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CAPABILITY BROWN

From left: Graham
Whyte, Tony Ferguson, Roger Willis,
Roger Flavell and Jeff Christie (seated)
CHRISTIE fans still see photos of this line-up
floating around from time to time, and apart from not
knowing who some of the members are often wonder why
there are five people in the shot. After all, Christie had
always performed as a trio or a quartet.
These 1974 photographs, as it turned
out, proved to be the last promotional pictures taken of the
band before it officially split up in the 70's. It shows Jeff,
Roger Flavell, and three new members Tony Ferguson
(lead guitar), Roger Willis (drums) and Graham Whyte (guitar).
The recruits had been with a band called Capability Brown,
whose music had garnered some critical acclaim.
Capability Brown had and still have a cult following in UK
music history as a "progressive" band, ultimately
based on an outstanding piece from their second album, Voice.
But largely their range covered mainstream pop music, treated
in an "arty", alternative fashion. The band was
a six-piece in which everyone sang and played instruments.
The line-up consisted of Tony Ferguson (guitar, bass), Dave
Nevin (keyboards, guitar, bass), Kenny Rowe (bass, percussion),
Grahame White (guitar, lute, balalaika, keyboards), Joe Williams
(percussion) and Roger Willis (drums, keyboards).
Ferguson and Nevin wrote the majority
of the bands material, and the band also excelled in
covers of obscure material (Rare Birds Beautiful
Scarlet and Redman, Argents
Liar, Affinitys I
Am And So Are You and Steely Dans Midnight
Cruiser).
Capability Browns forte was
vocalizing. Together they sounded not unlike The Association:
a massed choir of voices, ranging from baritone to high clean
falsettos. Their first album, From Scratch, which included
Liar, was average and unexceptional.
The second album Voice, released in 1973, was their claim
to fame, incorporating an over-20-minute richly melodic piece
called Circumstances (In Love, Past,
Present, Future Meet) a stunning piece of music
incorporating keyboards, a cappela voices, synthesizers and
mellotrons, solo vocals, delicate harpsichord-like acoustic
guitar sections, powerful electric guitar chords and massed
vocal choirs.
The band did not manage to record
again after this, and in 1974 Tony, Roger and Graham were
recruited by friend and Christie member Roger Flavell to join
his group on a tour of South America. They replaced Greg Ainsworth
and Terry Fogg, who had left for other pursuits.

The new line-up
had been put together for a tour of Central America and South
America; however, Graham never showed up for rehearsals, and
days before the tour was scheduled to begin, decided to pull
out of the group altogether. The shows went ahead without
him, and proved to be a success. It was on this tour that
Roger performed Guantanamera
on stage, to much approval from the Spanish-speaking audiences.
The group also performed another song specially for the Latin
fans, Navajo. The two songs were
released as separate singles
in Mexico, with Navajo hitting
No 1 in the Mexican charts. In Europe, the two songs were
released back-to-back on a single.
The Capability Brown members incorporated
two of their songs into the Christie stage sets covers
of Rare Bird's Redman,
and Argent's Liar. There was
an interesting connection here Liar
was written by well-known songwriter Russ Ballard, who was
in Unit 4 + 2 with former Christie member Lem Lubin.
The group broke up shortly after
the tour, and Christie never performed live in the 70's again.
Tony, Roger and Graham reunited to form a group called Krazy
Kat, and still collaborate with each other on various projects.
See also History.
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