The
Zombies were the only British group of the 60s who could have
seriously given
The Beatles a real run for their money. Although comparatively
unrecognised, their body of work is every bit as innovative, complex
and appealing as that of the Fab Four.
Without a Brian Epstein, a George Martin and the
marketing might of
The Beatles machine behind them however, The
Zombies (although hugely popular at their peak) have largely remained
a closely guarded secret for the fortunate few.
Rod Argent, Paul Atkinson, and Hugh Grundy met at
school in 1961 and soon introduced Paul Arnold, who in turn introduced
the others to singer Colin Blunstone. The group began playing the
1950s standards which were common to bands everywhere in England at
the time. Paul Arnold was replaced on bass by Chris White in 1962 and
the band began playing shows around St. Albans, building up a loyal
following over the course of the next year.
In 1963 they entered a local band contest and
advanced through the heats. Even before the final, they were offered a
deal by Decca and then went on to win the contest, turned professional
and in1964 began recording. She's Not There was released as the
first single, and was a worldwide smash hit. The tune made number 1 in
America making The Zombies only the second UK Beat group (after
The Beatles) to have a US Number One
The next single, Leave Me Be, failed to
shake up the charts, while the third single, the sublime Tell Her
No, was a minor hit in Britain and a Top 10 record in America. The
Zombies then toured America where they played enormous halls and
arenas to wildly enthusiastic fans. Riding the British Invasion craze,
they got a taste of the Beatlemania experience. The group was also
hugely successful in Japan and The Philippines (where they once had
five records in the Top Ten).
Back in England, Zombies records failed to do as
well and Decca (with a full roster of beat groups) were poised to dump
them. But the band stayed alive, recording single after superb single
that unfortunately failed to break through. Disillusionment ultimately set in, and although
the group managed to win a new contract with CBS Records, they decided
to break up, but not before recording a final album, Odessey and
Oracle (the misspelling was intentional) at Abbey Road Studios
late in 1967. This incredible LP was self-produced and more
representative of the band's real sound. To this day, it stands
alongside Sgt Peppers and Pet Sounds as absolute
milestone recordings of the Sixties.
Almost
as an afterthought, Time Of The Season was released as a single
and one radio station in America fell in love with it and kept playing
it.
Ever so slowly, it caught on, and then, overnight, it broke all
over the country - becoming a Top 5 smash in late 1968 and early 1969.
CBS clamoured for more product and promoters began offering huge sums
of money for the band to re-group. But it all came too late - It had
already been a year since the break-up, and The Zombies declined all
offers. Rod Argent and Chris had already begun work on the band
Argent, and Colin Blunstone had begun a solo career.
The Zombies have since been recognized as one of
the most under-rated of the 60's beat groups (their three biggest hits
are now rock standards, and She's Not There has been covered by
other artists such as Vanilla Fudge, Santana and
UK Subs).
Rod Argent
Keyboards Colin Blunstone Vocals Paul Atkinson
Guitar Hugh Grundy
Drums Paul Arnold
Bass Chris White
Bass