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by Richie Unterberger
Despite a couple of British Top Ten hits in 1964-65, the Rockin Berries made no dent in the U.S. market at the h 更多>
by Richie Unterberger
Despite a couple of British Top Ten hits in 1964-65, the Rockin Berries made no dent in the U.S. market at the height of the British Invasion. Much of the Berries output reflected the lighter pop-rock face of the British beat boom, emphasizing catchy, carefully constructed tunes supplied by British and American songwriters, with high harmonies indebted to the Four Seasons and the Beach Boys. The Berries wrote little of their own material, and this, combined with the wimpiness of some of their recordings, doomed them to little recognition, and little critical respect, even among British Invasion aficionados. For what they were, however, their best pop-rock outings were pretty respectable. A career strategy that put an eye on the all-around entertainer niche, however, led them to record many comedy numbers that have dated excruciatingly badly, and also ensured that they were denied artistic credibility and fell out of the British charts after the mid-1960s.
The Rockin Berries were formed in the early 1960s when guitarist Brian Chuck Botfield was performing with the Bobcats, a Birmingham band, at the Star Club in Hamburg. Several Bobcats (including singer Jimmy Powell, who went on to record with the Five Dimensions in the 1960s) broke off to form their own band, and Botfield brought in some Birmingham friends to regroup as the Rockin Berries. Vocal arrangements were the Berries forte, with Clive Lea taking the harder-rocking stuff and falsetto-voiced Geoff Turton pacing their most famous, Four Seasons-influenced material.
After a couple of flop singles for Decca in 1963, the Rockin Berries signed with the Pye subsidiary Piccadilly. After a mild hit with a cover of the Shirelles I Didnt Mean to Hurt You, their cover of the Tokens Hes in Town, penned by star songwriting team Gerry Goffin and Carole King, took them to #3 in the British charts in late 1964. Hes in Town was a gentle harmony number, like a less shrill Four Seasons, and the group turned to another cover of an American record, the Reflections Poor Mans Son, for their follow-up. More somber than Hes in Town, this made #5 in the UK. At around the same time, the Berries debut LP In Town, with a manic variety of material encompassing operatic ballads, R&B, harmony pop-rock, comedy, and the German Ich Liebe Dich, was a fair success in Britain, making #15.
The Rockin Berries versatility, though a boon to their live work in enabling them to play more mainstream theaters and cabarets than some British Invasion acts, worked against them on record. They would frequently insert comic routines into their live shows, and their second album, Life Is Just a Bowl of Berries, was half-occupied by terrible novelty/comedy numbers. They continued to record pop-rock by professional tunesmiths on their singles, including Goffin-Kings Youre My Girl, material by British hitmakers John Carter, Ken Lewis, and Perry Ford (who were also writing and recording hits as the Ivy League at the time), and even a little-known tune co-written by a pre-Blues Project Al Kooper, The Water Is Over My Head. Goffin-Kings Youre My Girl (which, like their Hes in Town, was first given to the Tokens) and The Water Is Over My Head were minor British hits in 1965, but after that there was no chart success for the band. They continued get work on the cabaret circuit and record singles for Piccadilly and Pye through 1968, when Turton left for a solo career, getting a Top Thirty hit in the US in early 1970 under the name of Jefferson (with Baby Take Me in Your Arms). Turton eventually rejoined the still-active Rockin Berries, who continued to play cabaret for the rest of the century, as well as making some more recordings.