RIP January

  • Please bear with us on the new site integration and fixing any known bugs over the coming days. If you can not log in please try resetting your password and check your spam box. If you have tried these steps and are still struggling email [email protected] with your username/registered email address
  • Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!

Barchullona

Well-Known Member
May 20, 2012
29,658
14,849
113
NULL
Honey Lantree of the Honeycombs. RIP. Saw them in 1964 and they were surprisingly good. She was no gimmick drummer either, could play well.

This is one of those songs that always takes me back and I associate with the time it was released.

You must log in or register to see media
 
Remember singing ob la di all the time as a little kid.
I actually met one of the band in LA when I stayed with a mate.
Edit. Actually I think it was dean I met. But we called him tommy, seen it's his real name. A really nice bloke and so modest. Got his guitar out in the boozer at Xmas and had a great singalong.
RIP

Dean Ford, singer with Scottish pop group Marmalade, dies aged 72
Ben Beaumont-ThomasLast modified on Wed 2 Jan 2019 14.29 GMT
Frontman of first Scottish band to top UK singles chart later became limousine driver in Los Angeles

Dean Ford, the frontman with Scottish guitar-pop group Marmalade, has died aged 72.

His daughter announced the news on Facebook, writing that Ford was “an amazing man, a gentle soul, extremely talented musician and a great father and Pop Pop to his only grandchild Connor … His music was his life and will now be his legacy for ever.”

Ford, whose real name was Thomas McAleese, grew up in Airdrie and formed his first band, the Tonebeats, aged 13 before joining local band the Cravats aged 16. He went on to front Dean Ford and the Gaylords, who became established in the nascent “swinging London” scene of the mid-60s, before changing their name to Marmalade.





The band became the first Scottish group to top the UK singles chart, with their cover of the Beatles’ Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da in December 1968. They had another seven UK Top 10 hits, including Reflections of My Life, co-written by Ford, which also reached the US Top 10 and sold over 2m copies worldwide. The band toured with the Who and Ford duetted with country star Bobbie Gentry.

Ford went solo after the band split and released an unsuccessful album in 1975. Eventually he moved to Los Angeles and worked as a limousine driver to stars including Michael Jackson, Tom Waits, Susan Sarandon and Bob Dylan, as well as delivering pizza and flowers. He also developed an alcohol problem before going sober in 1986. “The only thing that spoiled my life was alcohol,” he said in a 2015 interview. “I spent a lot of money on alcohol. And drinking took me away from what I should be doing.”
 
Honey Lantree of the Honeycombs. RIP. Saw them in 1964 and they were surprisingly good. She was no gimmick drummer either, could play well.

This is one of those songs that always takes me back and I associate with the time it was released.

You must log in or register to see media

sad to hearv this. this was one of very few "pop" tracks my folks had on vinyl and i've always loved it.
 
Honey Lantree of the Honeycombs. RIP. Saw them in 1964 and they were surprisingly good. She was no gimmick drummer either, could play well.

This is one of those songs that always takes me back and I associate with the time it was released.

You must log in or register to see media
RIP Honey.

Is Alan Partridge a time traveller? He’s definitely playing lead guitar on that YouTube clip.
 
  • Like
Reactions: HGS66
Honey Lantree of the Honeycombs. RIP. Saw them in 1964 and they were surprisingly good. She was no gimmick drummer either, could play well.

This is one of those songs that always takes me back and I associate with the time it was released.

You must log in or register to see media
The name of the group The Honeycombs was a pun on the drummer’s name and her job as a hairdresser's assistant.