edit 08.03.2017:
Good news!!! Recently I received a message from Kevin Griffith of Isle of Jura Records: after almost 40 years "Voyage - A Journey Into Discoid Funk" is going to be re-released soon as an heavyweight LP + digital download.
The album was completely remastered from the original master tapes by none other than Matt Colton and you can order it directly from Isle of Jura Records by clicking here. For those of you living in Europe, the album is distributed by Rush Hour and you can order it here.
I was kindly asked to remove all the download links from this post, so you won't find any. Now you've the chance to purchase an official release re-mastered by an engineer with steel in his balls, do not miss it!
Brian Lawrence Bennett was born in
Palmers Green,
North London, on February 8th, 1940. His interest in music dated from an early age: as a small child he used to listen to radio broadcasts from the
Aeolian Hall. He was soon hooked on the sounds of
Glenn Miller and other
Big Bands of the era.
He became fascinated by drums and percussion and lists
Gene Krupa,
Louis Bellson and, especially,
Buddy Rich as his early musical heroes. By 1953,
Brian had saved up enough money to purchase a rudimentary drumkit and he practiced constantly. Before long he was performing regularly with his school orchestra and youth club big bands.
He began playing professionally even before he left school, with his own
Tony Brian Trio and
The Esquires Dance Band. He also began composing music and writing songs from the age of fourteen onwards.
Brian's initial background was in
Jazz and
Swing, but by 1956 - the year he left school at sixteen to play drums in a
Ramsgate skiffle group performing for holiday makers- he was equally adept at playing
Rock'n'Roll. «
It wasn't originally by choice», recalled
Brian, «
but there were more and more jobs being offered and I didn't want to turn them down!».
A teenage prodigy, he became the house drummer at the legendary
2Is Club - now known as the birthplace of
British Rock'n'Roll - in
London's Soho, backing artists like
Tony Sheridan,
Terry Dene,
Vince Eager and
Vince Taylor, and from there he earned a regular spot on the
Jack Good's legendary TV music showcase
Oh Boy!.
By 1959,
Bennett was regarded as one of the top
Rock & Roll drummers in England and one of the most sought-after percussionists around. That year he joined
The Wildcats, the backing band of
Rock & Roll singer
Marty Wilde.
He remained with
Wilde for two years, also playing outside live gigs with stars such as
Tommy Steele, and he was also featured on a
Wildcats instrumental release of "
Trambone" recorded as the
Krew Kats. In 1960 he embarked on the legendary tour featuring
Eddie Cochran,
Gene Vincent and
Marty Wilde.
When
Marty embarked upon a career in films and musicals,
The Wildcats evolved into
The Krew Kats and cut a brace of fine instrumentals. After a brief stint as an orchestral
pit drummer, in October of 1961 lightning struck for
Bennett's career when
Tony Meehan - then regarded as the top drummer in England - quit
The Shadows, who were then the top
Rock & Roll British band as well as the backing group for
Cliff Richard, the top singer in the field.
The opening was one of the most coveted in the country -
The Shadows were regularly topping the charts in their own right, and their concerts with
Richard were riotous affairs, huge sell-outs in front of hordes of screaming fans across England -
Bennett was offered the spot. He accepted and was with the group across a string of hit singles and albums, lasting through their intended official breakup in 1968, on the occasion of the group's tenth anniversary as a professional band.
His drumming talents were but one aspect of his monumental musical contribution to the band. He wrote or co-wrote over 100 tracks for them, as well as over 20 compositions for
Cliff Richard... He also earned his first
Ivor Novello award for composing the title theme to the movie "
Summer Holiday", which starred
Richard and the band - he also contributed songs to their subsequent movies, up through "
Finder's Keepers".
A favourite feature for the audience at any
Shadows' concert was always his drum solo, with "
Little B" - a must showcase for every
Beat-Drummer in the
pre-Beatles era - perhaps being the best known and highly regarded piece which has inspired countless drummers over the years and is still performed now by budding young drummers at
Shadows' music clubs throughout the UK.
