I CAN HEAR THE GRASS GROW
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The Move were a British rock band formed in Birmingham in 1965. They scored nine top 20 UK singles in five years, but were among the most popular British bands not to find any real success in the United States. For most of their career The Move were led by guitarist, singer and songwriter Roy Wood. He wrote all the group's UK singles and, from 1968, also sang lead vocals on many songs. Initially, the band had four main vocalists (Wood, Carl Wayne, Trevor Burton, and Chris "Ace" Kefford) who divided the lead-vocal duties among themselves. The Move evolved from several mid-1960s Birmingham-based groups, including Carl Wayne & the Vikings, the Nightriders, and the Mayfair Set. Their name referred to the move various members of these bands made to form the group. Besides Wood, The Move's original five-piece line-up in 1965 was drummer Bev Bevan, bassist Ace Kefford, vocalist Carl Wayne, and guitarist Trevor Burton. By 1972, The Move had been reduced to a trio consisting of Wood, Bevan and Jeff Lynne, formerly of the Idle Race. The band's later years saw this lineup develop a side project called Electric Light Orchestra, which would go on to achieve major international success after The Move disbanded. Wood would later leave that group and form the decently successful band Wizzard. During their time together, the band released four studio albums, two compilation albums, one live extended play, and 18 singles. After their first two singles, "Night of Fear" and "I Can Hear the Grass Grow" hit number 2 and number 5 on the UK singles chart, the band released their self-titled debut in 1968, which hit number 15 on the UK Official Albums Chart and garnered two more top-10 singles, "Flowers in the Rain" and "Fire Brigade". After 1968, the band would have three more singles in the top 10, including "Blackberry Way", which went all the way to number 1. The band also released three more studio albums, Shazam, Looking On, and Message from the Country before their breakup. In 1981, the band briefly reunited for a one-off charity concert, consisting of Bevan, Wood, and Kefford. 23 years later, in 2004, Bevan would form the "Bev Bevan Band" with Phil Bates and Neil Lockwood. The name later changed to "Bev Bevan's Move" and Bevan would invite Burton to the group in 2006 as an occasional guest in shows, before he became a permanent member of the group. Between 2007 and 2014, Burton and Bevan, alongside Lockwood and new members Phil Tree, Gordon Healer, Tony Kelsey, and Abby Brant, performed intermittently as "The Move featuring Bev Bevan and Trevor Burton". The band's most recent reunion would happen in 2016, as "Bev Bevan's Zing Band", with Bevan and former members Tree, Brant, and Kelsey, alongside new member Geoff Turton.
In connection with: The Move
Title combos: The Move
Description combos: UK of one Gordon later which formerly find also

Colin David Tooley (18 August 1943 – 31 August 2004), better known as Carl Wayne, was an English singer and actor. He is best remembered as the lead singer of The Move, a group that he co-founded in 1965. He sings lead on several of the band's hits, such as "Curly" (in which he also plays sitar), "Flowers in the Rain", "I Can Hear the Grass Grow", and "Night of Fear". Wayne was born and raised in Birmingham and entered the music business playing bass guitar. However, he switched to vocals and formed the G-Men, but later joined The Vikings (later Carl Wayne and the Vikings), a band which also included Ace Kefford and Bev Bevan. Kefford and Trevor Burton formed a group, The Move, which Wayne, Bevan, and Roy Wood would join, hitting huge success within the band. He left in 1970, and pursued a cabaret career with slight success. Wayne notably played Tom-Tom and Odd Job John in several episodes of Emu's TV programmes. In 2000, he joined The Hollies, and performed with them until his death in 2004.
In connection with: Carl Wayne
Title combos: Wayne Carl
Description combos: David In the cabaret also was group Rain co
Fall Heads Roll is the 24th studio album by English post-punk group the Fall, released in 2005. Although well-received by critics, it didn't reach the top 100 of the UK Albums Chart, and was the last album released by the band prior to major personnel changes.
