Procol Harum
are a British rock band, formed in the 1960s, who contributed to the development of progressive rock, and by extension, symphonic rock. Their best-known recording is their 1967 single "A Whiter Shade of Pale." Although noted for its classical influence, Procol Harum's music also embraces the blues and pop.
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History
Origins
Based in
Southend,
Essex,
The Paramounts, led by
Gary Brooker and
Robin Trower and including
Chris Copping, scored a moderate
British success in 1964 with
Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller's "
Poison Ivy," which reached number 35 in the UK singles chart.
[1] Unable to generate any follow-up success, the group disbanded in 1966.
Early years
In April 1967, Brooker began working as a singer/songwriter and formed Procol Harum with non-Paramounts
Keith Reid (poet),
Hammond organist
Matthew Fisher, guitarist
Ray Royer and bassist
David Knights.
Guy Stevens, their original manager, named the band after a friend's
Burmese cat.
[2] The name has been said to be
Latin for "beyond these things", but the correct Latin translation of "beyond these things" is
Procul His
.
[3] Alternatively, the name has been translated as "of these far off things" (harum is in the feminine, genitive, plural). However, procul would not be followed by a genitive in Latin. The name of the band is frequently misspelled; often with
Procul
,
Harem
, both, or other variations.
At
Olympic Studios, with session drummer (and non-Paramount)
Bill Eyden, producer
Denny Cordell, and sound engineer
Keith Grant, the group recorded "
A Whiter Shade of Pale" and officially released on
12 May 1967. With the sudden success of this single and
The Moody Blues' "
Nights in White Satin", their label
Deram Records became known as a premier progressive rock label
[dubiousdiscuss] .
With a structure reminiscent of
Baroque music, a
countermelody based on
J.S. Bach's cantata no.140 assigned to Fisher's
Hammond organ, Brooker's soulful vocals and Reid's mysterious lyrics, "
A Whiter Shade of Pale" reached #1 on the British charts and did almost as well in the
United States, reaching #5. In the years since, it has become an enduring classic, placing on several polls of the best songs ever.
After "A Whiter Shade of Pale" became a hit, the band set out to consolidate their studio success by touring; their live debut was opening for
Jimi Hendrix in 1967.
The group's follow-up single, "
Homburg", with a lineup change of former Paramounts
B.J. Wilson on drums and
Robin Trower on guitar, was almost as successful in the UK as it reached #6, but the LP
Procol Harum
, was less successful (it was recorded soon between the two hit singles, but was held back until early 1968 and in mono and phony stereo, which was unusual by that time). A series of singles charted lowly in the US and UK, though rarely both at the same time.
A Salty Dog
(1969; see
1969 in music) was popular among fans, and was their first album to sell well in the UK; it is still regarded as one of their finest albums. The title track in particular gained a good deal of US
FM radio airplay, with Reid's ominous lyrics in the forefront. However, Fisher, who produced this album, departed the band soon after its release.
The group would have many personnel changes
[4], but their lineup for their first three albums was
Gary Brooker (
piano and
lead vocals),
Robin Trower (
guitar and
lead vocals),
Matthew Fisher (
organ and
lead vocals),
David Knights (
bass),
B.J. Wilson (
drums), and
Keith Reid (
lyricist). Former Paramount
Chris Copping joined on organ and bass in 1970, and from late 1972 till 1977, the group's guitarist was
Mick Grabham.
Procol Harum produced a unique sound that emphasized Brooker's melancholy vocal style and an evocative mix of his eclectic piano, Fisher's elegant, church-like organ, Wilson's dramatic drumming and Trower's searing guitar, with frequent black humour and a penchant for experimentation. Musically, Procol Harum was split during all these years between Trower's guitar-driven
blues rock style and Brooker's and Fisher's structured classical rock sound. The group often combined the two into a dynamic fusion, but by 1971 the disparities in style became too great; the end of an era was marked for Procol, with the release of their fifth album
Broken Barricades
, and subsequent departure of Trower to form his own
power trio band; he would be replaced by
Dave Ball.
Procol returned to success on the music charts in the following years with a distinctly
symphonic rock sound, often backed by
symphony orchestras. At this they were one of the first groups to achieve success;
Procol Harum Live with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra
was a #5 gold album in the U.S. in 1972, as well as reaching #48 in Britain.
"Conquistador" (a track from their first album, recharted for accompaniment by the Edmonton Symphony in 1971) was a hit single in 1972, getting to #16 in the U.S. with considerable additional FM radio airplay, while reaching #22 in the UK. Their follow-up album,
Grand Hotel
, did fairly well, reaching #21 on the U.S. Billboard Chart in 1973.
Mid-seventies
More personnel changes contributed to declining sales in the later part of the 1970s, with "Pandora's Box" being their final UK top 20 hit in 1975; the band finally broke up in 1977. They reunited for a single performance five months later, when "
A Whiter Shade of Pale" was named joint winner (along with
Queen's "
Bohemian Rhapsody") of the Best British Pop Single 1952–1977 at the
BRIT Awards, part of
Queen Elizabeth II's
Silver Jubilee.
