Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

The Throb

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Active until
  
1967

Albums
  
Throb

Active from
  
1965


Origin
  
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Years active
  
1965 (1965)–1967 (1967)

Associated acts
  
Geoff Doyle and the Resonettes, The No Names

Past members
  
John Bell Denny Burgess Peter Figures Marty Van Wynk Bob Daisley Paul Wylde

Genres
  
Garage rock, Rhythm and blues, Rock music, Surf music

Record labels
  
Albert Productions, Parlophone, EMI, Polydor Records

Similar
  
Bobby & Laurie, The Wild Cherries, The Missing Links, Ray Brown & the Whispers, Phil Jones & The Unknown

The Throb were an R&B-based garage rock band from Sydney, Australia, who were active in the mid-1960s. Despite their short tenure, they achieved a brief moment of success, scoring a major hit in Australia with a cover version of "Fortune Teller", originally recorded by Benny Spellman, and which had previously been covered by The Rolling Stones. But, perhaps the song for which they have become best-remembered is the brooding lament "Black", a feedback-drenched rendition of the traditional folk song, "Black (Is the Colour of My True Love's Hair)", which they released in August that year, but to lesser success, though it became a minor hit in Sydney.

Contents

History

The Throb formed in Sydney in 1965 with the line up of John Bell on lead vocals and rhythm guitar, Denny Burgess (ex-Mystery Men) on bass guitar and vocals, Peter Figures (ex-Geoff Doyle and The Resonettes, The No Names) on drums and Marty Van Wynk (ex-Geoff Doyle and The Resonettes, The No Names) on lead guitar.

Figures and Van Wynk had worked together in The Resonettes in the early 1960s as a surf instrumental band. When they signed with Polydor Records in 1964 they changed the band's name to The No Names and issued two beat music singles, "She Is Mine", and a cover version of The Coasters hit Charlie Brown. By December 1965 The No Names became a R&B and rock band called The Throb.

The Throb signed with Albert Productions and label owner, Ted Albert, recommended a cover version of "Fortune Teller" as their debut single. In February 1966 it was issued by EMI/Parlophone and soon charted at No.4 in Sydney and No. in Melbourne. It also charted at No.4 in Adelaide and was a number-one hit in Brisbane. According to the Australian Chart Book 1940–1969 (2005) this equates to a national chart position of No.4. The group had become a "hot live draw on the discotheque circuit".

The band reworked an English folk song, "Black is the Colour of My True Love's Hair", as a "mournful, demonic" tune, which was released as their second single. It reached the Top 40 in Sydney but did not chart in other capital cities. Van Wynk left to join The Soul Agents while The Throb continued as a three-piece until October, when Burgess left to form his own group, Honeybunch. Bell and Figures recruited Bob Daisley (ex-Dennis Williams and the Delawares, Gino Affair) on bass guitar and Paul Wylde on organ and piano. The Throb disbanded in January 1967 when Figures joined The Square Circle.

Bell became a builder and ran a plastering firm. By 1969 Figures had joined Jeff St John & Yama and was later in various other groups. In 1972 Denny Burgess joined The Masters Apprentices, alongside his brother Colin. Van Wynk was in the Marty Rhone Band and also had a career as a songwriter.

Singles

  • "Fortune Teller" (1966) AUS No. 4
  • "Black is the Colour of My True Love's Hair" AUS No. 42
  • Songs

    Believe in Me1966
    Turn My Head1966
    AdigundeThrob · 2002

    References

    The Throb Wikipedia