Many drummers back then considered each new
Shadows' record as a drum lesson - learning how to play the fills in classic tunes such as "
The Rise and Fall of Flingel Bunt" and "
Foot Tapper".
"Voyage - A Journey Into Discoid Funk", inner gatefold
In 1967
Bennett released his first solo LP exploring
Jazz and
Easy Listening territories with the aptly entitled "
Change of Direction", which was followed in 1969 by "
The Illustrated London Noise", a return to
Rock and
Funky music.
Following the 1968 "farewell"
Shadows concert, he participated along with lead guitarist
Hank Marvin and bassist
John Rostill in the band's brief 1969 reunion for a tour of Japan.
By the early '70s
Brian was a highly successful and much sought after session drummer working with a vast array of different artists including
Ella Fitzgerald,
Olivia Newton-John,
Engelbert Humperdinck,
Richard Harris,
The Walker Brothers and many more.
With
The Shadows on extended hiatus,
Bennett turned to other areas of music. He'd already developed some insights into the mechanics of music through his work as a songwriter, and he took a correspondence course in arranging and orchestration that, when added to his natural ability as a composer, ended up reshaping his whole career. He'd always provided vocals on the
Shadows' own recordings, and now he re-established his performing credentials on the piano as well as the vibraphone.
He became
Cliff Richard's musical director and formed
The Brian Bennett Orchestra touring the world including the first Western rock concerts performed in Russia. Even more important, amid the string of hit albums with
Richard that followed, he also started writing music for movies / television and part of this huge load of work was published on many
library records by specialized labels like
KPM Music and
Bruton.
In 1977 he published his third proper solo album, "
Rock Dreams", credited to the
Brian Bennett Band, which was followed the next year by the
Disco/Funk opus "
Voyage - A Journey Into Discoid Funk", the subject of this post.
Brian Bennett, DJM promotional picture, circa 1977-78
Later on,
Brian developed yet another career composing music for films. During the '80s, he was awarded his second
Ivor Novello award (for 25 years services to music) and wrote music for a wide range of programmes including "
Dallas", "
Knotts Landing", "
Pulaski",
The Royal Wedding of
Prince Charles and
Lady Diana Spencer (!!!), "
BBC Golf" theme, "
The Sweeney",
Dennis Hopper's film "
The American Way" and
Ellen Barkin and
David MacCallum's "
Terminal Choice". In 1990, he won his third
Ivor Novello award for
Best Score For a Television Series (
The Ruth Rendell Mysteries).
From the 1990s to 2000, he was in demand more than ever and he composed music for the long-running series "
The Knock", "
Nomads of the Wind", "
Global Sunrise", "
Living Britain", "
Dirty Work", "
David Jason In His Element" and
Hansjörg Thurn's film "
The Arpist".
In 2001
Bennett was the proud recipient of the
Gold Badge Award given by the
British Academy of Composers & Songwriters Society. He also won the
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards 2000/2001 for
Best Original Title Music for "
Murder In Mind". In 2004 he was awarded an
OBE and collected his award from
The Queen at
Buckingham Palace.
In 2009 and 2010
Cliff Richard and The Shadows embarked on a 50th anniversary tour with 36 shows in the UK, Europe, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.More recently,
Bennett wrote with his son,
Warren, 24 episodes of the award-winning TV series "
New Tricks". He also recorded and produced an album with
Cliff Richard and The Shadows.
As of early 2015 he is working on a musical called "
Soho", the music for a production called "
Starchild" and an album of the music of
John Barry played by
The Brian Bennett Orchestra...
Although he'll always be associated with
The Shadows, playing drums for them is merely one aspect of a glittering musical career.
"
Voyage - A Journey Into Discoid Funk" contains the following tracks:
01.
Voyage (6:25)
02.
