Showing posts with label Roger Beaver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roger Beaver. Show all posts

Listen

20th August 1948, West Bromwich, Staffs.


Robert Anthony Plant

Robert Plant would become one of the most important vocalists in 20th Century rock music. However, in 1966 he had already been in several bands. He joined Listen from the The Crawling King Snakes. The rest of the group were John Crutchley, Roger Beaver and Geoff Thompson. A very young and intense Plant can be seen with the guitar in the photo above. For a short period they were very popular around the local area playing at Walsall Town Hall and other local venues.



The group was regarded as a Tamla Motown style band with something of a Mod image. Noddy Holder worked as their Roadie for a month or so at the beginning of 1966 when he was between bands. Ironically, Noddy soon joined The 'N Betweens who released You Better Run in December 1966 just before Listen released their version of the same song as reported here in the December '66 issue of Midland Beat mag. The 'N Betweens version caught the public attention and Listen missed out.



In 1967 the group broke up and Plant joined drummer John Bonham in the Band Of Joy, a band that had actually been his idea and creation. He had known Bonham from the The Crawling King Snakes and, of course, from the Bonham family who ran a local public house. Jon Bonham's Uncle that ran the Three Men In A Boat. 15 year old Billy Bonham was a mult-talented musician that played for the local Walsall outfit called Prim n' Proper. Plant stayed there for a couple of years around 1966-ish, which is how he knew Holder, they lived a few hundred yards from each other.

When Holder was between groups he tried to get another band together..nothing happened obviously but he practised at the ...Boat with Pete Bickley, Bill Bonham (the Landlords son) and who ever might be around at the time. Bill Bonham told Chris Selby that Holder was trying to get a sound similar to The Beatles - I'm Down.


Also from the Dec. 1966 Midland Beat magazine.

The Band Of Joy meanwhile, were crossing Blues with Psychedelia and generating a bit of excitement. In 1968, Jimmy Page was looking for a new singer for his band. He approached Terry Reid who sent him to a Band Of Joy gig. The rest, as they say, is history but not Slade history.

Trivia: Robert Plant was a very good dancer, so good in fact, he won a Dance Competition once. One of the judges was Janice Nicholls the "THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS " TV girl.



divider

Bastardised in part from the excellent 2002 online book by Keith Farley. 'N Between Times: an Oral History of the Wolverhampton Group Scene of the 1960s. It's certainly worth a read.