Everything about The Kinks totally explained
The Kinks were an
English pop/
rock group formed in 1963, and categorised as a
British Invasion band, along with the other members of the so-called
Big Four (
The Beatles,
The Rolling Stones and
The Who). Despite being less commercially successful than these three contemporaries, mostly because of an untimely four-year ban from the United States in the mid-to-late 1960s, the Kinks are cited among them as one of the most important and influential rock bands of all time.
The band's early hard-driving singles set a standard in the mid-1960s for
rock & roll, while albums such as
Face to Face,
Something Else,
The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society,
Arthur and
Muswell Hillbillies are highly regarded by fans, critics, and peers, and are considered amongst the most influential recordings of the era. The group's original line-up consisted of
Ray Davies on
lead vocals/
rhythm guitar/
keyboards,
Dave Davies on
lead guitar/
vocals,
Pete Quaife on
backing vocals/
bass guitar, and
Mick Avory on
drums and
percussion. Following Quaife's departure in 1969, the band centred around the three remaining original members and frequently changed bassists and keyboardists. In 1984, friction between Dave Davies and Mick Avory resulted in the latter's departure, leaving only the brothers from the original line-up. However, the increasingly deteriorating relationship between the Davies brothers, and a string of unsuccessful records brought a break-up of the band in the mid-90s. Rumours of Kinks reunion are vague and bandmembers have since embarked on solo careers.
The Kinks' most recent appearance on a record was in
The Darjeeling Limited (
Original Soundtrack), an independent film soundtrack from 2007. This album included three songs: This Time Tomorrow, Powerman, and Strangers, all from the 1970 album, Lola versus Powerman and the Moneygoround, Part One.
Their influence on emerging artists has been a constant. During the
New Wave era, groups such as
The Jam,
The Knack, and
The Pretenders covered Kinks songs but his background was in jazz drumming.
The first single from The Kinks, "
Long Tall Sally," was a cover of a
Little Richard song, but because
The Beatles had also covered it with enormous success, The Kinks' version was overlooked. Nevertheless, the band received a lot of publicity through the efforts of their managers Robert Wace, Grenville Collins, and ex-1950s showbiz star
Larry Page. Their second single, "You Still Want Me," also failed, while ignominiously shifting a minuscule number of units. Although neither the Kinks nor the Union gave a specific reason for the ban, at the time it was widely attributed to their rowdy on-stage behaviour.
The group made its first tour of Australia and New Zealand in January 1965 as part of a "package" bill that included
Manfred Mann and
The Honeycombs. A stopover in
Bombay, India on the way to Australia led Davies to write the song "See My Friends" (released as a single in July 1965). This was a prominent early example of
crossover music and (along with The Beatles' "
Norwegian Wood") was one of the first pop songs of this period to display a direct influence from the traditional music of the Indian subcontinent. According to Ray Davies' book
X-Ray he was inspired to write "See My Friends" after hearing the songs of local fishermen during an early morning walk.
The band's stylistic changes were first evident in late 1965, with the appearance of singles like "
A Well Respected Man," "
Dedicated Follower of Fashion," and their third album
The Kink Kontroversy. These demonstrated the progression in Davies's songwriting, from hard-driving rock numbers towards social commentary, observation, and idiosyncratic character study, all with a uniquely English flavour. The satiric single, "Sunny Afternoon," was the biggest hit of the summer of 1966 in the UK, topping the charts.
"Sunny Afternoon" was a dry run for the band's
Face to Face.
Face to Face displayed Davies' growing skill at crafting gentle yet cutting narrative songs about everyday life and people. One of the songs from the album, "Session Man," was written about notable
session musician Nicky Hopkins, who often joined the band in the studio playing
keyboards,
mellotron, and
harpsichord. Hopkins had first played with the band during
The Kinks Kontroversy sessions the year before. He would play on the band's next two studio albums and would also be featured on numerous live BBC recordings with the band, before joining
The Jeff Beck Group in 1968.
The great social commentary single, "Dead End Street," was released at the time of
Face to Face, and became another big UK hit. It failed commercially in the US, only reaching No. 73 in the Billboard charts.
