Category Archives: Uncategorized

TRIUMPH to tour North America for 50th Anniversary

It’ll be 2026 soon, and what bands will fans of Canadian rock fan be looking to go see? RUSH….THE GUESS WHO…..APRIL WINE….TRIUMPH! Announced a couple of days ago, TRIUMPH has reunited, added a few players, and added APRIL WINE as the opening act for a 50th Anniversary tour of North America. The band last reunited in 2008, for 2 shows, and before that last toured with Rik Emmett, Mike Levine, and Gil Moore in 1988. Triumph, with Phil X in place of Emmett, was resurrected in ’92 for one more album and tour. Phil X is also involved again for this tour.

For this tour Triumph is adding a few players to help out. To clear things up, the band posted a few days ago – “We want to clear up something that popped up during today’s tour announcement: this is NOT a tribute band tour. This is a Triumph tour. We’re putting in the work to bring our show and our songs back to you, the fans. And to help us deliver a truly world-class show, we’ll be joined on-stage by a few friends – Todd Kerns and Brent Fitz from Slash’s band, and Phil X on loan from the mighty Bon Jovi. Big things ahead. We can’t wait to share it with you. See you on the road! – Gil, Rik & Mike

(Brent Fitz and Todd Kerns are also part of Canadian band Toque).

More recently Triumph has been the subject of a Documentary (Rock & Roll Machine, 2021), as well as a Tribute album earlier this year and most recently were honored by the Canadian Songwriters Hall Of Fame (see clip below).

LINKS:

I-Heart Radio interview with Gil Moore HERE.

ASIA – ‘Live in England’, release in new year

Well, this comes out in the new year, and I am excited to hear this! Saw the band when they played in Niagara Falls last year, and thought they sounded great. *Check out my interview with Harry Whitley from the beginning of his time with the band. Here is the press release, new video, artwork, track-listing, etc….

Today, legendary English rock supergroup ASIA are thrilled to announce their upcoming live album, ‘Asia – Live In England,’ due out on March 13, 2026 via Frontiers Music Srl. To celebrate the announcement, the band unveils the live version of their hit song “Heat Of The Moment,” alongside an official live video, available to view below.

Geoff Downes comments: “’Heat Of The Moment’ has an interesting story behind it. It was actually the final track John and I wrote for the ASIA album, and it ended up being the opening track and lead-off single. We threw it together in one afternoon. I had the verse, John had the chorus, although this was a guitar picking country-style piece in 3/4 time. We straightened it all out and bingo, there it was!”

He continues, “A couple of days later we wrote the middle 8 section, rehearsed it in the studio and recorded it straight down with band. Ironically, it still remains our most famous track to this day. Without it, I doubt the album would have been as big as it was, so I am very grateful to have been a part of the creation of HOTM. It’s still a really fun track to play live, and I hope it will bring back memories, and give pleasure to the listeners and fans all over the world for many years to come.”

Harry Whitley adds: “Playing ‘Heat Of The Moment’ live is always such an incredible experience, it’s always electrifying and this recording was no different – it was such an exciting night and a thrill to revisit all of ASIA’s catalog over the three nights. We’re really looking forward to fans hearing this whole live album and the others to follow…”

“This song carries decades of history – every note, every moment – and we hope listeners feel the same passion we pour into it night after night,” Virgil Donati states.

John Mitchell also expresses his love for this track: “’Heat Of The Moment’ is a very dear song close to my heart. Having performed it a vast number of times over the years both previously with the John Wetton solo band and with John and Geoff in Icon, from the quiet introspective acoustic version at The Borderline to the full band amped up version in front of 12000 strong in St Petersburg, it is both an uplifting anthem and a quiet tonic for the soul which never fails to bring warmth to the many.”

ASIA are back and roaring in their new, exhilarating line-up! Recorded live on the first of three unforgettable nights at Trading Boundaries in Sussex in April 2025, this release captures the band performing their iconic 1982 debut album ‘ASIA’ in full, along with a selection of their greatest hits.
Featuring Geoff Downes (keys), Virgil Donati (drums – ex-Planet X), John Mitchell (guitars – Arena, It Bites etc.) and the astonishing Harry Whitley (on bass and vocals), this fresh incarnation of ASIA brings both reverence for the classics and a thrilling new energy to the stage. The setlist includes fan favorites like “Heat Of The Moment,” “Only Time Will Tell,” “Sole Survivor,” “One Step Closer” and “Time Again,” alongside video-era and bonus tracks such as “Ride Easy,” “Video Killed The Radio Star,” “The Heat Goes On” and “Daylight” (video exclusive).
Geoff Downes shares: “Revisiting the entire first ASIA album brought all the great memories flooding back from 43 years ago. In the studio with John, Steve, Carl and, of course, the great Mike Stone at the production helm. I think at the time we knew we’d made a good album but could not have predicted the enormous success that followed, that made the band a household name across the world, and particularly in America. That said, it was a result of much hard work and effort from everyone involved. So, when I had the opportunity to put together the live album with the current and fantastic line-up of ASIA and in collaboration with Frontiers Music, it was really a no-brainer.”
“I was reminded of what a collection of great songs and performances made up the album – variety and musical dynamics to the fore. When we recorded it again earlier this year, I was drawn to some of the less featured tracks and realized how much they played an important part of overall album, in addition of course to the signature tracks such as ‘Heat Of The Moment,’ ‘Only Time Will Tell’ etc.”, he continued. “We did this for you, the fans, and hope you really enjoy hearing these songs in the live setting performed in their entirety once again and enjoy it as much as we did creating and performing it”.

TRACKLIST:

1. Heat Of The Moment

2. Only Time Will Tell

3. Sole Survivor

4. One Step Closer

5. Time Again

6. Wildest Dreams

7. Without You

8. Cutting It Fine

9. Here Comes The Feeling

10. Ride Easy (Bonus track)

11. Video Killed The Radio Star (Bonus track)

12. The Heat Goes On (Bonus track)

With ASIA’s legacy spanning over 40 years – from multi-million selling albums like ‘ASIA,’ ‘Alpha,’ and ‘Astra’ to defining the sound of the MTV era – this new line-up proves that the Year of the Dragon is bringing the legendary songs to life for a whole new generation of fans.

This is just the first of three live releases from Trading Boundaries, each capturing a full classic album from their initial trilogy in concert in audio and video. Experience the magic of ASIA, live, where past and present collide in a spectacular display of musicianship and passion.

LINKS:

http://www.originalasia.com

https://www.facebook.com/asiatheband/

https://www.instagram.com/asiatheband/?hl=en

NEKTAR: ‘Fortyfied’ Receives Definitive Re-Mastered Re-Release

After Being Unavailable for 15 Years – OUT NOW!

NEKTAR formed in Hamburg in 1969 and is well known for iconic progressive rock albums such as A Tab in the Ocean, Remember The Future and Recycled. After four decades of successful albums and tours, the band reformed to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Nektar’s formation.

The tour was recorded and released under the name Fortyfied. This live album was only briefly available on Roye Albrighton’s own label but has been unavailable for over 15 years. This is the first mainstream release of the recordings.

This re-mastered 2CD set features a line-up of Roye Albrighton, Ron Howden, Peter Pichl and Klaus Henatsch. This remastered re-release is endorsed by the relevant line-up of Nektar including the estate of Roye Albrighton.

Available from all good retailers:

Amazon 2CD set: https://geni.us/40fied

Apple Music:  https://music.apple.com/us/album/fortyfied-live-live-2025-remaster/1852092120

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/0Az7PuTffnB74lFANToqSE

Also available via Cherry Red’s website:  https://www.cherryred.co.uk/label/explore-rights-management/nektar-fortyfied-cd-edition

LUCIFER’S FRIEND – Mean Machine (1981)

A band, and album that just don’t get enough attention! Mean Machine was LUCIFER’S FRIEND’s eighth album, and last for some 13 years. The album was a reunion with singer John Lawton, who’d left the band in 1976 to join Uriah Heep, while Lucifer’s Friend carried on for a pair of albums (and live shows) with Mike Starrs (ex Colosseum II). Lawton had left (fired) from Heep in ’79, and recorded a solo album in 1980, with members of Lucifer’s Friend backing him. But, the band was still promised (owed) Elektra one more album. Now, if you are familiar with Lucifer’s Friend’s catalog, you’ll know that the band changed with every album; not so much the personnel, but the direction. The debut was a heavy album, seen as a proto metal album in 1970, that sat comfortably alongside Deep Purple’s In Rock, Uriah Heep’s debut, and Black Sabbath’s first couple of albums. But nothing following that matched the heaviness of the band’s debut, instead veering off into fusion, and including more brass and orchestrated instruments.

