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The Sorrows

The Sorrows are a rock band formed in 1963 in Coventry, Warwickshire, England,[1] by Pip Whitcher, and were part of the British beat boom of the 1960s. They were a fixture in the English mod scene and are sometimes referred to as freakbeat.

The Sorrows

Piccadilly

Phil Packham
Don Fardon

Career[edit]

The band was formed in 1963, and toured Germany for a month, playing several sets each day.[2] The band's first recording was a version of "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes", recorded in Joe Meek's bathroom.[2] They were signed by Pye subsidiary Piccadilly Records, and began working with producer John Schroeder. Their line-up included Fardon, Whitcher, Juckes, Packham and Finlay.[1]


The Sorrows released their first album, Take a Heart, in 1965 on Piccadilly.[1] The Sorrows played a hard, aggressive version of contemporary R&B; later this style of music was termed freakbeat.[3]


After the band achieved a minor chart position on the UK Singles Chart, Phil Packham and Don Fardon left the group. Fardon had a UK chart hit with "Indian Reservation".[2] Wez Price joined the group on bass guitar, Roger Lomas became lead guitarist, and Pip Whitcher did vocals. The band relocated to Italy, where they were moderately successful.[1] Whitcher and Lomas later recorded at Air Studios under Mike Sullivan.


Lomas in the early 1980s became a record producer for his own company, ROLO productions, and produced 1980s ska bands such as Bad Manners. In 2003 Lomas produced the Grammy Award winning album, Jamaican E.T. for Lee "Scratch" Perry.


In 2011, the band was re-formed by Fardon and Packham, and they began performing live again.[2] The new line-up comprised Fardon (vocals), Packham (bass guitar and vocals), Nigel Lomas (drums and vocals), Marcus Webb (guitar) and Brian Wilkins (guitar, harmonica and vocals).

Philip (Pip) Whitcher – (born 6 May 1943, ) – lead guitar and vocals.

Coventry

– (born Donald Arthur Maughn, 19 August 1940, Coventry) – vocals

Don Fardon

Philip (Phil) Packham – (born 13 June 1945, , near Stratford, Warwickshire) – bass guitar

Bidford-on-Avon

Terry Juckes – (born 27 August 1943, Broadway, Worcestershire ) – and vocals

rhythm guitar

Bruce Finlay – (born 20 September 1944, , Aberdeenshire, Scotland died 12 October 2022) – drums

Huntly

"I Don't Wanna Be Free" / "Come With Me" (Piccadilly 7N 35219) 1965

"Baby" / "Teenage Letter" (Piccadilly 7N 35230) 1965

"Take a Heart" / "We Should Get Along Fine" (Piccadilly 7N 35260/Warner Bros. 5662 [US release]) 1965 – – No. 21[4]

UK Singles Chart

"Nimm mein Herz" (German version of "Take a Heart") / "Sie war mein Girl" (Deutsche Vogue DV 14 449) 1965

"You've Got What I Want" / "No No No No" (Piccadilly 7N 35277) 1966

"Let The Live Live" / "Don't Sing No Sad Songs For Me" (Piccadilly 7N 35309) 1966

"Let Me In" / "How Love Used To Be" (Piccadilly 7N 35336) 1966

"Pink, Purple, Yellow and Red" / "My Gal" (Piccadilly 7N 35385) 1967

"Gonna Find A Cave"/"Don't Do That", "Doin' Alright Tonight" (EP) (Rise Above, RISE7188) 2014

The Sorrows Myspace page

at Allmusic

The Sorrows biography