'Golden age': 1967 – 1972
In May 1967, The Kinks returned with "
Waterloo Sunset" (which reached No. 2 on the UK charts), an emotional single with the melancholic observer spying two lovers meeting and crossing over Waterloo Bridge in London. The song was rumoured to have been inspired by the romance between two British celebrities of the time- actors Terence Stamp and Julie Christie - though Ray Davies denied this in his autobiography. The songs on their enduring 1967 album
Something Else By The Kinks expanded the musical progressions of
Face to Face, adding English
music hall influences to their sound. Dave Davies scored a major chart success with "Death of a Clown," co-written with Ray and recorded by The Kinks, but released as a Davies solo single (although confusingly also released on the
Something Else LP). Later, the Rolling Stones would remark that
Face to Face and
Something Else were both serious influences on their own albums of the late 1960s.
After a disappointing commercial reception for
Something Else, The Kinks rushed out a new single, "
Autumn Almanac," which became another hit in the UK. But their next single, "Wonderboy", released in the spring of 1968, stalled at No. 36 and would be the band's first single not to make the Top Ten since their early covers.
Throughout 1968, Davies continued to pursue his deeply personal songwriting style, while at the same time rebelling against the heavy demands placed on him to keep producing commercial hits. At the end of June The Kinks released the single "Days," which made #12 in the UK. It was a Top 20 hit in several other countries in the summer of 1968 -- although it didn't chart in the USA -- and it's also notable as the last recording made by the original lineup of the group.
Their next album, released in the autumn of 1968, is now widely regarded as a masterpiece, but at the time
The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society failed to sell strongly. A collection of thematic vignettes of town life, it was assembled from songs written and recorded over the previous two years, but the album's deliberately understated production contrasted with the extravagant style then in vogue, and it didn't have a popular single ("Starstruck" was released as a single in North America and continental Europe but failed to chart anywhere but the Netherlands). Although it was commercially unsuccessful,
Village Green was embraced by the new underground rock press, particularly in the US, where The Kinks' status as a cult band began to grow.
Village Green is now widely considered one of the best rock records of the era. An album track, "Picture Book", was featured in a popular
Hewlett-Packard television commercial in 2004.
Original bassist Peter Quaife resigned in March 1969 to form his own band
Mapleoak, and was swiftly replaced by
John Dalton. The American ban upon the band was finally removed that same year. Yet the band had to now adapt to an American concert scene that had changed radically in their absence — when The Kinks returned to the US their shows were at first held in smallish venues such as the Fillmore East. It would take several years of extensive touring in the US between 1969 and 1972 before the band developed a disciplined stage act that would generate positive reviews and draw crowds to larger concert venues.
Before their return to the US, The Kinks recorded another album -
Arthur (Or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire). As with the previous two albums,
Arthur was soaked with British lyrical and musical hooks, having been conceived as the score for a proposed but never realised television drama. It was a modest commercial success and was particularly well received by music critics in America, where it was favourably compared to the rock opera
Tommy by
The Who. Much of the album was inspired by Ray and Dave's beloved sister Rosie, who had migrated to
Australia in the early 1960s with her husband. Rosie was a significant musical influence on the brothers in their youth, and she inspired numerous Kinks songs, including "Australia", "Rosie Won't You Please Come Home" and "Come Dancing".
The band added keyboardist
John Gosling to their permanent line-up while recording the follow-up to
Arthur. Before that, veteran keyboardist
Nicky Hopkins, along with Ray, had done most of the session work. Gosling debuted with The Kinks on "
Lola" (1970), a clever account of a confused romantic encounter with a
transvestite that became a hit in both the UK and the US. The song originally contained a reference to "
Coca Cola", but the BBC refused to play it as this was considered a violation of their advertising policy. The single then had to be hastily re-recorded with the offending line changed to "cherry cola". The album
Lola versus Powerman and the Moneygoround, Part One was their most successful since the mid-1960s. The album also featured the group's final UK Top 10 hit, "Apeman."
In 1971, the band released
Percy, a soundtrack album to a
film of the same name about a penis transplant. It is generally regarded as a lesser effort. The band's US label, Reprise, declined to release it in America, precipitating a major dispute that contributed to the band's departure from that label.