Mean Machine brought the band back to being a guitar driven hard rock band. It fit in time with the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal, and was full of guitar riffs from Peter Hesslein opening a number of well written serious rockers, with John Lawton returning to a more powerful sound, than some of the softer rock he’d sang during Heep’s pop-aimed era. Mean Machine is a solid album of 80s hard rock, well produced, starting with “One Way Street To Heartbreak”, and not really letting up ’til the end. Riffs, melodies, harmonies, memorable choruses, and great songs like “Hey Driver”, “Fire and Rain”, “One Night Sensation”, and “Born To The City”. The more pop anthem “Action” was released as a single, but neither the single or the album did much, as Elektra did very little to promote it; a shame as this is really worth hearing.

The band disbanded again after this, but would reform in the mid 90s for Sumo Grip. But, if you come across Mean Machine, check it out, a great underheard gem of 80s hard rock.

MAGNUM – 10 favorite album covers

Legendary British rockers MAGNUM’s debut album was 1978’s Kingdom Of Madness. The band recorded throughout the 80s, took a break in the mid 90s, and returned in 2002. Aside from classic tracks like “Kingdom Of Madness”, “On A Storyteller’s Night”, “How Far Jerusalem”, “Days Of No Trust”, and many others, much of the band’s catalogue would become eye catching detailed works of art, created by Rodney Matthews, who started on the band’s fourth album Chase The Dragon, from 1982. He would do many others following that, particularly since the band returned in the early 2000s. Magnum’s last studio release was 2024’s Here Comes The Rain. The band’s guitarist & songwriter Tony Clarkin passed away just at the time of the album’s release, and the band took a long break. Before the year was out Magnum reformed to put on a number of shows paying tribute to Tony. Rodney Matthews also announced his retirement from creating artwork for album covers as well. Earlier this year Magnum released Live At KKs Steel Mill, recorded on the last tour with Tony Clarkin. Below I have selected 10 of my favorite Magnum album covers, mostly done by Rodney Matthews, but not all. I’ve left few explanations. Feel free to drop your own favorite Magnum covers in the comments!

I did not choose these based on my favorite Magnum albums, just the covers….(though the first 3 might happen to be in my top 5 Magnum albums).

Escape From Shadow Garden (2014)

Not sure what’s going on in many of these covers, usually a lot, with lots of details,

On A Storytellers Night (1985)

The first Magnum song I recall hearing way back would be the title song to this one. A fitting cover theme for the title.

Into The Valley Of The Moonking (2009)

The album that really got me in to Magnum. Love the circle frame, like looking into a crystal ball.

Chase The Dragon (1982)

Again, the first Rodney Matthews Magnum cover, and easiest one to find in Canada, which most of the band’s catalogue not getting released here.

Here Comes The Rain (2024)

The band’s last studio album. Love the idea and the colors.

Sleepwalking (1992)

I really like this one. Very colorful, different, a few references to other Magnum albums. A US flag (and “Only In America” single), despite not getting a North American release.

Princess Alice And The Broken Arrow (2007)

The first album of Magnum’s early 2000s return to feature Rodney Matthews work. Somewhat reminiscent if Storyteller’s Night.

On The 13th Day (2012)

Just like this one for the colors, the lettering, and the flag holding the title.

The Valley Of Tears (2017)

One of a few created by then-bass player Al Barrow. Love the concept and the colors in the the sky. Al also worked on a number of Magnum cover layouts, photos…..

Wings Of Heaven Live (2008)

The bands live recording from their 2007 of Wings Of Heaven (anniversary) tour, so it retains a few aspects of the studio album cover, again using the circle .

http://www.magnumonline.co.uk/

ALICE COOPER – Top 10 Solo albums

Well, I started out (months ago!) compiling a Top 50 list of favorite Alice Cooper solo songs. Many Alice lists I see on Youtube (and elsewhere) tend to mix the original band and his solo recordings into one list, but for me, I see (and hear) a big difference, so I absolutely have to separate the 2. Much like I wouldn’t compile a favorite list of Black Sabbath albums and include Ozzy or Dio albums! Anyway, a good half of this list was easy to come up with, but the bottom half got a bit tougher to choose. Feel free to leave your picks in the comments.

Hey Stoopid (1991)

I like Trash when it came out, but over time it hasn’t aged well with me, being Alice’s ‘Bon Jovi’ album, and too many guests that I’m not a fan of. So, Hey Stoopid is the follow up, still in that 80s style, and with even more guest players and co-writers. BUT, gone is the Bon Jovi feel and just better songs, and a bit more bite. I also like the cover-art here. But aside from maybe 2 songs (I don’t need to hear “Feed My Frankenstein” ever again), I love all of this. Favorites being “Snakebite”, “Dangerous Tonight”, “Little By Little”, “Hurricane Years”, and “Burning Our Bed”.

The Eyes Of Alice Cooper (2003)

I’ve seen this one ranked near the bottom on many Alice Cooper album rankings on youtube, and really wonder why(?) I think this is a great album, full of Alice rockers and ballads, and humor! Not perfect (I can do without “Novocain”), but “What Do You Want From Me”, “Man Of The Year”, “Detroit City” (w/ Wayne Kramer), “Love Should Never Feel Like This”, as well as the ballads “The Song That Didn’t Rhyme” and softer “Be With You A While”, are good to outstanding by me. Alice uses his touring band here, without an excess of ‘guest’ players, so it sounds like a band album. The original CD release of this album came with 4 different eye (and circle) colors.

Welcome To My Nightmare (1975)

An easy favorite for most; it’s the album that started off Alice’s solo career (effectively marking an end to the original band). His Nightmare band featured guitarists Dick Wagner and Steve Hunter (as well as the rest of Lou Reed’s band), who would work with Alice for some years to come But the concept, theatrics, and songs here are just classic. This included the anthem “Department Of Youth”, the live favorite “Cold Ethyl”, the top 20 hit ballad ” Only Women Bleed”, a guest appearance from Vincent Price on “Black Widow”, the introduction of the (recurring) character “Steven”,… The album would be made into a TV special aired as Alice Cooper: The Nightmare. More recently a live show from this tour was released on Record Store Day, featuring Alice’s new band performing a set that included (almost) the entire album, as well as a few previous AC hits. Alice followed up this album with Alice Cooper Goes To Hell, which can be seen as a sequel…

Brutal Planet (2000)

Alice didn’t record a lot during the 90s, like many other older artists, but as he tended to do ever few albums, he switched gears, creating perhaps his most ‘metal’ album this one, released in the summer of 2000. Taking in sounds of industrial or new metal at the time, with a heavier sound, and darker lyrics,, reflecting what was currently happening in music and the world. Produced by Bob Marlette, who’s credits included Rob Zombie, Marylin Manson, Rob Halford, and many others. Loved the title track, as well as favorites “Blow Me A Kiss”, “Pick Up The Bones”, “Cold Machines”, and the ballad “Take It Like A Woman”. The follow up, Dragontown, was pretty much a sequel to Brutal Planet. I liked that one too, just not as strong IMO.

Raise Your Fist And Yell (1987)

The follow up to Alice’s comeback album Constrictor. Taking on the 80s metal sound, and inspired by current happenings (the PMRC hearings), and slasher films! The second to feature Kane Roberts as guitarist and co-writer throughout. I played this album non-stop! Not a bum track here. I can still pull this out and love it. Featured the hit “Freedom”, plus “Prince Of Darkness” (from the John Carpenter movie), and favorites like “Give The Radio Back”, “Time To Kill”, and the slasher trilogy on side 2 (“Chop, Chop, Chop”, “Gail”, “Roses On White Lace”). Saw this tour twice.

