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Status Quo (band)

Status Quo are a British rock band. The group originated in London and was founded in 1962 by Francis Rossi and Alan Lancaster while they were still schoolboys.[1][2] After a number of name and lineup changes, which included the introduction of John Coghlan in 1963 and Rick Parfitt in 1967, the band became The Status Quo in 1967 and Status Quo in 1969. As of 2022, the group have been active for 60 consecutive years (despite announcing a breakup in 1984, they played Live Aid the following year and resumed normal activities in 1986).[3]

For other uses, see Status Quo (disambiguation).

Status Quo

The Paladins (1962–1963)
The Spectres (1963–1967)
Traffic Jam (1967)
The Status Quo (1967–1969)

London, England

1962–1984
1985–present

See: Personnel

They have had over 60 chart hits in the UK – more than any other band[4] – including "Pictures of Matchstick Men", "Down Down", "Rockin' All Over the World", "Whatever You Want", "In the Army Now", and "What You're Proposing". Twenty-two of these reached the Top 10 in the UK Singles Chart, and fifty-seven reached the Top 40.[5] They have released over 100 singles and 33 albums, most of which were bestsellers. Since reaching number 5 on the UK albums chart in 1972 with Piledriver, Status Quo have achieved a career total of 25 UK top ten albums, extending all the way up to their most recent release, Backbone, in 2019. In 2012, they were announced as the tenth best-selling group of all time on the UK Singles Chart with 7.2 million singles sales in their homeland alone.[6] As of 2015, they were one of only 50 artists to have achieved more than 500 total weeks on the UK Albums Chart.[7] With their various records for both single and album releases, Status Quo are one of the most successful and bestselling bands of all time, especially in their home country.


In July 1985 the band opened Live Aid at Wembley Stadium with "Rockin' All Over the World".[8] In 1991, Status Quo received a Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music.[9] In 2014, preparing to headline that year's Download Festival, Status Quo won the Service to Rock award at the Kerrang! Awards.[10] Status Quo appeared on the BBC's Top of the Pops more than any other band.[11] Their success and longevity as well, in part, as their connections to the British Royal Family, including philanthropic work with the Prince's Trust, have seen them frequently described as a "national institution" by the media.[12][13][14] The band have sold approximately 108-118 million records worldwide.[15]

History[edit]

1962–1967: Formative years[edit]

Status Quo were formed in 1962 under the name The Paladins[16] by Francis Rossi (vocals, guitar) and Alan Lancaster (bass) at Sedgehill Comprehensive School, Catford, London, along with classmates Jess Jaworski (keyboards) and Alan Key (drums).[1] Rossi and Lancaster played their first gig at the Samuel Jones Sports Club in Dulwich, London. In 1963, Key was replaced by John Coghlan and the band changed their name to The Spectres.[2] After changing their name, Lancaster's father arranged for the group to perform weekly at a venue called the Samuel Jones Sports Club, where they were noticed by Pat Barlow, a gasfitter and budding pop music manager. Barlow became the group's manager and secured them spots at venues around London, such as El Partido in Lewisham and Café des Artistes in Chelsea.[17] In 1965, when Rossi, Lancaster and Jaworski left school, Jaworski opted to leave the band and was replaced by Roy Lynes.[18]


They began writing their own material, and later that year met Rick Parfitt who was playing with a cabaret band called The Highlights. By the end of 1965, Rossi and Parfitt – who had become close friends after meeting at Butlins – made a commitment to continue working together. On 18 July 1966, the Spectres signed a five-year deal with Piccadilly Records, releasing two singles that year, "I (Who Have Nothing)" (first recorded by Joe Sentieri and most famously covered by Tom Jones) and "Hurdy Gurdy Man" (an original song by Alan Lancaster), and one the next year called "(We Ain't Got) Nothin' Yet" (originally recorded by New York psychedelic band the Blues Magoos).[2] All three singles failed to make an impact on the charts.[19]


In 1967, the group's sound began moving towards psychedelia and they renamed themselves Traffic, but were soon forced to change it to Traffic Jam to avoid confusion with Steve Winwood's Traffic, following an argument over who had registered the name first.[19] The band secured an appearance on BBC Radio's Saturday Club, but in June their next single, "Almost But Not Quite There" (an original song by Francis Rossi), underperformed. The following month saw Parfitt, at the request of manager Pat Barlow, joining the band as rhythm guitarist and vocalist. Shortly after Parfitt's recruitment, in August 1967, the band officially became The Status Quo.[20]

Touring[edit]

