Finch/Contraband
Finch (previously known as Stillwater) issued their first
single in January 1974. Owen Orford was a flashy frontman with a
confident rock voice and a neat line in microphone stand
acrobatics.
Original guitarist Bob Spencer was still in high school when
the band won the 1973 2SM/Pepsi Pop Poll for which the prize was a
contract with Picture Records, resulting in the aforementioned
single, And She Sings.
Finch also appeared on the soundtrack album to the surfing film
Drouyn. Finch's three rock tracks - Sail Away, Lady
of Truth and Roses - appeared alongside jazzy
incidental material.
The band settled into the pub rock circuit and released the
self-financed (and hugely underrated) Thunderbird album in
May 1976. In December they released the excellent single Short
Changed Again, which peaked at Number 29 on the Sydney chart.
Finch moved to Melbourne at the end of 1976 and embarked on a
successful tour with Supernaut. In March 1977, just as Finch was
making commercial headway, 19-year old Spencer left to replace Red
Symons in Skyhooks. Bassist Tony Strain also let the band.
The band went through a rash of new players (Gary Quince,
Skeeta Pereira, Sam Mallett and Graham Thompson) before the
line-up stabilized with the arrival of Mark Evans (ex AC/DC) on
bass and Graham Kennedy and Chris Jones on guitars.
The band signed to CBS/Epic and issued the single One More
Time in October 1977. Dave Hinds (ex-Rabbit) replaced Chris
Jones (who joined Feather) in December of that year. The band
began to move in a more commercial hard rock direction, and the
next single, Where Were You? reached Number 14 in Melbourne
and Number 33 in Sydney in February 1978. The album Nothing To
Hide produced a second single, also called Nothing To Hide
(May 1978).
Finch then signed with CBS's US subsidiary label, Portrait. Due
to the presence of a Dutch band also called Finch, the band then
became Contraband. Portrait issued Contraband's debut single, That's
Your Way in October 1978 and in that same month, Barry Cram
(ex-Avalanche) replaced McFarlane, who joined Swanee.
The Contraband album was released in May 1979,
accompanied by the singles Rainin' Again and Gimme Some
Lovin' (a cover of the Spencer Davis Group track). The album
created interest in the USA but was not successful in
Australia.
Portrait dropped Contraband later in the year and the band
broke up.
|