Dada (1983)

The last album in what’s been labelled Alice’s ‘blackout’ years, and his last for Warner Brothers. This, and the 1 before it sold poorly, with little promotion, and no touring. I bought this one, and the 2 before it, off the 99 cent rack at a local convenience store! But hey, these weren’t bad at all! Dada being my favorite of Alice’s early 80s 4 album run, where he changed the look and sound to fit with the times. Dada featured a fresh sound, good songs, and flow, with standouts like “Former Lee Warmer” (formerly Warner), the hilarious “I Love America”, and epic “Pass The Gun Around”, highlighted by one of Dick Wagner’s most memorable solos.

From The Inside (1978)

Following Alice’s stay at an asylum for alcoholism, he co-wrote a lot of this with Bernie Taupin (Elton John), and used members of Elton’s band, as well as the likes of Steve Lukather, David Foster… From The Inside featured the hit ballad (Alice’s 4th in a row), “How You Gonna See Me Now”, as well as memorable rockers like “Serious”, “Wish I Were Born In Beverly Hills”, and the title track, plus a few more ballads and lighter cuts. A pretty clean sounding album, featuring stories inspired by his stay in the asylum, and the effect on those around him (“For Veronica’s Sake” about his dog). A solid album. Check out the non-LP b-side “No Tricks” as well, a duet with soul singer Betty Wright.

Zipper Catches Skin (1982)

See above! I played the heck out of this one. Lots of fun rockers like “Adaptable (Anything For You)”, “Tag, You’re It”, “Zorro’s Ascent”, as well as “I Am The Future” (from Class Of ’84). “Make That Money (Scrooge’s Song)”, and the hilarious title of “I’m Alive (That Was The Day My Dead Pet Returned To Save My Life)”. Featured guitarists (and co-writers) John Nitzinger, Dick Wagner, Billy Steele, as well as Mike Pinera, and players Erik Scott (bass), and Duane Hitchings (keys), among others. Wagner later claimed there was a lot of crack cocaine use on this one, but I liked it.

Constrictor (1986)

Alice’s comeback album, after finally kicking his previous habit (cocaine), made sober, and full of energy. The first to feature new guitarist Kane Roberts, as well as a return to a hard rock guitar sound and the classic Alice image (eye make up and leather). Produced by Beau Hill and Michael Wagener, who were big at the time with many 80s metal acts. The drum sound kinda gives this a dated sound now, but at the time, I’d never thought I’d get to see Alice (being a newer fan, and Alice being out of the public eye), but I got to see this tour. Constrictor was the first Alice album in years to chart, and get any radio play. Cuts like “Teenage Frankenstein”, “Give It Up”, and “Life And Death Of The Party” were favorites. It also included “He’s Back (The Man Behind The Mask)”, from Friday The 13th: Part VI (Jason Lives).

The Last Temptation (1994)

This last spot was the toughest for me to decide on… The Last Temptation was an Alice Cooper concept album, a series of morality plays….Anyway, the full story was explained over a series of comics by Neil Gaiman and Michael Zulli. The Last Temptation opened with “Sideshow”, and followed on with excellent rockier cuts like “Nothing’s Free”, “Bad Place Alone”, the title track, the single “Lost In America”, and lighter songs such as “Stolen Prayer” (co-written with Chris Cornell) and favorite “It’s Me” (co-written with Tommy Shaw and Jack Blades). The album featured guitarist Stef Burns (Y & T), as well as Derek Sherinian (keys), among others, as we as guest Dan Wexler (Icon) who co-wrote a number of songs, and played guitar on one. There was no tour for this album, but eventually a few songs were worked in to the live show. The 90s were a tough time to be an Alice fan!

And then…..Paranormal, Lace and Whiskey, Goes To Hell, Dirty Diamonds, Flush The Fashion, Trash, Along Came A Spider, Special Forces, Welcome 2 My Nightmare, Detroit Stories, Road,

PETER GOALBY – Don’t Think This Is Over (a review)

The third post-Uriah Heep solo release from Peter Goalby was discovered earlier this in a storage unit. 9 more songs that were thought lost decades ago. With the discovery of these songs, Paul Hodson (keyboards, programming) and Eddy Morton (guitar solos) – who worked on the previous songs released (Easy With The Heartaches and I Will Come Runnin’) were called upon to add overdubs. Former bandmate and longtime friend Mick Box added a brilliant solo to 1 track, and John Sinclair also worked on 1 track. In all, taking these late 80s recordings of demos to being a properly produced album.

I was hesitant to post a lengthy review, figuring I could easily be accused of bias, but oh well. I am excited to see this out (though not a fraction of how excited Peter must be). The finished product of this is probably beyond what fans could expect to still be made available… Don’t Think This Is Over is even more so impressive than the 2 CD released that came before, full of melodies, hooks, and Peter’s passionate vocals. This album is a great mix of different songs, with the easily likeable upbeat aor like the lead off cut “I’ll Be The One”, as well as “It’s Just My Heart Breaking”, “Heart What Heart”(with that keyboard intro being reminiscent of “I Will Come Runnin”), and the title song! Then there are those more unique songs here like “Another Paper Moon”, which begins as a piano ballad and builds into a power ballad, something unlike anything else in Peter’s catalogue; love the string sounds and synths throughout this. “The Sound Of A Nation” is more of an anthemic rock song highlighted by Mick Box’s guitar solo, which gives it a good lift. “Show Some Emotion” is my favorite here; a moving track, that starts softly and builds up, with one of Peter’s standout vocal performances here. The disc closes, fittingly with “I Don’t Wanna Fight”. This song was released as a single back in 1988, to mixed reviews, but the musical arrangement lacked a bit of weight, but this has been completely re-done here, with former Heep bandmate John Sinclair taking Peter’s vocals and putting them in to a completely new arrangement on keyboards, and along with Peter Kent’s guitar work, this one sounds like a brand new song, up to date and lively.

So many potential hits here. As I’ve said before, Peter’s specialty was writing choruses that are easily likeable and memorable, and songs that would be major hits for numerous acts in the 80s and 90s (probably still some now), as he’d intended to make his mark as a songwriter. I think he’s achieved that by now, with these 3 albums. Imagine a few of these either on a Heep album or on the radio back then!? This may not be the last thing we hear from him, but more than we expected still, and in time for Christmas!

*Artwork by Michael Inns, fitting nicely in the series of the previous PG releases.

*Check out the press release (edit) below, as well as links to Don’t Think This Is Over.

Uriah Heep’s Ex-Lead Singer Peter Goalby Announces the Completion and Release of his Long Lost Solo Album Don’t Think This Is Over – OUT NOW!

Peter Goalby was the lead singer of Uriah Heep, Trapeze and Fable but has now retired from the music industry after an illustrious career.

Peter had been living with the knowledge he’d recorded a solo album just after leaving Uriah Heep but it was only when a poorly labelled DAT was spotted, at a storage facility over 30 years later, that the lost album was found.

Peter Goalby explained the background to the release:In 1987 I was offered a recording and publishing contract with RAK Records just after I’d left Uriah Heep.  I thought these songs would be very commercial in the 1980s and Smokie recorded Fallin’ Apart. I later found out the master tapes had been lost and I silently carried the disappointment that music I’d put my heart and soul into was gone forever.  Never say never!”

The lost album’s release follows the successful release of Easy With The Heartaches and then I Will Come Runnin’.  Don’t Think This Is Over is OUT NOW from all good retailers:

Amazon CD: https://geni.us/DontThinkCD

Apple Music: https://geni.us/PGapplemusic

Spotify: https://geni.us/PGspotify

All Peter Goalby’s solo albums are also available from Cherry Red: https://www.cherryred.co.uk/artists/peter-goalby/

LIGHTHOUSE – Paul Hoffert discusses One Fine Morning and more about legendary Canadian band

Many years ago I saw LIGHTHOUSE in St Catharines. I am sure i got tickets through the local magazine i wrote for, and recall going down to briefly meet Paul and a few bandmembers after the show. No pics, and I doubt he would recall that. Now, 2025 and I am very happy with this reissue package of the band’s classic Canadian rock album One Fine Morning. I interviewed Paul a couple of weeks back to talk about that era, and more about Lighthouse. Paul talks about the band’s early days leading up to their breakthrough album, working with legendary producer Jimmy Ienner, as well as a few of the band’s hits, Bob McBride, the album artwork, and the band’s current happenings. Lighthouse returns to St Catharines in April. The band also plays Guelph in February, and Pickering (w/ Five Man Electrical Band).