In connection with: Fall Heads Roll
Title combos: Fall Heads Roll Heads Fall
Description combos: didn the the it prior by is album well
Move is the debut album by the English rock group the Move. Released on 22 March 1968 through Regal Zonophone Records, the album features ten Roy Wood compositions, along with three covers which had been a prominent part of the group's live act. Although scheduled for an earlier release, the album was delayed by the theft of the master tapes, which led to the tracks needing to be re-mixed. The album was sporadically recorded between January 1967 and February 1968 at Advision, De Lane Lea and Olympic Studios in London, during gaps in their tight recording schedule when the group were not booked for any performances. Highly anticipated, the album featured two previously released singles: "Flowers in the Rain" and "Fire Brigade", both of which reached the top five in the UK Singles Chart. "Cherry Blossom Clinic" would have also been released as a single, although the release was withdrawn. Still, two other singles from the album would be released outside of the UK, those being the US-exclusive single "Yellow Rainbow" and the Japan-exclusive single "The Girl Outside", which had "Cherry Blossom Clinic" on its B-side. Move was the only album by the band to chart in the UK, reaching number fifteen on the charts during the early summer of that year. Move was also the only album by the group to feature their original bassist Chris "Ace" Kefford, who left the band shortly after the record was released in spring 1968, as well as being the only one to fully feature rhythm guitarist Trevor Burton, who left during the early sessions for their follow-up record Shazam, although Kefford would return for a one-off reunion concert in 1981, and Burton would return to the band (then-renamed to the "Bev Bevan Band") in 2004, as an occasional member, before becoming a full member once again in 2007.
In connection with: Move (The Move album)
Title combos: album Move The album Move The Move album Move
Description combos: spring needing one Lane re in album theft The
"I Can Hear the Grass Grow " is the second single by the Move, written by Roy Wood and produced by Denny Cordell. The song was recorded on the 5th of January, 1967 in Advision Studios (based in London), was first released on the 31st of March (making it their very first original release that year), and became a big hit, making it to number 5 on the UK Singles Chart on the 10th of May, staying there for a total of ten weeks. "I Can Hear the Grass Grow" was the second of a string of four consecutive top-5 singles from the band in the United Kingdom, from 1966 to 1968. The song would later become one of the band's signature hits, and was covered by acts such as the Blues Magoos in 1968, Status Quo in 1996, and The Fall in 2005. It would later appear on the 2007 reissue of the band's debut studio album, Move.
In connection with: I Can Hear the Grass Grow
Title combos: the Grass Grow Can Hear Grass Grow Hear the
Description combos: by Magoos reissue to the Can in Move was
Basic Blues Magoos is the third album by the American rock band the Blues Magoos. It was released on Mercury Records on May 13, 1968 (see 1968 in music). The album saw the group transitioning from psychedelia back to their blues rock roots. Though the album has gained more favor over the years, it was received as a disappointment upon its original distribution and failed to chart.
In connection with: Basic Blues Magoos
Title combos: Basic Blues Blues Basic Magoos
Description combos: The has the to to as more 1968 has
The discography of British rock band the Move consists of four studio albums, one live album, 20 compilation albums, one extended play, and 18 singles. The band's first two singles, "Night of Fear" and "I Can Hear the Grass Grow" were big hits in the United Kingdom, charting at number 2 and 5 respectively on the UK singles chart. In 1968, the band released their self-titled debut studio album, which reached number 15 on the UK Official Albums Chart and garnered two more hit singles, "Flowers in the Rain" and "Fire Brigade", which, like the previous two non-album singles, charted in the top 10 of the UK singles chart, with the former charting at number 2 and the latter charting at number 3. The band's next UK single, "Wild Tiger Woman" was a chart disappointment, only charting at number 53. Because of this, the band announced that they would break up if their next single did as poorly. This would not be the case, as the single that would come after, "Blackberry Way" charted at the top of the UK singles chart, and the single to come after, "Curly", whilst charting much less, hit number 12 and fared much better than "Wild Tiger Woman". Despite these successes, the band's second studio album, Shazam, released in 1970, did not make the UK Official Albums chart. The band released two more studio albums, Looking On and Message from the Country, which also did not make the charts, and while the lead single for the former, "Brontosaurus" hit number 7 on the UK singles chart, the second and final single from the album, "When Alice Comes Back to the Farm", did not chart at all in the UK, and Message from the Country did not have a single at all, with the planned "Ella James" single being withdrawn. Three more singles from the band would hit the charts, including "Tonight" at number 11, "Chinatown" at number 23, and "California Man" at number 7, although the band's final single, "Do Ya" would also not chart, other than a position at number 93 on the US Billboard Hot 100. The band would break up shortly afterwards, with members Bev Bevan, Roy Wood, and Jeff Lynne forming the hit band Electric Light Orchestra alongside Move associate Richard Tandy, with Move manager Don Arden becoming the manager for the new band. Roy, after leaving ELO, formed Wizzard, which were also decently successful. Meanwhile, the Move's final charting projects, the compilation albums Split Ends and The Best of the Move would be the band's only charting albums in the United States of America, although they charted considerably low, at number 172 and 205 respectively.
In connection with: The Move discography
Title combos: discography The The Move discography
Description combos: on single 93 at two UK UK from On
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