Hatfield and the North's Biography
Emerging from the Canterbury, England musical community which also launched Gong and Kevin Ayers' the Whole World, the whimsical progressive rock unit Hatfield and the North formed in 1972. Named in honor of a motorway sign outside of London, the group's founding membership brought together a who's-who of the Canterbury art-rock scene -- vocalist/bassist Richard Sinclair was a former member of Caravan, guitarist Phil Miller had tenured with Robert Wyatt in Matching Mole, and drummer Pip Pyle had served with both Gong and Delivery. After a series of line-up shuffles, keyboardist Dave Stewart (an alumnus of Egg) was brought in to complete the roster, and in tandem with the Northettes -- a trio of backing vocalists consisting of Barbara Gaskin, Amanda Parsons and Ann Rosenthal -- the group began gigging regularly.
Upon signing to Virgin, Hatfield and the North recorded their 1974 self-titled debut LP, a jazzy, largely improvisational work halfway between melodic pop and more avant-garde stylings. A single, "Let's Eat (Real Soon)," appeared at the end of the year, and in 1975 the group resurfaced with The Rotters Club; although the record briefly landed in the U.K. charts, their commercial future looked dim, and so Hatfield and the North disbanded within months of the album's release. Sinclair soon joined Camel, while Stewart recorded with Bill Bruford before finding pop success in 1981 with ex-Zombie Colin Blunstone on a cover of the Jimmy Ruffin chestnut "What Becomes of the Broken HeartedNULL" In 1989, Hatfield and the North reunited, minus Stewart, for a series of live dates; a document of the performances, Live 1990, followed in 1993. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
Upon signing to Virgin, Hatfield and the North recorded their 1974 self-titled debut LP, a jazzy, largely improvisational work halfway between melodic pop and more avant-garde stylings. A single, "Let's Eat (Real Soon)," appeared at the end of the year, and in 1975 the group resurfaced with The Rotters Club; although the record briefly landed in the U.K. charts, their commercial future looked dim, and so Hatfield and the North disbanded within months of the album's release. Sinclair soon joined Camel, while Stewart recorded with Bill Bruford before finding pop success in 1981 with ex-Zombie Colin Blunstone on a cover of the Jimmy Ruffin chestnut "What Becomes of the Broken HeartedNULL" In 1989, Hatfield and the North reunited, minus Stewart, for a series of live dates; a document of the performances, Live 1990, followed in 1993. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
Hatfield and the North's Albums
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Virgin Radio - Vancouver Canadian Top 20 - June 28, 2009
- 2Please Don't Leave Pink
- 3Love Game Lady Gaga
- 4Boom Boom Pow Black Eyed Peas
- 5I Do Not Hook Up Kelly Clarkson
- 6Halo Beyonce
- 7Waking Up In Vegas Katy Perry
- 8Dead End Countdown The New Cities
- 9Give It To Me Right Melanie Fiona
- 10Super Girl Suzie McNeil
- 11Goodbye Kristina DeBarge
- 12If You See Amy Britney Spears
- 13I Know You Want Me Pitbull
- 14Right Round Flo Rida
- 15Beautiful Akon
- 16The Climb Miley Cyrus
- 17Gives You Hell All-American Rejects
- 18Africa Karl Wolf
- 19Summer Girl Stereos
- 20Too Pretty State Of Shock
- 21Bucket Carly Rae Jepsen
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