Brian Auger & Julie Driscoll - The Mod Years (Complete Singles, B-Sides & Rare Tracks 1965-69)
Brian Auger was raised in London, where he took up the keyboards as a child and began to hear jazz by way of the American Armed Forces Network and an older brother's record collection. By his teens, he was playing piano in clubs, and by 1962 he had formed the
Brian Auger Trio with bass player
Rick Laird and drummer Phil Knorra. In 1964, he won first place in the categories of "New Star" and "Jazz Piano" in a reader's poll in the Melody Maker music paper, but the same year he abandoned jazz for a more R&B-oriented approach and expanded his group to include
John McLaughlin (guitar) and
Glen Hughes (baritone saxophone) as the Brian Auger Trinity. This group split up at the end of 1964, and
Auger moved over to Hammond B-3 organ, teaming with bass player
Rick Brown and drummer
Mickey Waller. After a few singles, he recorded his first LP on a session organized to spotlight blues singer
Sonny Boy Williamson that featured his group, saxophonists
Joe Harriott and
Alan Skidmore, and guitarist
Jimmy Page; it was
Don't Send Me No Flowers, released in 1968.
By mid-1965,
Auger's band had grown to include guitarist
Vic Briggs and vocalists
Long John Baldry,
Rod Stewart, and
Julie Driscoll, and was renamed
Steampacket. More a loosely organized musical revue than a group,
Steampacket lasted a year before
Stewart and
Baldry left and the band split.
Auger retained
Driscoll and brought in bass player
Dave Ambrose and drummer
Clive Thacker to form a unit that was billed as Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger and the Trinity. Their first album,
Open, was released in 1967 on Marmalade Records (owned by
Auger's manager, Giorgio Gomelsky), but they didn't attract attention on record until the release of their single, "This Wheel's on Fire," (music and lyrics by
Bob Dylan and
Rick Danko) in the spring of 1968, which preceded the appearance of the song on
the Band's
Music from Big Pink album. The disc hit the top five in the U.K., after which
Open belatedly reached the British charts. Auger and the Trinity recorded the instrumental album
Definitely What! (1968) without
Driscoll, then brought her back for the double-LP,
Streetnoise (1968), which reached the U.S. charts on Atco Records shortly after a singles compilation, Jools & Brian, gave them their American debut on Capitol in 1969.
Driscoll quit during a U.S. tour, but
the Trinity stayed together long enough to record
Befour (1970), which charted in the U.S. on RCA Records, before disbanding in July 1970.
Auger put together a new band to play less commercial jazz-rock and facetiously called it the Oblivion Express, since he didn't think it would last; instead, it became his perennial band name. The initial unit was a quartet filled out by guitarist
Jim Mullen, bass player
Barry Dean, and drummer
Robbie McIntosh. Their initial LP, Brian Auger's Oblivion Express, was released in 1971, followed later the same year by
A Better Land, but their first U.S. chart LP was
Second Wind in June 1972, the album that marked the debut of singer
Alex Ligertwood with the band. Personnel changes occurred frequently, but the Oblivion Express continued to figure in the U.S. charts consistently over the next several years with
Closer to It! (August 1973),
Straight Ahead (March 1974),
Live Oblivion, Vol. 1 (December 1974),
Reinforcements (October 1975), and
Live Oblivion, Vol. 2 (March 1976). Meanwhile,
Auger had moved to the U.S. in 1975, eventually settling in the San Francisco Bay area. In the face of declining sales, he switched to Warner Bros. Records for
Happiness Heartaches, which charted in February 1977.
Encore, released in April 1978, was a live reunion with Julie Tippetts (née
Driscoll) that marked the end of
Auger's association with major record labels, after which he dissolved the Oblivion Express and recorded less often. In 1990, he teamed up with former
Animals singer
Eric Burdon, and the two toured together during the next four years, releasing Access All Areas together in 1993. In 1995,
Auger put together a new Oblivion Express. As of 2000, the lineup consisted of his daughter,
Savannah, on vocals,
Chris Clermont on guitar, Dan Lutz on bass, and his son
Karma on drums. This group issued the album
Voices of Other Times on Miramar Records one week before
Auger's 61st birthday.
Sixties pop diva-turned-avant jazz singer
Julie Driscoll was born June 8, 1947 in London. As a teen she oversaw
the Yardbirds' fan club, and it was the group's manager and producer
Giorgio Gomelsky who encouraged her to begin a performing career of her own. In 1963 she issued her debut pop single "Take Me by the Hand," two years later joining the short-lived R&B combo
Steampacket alongside
Rod Stewart,
Long John Baldry and organist
Brian Auger. After
Steampacket dissolved,
Driscoll signed on with the Brian Auger Trinity, scoring a Top Five UK hit in 1968 with their rendition of
Bob Dylan's "This Wheel's on Fire." Dubbed "The Face" by the British music press,
Driscoll's striking looks and coolly sophisticated vocals earned her flavor of the month status, and she soon left
Auger for a solo career. Her debut solo album
1969 heralded a significant shift away from pop, however, enlisting members of
the Soft Machine and
Blossom Toes to pursue a progressive jazz direction. Also contributing to the record was pianist
Keith Tippett, whose avant garde ensembles
Centipede and Ovary Lodge Driscoll soon joined. She and
Tippett were later married, and she took her new husband's name, also recording as Julie Tippetts. With her 1974 solo masterpiece
Sunset Glow, she further explored improvisational vocal techniques in settings ranging from folk to free jazz. Two years later,
Tippett joined with
Maggie Nicols,
Phil Minton and Brian Ely to form the experimental vocal quartet Voice, and in 1978 also collaborated with Nicols on the duo album Sweet and s'Ours. A decade later, she and
Keith released Couple in Spirit, and in 1991
Tippett teamed with over a dozen instrumentalists from Britain and the former Soviet Georgia in the Mujician/Georgian Ensemble. The following year, she re-recorded "This Wheel's on Fire" as the theme to the smash BBC comedy Absolutely Fabulous. AMG.
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