I want to start by talking about One Fine Morning. That was the band’s fourth album. I just want to ask you what kind of led up to that album because you guys had gone through some changes. You changed record labels and you added Bob McBride and things suddenly picked up with that album.

When Lighthouse first started, we had a kind of a fairy tale kind of a story about how to start a band and how to get a record deal. Skip and I met in New York City and I had a play running on Broadway for about six months and Skip was performing at the Electric Circus with his band, The Paupers.

And I just happened to go into the Electric Circus one evening and this Canadian band was playing there.  At the intermission Skip came over, recognized me, and said, You’re Paul Hoffert from Toronto. And I said, Oh my goodness, how would you even know that? We’re here in Manhattan, and so on and so forth.

And he said, Oh, well, I’m a rock and roll drummer, but I really like jazz and I always go down to the jazz clubs where you play.  So I know who you are, and this and that. We just chatted for a few minutes and then he had to go back on stage.

The next day, what are the chances that I take an Air Canada flight and sitting next to me is Skip Prokop, going back to Toronto. So we chatted, and got a chance to fill each other in on what our passions were personally and musically. And it turns out that both of us love film scores. Skip liked the really big Westerns where the horses would come over the horizon, you hear the French horn and the string sections. And I had scored two movies already and one of them won a prize at the Cannes Film Festival. So I was, you know, on a course towards becoming a film composer at that point.

Anyway, Skip said, Oh, that’s really interesting, because the night I saw him before, the night before was his last night with the Paupers. Skip was managed by Albert Grossman, who at the time, was without a doubt the most sort of famous rock and roll manager, managing everyone from Bob Dylan to Peter, Paul and Mary to Janis Joplin, for example.

And his manager, Albert, had asked Skip to put together a new band for Janis Joplin because a record company deemed that her band, which was fine for getting her career started, was not good enough to do recordings because Janis Joplin had started out as Janis Joplin. And then she became JANIS JOPLIN, and a whole different kind of requirement was needed for the quality of her band. So, Skip had been in discussion with Janis about how to make her band more higher quality. And he identified the weak link, as did many of the reviewers, as the guitar player. So, when he mentioned this to Janis that he planned to bring in another guitar player, Janis was very resistant. The two main problems that Janis had was, number one – the guitar player was her boyfriend; and number two – the guitar player was her drug dealer! So that was a problem. Skip mentioned this to me and he said, I don’t know if this is going to work out. But he said, I’m glad we met because I have this other idea. I love, film music. And he said, you know the Beatles!? And I said, yeah, everybody knows the Beatles. He said, Well, they can’t tour anymore because George Martin, their producer, is recording piccolo trumpets and string quartets and orchestras and all of these things. And then they’re no longer the Fab Four – they’re the Fab Four, plus hundreds of studio musicians, and all this stuff.

And it’s not economically feasible for them to reproduce that on the road. But I’ve been thinking, Wouldn’t it be great to have a rock and roll band that had orchestral resources like strings and horns, and that sort of thing, that could record with all of those instruments and then could go out and perform exactly what was on the record live!? And I said, Yeah, that’s exciting. Skip knew I was an arranger and an orchestrator. He said, Maybe we should do this together because I know all the rock and roll people. I know the record companies. I know the manager, my manager’s, Albert Grossman and so on, and, all about how to, you know, write music and do arrangements and so on and so forth. And maybe we could do it. He said, Now that things aren’t working with Janis, Would you consider putting together a new band with me? And I said, Well, let me think about it. I’ll speak with my wife. I was married to Brenda Hoffert (still), and we had a couple of little kids. I said, OK, let me get back to you. I got back to Skip a couple of weeks later, and I said, Yeah, but I don’t know anything about the music business. I don’t know how do you put together a band, how do you get a record deal…These are things that you have to bring to the table. And Skip said, Of course, I know about all that stuff. So I said, so what do you do? How do you get a record deal? And he said, Oh, we have to write some songs. I said, OK, we have to do a demo. right !? So, Skip came over to my house; we wrote four songs. We went into a recording studio and we recorded those four songs as a demo. And we took them down to New York. The next morning, Skip called his record company at the time, Verve MGM Records, and asked to speak to the artist and repertoire guy, (A&R people, I used to call it. I don’t think they did). At 10 o’clock in the morning, we called and Skip said, can we come down? We have a demo tape. Can we leave it with you? We hope that you’ll listen to it. And I have a new partner and yada, yada, yada. And they said, Sure, come down in about an hour. So, at 11 o’clock, we went to the record company and we anticipated what would have happened in those days and what might even happen today, which was you would hand your demo tape to a receptionist or somebody. And then if you were really lucky, they might forward it to somebody else who might listen to it. But that didn’t happen to us. What happened was the A&R guy said, come into the listening room. I’ll listen to it. He said, how many songs we have? We said four songs. He said, that’s great. It’s not too long. So, we listened to the demo.

They paused for a minute, and he said, I get it. I know what you guys are trying to do. And we thought he got the thing about the Beatles and we could have a band and we could go and do that. But you guys probably know that the record business for the last couple of decades has been earning all this money by the big band era – Frank Sinatra, Duke Ellington, all the big bands of various kinds. And he said, What happens is the students that go to all the high schools and colleges and play in the marching bands and the stage bands take lessons at school and they learn how to play trumpets and trombones and string instruments and all that kind of stuff. And then we sell print music of all the arrangements that are on the big band records and the schools all play them and we close that loop where the schools are doing that and it’s a very good business model. But now there’s this thing called rock and roll and rock and roll is just like drums and guitars.

And nobody can figure out like how you can’t go to the schools and say, you know, here’s an arrangement of, you know, what I’m talking about. So they said, you guys have figured that out because you figured out how to take the rock and roll thing that’s happening and get all those kids who can listen to the stuff that, like on your demo, that has a string quartet and a quartet of horns and a rock and roll rhythm section and do that. So, he said, really, I enjoyed your stuff. Why don’t you go and have lunch?! And when you come back, I’ll have played your demo for some of my colleagues, and depending on what they say, we’ll talk further or not. When we had lunch, we came back at one o’clock the same day that we had called to ask if we could bring our demo down.

They brought us into the conference room and in the conference room was the president of the record company, the vice president of finance. A whole bunch of other people that used to work at all kind of companies called stenographers and secretaries before computers who could actually, would have to, you could dictate contracts and stuff and then they would type them out and then actually, print it out and then you’d have a contract. They said, we want to sign you guys. We’ve talked about it. We think you’re perfect for the label. And we’re willing to give you a really great contract. But we understand that we’re the first label that you’ve shown the stuff to. And we’re concerned that you’ll start shopping it around to different labels and maybe one of the other labels can outbid us or something. So we’re going to make you an offer – If you’re willing to sign a record deal today, we’ll draft it. We’ll give each of you (Skip and myself), we’ll give you a total of 30,000 bucks, 15,000 bucks each, just as a signing incentive. (Well, $30,000 then was worth 250,000 bucks. So, we got the equivalent). Well, a pile of money and we’ll fly your band. Didn’t have a name yet, but we’ll fly your band down to New York. We’ll record you at Electric Ladyland. We’ll spend a ton of money breaking you so that we’ll support you in this and that. And that’s it. But you want some time to think it over. We can only give you a half hour. And if you want to do the deal, we’ll start drafting the contracts. By the time you leave here at five or six o’clock in the afternoon, you can sign the contracts, and we’ll have the checks drawn. You can walk out with a bunch of money and we can move forward. And if you don’t decide to do that, then we withdraw the offer because we don’t want to get him in…whatever. That was the offer.  So, they left the room, and I looked at Skip and he looked at me and, we basically didn’t have to say anything. It was basically, what the fuck!? I mean, we’re not going to do this deal? So, we did the deal. So then we had that.

And I was sort of, floating on a cloud because I missed the opportunity to write some songs for a demo. And this band thing that Skip and I had talked about and we had a record deal.

