Sky (band)
Sky | |
---|---|
Origin | London |
Genres | |
Years active | 1978–95 |
Past members |
Herbie Flowers Tristan Fry Kevin Peek John Williams Francis Monkman Steve Gray Paul Hart Richard Durrant |
Sky were an English/Australian instrumental symphonic rock group that specialised in combining a variety of musical styles, most prominently rock and classical. The group's best known members were classical guitarist John Williams, bass player Herbie Flowers (a former member of Blue Mink and T. Rex) and Francis Monkman, a founder member of progressive rock band Curved Air.
History
Formation
In 1971, Australian classical guitarist John Williams released Changes, his first recording of non-classical music (and the first on which he played electric guitar). Among the musicians working on the album were Herbie Flowers and Tristan Fry, an established session drummer who was also the timpanist for the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields. The three musicians became friends, kept in touch and continued working together on various projects. Fry, Flowers, and Francis Monkman were performers on Williams' 1978 album Travelling, another cross-genre recording which was a substantial commercial success.
The success of Travelling inspired Williams and Flowers to set up their own long-term cross-genre band. Fry and Monkman were swiftly recruited, and the first Sky lineup was completed with the addition of Australian session guitarist Kevin Peek. Peek was equally adept at classical guitar and pop/rock styles, having built up a reputation both as a chamber musician and as a long-standing member of Cliff Richard's band (as well as for Manfred Mann, Lulu, Tom Jones, Jeff Wayne, Shirley Bassey and Gary Glitter). In addition, Peek and Monkman had both played on Louis Clark's album '‘(per-spek-tiv) n. The band began writing and recording instrumental music drawing on their collective experience of classical, light pop, progressive rock, light entertainment and jazz. After a protracted search for a record company, Sky signed with the small European label Ariola Records.
First lineup: 1978–80
Sky's self-titled debut album (released in 1979) was highly successful in Britain and Australia, quickly reaching gold record status and eventually topping out as a platinum record. Although the band was run democratically, and all members contributed music and/or arrangements, the presence of John Williams in the lineup was regarded as the band's biggest selling point (and was emphasised in publicity). Williams' concurrent solo instrumental hit - "Cavatina - Theme from The Deer Hunter" - also helped to raise the band's profile. However, this was counterbalanced by some negative reviews from critics accustomed to Williams' classical performances, who remained unimpressed by his new direction with Sky. The band toured the UK in summer and autumn 1979, particular triumphs being sold-out concerts at the Royal Albert Hall and the Dominion Theatre in London (the latter a five-night sellout).
In 1980, Sky recorded and released their second album, Sky 2 - a double album that built upon its predecessor's success (becoming the tenth highest selling album in Britain that year). The album included Monkman's side-long rock suite "FIFO" (a piece inspired by computer processing, stands for "First In, First Out") and four classical pieces including three established chamber music pieces (played entirely straight) and the band's souped-up electric treatment of Bach's "Toccata and Fugue in D Minor". The latter was released as a single (under the name "Toccata") and reached number 5 in the national pop charts, giving the band the opportunity of performing on Top Of The Pops.
In 1980, the BBC produced the television series Great Railway Journeys of the World which included an episode set in Australia. The music for this programme was by Sky, featuring tracks from the first two albums.
Following further tours of Australia and the UK, Francis Monkman left the band in 1980 to concentrate on his own projects (having scored success with his soundtrack to the film The Long Good Friday). The split was entirely amicable and the band had no doubts about carrying on despite the fact that Monkman had been Sky's most prominent original composer and arranger.
Second lineup: 1980–84
Monkman was replaced as keyboard player by Steve Gray, formerly of Back Door and Wasp. Like most of the other band members, Gray was an established session musician. He soon became a prominent composer within Sky and took the band towards a more jazz-influenced sound, drawing in part on his experience as a piano player (with Quincy Jones, Henry Mancini, Michel Legrand, Lalo Schifrin, Peggy Lee, Sammy Davis Jr and John Barry).
Gray joined the band in time for their first European tour, followed by another UK tour and (on 24 February 1981) the "Sky at Westminster Abbey" concert. This had been conceived by the British producer Martin Lewis and was the first-ever rock concert held at the abbey. It was videotaped for a BBC TV special and subsequently released on home video and laserdisc. The concert was a benefit for the human rights organisation Amnesty International and commemorated the organisation's 20th anniversary. The landmark event resulted in Sky receiving considerable positive media coverage. The Westminster Abbey concert was also the launch event for the band's third album, Sky 3, a generally brighter and breezier album than its predecessors. The band toured Australia, Europe and the UK in support of the release.
