Eggs Over Easy
New York threesome Eggs Over Easy travelled to the UK in 1970
to record an album at Olympic Studios with Chas Chandler,
ostensibly for Mercury Records.
The sessions certainly took place, but back in New York
something went wrong on the business front and the band were
advised to stay in London until it was sorted out.
With nothing better to do, they persuaded the landlord at their
local jazz pub to give them a couple of gigs, and on 13 May 1971,
debuted at the Tally Ho pub in Kentish Town with former Animals
drummer John Steel sitting in.
The Eggs' brand of quiet, laid-back country rock and soul - and
a repertoire of over 100 songs which included covers of great Motown
titles and songs by The Band and The
Rolling Stones - earned them an immediate residency and pub
rock was born.
As word spread, they caught the imagination of Brinsley
Schwarz's manager Dave Robinson and the group's bass player, Nick
Lowe.
After a short UK tour supporting John
Mayall, Eggs Over Easy returned to the US - where the album Good
'n' Cheap was finally released on A&M in 1972 - and they
disbanded shortly afterwards.
Although they were only in London for a matter of months, the
effect the Eggs had on music in the Britain's capital would last
for years.
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