I said, OK, now that we have a record deal, what do we do? And he said, Oh, we need a manager because we need to play gigs. Tomorrow we’ll go see Albert Grossman, my manager, and he’ll be happy that we already have a record deal because that’s one of the hardest things for a manager to do is get the record deal. The next day we went to see Albert Grossman and we offered him the management of Lighthouse, and Albert, unfortunately, thought that our idea was a terrible idea. And he said, Absolutely not. I just put together a band called the Electric Flag, and that’s a nine-piece sort of horn blues band. We just came from our first tour and I lost $110,000 because there’s too many people across this. It’s just really a bad idea. And I basically came back and said, No more bands with more than five people.

So, OK, so I was on a high and then we’re on a low. Now, Albert Grossman didn’t want to manage us. As we’re walking out of Albert Grossman’s office, we meet this guy, Vinnie Fusco, who Skip knew because he was actually an accountant and he managed Albert’s office. He said to Skip, What’s going on? And Skip said, Oh, this is my new partner, and we put together this band. We have this great idea. We brought it to Albert to manage us, but he turned us down. And he said, What’s the idea? We explained to him what we had explained to others. And he said, he said, I think Albert’s really wrong on this one. He said, This is a fantastic idea! He said, I’ll manage you. He said, you think that Albert Grossman comes into the office in the morning and calls out to agents to try to get gigs for Janis Joplin and all those things. I get to the office in the morning and I say, hello, is Vinnie Fusco at the Albert Grossman agency? And I do all of the grunt work. And then Albert signs the contracts. So, he said, I’ll manage you. And he said, It won’t make any difference. I’ll just pick up the phone and say, is Vinnie Fusco from the Albert Grossman agency? So we agreed to have Vinnie Fusco manage us.

We started recording our first Lighthouse album. And what happened was that every day that we were recording, Vinnie would start bringing in record executives from the other record companies and just take a little break and press the button in the studio. And we come in and he’d say, Oh, this is so-and-so from Columbia Records. And then next day, this is so-and-so from Warner Records. Then I think (maybe) the third record company was RCA Victor. And in fact, what Jimmy had doing was he was shopping the band that we had already signed and already gotten the checks and already told our wives we were going to buy houses. The money was already notionally spent.

And they said the deal is all set. RCA is going to take over everything. They know about MGM. They’re going to buy out MGM. They’ll pay MGM whatever MGM had laid out so far. And they’re going to give them some percentage points. You guys don’t have to worry about it. It’s not your money. And now it’s a million-dollar deal that RCA came up with because he said you guys probably haven’t thought about it, but Albert wasn’t wrong when he said that it cost a fortune to go on the road and tour because you guys are going to have a 13-piece band. And I looked up the technical requirements, and the gigs that you’re going to be playing, a lot of them aren’t going to have recording or mixing consoles with enough inputs to be able to mix the strings and the horns and all of that stuff. So, RCA has agreed to build you a custom sound system with 48 inputs and microphones, buy you a truck, get you the big W bass cabinet so that it’s going to sound fantastic in the audience, and so on and so forth. So that’s how we got started. And along with that, Vinny put a couple of extra things in the recording contract that we didn’t have with the MGM contract. Number one, RCA Victor guaranteed that our first concert in the United States would be a sold-out concert at Carnegie Hall, and that Skip and I would have 100% creative freedom to produce the records and do whatever the heck we wanted. And we didn’t have to deal with the label – no suits, no skirts coming up to do that. So that’s what we did.

The very first concert that we did was in Canada, and RCA sent us a New York promo guy, and our first concert was at a place called The Rock Pile. It was a rock and roll club in the Masonic Temple, at the corner of Davenport and Yonge. And somehow, this New York promo guy had gotten in touch with Duke Ellington, who was performing in Toronto, and got Duke to come to introduce our band now with the name Lighthouse at our very first international gig, first Canadian gig. He had all these photographers and television station camera people there, and Duke Ellington showed up and got in front of the thing, and he said, I’m sure you know me, I’ve had a wonderful career with the jazz big-band era. And he said, now there’s this whole new thing called rock and roll, and my new friends Skip and Paul have figured out how to put a band together that’s a rock and roll big band instead of a jazz big band. And he said, I love the idea, maybe this is going to be the next thing in music, I’m beginning to see the ‘Lighthouse’, and everybody clicked the things, and the next day there was stuff in all the newspapers. And then a couple of weeks later, we had our Carnegie Hall concert in New York, which was sold out because RCA just bought billboards on Times Square and they spent money. And right after that, Lighthouse went on the road, and in the first couple of years, we played over a thousand gigs.

We had to work all the time because it was very expensive. So, back to your question, how come One Fine Morning was the first record. The first three records that Skip and I produced where we had creative freedom, we did the kind of music that had no name at that time. A year or two later, they were calling it things like prog rock and fusion jazz, where you were smashing together more sophisticated, more instrumental kind of stuff. But when we put out the first three albums on RCA, AM radios were being installed in automobiles. but no FM radios. And the kind of music that we were playing, the shortest songs were four or five minutes, and sometimes they would go on for 10 or 15 minutes. We didn’t fit the format of AM radio. And so, although we were very popular touring, because in those days it was all the festivals and a lot of the big acts, if you think of Joni Mitchell or Dylan and those people, they may be playing a guitar or a keyboard and maybe a couple of other instruments. But Lighthouse came and when 20 or 30 or 40,000 young people would show up at a festival, we’d fill the stage. So, we were very popular and had very good reviews of our show. But we didn’t get any AM airplay. And so, after the first three albums, RCA dumped us. And they said, It’s too expensive. We’ve really blown a lot of money. They sent us to Japan, where we had a number one hit. They sent us to the Isle of Wight in England, where we won the battle of the big rock bands between Chicago, Blood, Sweat & Tears and Lighthouse. That was a big thing.

And then we couldn’t get a record deal because all the record companies said what Albert Grossman said. It’s a bad idea financially. It cost too much money. And although we’d sold thousands of records, we weren’t selling yet millions of records because we had no airplay on hit radio. So, we looked around for an outside producer who might be able to zig and zag our creative direction, because although the guys in the band were not interested in selling out and doing what the man wanted us to do, which was change our direction and become a hit top 40 band, Skip and I realized that we had to either disband the idea, because we couldn’t exist without a record company to support us, or we had to make a change. And so we brought in Jimmy Ienner, who basically went to our live concert, had a talk with everybody in the band and said he’d be willing to produce us, only under the condition that he had total control over picking the material and that he would try to educate us as to how to write radio-friendly songs, basically two and a half to three and a half minutes long; No big intros, no long outros, no long solos, and things that could get airplay. And we agreed.

So the result of that album was also that Jimmy said, You need to get a really good lead singer also. And Skip had originally said to me, when we were putting the band together, he said, we want to have four horns, four strings, four rhythm sections, and a lead singer. He said, the only thing I wanted to talk to you about was you don’t want to, we don’t want to get a really good singer.

And I said, what do you mean? We don’t want to get a really good singer. He said, look, I’ve been playing in rock and roll bands, if you have a really good singer, they get all the chicks, they basically get all the reviews…and, you’re just a piano player and I’m just a drummer. And I’ve been through that, done that. So, we got a guy who was an okay singer, really nice guy.

But anyway, by the end of doing three albums, our singer, Pinky Dolvin, wonderful guy and okay singer, who had, unfortunately, was stage fright, standing in front of all of these huge resources behind him, blasting out with trumpets and all of these orchestral things. And he said, I’m really sorry to do this to you, guys. I have to leave. You need to get not only somebody better, but you see, I’m drinking a half a bottle of Newfoundland Screech before every show, because I’m just scared to go out and front such a big band. So that’s when we got Bob McBride, that’s when we got Jimmy Ienner. And after Jimmy tutored everybody in the band on what he needed to make us radio friendly and sell a lot of records, all the guys in the band started writing songs, demo songs for this new fourth album. Which was hopefully going to break that problem for us and greatly expand our audience. And it worked. That’s what happened. Now, we all gave him demos. And I’ll come back to this in a minute.

The main thing is, we put out this album, and it was a hit. And the hit single, the biggest hit single from that album, (it had a few) was the same name as the album, One Fine Morning. And what happened was that it was all working out. We were now headlining because we had hit records on the radio. And half of the demos the guys submitted for the recording; I think there were ten demos, five of them made it on to the final album and five of them were rejected by Jimmy for not fitting what his criteria were, or they weren’t good enough.