In 1971, the band's contracts with Pye and Reprise expired. Before the end of the year The Kinks signed a five-album deal with RCA Records and received a million dollar advance. This helped fund the construction of their own recording studio, Konk. Their debut for RCA,
Muswell Hillbillies, was soaked with country influence and is often hailed as their last great record, though it failed commercially. A few months after the release of
Muswell Hillbillies, Reprise released the double-album compilation
The Kink Kronikles, which actually outsold
Muswell Hillbillies.
1972's double album
Everybody's in Show-Biz consisted of half studio tracks and half live tracks recorded during a two-night stand in New York's Carnegie Hall stand. The record featured the ballad "
Celluloid Heroes" and the catchy "Supersonic Rocket Ship", their last UK Top 20 hit for over a decade. "Celluloid Heroes" was a bittersweet rumination on dead Hollywood stars in which Ray Davies admits that he wishes his life were like a movie, "because celluloid heroes never feel any pain/And celluloid heroes never really die." The album was a commercial failure in the UK, but more successful in the US. The record was a transitional piece between the band's early 1970s rock material and the theatrical incarnation in which they'd immerse themselves over the next four years.
Theatrical incarnation: 1973 – 1976
In
1973, Ray Davies dived headlong into the theatrical style, beginning with the rock opera
Preservation, a sprawling chronicle of social revolution, and a more ambitious — if less successful — outgrowth of the earlier
Village Green Preservation Society ethos. In conjunction with the
Preservation project, Davies expanded The Kinks' lineup to include a horn section and female backup singers, essentially reforming the group as a theatrical troupe.
Preservation: Act 2 was the first project recorded at Konk Studio. From this point forward, virtually every Kinks studio recording would be produced by Ray Davies at Konk.
Ray's marital problems during this period would prove to adversely affect the band. Coupled with the band's abuse of drugs and alcohol and some members' antipathy for their new theatrical incarnation, the band's output remained uneven and their already wobbling popularity eroded further. Notable songs from this period include "Daylight", "Where Are They Now?", and "Sweet Lady Genevieve", as well as the more rock-oriented "Money Talks".
, closer in spirit to vaudeville than to rock opera, was released in late
1973 amid generally poor reviews, although its live performances fared better with the critics. appeared in the summer of 1974 to a similar reception. Davies soon began another musical,
Starmaker, this time for the Britain's Granada Television. After a broadcast with Ray Davies in the starring role and The Kinks as both back-up band and ancillary characters, the project eventually morphed into the thematically complex if uneven concept album
The Kinks present A Soap Opera, released in the spring of
1975, in which Ray Davies fantasised about what would happen if a rock star traded places with a "normal Norman" and took a 9-5 job.
In
1975, The Kinks recorded their final theatrical work,
Schoolboys in Disgrace, a backstory biography of
Preservation's capitalist overlord Mr. Flash. Compared with the previous three albums, the songs on
Schoolboys were more independent from the album's concept and featured a harder rock sound. With its funky beginning and emotive lyrics, "No More Looking Back" was considered a stand-out track by fans, and the straight ahead rocker "The Hard Way" became a Kinks concert fixture for the following decade. Some of the songs were performed at the Dutch Pinkpop festival, where a blind-drunk Ray Davies raced through an embarrassing golden oldies set, to the amusement of the equally inebriated crowd.
The Kinks signed with
Arista Records in 1976, reborn with the encouragement of Arista's management as an
arena rock band, stripped back down to a five-man core group.
Rock was also in a
back-to-basics trend at this time, spearheaded by the
Punk movement and the emergence of late 1970s "supergroups". One of the biggest bands of the time,
Van Halen, achieved their breakthrough hit with an arena rock remake of "You Really Got Me", which in turn greatly boosted The Kinks' commercial resurgence. The band soon reappeared on the record charts in what would prove to be their most successful commercial period.
Return to commercial success: 1977 – 1984
John Dalton left the band before finishing "Mr. Big Man" for their debut Arista album.
Andy Pyle was brought in to complete the track and to play on the following tour.
