Harlequin (band)
Harlequin | |
---|---|
Origin | Winnipeg, MB, Canada |
Genres | Rock |
Years active | 1975–present |
Labels | Epic |
Website | http://www.harlequintheband.com |
Members |
George Belanger Derrick Gottfried AJ Chabidon Paul McNair Gary Golden |
Past members |
Ralph James> David Budzak> Glen Willows> Gary Golden> Nik Rivers Rob Waite M.J. Hutton Randy Heibert Randy Booth Brad Meadmore Craig Fatheringham Igmar Munsch Paul Schelinberg Jim Cote Steve Broadhurst Darren Moore |
Harlequin is a Canadian rock band that formed in Winnipeg, Manitoba in 1975. The band is best known for their hit singles "I Did It For Love," "Thinking of You," "Superstitious Feeling," and "Innocence".[1]
In 2004, the band released an album titled Harlequin II. The band was always active,leader George Belanger kept the band active while running another business for 18 years. He then set that enterprise aside and began recording again and released "Waking the Jester" in 2007 then a live album,On/Q in 2009.
History
In 1975, Winnipeg bassist Ralph James formed Harlequin upon recruiting vocalist George Belanger, guitarist Glen Willows, keyboardist Gary Golden, and drummer David Budzak.[2] The band began recording demos and travelling to Toronto to perform in the local bars and clubs. It was in one of these small bars in Toronto that Harlequin were discovered by representatives of Jack Douglas, the producer of Aerosmith, John Lennon, and Patti Smith, after they tried to see another band in a larger bar downstairs, but could not gain admittance due to a sell-out crowd.[3] These two individuals later became the producers of the 1st album Victim of a Song. They were Lachlan MacFadyen and Kent Dobney ... former bandmates of Jack Douglas.
Douglas helped get Harlequin signed to CBS/Epic Records in 1979, and later that year that band released their first LP, Victim of a Song, which went Gold, and received heavy radio play, particularly in Western Canada. Douglas was listed as the record's executive producer; for the next two albums, Douglas would act as producer. The band's second release, Love Crimes (1980) yielded two hits, "Thinking of You," and "Innocence," Harlequin's biggest hit to date. Harlequin's third album One False Move (1982) contained two more hits, "Superstitious Feeling," and "I Did It for Love".
For their self-titled fourth studio album, Harlequin replaced Douglas with The Fixx bassist Alfie Agius as their producer. Harlequin (1984), produced only one single, "Take This Heart".[3] The band effectively split after this album, but in 1986, Harlequin released their Greatest Hits album with one new track "(It's) No Mystery". This track was written by David Bendeth and Tom Cochrane, produced by Bendeth, and featured Belanger on lead vocals backed by Randy Booth, Randy Heibert and some session musicians. In 1986, the line-up was Belanger (vocals),Randy Heibert (guitar),Randy Booth(bass),Igmar Munsch(keys), and Brad Meadmore (drums).[2] The line-up changed almost yearly through the rest of the 1980s until 1987, when the line up of Glen Willows, George Belanger, Nik Rivers, Rob Waite and M.J. Hutton toured coast to coast in Canada for several years, into 2007. Throughout that period Steve Broadhurst toured with the band as a sub for Rob Waite and Paul McNair was also a sub for MJ.
In 2004, Belanger met James Brose who had completed a cd of his own and asked George what he thought of it. After George expressed his opinion, James asked George what he should do. The result was a reverse engineering project which stripped the songs down. Most of the tracks were completely re-written and re-recorded. George rewrote lyrics, melodies and the result was called Harlequin II. In 2006, the band was inducted into the Western Canadian Music Hall of Fame at the Western Canadian Music Awards.[4]
In 2007 Harlequin consisted of guitarist Derrick Gottfried, bassist Nik Rivers, keyboardist Darren Moore, and drummer AJ Chabidon. This lineup released Waking the Jester (2007), which contained two singles, "Shine On," and "Rise." The band resumed touring and in 2009 released Harlequin's first live album, Live On/Q.[3]
The band continues to tour mostly within Canada.[5]
Discography
Studio albums
Year | Album | Track listing |
---|---|---|
1979 | Victim of a Song | 1 Sweet Things In Life 2 Survive 3 What's Your Name 4 Victim of a Song 5 You Are The Light 6 Who Knows (What A Love Can Do) 7 Shame Shame 8 Turn Around 9 Barely Alive |
1980 | Love Crimes | 1 Innocence 2 Love on the Rocks 3 Thinking of You 4 It's All Over Now 5 Heaven (Dial 999) 6 Sayin' Goodbye to the Boys 7 Wait for the Night 8 Crime of Passion 9 Can't Hold Back |
1982 | One False Move | 1 I Did It For Love 2 Hard Road 3 Shame If You Leave Me 4 Say Goodnight 5 Ready to Love Again 6 Fine Line 7 Heart Gone Cold 8 Heavy Talk 9 Superstitious Feeling 10 It's a Woman You Need |
1984 | Harlequin | 1 Take This Heart 2 Keep This Fire Alive 3 Don't Waste My Time 4 Memories 5 Can't Turn It Off 6 Calling 7 Trouble in Paradise 8 Run for Your Life 9 Love in Disguise |
2007 | Waking the Jester | 1 Shine On 2 Rise 3 Hell or High Water 4 40 Days in Your Car 5 Black Out the Sun 6 How Long 7 This Limbo 8 Take It or Leave It 9 Lolita 10 Inbound Train 11 Little White Lies 12 You Can't Go Back 13 Taste It |
Compilation albums
Year | Album |
---|---|
1984 | Radio Romances |
1986 | Harlequin's Greatest Hits |
Live albums
Year | Album |
---|---|
2009 | Live On/Q |
Singles
Year | Single | Peak chart positions | Album |
---|---|---|---|
CAN[6] | |||
1979 | "Survive" | 89 | Victim of a Song |
1980 | "You are the Light" | 78 | |
"Innocence" * | 29 | Love Crimes | |
1981 | "Thinking of You" | 44 | |
1982 | "Superstitious Feeling" | 29 | One False Move |
"I did it for Love" | 19 | ||
1984 | "Take this Heart" | 64 | Harlequin |
1986 | "It's no Mystery" | 92 | Greatest Hits |
2007 | "Shine on" | — | Waking the Jester |
"Rise" | — | ||
* Originally released as a non-LP single which peaked at No. 46 in 1978 | |||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
References
- ↑ http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=U1ARTU0001538
- 1 2 http://www.allmusic.com/artist/p18117
- 1 2 3 http://www.harlequintheband.com/history.html
- ↑ List of Artistic Awards, Western Canadian Music Awards, 2006; www.westerncanadianmusicawards.ca.
- ↑ http://www.harlequintheband.com/tour.html
- ↑ http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/films-videos-sound-recordings/rpm/Pages/list.aspx?OCRText=harlequin&&p_ID=15