Fast forward half a century, and Lighthouse, against all odds, is still in existence. Some of the original guys – myself, our trombone player, Russ Little, are somehow still in the band. Up until five years ago Skip was still playing drums, he passed away, then Ralph Cole had arthritis, so we had to make a change. But Lighthouse is still able to attract audiences, and it’s wonderful for a guy like me, because I love to perform. So, when we talked to our record company and said We really need to have some new product, because when we play our shows, we usually play twenty to twenty-five tunes, and almost half of the ones that we play are from this one album, One Fine Morning, which was our first big album. This and all these other albums haven’t been available on LP or CD for some thirty – thirty-five years. The record company was very encouraging and said OK how can we figure out a way to start reissuing your classic rock albums, and renew them in some kind of way that it’s not just going to be old news…So we came up with this idea, along with the record company and both the record company and the band were very excited about it. The idea was, that with all the technological advancements that are available now in making recordings available in high-fidelity, we were able to Unmix the original One Fine Morning album. When I say unmix, we were able to take the mixes on that album, and separate them in to a drum track, a guitar track, a vocal track, and all the other tracks, and then we remixed them, raising them up to the super high fidelity of today. And then what we said we’re going to do was take the best performance of the original band, One Fine Morning tapes, and combine it with the best sound you can get today. And we’ll release both double CDs and double LPs. One of the CDs, or LPs, is going to be the One Fine Morning album in the same order as the original 1971 release, and the other album will be all extra stuff that our fans kept on saying We want to know more about not just what you played and why…So, when we went through the archives we found the original ten demos that had been submitted to our producer Jimmy Ienner, five or which made the album, and five of which didn’t.  We decided to put in a second disc, and fill it with those demos, and not to remix those because most are just guitar and singer, so they are what they are. So, for those five that made it on to the album, and I’ll just give you an example – “One Fine Morning”, the single that my friend, Skip Prokop wrote, on the demo he sang it because Bob McBride had just joined the band. I think Skip was just playing acoustic guitar, and I was playing conga drums. So, it will give our audiences and fans a chance to hear the evolution of stuff that was submitted. You can see the evolution from one disc to the other where you’d have Bob McBride singing, and there’d be horn and string parts, all of that. And the other thing, that was very exciting for me, personally was Jimmy Ienner was the only guy that ever heard all of the demos, and in order to avoid stirring the pot with all the guys in the band, he chose not to share all of the demos, so that he really on chose what He wanted. So, it was my first time listening to things that hadn’t made it, and the only guys that would’ve heard those were the guys that played on a particular demo. And once we got the idea, that was the start of this new anniversary edition. Both the record company, myself and my bandmates are very enthusiastic about it, because it sounds fantastic. And it’s got all of this new stuff, which is what our audiences keep asking for. Oddly in 1971, the Vietnam war was happening, and in many ways it was quite a bit like the times we’re living in in 2025. Today we have the war in Yugoslavia, a war in Israel, the United States is having almost a revolutionary war. Back then was a similar thing, and bands were trying to write stuff. So, some of the material that we had is very appropriate to the political situations that we have today.

Where did Bob McBride come from, where did you find him?

Bob McBride was a diamond in the rough. He had left home when he was teenager, and started hanging out in what was (and is still) called Yorkville Village, around all of the folk clubs that were there. He had a fantastic voice, but he realized that he needed to get some experience that was at a higher level than he could get in Canada. So he went to Los Angeles, where he hooked up with an incredibly wonderful singer called Johnny Mathis, who had a lot of hit records. And Bob studied with Johnny Mathis for about three months. I think he even lived with him for a bunch of time, during which time Mathis taught him how to breathe and how to do all kinds of really advanced, you know, holding a note forever in through your nose, out through your mouth, and all of that kind of singing technique. And then he came back to Toronto, and when he came back to Toronto, it just happened to be the time that we were auditioning for a new lead singer for the One Fine Morning album. And somebody said, There’s this guy who’s a, he’s a ballad singer. And we said, Oh, I don’t know if that’s what Jimmy is going to want, because we’re doing rock and roll and everything. Anyway, Bob auditioned. And as soon as he started singing, we were just like floored! Skip and I and Ralph (guitar player), heard him sing. And we just said, Oh my goodness, this guy is really fantastic. So, we brought him into the band.

At first, he was suffering from the same stage fright issue that our previous singer, Pinky, was suffering from. That is to say, he had been playing in folk clubs, playing acoustic guitar and singing nice ballads and all that kind of stuff. Pretty stuff. But all of a sudden, out comes Lighthouse with this huge, huge amount of decibels and rock and roll beats. And so I remember the first time he came on stage to sing with us, I don’t remember what the gig was or where it was, but it was somewhere in the United States, and he comes on stage and he’s wearing his acoustic guitar. I walk up to Bob and I say, Why are you wearing your acoustic guitar? He said, Oh, I always wear my guitar when I’m singing. I said, You realize that we’re an electric band, that there’s no microphone on your guitar, there’s no pickup from it; It’s not going to be in the mix in any kind of way. (He says) That doesn’t matter. I just feel more comfortable.

He was hiding sort of behind his guitar, and it took about five or six gigs. But, there’s nothing like a practical experience on stage. And I didn’t know until I started going on stage what it would feel like. And I guess Bob and those other people didn’t know. And there seems to be two kinds of people, there are people who take the nervous energy of being on a stage in front of lots and lots of people and basically it makes them frightened and they don’t thrive with it, and then there are the other guys like Bob McBride and myself who perform a million times better only when there’s an audience and that happens. It turns it, took him maybe a week or two weeks and he just became this unbelievable lead singer who not only sounds fantastic on our albums, but we always, we excited the audience. We’re a very exciting band because we’re very exciting people when we get in front of an audience.  

I watched some of the clips of you guys on YouTube. I think there’s one from Massey Hall, and he seemed quite comfortable, quite outgoing, obviously, on stage. I guess you would have never known it at that point.

Oh, yeah. Once we did that, you could see. And if I have the right clip in mind, I’m not sure what the song is that you saw at Massey Hall, but it reminded me of how frenetic I was in those days playing conga drums, acoustic conga drums. It’s always been fantastic for me. It was just an incredibly lucky experience that I did it. Sometimes my colleagues have remarked to me from time to time… that I’ve always felt that getting in front of a live audience, whether you’re an actor in a play or a musician in a band or whatever it is, it’s like jumping off a cliff and hoping that you’re going to have a soft landing.

It’s so different than playing in a recording studio when you’re trying to get everything perfect. What you do when you have a live show, you take all those chances. And sometimes you don’t have a soft landing, but then you have another show the next day. It’s not going out there to everybody else. But yeah, I used to room with Bob and I love him. He’s a lovely, lovely man.

A lot of the songs you guys obviously co-credited in that were on a lot of the songs. Um, can you tell me a bit about how the songs would start? Who would come up with either the lyrical idea or the musical idea? And then kind of what kind of influenced what you guys wrote about on specific songs, like “One Fine Morning” and “Hat’s Off To The Stranger”, those sort of things?

How shall I put this!? From what I’ve heard and seen of The Beatles and some of the other bands at that time, they had a deal and Skip and I had a deal for our co-writing that we would split the writing of tunes and nobody would have to worry about. So, we just said, OK, we’re going to get 50-50 and see how it works out. But every song was different. Certainly in my mind, after Skip took to heart Jimmy Ienner’s instructions about writing radio formatted songs, I just quickly got the highest regard for Skip as a lyricist in particular. Skip and I wrote a few songs that we actually co-wrote. There’s a song on a previous album called “The Chant”, it’s a Buddhist chant. And sometimes one, sometimes the other, sometimes this, sometimes that – but without a doubt, every hit song that Lighthouse has ever had, that’s really gone far on the charts, has a lyric that was written by Skip. And the thing is that, you know, technically I was sort of music director of the band and the bass player used to come with me, and I’d work out the bass parts with him. He actually taught himself how to read music and that happened. And the horn players always needed charts. But, sometimes the string players would write some parts. Sometimes the horn players would write some parts, and sometimes they’d contribute some lyrics. And it would all come out in the wash so that nobody felt that they weren’t being taken care of. Lighthouse was a very collaborative experience. One of our big singles was a song called “Sunny Days” and when I just would read Skip’s lyric for that. Here’s an example…”Sitting stoned alone in my backyard, asking myself, why should I work so hard? Sitting dreaming about the days to come, half undressed, just sitting in the sun”- Beautiful, Fantastic lyric!