Solstice (6:21)
03.
Chain Reaction (6:41)
04.
Pendulum Force (6:24)
05.
Air Quake (4:15)
06.
Ocean Glide (6:41)
All tracks were remastered from the original vinyl in July 2014, they are available as a
FLAC lossless format file or as a
high-quality 320 Kbps MP3 file. Both formats offer complete printable PDF artwork.
Before burning this album on CD-R using the provided CUE file you must convert the original files to WAV format using an appropriate software. Here's an option for
FLAC to WAV conversion and one for
MP3 to WAV conversion.
As usual, please have a look at the comments for the download links.
"
Voyage - A Journey Into Discoid Funk" was released in the U.K. by
DJM Records with cat. number
DJF 20532 in late April1978. During the same year the record was also published in
other countries across Europe, and in 1997 it was finally re-released on CD - coupled with
Brian Bennett Band's "
Rock Dreams" by
See For Miles Records.
Unfortunately, all the tracks on this edition were remastered from vinyl, not from the original master tapes... Anyway, the booklet of such CD offers precious information about
Bennett and the album. The notes were compiled by
Rob Bradford, here's some of them:
«...At this point in his career,
Brian was employed as a producer/arranger by
DJM. This put him in a position to fulfil some of his ideas for solo projects. According to
Brian, there were several strands of thought behind "
Voyage".
«
I suppose that I was already becoming a bit 'Themic', if you like. Maybe it was leading up to creating music to complement or invoke visual imagery. I had this idea of the earth in space. Also, "Star Wars" was all the rage, so this space fantasy thing was very much in vogue. There were groups like Space and Meco creating interesting, yet commercial sounds. I was also listening to Brian Eno. I liked a lot of the material he was putting out. It was a different genre and I wanted to see if I could write some material along those lines. We probably realised that it wasn't going to be a great commercial success, but then again, you can never be absolutely certain. There was always a chance. I was delighted to be given the go ahead, so it was a voyage around the earth, if you like. One thing that I really hated was the sub-title, "A Journey Into Discoid Funk". Terrible! That was the idea of the marketing people, 'we've got to call it something, categorise it...' that kind of thing. I wasn't too keen on the sleeve either. I had some ideas of my own, a little montage sequence, representing each track. That was dismissed out of hand. I wasn't too keen on the spaceship thing. I was pleased with the music, though. I was listening to it recently for the first time in nearly twenty years. It still sounds good. I know that the critics at the time didn't like it much, but that didn't bother me. I stand by the quality of the music and the playing. It was all done live in the studio. It was recorded at The Music Centre, Wembley. All of the drums were played live and so were the synths. We were experimenting with all the latest sounds and technology, but the human element was still there. Nowadays, there'd be a lot more use made of computers, programming and sequencing. It was very enioyable. Francis Monkman and Alan Jones were both outstanding.»
With material of this nature, it's really up to the listener to make what he/she will of each track, which create differing moods and atmospheres. I'll make my own brief comments and than add a few of the appropriate descriptions typical of those found on
Brian's library music albums.
Voyage: quite 'filmic' as
Brian describes it. If orchestrated, then not out of place on the "
Star Wars" type of soundtrack. Very stylish, mixing elements of groups such as
Tangerine Dream,
Kraftwerk and
The Orb. Present are elements reminiscent of
Emerson, Lake & Palmer's arrangement of
Coplands' "
Fanfare For the Common Man". ('
Prestigious, expansive, epic theme').
Solstice: a very quiet, gentle relaxing opus. Very dreamy and subtle. Ethereal, 'New Age'. ('
Serene, slow, timeless atmosphere').
Chain Reaction: opening with slow, long rolls on heavily phased drums, the sound is similar to that achieved by
Carl Palmer on parts of
ELP's "
Brain Salad Surgery" before launching into a
quasi-2001 - type almost disco theme. ('
Scenic, with underlying suspense').
