Help Yourself (band)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Help Yourself
OriginLondon, England
GenresPub rock, country rock, psychedelic rock
Years active1970–1973
LabelsLiberty, United Artists, Hux
Past membersMalcolm Morley
Richard Treece
Dave Charles
Ken Whaley
Paul Burton
Ernie Graham
Jonathan "Jo Jo" Glemser
Sean Tyla
Deke Leonard
Kevin Spacey

Help Yourself, known to their fans as "The Helps",[1] were an English rock band of the early 1970s. Originally formed as a backing band for Malcolm Morley, they evolved into a pub rock band with psychedelic-influences. Releasing four studio albums before their break-up, and one 31 years later, they are possibly best known for the number of notable musicians that passed through their ranks.

History

Help Yourself formed in London in 1970, originally as a backing band for singer-songwriter Malcolm Morley, who had been signed as a solo act by Famepushers.[1] The band was assembled by John Eichler who, as well as working for Famepushers, was production manager at Strand Cosmetics, where he hired people either for 'musical ability' or 'strangeness'.[citation needed]

The eponymous debut album, Help Yourself, was recorded from late 1970 to early 1971. Malcolm Morley (vocals, guitars, keyboards) wrote all the songs on this album, which was recorded with former Sam Apple Pie member Dave Charles (drums, percussion, vocals), ex member of Monday Morning Glory Band, Richard Treece (lead guitar, harmonica, vocals) and former Growth member Ken Whaley (bass) [1]

The album was recorded before the band had played a gig, having been signed to Liberty Records by Andrew Lauder, head of A&R. The band toured on the Downhome Rhythm Kings package with Brinsley Schwarz & Ernie Graham (ex Eire Apparent), who were all managed by Famepushers.[citation needed] After the tour, Ken Whaley departed but no other bass player was recruited to replace him.

Help Yourself, Ernie Graham (vocals, guitar) and his guitarist Jonathan "Jojo" Glemser, moved into Headley Grange in 1971, shortly after Led Zeppelin IV had been recorded there.[1] The line-up was amalgamated to include both Graham (who had just released his eponymous solo album backed by Help Yourself and Brinsley Schwarz) and Glemser, both of whom were guitarists, so Treece switched to bass. The band played the 1971 Glastonbury Festival.[2] "Street Songs", from their first album,[3] was issued on a United Artists double album sampler All Good Clean Fun. A tour was arranged to promote this album, so Help Yourself joined Man and Leicester band Gypsy, on a tour of Switzerland.[4] The second album Strange Affair was recorded at Rockfield Studios, initially with Richard Treece still on bass, and adding his guitar parts later, until Paul Burton, their then Road Manager and former Sam Apple Pie roadie, joined on bass, guitar and vocals, to complete the album.[5] Strange Affair was released in early 1972, by which time both Graham and Glemser had also departed.

The new line-up of Morley, Treece, Charles and Burton appeared on their first

roadie, helped with some of the songwriting during this period, notably "American Mother," and "All Electric Fur Trapper" on "Strange Affair" which was based on a fairy tale he had written. Shortly after completing the album, the band left Headley Grange, Tyla moved in with ex member Ken Whaley, and they formed Ducks Deluxe
.

Just as the Helps were due to start a tour to promote Beware The Shadow, Morley suffered a bout of depression ("The Shadow" referred to in the album title).[7] Rather than cancel the tour, Deke Leonard, who had just been fired by Man, stood in. Leonard stayed with the band after Morley had recovered, whilst Help Yourself backed Leonard on his first solo album Iceberg [8]

In December 1972, Help Yourself with Leonard and B. J. Cole, played at Man's Christmas Party. The double 10" album, Christmas at the Patti recorded at this concert, contains far more of their performance (24’) than their hosts (11’30’’). Ducks Deluxe also played this concert, but Whaley had already left.

Beware The Shadow was released in late 1972, but none of the first three albums sold well. The Helps appealed to a hippie audience such as fans of Grateful Dead and Quicksilver Messenger Service so they were moderately successful in the U.S.[1] but never toured there.

In 1973, the band proposed touring with Roger Ruskin Spear, the Flying Aces and Vivian "Spiv" Morris, in a vaudeville show called "Happy Days", which was to be held in a circus tent. They started recording material for this in January, but Burton was unhappy with the proposed theatrical tour, so he left. Whaley returned and the band started recording their new album in February, finishing the Happy Days album in March and the Helps album in April,[7] when they also recorded their second Peel Session.[6] After a two-month "Happy Days" tour, the fourth album, The Return of Ken Whaley, was released, with the Happy Days album included free with the first 5,000 copies.

The fourth album did not sell well either, and the band were not getting many gigs, so they were surprised when United Artists asked them to record another album, which they started recording in July 1973, with a line-up augmented by Sean Tyla. The album was to be called 5 and a cover was commissioned from Rick Griffin. They only had "half formed ideas" and although they eventually laid down 8 tracks, they gave up recording and disbanded in August 1973.[9] They re-formed for "The Amazing ZigZag Concert" on 28 April 1974 with a core line-up of Morley, Treece, Whaley and Charles with Burton and Leonard guesting.