And then I would come in and say, Oh, I have an idea for this. I don’t know if it’s going to work. I said that I’ve always been a big fan of Count Basie and his big band. And Count Basie wasn’t the flashy piano player. But I said, Count Basie’s big band jazz always had an acoustic guitar player who would be going chug, chug, a-chug, chug, a-chug, chug, a-chunk... I said, Why don’t we do that, and do it like an old fashioned blues big band…. And why don’t I do like a little Count Basie kind of intro. And with that, then the melodies and all of that stuff started coming together. It’s a simple song. It has some verses; it has some choruses; it has a few chords. And that’s all it is. I don’t think that there’s a uniform way that every song that Lighthouse did was written either by Skip and myself or the other guys in the band. It just happened – Who was where, when, and who had an idea and how did it happen?

I like the demo of with Skip singing (“One Fine Morning”) it kind of reminds me of that Beatles release of Let It Be Naked, where they took all the orchestrations out and it was just the band, the guitars and drums.

Oh yeah. In the demo, we didn’t take anything out. We just, that’s, that was Skip said, I have an idea for a song. And I think, and in that case, Ralph Cole made the guitar part, that was his thing. But basically Skip came up with that idea…he just put a bar-chord down and get that kind of chord that’s not a chord that you can write down in a rock and roll chord. So he starts playing that and I was near a conga drum and we had just played with Santana on the West Coast or something, and we said, Why don’t we do like a Latin-rock thing? And that was a demo…But that’s why I think that this is an interesting kind of package. It’s interesting to me. I hope that others find that interesting as well because people get a chance to kind of listen to it and see how songs evolve, which is different than a kind of Tin Pan Alley, let’s write a hit song kind of thing.

Were you guys, while you were making this album, did you have any sense of when hearing a couple of the songs that it was a step forward, that it was going to be something great?

No. And I believe, (and Skip is no longer with us, so I can’t pick up the phone and ask him), but I believe he would agree with me that neither Skip nor I ever had any idea of which songs would become hits. Like “Sunny Days”, that song. Skip and I, it took minutes to, to come up with it. And we thought, Oh, it’s like a novelty song. This will never get on the album probably, but let’s let Jimmy Ienner hear it. And then Jimmy said, and We’ve been talking about it, we want to release that as a single, which was great. And “One Fine Morning”, Jimmy did not want to let us record it because we broke all of his rules. Sometimes you just say, Well, we’re going to do an album, so if you need 10 songs, you want to record like 12 or 13 songs, and then you pick the best 10. So, so we had “One Fine Morning”, and Skip basically insisted, What we’ve got, we’ve got all this energy and everything, you really need to play a jazz piano solo. He says, I’ll take the sound, my drumming way down, and we’ll just sort of do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do…. Now play a nice little thing like that. And I’ll make sure the other guys don’t cover it. We’ll talk to Ralph and we’ll just, do all that stuff. So we did it and we recorded it like that. And, and Jimmy said, Okay, we’ve recorded this, but it’s a six-minute song!  I said, We can’t do any long songs. And it started with just bass and drums for 15 seconds. There was an intro to the guitar intro, and that’s all the stuff that Jimmy hated because it just made it not enough hooks, and too much time. Then when it came time to cut stuff in and out of the album, Jimmy played this for the record company people, and they said, It looks like they’re going to, we’re going to put the “One Fine Morning” on the album. And we were really happy, but we knew that it would never be the single. But then we put out the One Fine Morning album and we put “Hats Off To The Stranger” as the first single, a nice structured radio friendly song. And it got into the top 40, which was great for us.

It did the job. And by then this was even just one year later, a lot of the prog rock and FM radios started taking hold. And, the FM stations started playing “One Fine Morning” – the full version! So, if my memory serves me, Jimmy went and cut down the piano solo, cut out the intro and put out the single version of “One Fine Morning” so that we could get AM airplay. And what happened was that we got a little airplay from that. And then all the AM stations just went on the longer version from the album. Could I have predicted that? No. Some people like Carole King (and those people) could just sit down and write songs. I’ve known a lot of great songwriters and I admire them so much. But, in the case of Lighthouse, we could never do it. And we became a lot more successful once we got an outside producer who would start making those decisions, because every single guy in the band would tell us that they knew what would be the single. And then we’d say, Which one do you want? It would always be the song that they had a solo in.

That’s funny. I want to ask about the album artwork. Both One Fine Morning and Thoughts Of Moving On were done by Brad Johansen. And they’re the two in the catalog that are very colorful and kind of stand out. How much input did you guys have in the album art and recall what thought of it and all that time?

The original album artwork for the Lighthouse albums, Skip and I had very little input on it. And some of it we really did not like, we hated the Sunny Days album cover, but the contracts that we had, the record company was always in charge of that. We always felt that they did a bad job, except for One Fine Morning, which was in the middle of the psychedelic era, which we thought that the Brad Johansen cover was maybe the best.

When we went to do this remake, Anthem got a graphic artist to take the original cover and to, I don’t know if you’ve heard the term shiz it up, just pop it out over-saturate the colors… So even what we did, it’s very similar. It’s based on the original artwork.

The other quick little interesting story is when the album came out in Europe, the European record companies…

This was used as the same cover as The Best Of…(I hold up The Best Of Lighthouse LP)

That’s right; the Roger Dean stuff. Roger Dean, who did that, was famous for a lot of things, including that cover. We did a cruise and he had his artwork. This was the original Roger Dean sketch for that fantastic cover. (Paul holds up a sketch of the artwork). And we bought this when we met Roger Dean. You know, if you wanted to buy the original Roger Dean artwork for that record that you showed me, it would probably be, I don’t know, a hundred thousand bucks or more.  He’s a very valuable, collectible, artist. But this time around, Brenda Hoffert who manages Lighthouse (my wife), and I were very involved in every detailed aspect of the sound, the cover, the write-up – the guys who had played in the original band, we wanted them to put some text in about how they felt about it, that sort of thing.

How did you guys get hooked up? You were on Anthem originally, right?

So Anthem, of course, was Rush’s record company. And they had all the Rush stuff and I can’t remember exactly when it might’ve been 10 years ago(?) We sold all of the publishing to the Lighthouse catalog of the classic rock years. And we also sold all the master recorders to a company that was then called ‘Olay’.

And Olay, which was financed by the Teachers Union of Ontario or something like that, who had a big wallet to acquire, decided to get a bunch of well-known Canadian music into it’s catalog. So, the word went out that they were interested in, If people wanted to cash out; they were interested in buying copyrights. Brenda and I sold the Lighthouse copyrights and maybe a year later, the guys in Rush sold their catalog to Olay. And then there’s a whole bunch of other Canadian bands that were on Olay. And Olay did some testing and found out that the name Olay, it was a terrible name – Nobody remembered it; nobody could spell it. And they said, Oh, but Anthem’s a good name, so now that we own the Anthem label from Rush, Why don’t we re-brand the entire company, the publishing and the record company as Anthem Entertainment!?  That’s where the Anthem name came from. And we loved it because we liked being associated with Rush. We could do a lot worse than that.

There seems to be a great camaraderie of the older bands back in the day; you guys played with like April Wine, Crowbar, A Foot in Coldwater…

Absolutely. Everybody in those days. There was a spirit of trying to do well. Everybody was rooting for everybody else. I think we all, at the time, I don’t remember if they actually use the old metaphor, ‘a rising tide lifts all ships’.  We all felt that if we could help any of our fellow Canadians be successful, it’s a success for all of us because that’s what we were really fighting at that time before CanCon.

That’s funny because all those bands that I mentioned were all great at the time. You all had a lot of hit success, but you’re all very different.  You couldn’t say there was like two or three bands that were the same or doing the same thing. There’s a big difference between you guys and A Foot Coldwater, April Wine, Rush, and all the various other bands at the time.