The fourth Sky album - Sky 4: Forthcoming - was released in March 1982. This was Sky's first album to feature no original material, as it consisted predominantly of arrangements of classical compositions and was marketed under the slogan "Genius Past, Genius Forthcoming". Once again, the band toured the UK and Australia to promote the album (and followed this up with trips to Europe and Japan). The Australian autumn tour featured the debut of plenty of new material, much of which was included on a live double album, Sky Five Live, released in January 1983.
Sky released their sixth album Cadmium in December 1983. The album contents were a mixture of Sky traditions and new elements - it contained a classical-rock arrangement of Prokofiev's "Sleigh Ride" (from the "Lieutenant Kijé Suite"), alongside seven original compositions and the first examples of commissioned compositions from contemporary writers from outside the band (in this case, Kevin Peek's old friend and fellow Cliff Richard collaborator Alan Tarney, who provided two original tunes). Two concerts at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London were filmed and broadcast on Christmas Eve, 1983, with songwriter and singer-songwriter Patrick Ros as special guest. Ros provided three seasonal compositions of his own on which he was backed by the band.
Third lineup: 1984-1986
In February 1984, John Williams parted company with Sky, returning to a full-time classical career. Williams had previously hinted that his work with Sky had been intended as a five-year stint. Although his departure was amicable it damaged Sky's profile: Williams had remained Sky's biggest star and live draw, despite the band's collective efforts to present themselves as a partnership of equals.
Sky opted not to recruit a permanent replacement for Williams: instead, the band remained as a quartet, working with a succession of guest musicians. The first of these was former Yes keyboard player Rick Wakeman, who joined the band on their Australian tour of early 1984. Guests for the 1984 summer tour of the UK were woodwind player Ron Aspery (Steve Gray's former mentor in Back Door and the Middlesbrough Municipal Junior Orchestra), Davey 'Crabsticks' Trotter on Mellotron and session guitarist Lee Fothergill. 1984 also saw the release of a stopgap "greatest hits" compilation called Masterpieces, released on mass-media label Telstar (and featuring a previously unreleased live version of the Beatles song "The Fool on the Hill", performed as a classical guitar duet by Williams and Peek).
In September 1984, Sky began recording their seventh album - The Great Balloon Race - in Kevin Peek's Tracks Studio in Western Australia. During the mixing stage, the band learnt that they had been dropped by Ariola Records. The album was eventually released on Epic Records (coincidentally, also the label releasing John Williams' albums). The Great Balloon Race was the first Sky album to feature entirely original material without any classical content, although two pieces ("Allegro" and "Caldando") were strongly classically inspired. Guests included Aspery, Fothergill, pan-pipe player Adrian Brett and former Jeff Beck Band keyboard player Tony Hymas (who contributed the unusual semi-spoken album opener "Desperate For Your Love").
Despite some favourable reviews, sales of The Great Balloon Race were significantly lower than they had been for previous recordings, and when Sky toured the UK to promote the record, they found themselves playing to smaller audiences than on previous tours. As with the previous two tours, Sky performed with guest players - this time Nicky Hopkins (keyboard player for The Rolling Stones) and multi-instrumentalist Paul Hart (a former composer for the National Youth Jazz Orchestra who'd also played bass guitar for John Dankworth and both violin and piano for Cleo Laine). Unlike previous guests, Hart would continue to play a role in the band later.
Mozart project: 1987
Sky returned in late 1987 with the Mozart album, which united the band with the orchestra of the Academy of St Martin in the Fields. The project was initiated by Tristan Fry (due to his parallel work with both band and orchestra) and was inspired by the bicentenary of Mozart's death. The album contained full orchestral performances of Mozart's work with Sky incorporated into the arrangements (most of which were written by Steve Gray). The band and orchestra (with Paul Hart returning as guest musician) promoted the album with a one-off concert at the Royal Albert Hall on 1 November 1987. The Mozart project was roundly panned and dismissed by the press (although the album was ultimately Sky's most successful album in the United States) and the band took another two years off before returning again.
Further lineup changes and final years: 1990–95
A second compilation album - Classic Sky - was released in 1990. The band played a one-off concert at the London Palladium in the same year (the first to feature Paul Hart as a full band member) and recorded a TV concert in early 1991. New compositions by Peek, Gray and Hart were premiered but apparently never recorded in the studio.
In 1991, Kevin Peek became the next member of the band to depart. A full-time resident of Australia since 1982 and busy with multiple recording projects at Tracks Studio (all of which inhibited his practical ability to spend time in the UK working with Sky), he no longer believed that he had enough time to commit to the band.