Status Quo have performed a career total of at least 3700 documented gigs as of September 2022.[76][77][78] After the addition of early undocumented gigs and various lost performances, the concert total is likely to be higher and is estimated by the band to be over 6000, with an audience in excess of 25 million people.[79] The band have performed over a hundred gigs in a single year several times, with the recorded peak of 144 (1971), averaging a live show every 2.5 days.[78] The band calculated that after 48 years of touring activity, they had "travelled some four million miles and spent 23 years away from home".[79] With the sole exceptions of 1980 and 1985, Status Quo embarked on multinational tours every year between 1968 and 2019 (predominantly in Europe, though they have visited every populated continent).[78] The band took a complete break from touring in 2020 and 2021, including cancelling the largely sold-out Backbone album tour, in part due to restrictions imposed by the global response to COVID-19. They are touring again as of 2022, with extra dates added to their 2022 Out Out Quoing tour.[80][81]

– lead guitar, vocals (1962–present)

Francis Rossi

– keyboards, rhythm guitar, harmonica, vocals (1981–present; additional musician during 1976–1981)

Andy Bown

– bass, rhythm guitar, vocals (1985–present)

John "Rhino" Edwards

Leon Cave – drums, percussion, backing vocals (2013–present)

– rhythm guitar, vocals (2016–present)

Richie Malone

Current members


Former members

In 1989, American group Camper Van Beethoven scored a number one hit on Billboard magazine's Modern Rock Tracks chart with a cover version of "Pictures of Matchstick Men". The song is from their album Key Lime Pie. British alternative rock band Kasabian released their own cover version of the same song as a B-side from their 2006 single Shoot the Runner.

alternative rock

The 1996 re-issue of the album by Dexys Midnight Runners contained a cover version of "Marguerita Time".

Too-Rye-Ay

backed by Type O Negative, covered "Pictures of Matchstick Men" as part of the soundtrack to the Howard Stern biographical movie Private Parts in 1997.

Ozzy Osbourne

Towards the end of his life, John Peel was known for playing "Down Down" as part of his eclectic DJ sets.[82]

DJ

(from the Dutch project Ayreon) covered "Pictures Of Matchstick Men" and "Ice in the Sun" on his solo album Strange Hobby.

Arjen Lucassen

guitarist Brett Gurewitz recorded a cover version of "Pictures of Matchstick Men", on his 1985 solo album Seeing Eye Gods.

Bad Religion

German band Helloween covered "Rain" for their single "Power". It can also be found on the bonus disc of the special edition of their 1996 album, The Time of the Oath.

power metal

John Shearlaw, : Again & Again. Sidgwick & Jackson, October 1984, Paperback, ISBN 0-283-99101-1 (1st edition (1979) and 2nd edition (1982) as The Authorised Biography by John Shearlaw)

Bob Young

Tom Hibbert: Status Quo. Omnibus Press, 1982,  0-86001-957-8

ISBN

Neil Jeffries: Rockin' All Over the World. Proteus Books, March 1985, Paperback,  0-86276-272-3

ISBN

Bob Young: Quotographs – Celebrating 30 Years of Status Quo, IMP International Music Publications Limited, 1985,  1-85909-291-8

ISBN

Rick Parfitt: Just For The Record. Bantam Press, September 1994, hardcover, ISBN 0-593-03546-1

Francis Rossi

Patti Parfitt: Laughing All over the World: My Life Married to Status Quo. Blake Publishing Ltd, October 1998,  1-85782-198-X

ISBN

David J. Oxley: Rockers Rollin' – The Story of Status Quo. ST Publishing, Januar 2000, Paperback,  1-898927-80-4

ISBN

David J. Oxley: Tuned To The Music of Status Quo. ST Publishing, 2001, Paperback,  1-898927-90-1

ISBN

Francis Rossi, Rick Parfitt, : Status Quo. XS All Areas. Sidgwick & Jackson, September 2004, hardcover, ISBN 0-283-07375-6 (paperback edition: Macmillan Publishers Ltd, August 2005, ISBN 0-330-41962-5)

Mick Wall

Francis Rossi, Rick Parfitt, Bob Young: Status Quo: The Official 40th Anniversary Edition. Cassell Illustrated, October 2006, hardcover,  978-1-84403-562-5.

ISBN

Status Quo: La Route Sans Fin, foreword by Bob Young,  2-910196-42-9

ISBN

Eduard Soronellas Vidal (2008 – Spanish). Status Quo: Sobran Acordes, foreword by John 'Rhino' Edwards. Barcelona: Lenoir Ediciones.  978-84-938163-9-1

ISBN

Status Quo official website

at AllMusic

Status Quo

discography at Discogs

Status Quo

at IMDb 

Status Quo

BBC Norfolk: Status Quo gig gallery – Thetford Forest 2008

Francis Rossi, Interview: "I Have Eight Children, and They All Vary" 18 May 2011

Status Quo's ultimate gig history compiled by Thomas Franck