Exactly. And, because I had the good fortune to play across the United States, and at the Fillmore West, the Fillmore East and all of those places with all of the acts that had become huge acts over time, but who were coming on. For example, when Lighthouse played in Philadelphia, our opening act was Elton John, because that was his first record and nobody knew who Elton John was. All of that kind of thing that became classic rock. So from Santana on one end to the folk rock of the Grateful Dead. And if you look at the billboards of the acts at the places that we were playing, playing, you’d have like the acts I just mentioned, for example, and then you’d have a rockabilly band with guitar, from kind of fifties and sixties music. It was very diverse and it was very creative, and people listened to the other bands.

I would say that the only act that I ever, consciously, copied a style of piano-playing from was from Elton John, because Elton John, who’s not that well known for this particular thing, figured out something that none of us other keyboard players at the time could figure out, which was how do you take an acoustic piano and make it work with a rock and roll band!? Yeah. It wasn’t easy, but he kind of made it. I can’t imagine that there was any keyboard player at that time that heard what Elton John was doing…We didn’t sit down and say, Aha, now that’s an interesting idea! We didn’t all play like Elton John. We were inspired by each other, but nobody was really trying to cut up the other people or do that kind of thing.

I know this is the first big album for Lighthouse. Is there of a possibility that there’ll be a few more following this?

Yes. It’s all in the works, the question of how many and how soon is something that will depend on how successful this is. I must say that I’ve been blown away. That’s not a term that I use very frequently by the reception, like the reviews that…getting four and a half out of five stars, and just wonderful, nice things that people are saying about the whole process. That could be just a ‘honeymoon effect’ of the album just coming out, and as people are happy about it…We are working hard with the record company to try to make this work for everybody in the audience.

Do you have any desire or intentions of maybe recording any new music with current band?

Of course. We’ve been trying to get record companies to do that for the last 25 years, and none of them are interested. They all tell us that, you know, they do some research, and they basically say, Last year, Elton John released (just to use Elton John as another name, like unbelievably huge star), he dropped two or three singles and we couldn’t get any airplay. The record company would say, We want Elton John, but we want the old stuff!

Do you guys cover the whole catalog in the show or just the hits?

I think right now, the leading plan – the big picture is, we don’t want to go back to the RCA stuff yet because it’s all prog-rock, and we want to build on the hits. So, going from that classic period from One Fine Morning, to Thoughts Of Moving On, to Sunny Days  – there was four or five albums, which had a couple of tunes that did very well.  I think the ‘loose’ plan is to re-introduce the Lighthouse classic-rock stuff to newer, younger audiences, and each time the extras might be different, but to do that in a way that makes it new albums, at least in a way that’s new – to us (haha). Because a lot of stuff in the archive we haven’t seen. So I’m not giving anything away, because it’s not etched in stone, but I think that’s the general plan, and that’s one of the reasons I’m so happy that the initial reaction has been so strong.

LINKS:

https://www.lighthouserockson.com/

https://www.facebook.com/groups/lighthousetheband

https://www.cshf.ca/2022-inductions-lighthouse/

https://www.thestar.com/entertainment/music/paul-hoffert-lighthouse-co-founder-and-renaissance-man/article_9cb34ec2-9900-5cb7-8a7d-a1b370c069d9.html

JOHN SLOMAN – pens rock related new novel

JOHN SLOMAN (Lone Star, Uriah Heep) has just released his 3rd book Rock Heaven , a novel . Rock Heaven is not autobiographical, according to John. “At the beginning of this year, I decided to adapt my original screenplay to a novel which is now currently available on Amazon under the title of my screenplay: ‘Rock Heaven’.

John adds – “Rock Heaven was a screenplay I wrote in 2007. Had meetings with various producers who loved it. But the money never came. It’s about a rock musician…and a song titled ‘Rock Heaven’. But also much more. I wrote the title track, so at some point in the movie people would hear this song that’s referenced in the dialogue. It then occurred to me to write an entire soundtrack album. By now I was several years into this thing. I demoed the title track as well as all the other tracks for this soundtrack album at home. This time last year, I was in the process of writing what would’ve been my third book, when I decided to set it aside temporarily in favor of adapting Rock Heaven to a novel. My intention is to release Rock Heaven as a digital single, to provide a musical context for the book. If I receive some interest in my soundtrack album, I will consider releasing it at some point. For example, in the absence of a movie being made, I could release an audio version of Rock Heaven, which would include my ten songs.

Who knows, perhaps some film director scrolling on Amazon one night for an original story to bring to the screen might discover my novel, and my tale of woe becomes a movie after all.

At one point I adapted the screenplay as a 6-part TV series and sent it to a new production company based in Wales. Unfortunately, I didn’t even receive a response to my email, leaving me wondering if perhaps a Welsh writer basing a story around a Welsh musician wasn’t quite Welsh enough for a Welsh production company to be interested.

ROCK HEAVEN is available on Amazon, at present (mine arrives tomorrow)

John also has resumed writing on the book he set aside for Rock Heaven, as well completing a new album to be released next spring.

Louis Deveroe is the resident music critic at a London based lifestyle magazine called XYZ Magazine and married to the much younger Gina. He should be happy. But the memory of that stinging rejection letter from Rolling Stone magazine all those years ago haunts him day and night – and he wishes he could find a story worthy of his superior writing ability so he can show those guys at Rolling Stone just how wrong they were. One night over dinner, his school teacher wife challenges her unfulfilled husband to change his life and pursue his dreams. And soon the story of a lifetime presents itself. But how far is Louis prepared to go in pursuit of that story? Would he smuggle a Class A drug into a psychiatric hospital in order to loosen the tongue of a disgraced rock star? Would he risk his life? There are three steps to Rock Heaven. But what is Rock Heaven? Where rock stars go when they die? Or where wannabes live in a medicated fog? The only one who really knows the answer is Louis…

DANNY PEYRONEL – ‘It Happens When You Look The Other Way’

Singer, songwriter, Danny Peyronel has a new solo album out. Peyronel is best known as keyboard player with The HEAVY METAL KIDS, followed by UFO, and later resurrected the HMKs as singer, and played with X-UFO. It Happens When You Look The Other Way contains 16 tracks. Check out the press info/bio below, as well as the videos from the album and links at the end.

DANNY PEYRONEL started making music as a pro while still a teen a million years ago, at the height of The Golden Age of Rock.  He was a founder member of iconic London band the HEAVY METAL KIDS, who became yhr reference for the incipient Punk movement.

Moving on to legendary rockers UFO, he was their original keyboardist, writing songs that changed the band’s direction.  He went on to write multi-million selling hits like ‘Midnight at the Lost and Found’ for MEAT LOAF, as well as others for DAVID GILMOUR, SADE and more. In the 80’s he became lead singer and frontman with his band TARZEN, and the 90’s saw him work with Desmond Child, writer of  some of the biggest hits of BON JOVI, AEROSMITH & ALICE COOPER.

Back in Europe, he released his first solo album, ‘Make the  Monkey Dance’, and resurrected the HEAVY METAL KIDS for their  critically acclaimed swansong ‘Hit the Right Button’. More recently, his X-UFO released a powerful live album recorded  at various European Festivals, ‘Vol.1: The Live Files’, followed  by a studio record, ‘HOUSE of X’.

Now in Barcelona, Danny recorded his new album, ‘It Happens When  You Look the Other Way’, with the help of David Pereira-Oleart,  guitarist, producer and video creator, and featuring top local talent as well as life-long colleagues. The band, led by David Pereira-Oleart (Lipstick) on guitar and featuring young guitar prodigy Martin Buszano, Lakis Economou (Malcolm Bruce Band) on bass and Javi Rojano Reina (Amaro) on  drums, is gearing up to present the new album throughout Europe and the Americas. Special guests stars will be featured nightly.

IT HAPPENS WHEN YOU LOOK THE OTHER WAY:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wk5INVO2Pjk
 
HEAVEN’S IN A CHEVY TONIGHT:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=weMkvvnRTJk
 
RUN AWAY RASHID:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FsQFbaoTSa4
 
CHANCE:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3h6reVUM88
 
THE LAST GOODBYE:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3apcoybsms
 
FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxQNot2NVTE
 

LINKS:

http://www.dannypeyronel.com

https://www.facebook.com/OfficialDANNYPEYRONELpage/

https://www.instagram.com/danny_peyronel/

https://bsky.app/profile/dannypeyronel.bsky.social

https://www.youtube.com/@MondoDanny