Peek was replaced as Sky's main guitarist by classical/cross-discipline guitarist Richard Durrant (an associate of Herbie Flowers), who joined the band in time for a comeback concert in September 1992 at the Barbican, London. Although the band toured the UK again during spring 1993, they were playing notably smaller venues than they had in the 1980s, and by this time the group's momentum had finally been lost as gaps in band activity grew longer. The last performance by Sky was at an RAF tribute concert in May 1995. Although the band never formally disbanded, Sky has never since returned to active recording and performance. The subsequent deaths of Steve Gray and Kevin Peek (in 2008 and 2013) make a future reunion unlikely.
After Sky: individual careers and recordings
Following his departure from Sky in 1984, John Williams resumed his career as one of the world's leading classical guitarists, which continues to this day. In 1988, Williams and the London Symphony Orchestra commissioned and performed a guitar concerto by Williams's former Sky bandmate Steve Gray.
Since leaving Sky in 1980, Francis Monkman has divided his time between experimental rock music and classical music recordings of solo keyboard work (generally harpsichord or church organ). Post-Sky, Tristan Fry continued his work as a classical percussionist: he still works with the Orchestra of the Academy of St Martin in the Fields, as well as the Tristan Fry Percussion Ensemble.
After leaving Sky in 1991, Kevin Peek continued to work as a musician and producer in Australia. In his later years, he underwent two bankruptcies, the first of which resulted in a three-year prison sentence.[1] In 2010 he was linked to a "Ponzi" style investment scheme.[2] In November 2011 he was back in court, bailed on 227 charges of gaining benefit by fraud: a trial date was scheduled for 27 January 2012, but abandoned due to Peek's ill health.[3] He died in Perth, Western Australia, on 11 February 2013, from metastising skin cancer.[4]
Following Sky's last known collaborative work in 1995, Steve Gray continued his career as a respected composer (which he had been carrying out in parallel to his work with Sky). His compositions include two operas, a requiem mass for jazz big band and choir, the guitar concerto for John Williams and the LSO, and a piano concerto written for French jazz pianist Martial Solal. Gray also provided a full orchestration of the works of Brian Eno (in collaboration with the original composer). From 1991, he worked closely with the North German Radio (NDR) Big Band in Hamburg (at the invitation of singer and composer Norma Winstone) and from 1998 he worked as guest professor of composition and arrangement in the Hanns Eisler jazz department of Berlin Hochschule für Musik. Steve Gray died on 20 September 2008.[5]
As well as branching out as a light entertainment raconteur, Herbie Flowers continues to work as a high-profile session musician and has collaborated with Jools Holland, Clannad, Mike Hatchard and Paul McCartney. He also played in the band for the first live tour of Jeff Wayne's War of the Worlds show (having performed on the original studio album). He frequently collaborates with Sky's final guitarist, Richard Durrant, on various musical projects (including a trio with former Gentle Giant drummer Malcolm Mortimore). Durrant has continued to develop his own career as a classical guitarist, as well as composing film and television music and working as a record producer (notably for the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain). Durrant is also the founder of the acoustic record label LongMan Records.
Paul Hart went on to a career in film, television and commercial music and has written concert music for the London Symphony Orchestra, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and the King’s Singers. His Concerto for Classical Guitar and Jazz Orchestra was revived for performance in 2008 by the Towson University Jazz Orchestra and guitarist Michael Decker.[6]
In 2002, a posthumous Sky live album - Live in Nottingham - was released on Classic Rock Productions, drawing on a 1990 live-in-the-studio concert with the Peek/Flowers/Gray/Fry/Hart lineup, which had followed the band's lone Palladium concert in the same year.[7] In 2005, Quantum Leap Productions issued a live DVD, Live in Bremen, featuring the original Sky lineup and recorded at a German television show in either 1979 or 1980.[8]
Reissues
In 1993, Arista reissued the band's first five albums on CD, although cuts were made to certain albums to suit CD running times (a shorter edit of "Scipio" on Sky 2 and the complete removal of the twenty-minute suite "The Animals" from Sky Five Live). [The complete "Sky Five Live", with "The Animals", was issued as a double CD on Esoldun, with four bonus tracks from the four earlier studio albums. These were "Carillon" (Sky, listed as "Carillion"), "Toccata" (Sky 2), "Westwind" (Sky 3) and "Fantasia" (Sky 4).]