Pendulum Force: ('
Cool and funky, effervescent, unhurried, confident, optimistic stabs').
Air Quake: a very dramatic number, with lots of
Sci-Fi type FX. Definitely echoes of
Jean Michelle-Jarre and "
Equinoxe'. ('
Abstract, uptempo, exciting with stabs').
Ocean Glide: a beautiful, accessible piece which is actually
Brian's favourite track on the album. There are definitely hints of a visual/aural combination here. This music could easily fit in with the type of music that
Brian now provides for TV documentaries. A musical comment on the visual scene of your choice. It reminds of
Mike Oldfield at his best. Mellifluous and romantic, but not cloyingly sentimental. ('
Gentle intro, expansive melodic theme, epic romantic montage featuring piano').
When originally released during the height of the
Punk Rock era, this album was ahead of its time. It received a mauling from dismissive critics. If I remember correctly, someone described "
Voyage" along the lines of '
...an album to play to your hippy mother's maiden aunt', whilst (even more unkindly) another merely described it as an album to put on in order to drive away undesirable guests from your party... early. Well, I beg to differ. In 1997, the music hasn't dated, it's refreshingly contemporary. Treat it as high quality
New Age, atmospheric, ambient and you won't be disappointed.»
A magazine ad for the imminent release of "Voyage", April 1978
Here's the complete credits and personnel list of "
Voyage - A Journey Into Discoid Funk" as they appear in the original liner notes:
Keyboards:
Francis Monkman
Bass Guitar:
Alan Jones
Percussion:
Brian Bennett
Recorded and Engineered by
Dick Plant.
Assistant Engineer:
Barry Kidd
Synthesizers programmed and realized by
Francis Monkman.
Recorded at the
Music Centre,
Wembley.
Written, Arranged and Produced by
Brian Bennett.
Aphex processed
Sleeve Design:
Roy Simpson Ltd.
Brian Bennett, circa late '70s / early '80s
The following biographies of
Francis Monkman and
Alan Jones were written by
Rob Bradford in 1997 and are part of the aforementioned booklet included in the CD version of "
Voyage / Rock Dreams":
«The classically trained
Francis Monkman was a graduate of
The Royal Academy of Music. He was a keyboard player and organist of phenomenal talent. After graduating from in the late '60s, he soon decided that his future lay within the sphere of
Popular, rather than
Classical music.
Monkman rapidly teamed up with the classically-trained violinist
Darryl Way, who had similar ideas. Along with charismatic female vocalist
Sonia Kristina, they formed the influential outfit
Curved Air.
Monkman stayed for "
Air Conditioning", "
Second Album" and "
Phantasmagoria". He also appeared on a retrospective live LP. He later joined forces again with
Darryl Way for "
Concerto For Electric Violin and Synthesiser".
Francis Monkman had also become a respected player on the session scene as well as developing his own composing/arranging talents. In 1978, he released his own solo LP, "
Energism". Prior to that, he had appeared on LPs by numerous artists, including;
Harvey Andrews,
Kate Bush,
B.J. Cole,
Renaissance,
Al Stewart and
John Williams.
Known to both
Brian Bennett and
Alan Jones via the session scene,
Francis Monkman was invited to play keyboards for
The Shadows during their acclaimed
20 Golden Dates tour of 1977. As a result of this,
Brian wanted
Francis' redoubtable talents on "
Voyage".
Later on,
Monkman was to achieve a sort of superstardom as part of the immensely talented and hugely popular supergroup,
Sky.
Francis was present for "
Sky" and "
Sky 2". His talents were given full reign on pieces such as "
Vivaldi" and "
Toccata". Additionally, Francis composed a good deal of the group's music.
Thereafter,
Monkman continued with session work and also concentrated more upon composition, developing a successful career in writing library music as well as TV work and advertising jingles. He remains an active and respected musician.»
