- Simon Dupree and the Big Sound
Simon Dupree and the Big Sound was a British pop band formed by three brothers,
Derek Shulman , born 1947 (vocals),Phil Shulman , born 1937 (vocals, saxophone, trumpet), andRay Shulman , born 1949 (guitar, violin, trumpet, vocals). They started as The Howling Wolves, and then became The Road Runners, playing R&B around thePortsmouth area, home of the Shulman brothers. Making up the rest of the group were Peter O'Flaherty (bass), Eric Hine (keyboards), and Tony Ransley (drums).Their first few singles, notably "I See The Light" (1966), failed to chart and they only broke through at the end of 1967 with the psychedelic "Kites", a Top 10 hit in the
UK Singles Chart . Regarding themselves asblue-eyed soul brothers, they hated it as it was so unrepresentative of their usual style. The follow-up, "For Whom The Bell Tolls", was only a minor hit, and a subsequent single "Broken Hearted Pirates", featuring an uncreditedDudley Moore on piano, made no headway at all.Fact|date=February 2007A then unknown keyboard player by the name of Reginald Dwight was hired to fill in for an ill Eric Hine and he joined them on a 1967 tour in
Scotland . They were asked to allow him to stay on, and he was almost recruited as a permanent member. They politely rejected the chance to record any of his compositions (although they did ultimately record "I'm Going Home" as the B-side of their final (contractually obligated) single,) and laughed when he told them he was adopting thestage name ofElton John . [The 'Simon Dupree and The Big Sound' story continues with 'Elton John' in Scotland. [http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~peterkin/elton_john_with_simon_dupree_1968.htm] ]The group released two
album s; "Without Reservation", onParlophone Records (1967), and a compilation "Amen" (1980). A more recent set, "Part Of My Past" (2004), includes all their singles, album tracks and previously unreleased material prepared for their second album, release of which was cancelled at the time.Frustrated as being seen as
one-hit wonders being pushed by theirrecord label as a pop group rather than the soul band they had always intended to be, they disbanded in 1970 and the Shulman brothers went on to form the successfulprogressive rock groupGentle Giant .References
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