In 2001, the band began a reissue programme of their back catalogue on Sanctuary Records, beginning with the Anthology compilation album. After four years wait, Sky reissued their debut album on the label in 2005 (with Sky 2 following on a different label, Castle Music). After this the reissues plan stalled (although occasional brief runs of the first two Sky albums would appear intermittently on small labels). It would be nine more years before a full Sky reissue programme was carried out properly.
The entire Sky back catalogue was eventually reissued by Esoteric Recordings (a progressive-rock-friendly subsidiary of Cherry Red Records). On 27 October 2014, fully remastered versions of Sky and Sky 2 were released as CD/DVD packages, each containing a DVD of Sky's television appearances (in 1979 and 1980 respectively). Remastered versions of Sky 3 and Sky 4: Forthcoming were released on 26 January 2015, each with new sleevenote essays and companion live DVDs (the former featuring a companion DVD of the "Sky At Westminster Abbey" concert, the latter featuring the band's July 1982 live set for the BBC TV programme Night Music). Remastered versions of The Great Balloon Race and Mozart followed on 30 March 2015 (with new essays but no bonus DVDs). The reissue set was completed by the 27 April 2015 release of the remastered Sky Five Live (as a double CD with new sleevenote essay and with "The Animals" restored to the running order) and Cadmium (as a double set with three bonus tracks, a new sleevenote essay and a DVD combining a previously unreleased BBC recording of Sky at Drury Lane and a rare performance of the piece "Troika" on the Val Doonican Show from December 1983).[9]
Personnel
- Herbie Flowers - bass guitar, double-bass, tuba (1978–1995)
- Tristan Fry - drums, percussion, trumpet (1978–1995)
- Kevin Peek - guitars (1978–1991; died 2013)
- John Williams - guitars (1978–1984)
- Francis Monkman - harpsichord, synthesisers, organ, guitars (1978–1980)
- Steve Gray - keyboards, saxophone (1980–1995; died 2008)
- Paul Hart - keyboards, guitars, mandolin, cello (1984–1995)
- Richard Durrant - guitars (1992–1995)
Albums
Studio albums
Released | Album | Singles |
---|---|---|
1979 | Sky |
|
1980 | Sky 2 |
|
1981 | Sky 3 |
|
1982 | Sky 4: Forthcoming |
|
1984 | Cadmium |
|
1985 | The Great Balloon Race |
|
1987 | Mozart |
|
Live albums
Released | Album | Singles |
---|---|---|
1983 | Sky Five Live |
|
2001 | Live In Nottingham |
Compilation albums
Released | Album | Singles |
---|---|---|
1984 | Masterpieces | |
1990 | Classic Sky | |
2001 | Anthology | |
2015 | Toccata - An Anthology |
Non-album singles
Released | A Side | B Side |
---|---|---|
1980 | "Dies Irae" |
"March To The Scaffold" |
1984 | "The Fool on the Hill" |
"The Spirit" |
"Dies Irae" was included on the Music Club Edition of the Sky album. "March To The Scaffold" is an earlier recording than the version which appeared on Sky 4: Forthcoming.
Video releases
- Sky In Bremen - Credited as 1980 but recorded in 1979, released 2005 (Quantum)(DVD)
- Sky At Westminster Abbey - 1982 - BBC Video (BBCV 3017) (VHS, in mono) / (BBCV 3017L) (Laserdisc, in stereo)
- Live In Nottingham - Recorded 1991, released 2001 (Classic Rock Legends)(DVD)
References
- ↑ Neal Prior, "Sky was the limit: Peek has a second crack at bankruptcy", Sydney Morning Herald, 30 March 2002.
- ↑ Russell Emerson, "Police, regulators on rock star Kevin Peek's trail for Ponzi scheme", Adelaide Advertiser, 27 July 2010.
- ↑ Phil Hickey, "Former rock guitarist Kevin Peek to fight $8 million fraud charges", Perth Now, 2 November 2011.
- ↑ Rebecca le May (18 February 2013). "Small funeral for disgraced Sky guitarist Kevin Peek". Perth Now. Retrieved 15 June 2013.
- ↑ John Fordham (31 October 2008). "Obituary: Steve Gray | Music". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
- ↑ Press release for Towson University's American Premiere of Paul Hart’s Concerto for Classical Guitar and Jazz Orchestra, 14 February 2008.
- ↑ Sky: Live in Nottingham entry at Discogs.com
- ↑ Live in Bremen details on Sky fanpage
- ↑ News of Sky reissues on Esoteric Recordings homepage
External links
- Richard Sliwa's comprehensive unofficial Sky website
- Sky discography at Discogs