Post Description
Barclay James Harvest collection [art rock]
Art Rock
1970-2013
UK
FLAC
Image+.cue
lossless
John Lees (lead guitar, vocals),
Woolly Wolstenholme (keyboards, vocals),
Melvin Pritchard (drums),
Les Holroyd (bass, vocals)
In 1966 two R & B bands local to Oldham (UK) merged to form a blues outfit THE BLUES KEEPERS. With sponsorship from a local businessman (also their manager) they rented an 18th century farmhouse where
they practised extensively, gradually moving towards a progressive rock style then beginning to emerge. On turning professional the name BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST was adopted,
and the line-up stabilised as JOHN LEES (guitars, vocals), LES HOLROYD (bass, rhythm guitar, vocals), STUART "WOOLLY" WOLSTENHOLME (keyboards, vocals) and MEL PRITCHARD (drums).
After releasing their first single in April 1968, the band joined the legendary progressive HARVEST label, quickly expanding their musical horizons, chiefly by experimenting with longer
evolving song structures and orchestrations. Initially this involved the use of woodwind, strings and brass before acquiring a MELLOTRON, but by the time of the release of their first album '
Barclay James Harvest' in 1970 they were employing an orchestra, the grandly titled BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA led by ROBERT GODFREY who later became a member of THE ENID.
Though producing some of their best melodic progressive work at this time, the orchestra proved to be too expensive and very nearly bankrupted the band, but in 1973 a move to the POLYDOR label saw an
upturn in their fortunes. With increasing commercial success, their music began to develop towards simpler song structures with stronger arrangements which caused detractors to dub them
'The Poor Man's Moody Blues'! By 1979 WOOLLY left the band because he had become disillusioned that they had moved away from their Prog roots. They continued into the 1980s as a 3-piece augmented
by hired musicians, and with a string of melodic AOR albums finally made a commercial break-through in Europe, particularly in Germany where they played several major outdoor concerts,
beginning with a massive free concert on the steps of the historic Reichstag in August 1980.
By the end of the decade the band's popularity was starting to wane. In the 1990s, a traumatic court case and widening musical differences between band members took its toll.
In 1998 the two songwriters HOLROYD and LEES agreed to go their separate ways while continuing to work under the umbrella of the old band name. Thus was born the two outfits which remain today:
BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST FEATURING LES HOLROYD perseveres with the AOR style of their later work; while JOHN LEES' BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST (JLBJH) has returned to the more Prog orientated work of the 1970s,
including working again with Woolly Wolstenholme. Sadly, MEL PRITCHARD passed away in 2004.
http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=655
http://rateyourmusic.com/artist/barclay_james_harvest
1970, 1971 - Barclay James Harvest , Once Again
1971, 1972 - And Other Short Stories, Baby James Harvest
1974 - Everyone Is Everybody Else
1975 - Time Honoured Ghosts
1976 - Octoberon
1977 - Gone To Earth
1978 - XII
1978 - Live Tapes
1979 - Eyes Of The Universe
1981 - Turn Of The Tide
1982 - Berlin (Live)
1983 - Ring Of Changes
1984 - Victims Of Circumstance
1987 - Face To Face
1988 - Glasnost (Live)
1990 - Welcome To The Show
1993 - Caught In The Light
1997 - River Of Dreams
1999 - Nexus - Through The Eyes Of John Lees
2000 - Revival (John Lees, live 2 CD)
2002 - BBC In Concert 1972
2003 - Revolution Days (Featuring Les Holroyd)
2006 - Classic Meets Rock (Featuring Les Holroyd, live 2 CD)
2007 - John Lees' Barclay James Harvest - Legacy - Live at the Shepherd's Bush Empire 2006
2013 - John Lees' Barclay James Harvest - North + Live At Buxton Opera House
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