Francis Monkman in 1976
«Although never officially a member of
The Shadows,
Alan Jones is always identified as such by fans. On and off,
Alan played bass for the band between 1977 and 1989, appearing on many recordings and undertaking numerous tours with them. He is one of Britain's most accomplished bass players.
Jones was born in
Rotherham,
Yorkshire, on April 2nd, 1947. When he was still a small child,
Alan's family moved South to the
Sidden Hill area of
Dulwich. In common with so many youngsters of that era,
Alan was inspired by the early
skifflers and
Rock'n'Rollers. By the age of ten he was already playing guitar. In his first group, he initially played lead guitar, until it became apparent that the bass guitarist was not quite up to the job...It was at that point that
Alan switched to bass guitar as his main instrument.
During 1964/65, he was playing in a band called
Rhythm And Greens. In 1965,
Alan auditioned for the job as vocalist/bassist for the
Mecca Lyceum Ballroom Band. He beat off fifty-seven other applicants to land the job! In 1967, he was on the same bill as
Johnny Howard and his band/orchestra.
Johnny was so impressed by
Alan's playing that he offered him the job as
Ronnie Seabrook's deputy.
Alan accepted and the job eventually became permanent when
Ronnie later departed for pastures new.
In the meantime,
Johnny Howard had been assisting
Alan to read music and also setting up the odd session for him. «
The first one I ever played on», says
Alan, «
was The Equals' "Baby Come Back"!».
Alan rapidly became in demand as one of the top session players. He continued to mix session work and his
Johnny Howard commitments until 1973. It was then, following
John Rostill's tragic and premature death, that
Alan became
Tom Jones' permanent bassist for almost three years.
Shortly after his return to England,
Alan was invited to audition for the bass guitar vacancy in the re-formed
Shadows.
Alan had met
Brian Bennett when they both played on sessions (1970-73), plus,
Brian was a close friend of
Big Jim Sullivan (top session player and
Tom Jones' guitarist). Personal recommendations don't come much higher than that!
During the 1980s,
Alan continued to record for and tour with
The Shadows as well as continuing a busy career as a session player... Not surprisingly, for "
Voyage",
Alan Jones was
Brian Bennett's first choice as bassist.
Alan Jones and... Tom Jones in the mid '70s
The following videos offer a preview of the remastered album; here's "
Solstice", "
Pendulum Force", "
Voyage" and "
Ocean Glide", enjoy!
More information about "
Voyage - A Journey Into Discoid Funk",
Brian Bennett and
Francis Monkman is available here:
http://www.discogs.com/master/view/54371
http://monobrow73.blogspot.com/2011/06/hidden-gem-voyager-jouney-into-discoid.html
http://funkyfrolic.blogspot.com/2011/02/brian-bennett-voyage-journey-into.html
http://rateyourmusic.com/release/album/brian_bennett/voyage__a_journey_into_discoid_funk_f1/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Bennett_%28musician%29
http://www.brianbennettmusic.co.uk/
http://zildjian.com/Artists/B/Brian-Bennett
http://www.brianbennettmusic.co.uk/art_rhythm.php
http://www.mikedolbear.co.uk/story.asp?StoryID=1449
http://www.drummerworld.com/drummers/Brian_Bennett.html
http://www.allmusic.com/artist/brian-bennett-mn0000621102
http://www.whosampled.com/Brian-Bennett/sampled/?sp=1
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Monkman
http://www.discogs.com/artist/180121-Francis-Monkman
http://www.allmusic.com/artist/francis-monkman-mn0000861892
http://musiciansolympus.blogspot.com/2011/12/francismonkman-keyboards.html
http://calyx.perso.neuf.fr/interviews/fmonkman.html
If you have any other useful information about
Brian Bennett and "
Voyage - A Journey Into Discoid Funk" - especially corrections and improvements to this post - or if you spot any dead links, please get in touch with me at
stereocandies [at] hotmail [dot] com or leave a comment in the box below, thank you!