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Goodsall and Jones later got back together in 1992 with drummer [[Frank Katz]] under the Brand X name again for the ''[[Xcommunication]]'' album. This version of the band featured Goodsall performing on guitar and [[MIDI]]-guitar. The 1997 album ''[[Manifest Destiny (album)|Manifest Destiny]]'' also includes Goodsall, Jones, and Katz, as well as [[Franz Pusch]] on keyboards and other instruments, [[Marc Wagnon]] on MIDI vibes and other percussion instruments, [[Ronnie Ciago]] on percussion, and [[Danny Wilding]] on flute.
Goodsall and Jones later got back together in 1992 with drummer [[Frank Katz]] under the Brand X name again for the ''[[Xcommunication]]'' album. This version of the band featured Goodsall performing on guitar and [[MIDI]]-guitar. The 1997 album ''[[Manifest Destiny (album)|Manifest Destiny]]'' also includes Goodsall, Jones, and Katz, as well as [[Franz Pusch]] on keyboards and other instruments, [[Marc Wagnon]] on MIDI vibes and other percussion instruments, [[Ronnie Ciago]] on percussion, and [[Danny Wilding]] on flute.



==Reunion==
It has been confirmed that Brand X have been in talks of a reunion album and tour, with Phil Collins on drums, Ian Hart-Stein on guitar (being given permission to reuse the alias by Collins after he was found in his apartment unconscious after a suicide attempt) and a projected [[hologram]] of [[Sid Vicious]] from [[The Sex Pistols]] on bass. They are said to have recorded one new song already in light of the recent media attention of [[Michael Richards]], aptly entitled "Racism Sucks"l


== Discography ==
== Discography ==

Revision as of 14:07, 22 November 2006

Brand X is a classic jazz fusion band. Most of their albums were recorded in the 1970s and 1980s. In the 1990s, original members John Goodsall and Percy Jones formed a new version of Brand X.

File:Brand X-Missing Period Inside.jpg
The liner notes to Missing Period, indicating that Goodsall and Jones have owned the Brand X name since 1978.

1974-1981

The liner notes for The Plot Thins: A History of Brand X, 1976-1980, as written by Chris Welch and reproduced on the Phil Collins official web site [1], state that the band was formed in 1974 when guitarist John Goodsall met keyboard player Robin Lumley, who had been rehearsing an album project with bass player Percy Jones. When they started rehearsing at Island Studios, ex-Melody Maker critic Richard Williams took note of their music and wrote down "Brand X" in the studio diary, since the group lacked a name at the time. Their first drummer, Phil Spinelli, quit the band to work on a singing career. Drummer Phil Collins sat in for some guest sessions and eventually decided to join the band. He was already committed to Genesis, but he felt he could fit in time for recording and gigs with Brand X as a side project. Bill Bruford was also involved in the band's early days, but never recorded with the band. Goodsall, Jones, Lumley and Collins all also appeared on 1976's Marscape, released by Jack Lancaster and Robin Lumley and recorded around the same time as the first Brand X album, Unorthodox Behaviour.

When the band was doing recording sessions in 1977 through 1979, other musicians performed with the band at various times:

During recording sessions for Product and Do They Hurt?, two different versions of the band recorded in the same studio at the same time, working in shifts. One band included Mike Clarke with Peter Robinson and Percy Jones, while the other featured Collins, Lumley, Goodsall, and Giblin. The musicians were interchangeable between each other's sessions, and some 20 different songs were recorded.

After the 1981 album, Is There Anything About?, the band split up after they felt they had reached the end of a creative cycle. Robin Lumley says:

It was great that everyone really got on well, from beginning to end. Funnily enough there was never really a leader. People recognised Phil as a figure head and he had his own status, but generally it was a band without a boss. We were all very good friends socially, and we all shared the same sense of humour. Yes, there were some very silly episodes with Super Glue on the road! I refuse to take all the blame for that. But I did manage to get some industrial strength glue that was used for sticking aeroplanes together. So as far as sticking hotel room furniture to the ceiling was concerned - that was easy!

Lumley addressed the reasons for the breakup as follows:

The fact is we wore it out. We certainly didn't hate each other. We could no longer write any-thing together that made us happy and we just got on with other things. Phil of course went into his solo career, which became fantastically successful. The interesting thing is that now the old Brand X records are selling really well. I guess they are appealing to people who have worn out their vinyl copies and want the CDs! We never objected to being called a jazz-Rock band, but really we were playing rock 'n' roll with jazz bits in it.

1992-1998

Goodsall and Jones later got back together in 1992 with drummer Frank Katz under the Brand X name again for the Xcommunication album. This version of the band featured Goodsall performing on guitar and MIDI-guitar. The 1997 album Manifest Destiny also includes Goodsall, Jones, and Katz, as well as Franz Pusch on keyboards and other instruments, Marc Wagnon on MIDI vibes and other percussion instruments, Ronnie Ciago on percussion, and Danny Wilding on flute.


Discography

Studio

Live

Compilation

References

  1. ^ Welch, Chris. "Brand X - A Brief History". Phil Collins - Official Site for Phil Collins. Retrieved 2006-07-25.

External links