1990s: reformation
The band reformed in 1991 (see
1991 in music) with Brooker, Fisher, Trower and Reid (Wilson had died in 1990), and released
The Prodigal Stranger
, but sales were modest. After the album's release, a new incarnation of the band, with Brooker and Fisher but not Trower, toured the US and the world for a few years in the first half of the nineties.
In July 1997, fans arranged the celebration of the 30-year anniversary of the success of "
A Whiter Shade of Pale", and invited the then-inactive band to play. The concert, at Redhill, drew fans from all over the world. A direct result of the concert was the creation of the fan website in October 1997. Unusual for fan websites, 'Beyond the Pale' prides itself on being updated on a daily basis. Typical updates include the latest Procol Harum news, details of concerts from the 1970s and occasionally messages from the band.
The web site also made fans aware of each other, and thus catalysed and sparked a new interest in the band. This then led to , in which the fans got together to record three double CD albums of Procol Harum songs in novel arrangements, which in turn financed the web site. A fourth and final double-album is in preparation (2008).
2000 and beyond
In late 1999,
Gary Brooker promised that "Procol will play in 2000", and in September the band played an open-air gig with the
New London Sinfonia in
Guildford, UK.
In 2000, Procol Harum received some attention after the song "In Held Twas in I", appeared on the newly founded progressive rock
supergroup Transatlantics debut album. Transatlantic was formed by
Mike Portnoy and
Neal Morse, two of modern progressive musics most prominent musicians. "In Held Twas in I" is the only cover song featured on Transatlantics studio albums and many fans are unaware of the fact that this is a cover song.
Since 2001 the band [Brooker; Fisher; Geoff Whitehorn (also guitarist with
Elkie Brooks), guitar; Matt Pegg, bass, Mark Brzezicki, drums] has made several tours of mostly Europe, but also Japan and the US. A 2001 concert in Copenhagen was released on DVD in 2002. In 2003, the band released the album
The Well's on Fire
. A December, 2003 London concert with much of the material from that record was released on DVD in 2004:
Live at the Union Chapel
. Fisher quit Procol Harum in 2004.
The band resumed a limited touring schedule in 2005, with Josh Phillips replacing Fisher on Hammond, leaving
Gary Brooker as the only original performing member. In June 2006 they played at the Isle of Wight festival, the only act also to have played the original festival in 1969. In August 2006 Procol Harum played two outdoor concerts with the Danish Radio orchestra at Ledreborg Castle in Denmark, which were tele-recorded. An hour long edit of the show was broadcast on Christmas morning, 2008 on Danish Channel DR2 and the full concert was issued on DVD on 11 May 2009 (with six extra tracks from a Danish TV recording of the band from 1974).
Later in 2006 they played in Switzerland, Norway and Denmark, but with
Geoff Dunn replacing
Mark Brzezicki on drums, reportedly because the latter's other band
Casbah Club was touring with
The Who. However, Dunn ended up replacing Brzezicki on drums, for the band's European tours of 2007 (Italy, Germany, Netherlands). Recording from the Italian concerts were later released as the
One Eye to the Future – Live in Italy 2007
album. Procol Harum also played an orchestral concert in Sweden on 30 June. They performed with the Gävle Symphony Orchestra at the distinctive outdoor opera venue
Dalhalla (near Rattvik) which had once been a quarry.
On
20 July and
21 July 2007, fans arranged the celebration of the 40-year anniversary of the success of "A Whiter Shade of Pale", and invited the band to play. This took the form of two concerts at St John's, Smith Square in London.
20 July saw Procol Harum play a mixture of songs from their early days through to the début of a couple of new songs, "Sister Mary" and "Missing Persons". The following night "Gary Brooker and Guests" performed a fixture of obscure songs by Brooker-Reid that had either never been recorded, never been performed live before or were significantly different from the version they recorded. Support act was The Palers' Project in which Procol guitarist Geoff Whitehorn also played.
Although there was no Procol Harum activity in 2008, their manager, Chris Cooke, used the 'Beyond the Pale' web site to announce plans for a live DVD and a new album in 2009, as well as festival concerts in Norway on 17 July and Finland on 23 July.
[5]
Authorship lawsuit
Influences in Popular Culture
The band's unusual name has inspired references in modern popular culture. The
asteroid 14024 Procol Harum
is named after the band. The
orchid Procol Harum,
a hybridisation of Cymbidium
Mighty Sensation
with Cymbidium
Electric Ladyland
, is also named after the band.
[6]
The second book in
Douglas Adams's Hitchhiker Trilogy,
The Restaurant at the End of the Universe,
was inspired by the song "Grand Hotel", from Procol Harum's
album of the same name.
[7] [8]
Discography
DVD recordings
- 1999 The Best of Musikladen Live
- 2002 Live
- 2004 Live at the Union Chapel
.
- 2009 ''Procol Harum: In Concert with the Danish National Concert Orchestra & Choir
References
- {{UKChartHits|1679}}
- Johansen, "Procol Harum — Beyond the Pale". p50
- Lost in translation
- http://www.procolharum.com/99/ph_pedigree1b.htm
- http://procolharum.com/procolnews.htm
- Procol Harum, the Orchid
- Text of one of Douglas Adams's introductions of Procol Harum in concert
- Title Unavailable