Bees Make Honey
Barry Richardson was playing bass in one of the part-time jazz
combos which regularly appeared at the Tally Ho pub in Kentish Town
(London) when he first saw Eggs Over Easy.
A veteran of the Irish country showband circuit - now with a very good
'straight' job in marketing - Richardson realized he could put
together a band to match the Eggs musically and immediately recruited
fellow former Alpine Seven and Ian Whitcomb's Bluesville members Ruan
O'Lochlainn, Deke O'Brien and Mick Molloy from back home.
For the first few weeks the new band didn't have a name until
O'Lochlainn's wife suggested Bees Make Honey early in 1972. Like their signature tune, the Bees were Red Hot. Applying all the
crowd-pleasing techniques learned in the big barns of rural Ireland to
the London pubs, they swung where others merely rocked!
Soon signed to EMI, their debut single - a 1950s-inflected knee
trembler which slyly name-checked Charlie Gillett's Sunday morning
Honky Tonk radio show - was released in 1973. But neither it nor the
album which followed provided the band with their ticket to the top,
and it all began to fall apart.
Dropped by EMI, Richardson and Molloy kept the Bees going through
various line-ups right up until 1977 when they finally called it a
day, squeezed out of the pubs by the new-look punk bands.
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