Being incomplete, 5 was not issued, although a few years later some fans tried, unsuccessfully, to persuade the band to complete the album. After Morley released his solo album Aliens in 2001, the suggestion re-arose, and the album was finally completed in 2002/2003 by Morley, Treece and Whaley, with Kevin Spacey on drums, as Charles had other commitments. The album was eventually released in 2004.[9]

Musical style

Help Yourself played pub rock with a psychedelic-influenced sound.[1] Ned Raggett of AllMusic wrote, "Call the band a more down-to-earth Pink Floyd or Hawkwind set somewhere in the English countryside without specifically owing anything to either band."[10] Dave Thompson of AllMusic said that "familial comparisons to Man notwithstanding, [Help Yourself] was always closer to the British pub rock ideal than many of the movement's better-feted icons ever could be.[11] Raggett described Help Yourself as "a bar band for those who liked to spend their days baking in the sun".[12]

Personnel

  • Malcolm Morley – keyboards, guitar, vocals (1970–1973 & 2002–2003)
  • Richard Treece – guitar, bass, vocals (1970–1973 & 2002–2003)
  • Dave Charles – drums, percussion, vocals (1970–1973)
  • Ken Whaley – bass (1970–1971, 1973 & 2002–2003)
  • Paul Burton – bass, guitar, vocals (1971–1973)
  • Jonathan "Jojo" Glemser – guitar (1971)
  • Ernie Graham – guitar, vocals (1971)
  • Sean Tyla – guitar, vocals (1972 & 1973)
  • Deke Leonard - guitar (1972)
  • Kevin Spacey – drums (2002–2003)

Subsequent careers

Richard Treece

Richard Treece briefly joined Deke Leonard's Iceberg and later re-joined George and Martin Ace in The Flying Aces. He briefly joined The Splendid Humans, before joining former Man members Phil Ryan and Will Youatt in The Neutrons.[citation needed] In 2000, he issued a solo album, Dream Arena East (Treece 1), and then joined Ken Whaley in 'The Archers', which evolved into 'The Green Ray'.

The Green Ray comprised Richard Treece (guitar and vocals), Ken Whaley (bass and Vocals), his brother Simon Whaley (drums) and Simon Haspeck (guitar and vocals). They issued three albums: Soft Cloud (2002) SC001/FYPC15, Back from the Edge (2006) Gray 11 with Aaron Liddard, and the live Classic Rock Club, Cheshunt, 5 January 2008 with Nick Saloman of The Bevis Frond (Effigy 2008), and a DVD with Barry "The Fish" Melton guesting.[13] They played at the Glastonbury Festival (Green Stage) in 2007. Treece died on 26 May 2015.

Paul Burton

Paul Burton joined Deke Leonard's Iceberg after playing on the first album. He toured Republic of Ireland with them. He left after that tour and worked for Manticore Records (Emerson, Lake & Palmer), running their rehearsal studio in Fulham Broadway. He worked as a tour manager for Baker Gurvitz Army (Ginger Baker, Burton and Adrian Gurvitz) until January 1975. Having been newly married, he took a job as a chauffeur and ended up running a UK subsidiary of a Swiss electronics company as managing director for more than 25 years. He retired in 2007 and now living in Devon with his second wife.

Discography

Albums

Live albums

Singles

  • "Running Down Deep" / "Paper Leaves" (1971) Liberty (LBF15459)
  • "Heaven Row" / "Brown Lady" (1972) United Artists (UP 35355)
  • "Mommy Won’t Be Home for Christmas" / "Johnny B. Goode" (1972) United Artists (UP 35466)

Compilations

Samplers

  • All Good Clean Fun One track ("Street Songs") appears on the original 1971 double album (UDX 201/2)
  • All Good Clean Fun Three tracks ("Street Songs", "Eddie Waring" and "Re-affirmation") appear on the 2004 triple CD re-release (Liberty 8660902)
  • Naughty Rhythms: The Best of Pub Rock Includes one Helps track "Alabama Lady" (1996) EMI Premier (37968)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Pettiness, Keith. "Allmusic biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  2. ^ Sleevenotes by Nigel Cross to CD re-release of Ernie Graham his eponymous 1971 album (Hux 032)
  3. ^ "Help Yourself - Help Yourself | Releases". Discogs.com. 4 July 2017. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
  4. .
  5. ^ review by Valve of Beware the Shadow in Head Heritage retrieved 20 November 2008
  6. ^ a b The Peel Sessions BBC Radio 1 retrieved 20 November 2008
  7. ^ a b Sleevenotes by John Tobler to CD re-release of Strange Affair, The Return of Ken Whaley and Happy Days (BGOCD 452)
  8. .
  9. ^ a b Sleevenotes by Phil Mc Mullen to the 2004 release of 5 (Hux 054)
  10. ^ Raggett, Ned. "Help Yourself Review by Ned Raggett". AllMusic. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  11. ^ Thompson, Dave. "Strange Affair". AllMusic. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  12. ^ Raggett, Ned. "Beware the Shadow Review by Ned Raggett". AllMusic. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  13. ^ Effigy Music DVD details Archived 18 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 18 December 2008
  14. AllMusic
  15. AllMusic
  16. AllMusic
  17. AllMusic
  18. AllMusic