stratmantd wrote:As someone born (established?) in 1958, I never really knew The Shadows until Summer Holiday at which point the line-up was Hank, Bruce, Brian & Licorice. To me, Jet and Tony were another act altogether producing records such as Diamonds.
At that age, personnel changes are not really noticed that much; you just enjoy the music, so when John Rostill appeared in Wonderful Life it was just a different face. Only later was any musical style differentiated between the various artistes.
MWF was a great band which just didn't receive the attention it deserved. Their lyrics, melodies, harmonies, guitar-work were second to none but unfortunately it seemed that this was a move too far for Shadows "fans" who wouldn't allow them to progress in their musical styles.
The Shads have had their ups and downs like everyone else, ranging from the sublime, (such as Curly Leads, Tasty), to the ridiculous (any number of mid-to-late 80s "what can be covered next" albums).
To only be interested in the Hank, Bruce, Jet & Tony era is doing the whole band a disservice; they are so much more than that.
I agree! When applying the term "That Sound!" to The Shadows, in my opinion, it is not only the sound on "Apache", "Man Of Mystery" or "F.B.I." (the Marvin-Welch-Harris-Meehan period), but every sound The Shadows have made.