Bachman Turner Overdrive
Bachman
Turner Overdrive's origins can be traced back to the substantial
commercial achievements of The Guess Who in the late 60s.
Randy Bachman was a prominent member of that
band but left in 1970 when his Mormon beliefs began to rankle at the
excesses of a touring rock & roll band. After recording an
unsuccessful solo album, he teamed up with his drumming brother Robbie
Bachman, C. F. Turner (bass) and another former Guess Who colleague,
Chad Allan, to form Brave Belt.
Two non-charting albums for
Reprise followed before the group changed name to Bachman Turner
Overdrive and replaced Allan with guitarist (and brother) Tim Bachman.
The suffix was taken from a trucking magazine, Overdrive.
An eponymous debut album
followed in 1973 for Mercury, after which the group embarked on the
sort of strenuous touring schedule which would become something of a
trademark. While the album contained nothing revolutionary, few denied
the energy or authenticity of the performances. A casualty of the
first tour was Tim Bachman, later replaced by Blair Thornton on
guitar.
In December 1973 they enjoyed
their first US chart hit with Blue Collar. Subsequent singles
and albums would all fare well in the US charts. Taken from Bachman
Turner Overdrive 2 (1974), Takin' Care Of Business provided
a substantial US hit, before the November release of You Ain't Seen
Nothing Yet. The group's signature tune, it was originally written
for Bachman's brother and manager Gary, who suffered from a stammer -
hence the song's stuttering hook. The single became a US Number 1 and peaked
at Number 2 in the UK charts.
None of the group's subsequent
releases had the same impact. Randy Bachman was clearly losing
interest and left the group in 1977. Jim Clench replaced him in the
wake of the Randy-dominated Freeways (1977), after which the
group shortened its name to BTO. Their achievements in this form were
minimal, and Bachman's subsequent work with Ironhorse and Union proved
similarly undistinguished.
He re-formed Bachman Turner
Overdrive in 1984, and they continued to tour throughout the decade
while Bachman himself would split his time between the band and Guess
Who reformations. The band underwent personnel changes until half of
it was new. Then, at almost the same time, the "old" band formed to
play with Ringo Starr on his nationwide tour. It was messy, and the
name of their new record didn't help - Bachman Turner Overdrive
had completely different songs from the 1974 record.
Bachman Turner Overdrive were
still touring live as of 2000, albeit with a much-changed line-up.
| The
Band |
Randy Bachman
Guitar/vocals
Fred Turner
Bass
|
Robbie Bachman
Drums
Tim Bachman
Guitar
|
Chad Allan
Guitar
Blair Thornton
Guitar
Jim Clench
Guitar/vocals |
|