Average White Band
(also AWB
) is a Scottish funk and R&B band who had a series of soul and disco hits between 1974 and 1980. They continue to perform as of 2009.
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AVERAGE WHITE BAND TICKETS
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History
AWB was formed in 1971 by
Alan Gorrie [1] and Malcolm "Molly" Duncan, with Onnie McIntyre
[2],
Hamish Stuart [3], Roger Ball and
Robbie McIntosh [4] joining them in the original line-up. Duncan and Ball, affectionately known as the Dundee Horns, studied at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art (now part of the
University of Dundee), and were previously members of
Mogul Thrash. Gorrie and McIntyre had been members of
Forever More.
The band's breakthrough was a support slot at
Eric Clapton's comeback concert in
1973.
MCA Records released their debut album,
Show Your Hand
, which sold poorly. Bruce McCaskill, who was Clapton's tour manager, liked the band's music and agreed to
manage them. He borrowed money to take them to the
U.S. and to
promote them. McCaskill had many contacts from his days with Clapton and managed to get
Atlantic Records to sign them. The band relocated to
New York, signed to Atlantic and released the follow-up,
AWB
, better known as "The White Album". This
album was the first of many with renowned
producer Arif Mardin, and reached
#1 in the
U.S. Hot 100 chart.
McIntosh died of a
heroin overdose on
23 September,
1974. (Gorrie also overdosed but
Cher kept him conscious until medical help arrived.)
[5] McIntosh was replaced by
Steve Ferrone (of Bloodstone, and, like McIntosh, previously with
Brian Auger's Oblivion Express).
In 1975, the
single "
Pick Up The Pieces" from the album
AWB
also reached #1 in the U. S. chart. The track is probably their best known today. The band followed up with
LPs
Cut the Cake
(
1975) and
Soul Searching
(
1976), both big sellers and yielding further
Top 40 singles.
Cut the Cake
was dedicated by the surviving band members to Robbie McIntosh's memory. Their next LP,
Benny & Us
, was a collaboration with
soul legend
Ben E. King.
After several more albums, AWB's audience and sales dwindled. Their 1980
disco hit "Let's Go Round Again" (UK #12), was
covered in the late 1990s by
Louise. The group disbanded by
1982. Ferrone went on to work with
Duran Duran whilst Hamish Stuart joined
Paul McCartney's touring group. In 1985 Gorrie released a solo album,
Sleepless Nights
. Gorrie, McIntyre, and Ball reunited in
1989 to record
Aftershock
, but Ball left the band shortly after its release. Eliot Lewis co-wrote with Gorrie on this album and joined the band, replacing lead
singer Hamish Stuart.
Average White Band has continued recording (
Soul Tattoo
1997,
Face to Face
, 1999) and touring since. When Eliot Lewis left AWB in September 2002 to pursue other musical opportunities, he was replaced by Klyde Jones (see
[6]). Their most recent album release in April 2003 was entitled
Living in Colour
.
AWB's line-up then included Alan Gorrie (bass, lead vocals), Klyde Jones (guitar, keyboard, lead vocals), Onnie McIntyre (guitar, vocals), Fred Vigdor (sax, keyboard, vocals) and Brian Dunne (drums). Gorrie and McIntyre are the only remaining original members of the band.
Brian Dunne was replaced by Rocky Bryant as drummer for the 2006 tour.
Members
- Onnie McIntyre (born Owen McIntyre, 25 September 1945, in Lennoxtown, Scotland) — vocals / rhythm guitar.
- Hamish Stuart (born 8 October 1949 in Glasgow, Scotland) — guitar, bass guitar and vocals.
- Alan Gorrie (born 19 July 1946, in Perth, Scotland) — guitar, bass guitar and vocals.
- Molly Duncan (born Malcolm Duncan, 24 August 1945, in Montrose, Scotland) — tenor saxophone.
- Roger Ball (born 4 June 1944 in Broughty Ferry, Scotland) — keyboards / saxophonist.
- Robbie McIntosh (born 6 May 1950, in Dundee, Scotland — died 23 September 1974) — (drums) - up to 1974.
- Steve Ferrone (born 25 April 1950, in Brighton, England) — drummer - 1975 to 1983.
- Brian Robertson born 12 February 1956, in Glasgow, Scotland — Guitar- 1970 to 1972 (As The Dream Police)
Discography
Albums
- Show Your Hand
(1973) (re-issued in 1975 as Put It Where You Want It
)
- AWB
(1974)
- Cut the Cake
(1975)
- Soul Searching
(1976)
- Person to Person (live)
(1976)
- Benny & Us
(1977)
- Warmer Communications
(1978)
- Feel No Fret
(1979)
- Shine
(1980)
- Volume VIII
(1980)
- Cupid's in Fashion
(1982)
- Sleepless Nights
(1985 - Alan Gorrie solo album)
- Aftershock
(1989)
- Soul Tattoo
(1997)
- Face To Face (live)
(1999)
- Tonight (DVD)
(2002)
- Living in Colour
(2003)
- Greatest and Latest
(2005)
- Soul & the City, Recorded Live at B. B. King's
(2006)
Hit Singles
- Pick Up the Pieces
(1974) U.K. #6, U.S. Pop #1, U.S. R&B #5
- Cut the Cake
(1975) U.K. #31, U.S. Pop #10, U.S. R&B #7
- If I Ever Lose this Heaven
(1975) U.S. Pop #39, U.S. R&B #25
- School Boy Crush
(1975) U.S. Pop #33, U.S. R&B #22
- Queen of My Soul
(1976) U.K. #23, U.S. Pop #40, U.S. R&B #21
- A Love On Your Own
(1976) U.S. Pop #101, U.S. R&B #35
- Cloudy
(live version) (1977) U.S. R&B #55
- Get It Up
(1977) - with Ben E. King U.S. R&B #21
- Your Love Is A Miracle
(1978) U.S. R&B #33
- Walk On By
(1979) U.K. #46
- When Will You Be Mine
(1979) U.K. #49, U.S. R&B #33
- Let's Go Round Again
(1980) U.K. #12, U.S. Pop #53, U.S. R&B #33
- For You, For Love
(1980) U.K. #46, U.S. Pop #106, U.S. R&B #60
- Let's Go Round Again
(re-mix) (1994) U.K. #56
Contributions
- Up
(1976) - Morrissey - Mullen
- The Atlantic Family Live at Montreux
(1977)
Notes
- Alan Gorrie
- Owen (Onnie) McIntyre
- Hamish Stewart
- Robert (Robbie) McIntosh 1950 - 1974
- Gorrie Overdose
- AWB
References
- Alan Gorrie
- Owen (Onnie) McIntyre
- Hamish Stewart
- Robert (Robbie) McIntosh 1950 - 1974
- Gorrie Overdose
- AWB