Sleepwalker featured the touching ballad "Brother" and the reflective rocker "Juke Box Music". The single "Father Christmas" followed in late
1977 and became a seasonal fixture on US rock radio. The b-side "Prince of the Punks" was Ray Davies' satirical comment on his former protégé Tom Robinson of "2-4-6-8 Motorway" fame.
Andy Pyle and keyboardist John Gosling soon left the group to work together on a separate project. Dalton returned to complete the tour, and ex-
The Pretty Things keyboardist Gordon Edwards joined the band. The Kinks' second Arista album
Misfits, and their only album with Andy Pyle, was released in 1978 and included the minor hit "A Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy," mid-life crisis tribute to The Kinks' dedicated fanbase. The album's title track was a commentary on the band's lack of commercial success.
Misfits is often cited as one of the band's better later albums.
There were soon to be further line-up changes before The Kinks coalesced around a more stable line-up. Dalton left the band permanently after the end of their UK tour, with Gordon Edwards soon to follow. Ex-
Argent bassist
Jim Rodford joined the band, which recorded
Low Budget with Ray Davies handling keyboard duties. Former
Life keyboardist
Ian Gibbons was drafted for the following tour and soon become a permanent member. Despite the personnel changes, the group's recording and concert success continued to grow.
During this time in the late 1970s, new wave bands like
The Jam ("David Watts") and
The Pretenders ("Stop Your Sobbing") and
hard rock acts like
Van Halen ("You Really Got Me") recorded successful covers of Kinks songs, boosting each band's fame. At the same time, these cover versions helped fuel the commercial success of each new Kinks release. The
hard and
punk rock sounds of
Low Budget (1979) helped make it the group's most successful album in America, peaking at No. 11. Davies' crafted intelligent, polished, and commercially appealing songs like "Pressure", "A Gallon of Gas", "Catch Me Now I'm Falling", and the minor, disco-flavoured hit "(Wish I Could Fly Like) Superman".
1979 also saw The Kinks headline at
Madison Square Garden for the first time.
A live album (their third) and video, both called "
One for the Road", followed in 1980, bringing the group's concert drawing power to a peak between
1980 and 1983. Dave Davies also took advantage of the group's improved commercial standing to fulfill his decade-long solo ambitions and released albums on his own, including the eponymous "
Dave Davies" in 1980 (also known by its catalogue number "PL13603" owing to its striking cover art, which depicted Dave Davies as a leather-jacketed piece of price scanning barcode) and 1981's less successful "
Glamour".
The next Kinks album,
Give the People What They Want, was released in late 1981 and reached number 15 in the US. The record attained gold status, and featured the optimistic pub-rocker "Better Things" (a rare UK hit single), as well as "Destroyer", tracks reminiscent in sound to the band's 1960s heyday. The Kinks spent the better part of
1982 touring. In spring
1983, the nostalgic "
Come Dancing" became their biggest American hit (at number 6) since "
Tired of Waiting for You". It also became the group's first top 20 hit in the UK since 1972, peaking at number 12 in the charts. The anthemic album
State of Confusion followed and was another commercial success, going to number 12 in the US, but once again failing to chart in the UK, as had all previous albums since 1967. Prominent tracks were the ballads "Don't Forget to Dance (a US top 30 hit, and minor UK chart entry)," "Long Distance", the title track and the gentle sing-along "Heart of Gold". The song "Young Conservatives" in turn commented on the aspirations of the younger generation in the 1980s. During this time, Ray Davies became romantically involved with
Pretenders leader
Chrissie Hynde, resulting in the birth of a daughter, Natalie Ray, in 1983.
The Kinks performed
Saturday Night Live three times during this period, further adding to their resurgent popularity. They first performed for SNL in 1977, then again in 1981, and one final time in 1984.
The Kinks' second wave of popularity effectively peaked with
State of Confusion in 1983, but both internal and external factors would soon begin to undermine them. A music video-fueled influx of new, fresh talent and styles into popular music at this time effectively muted the early 80s resurgence of many of the classic acts (including fellow UK bands such as
David Bowie, The Who, and The Rolling Stones). Bands influenced by The Kinks, such as
U2,
The Smiths,
The Jam and
Duran Duran were topping charts. The concert market for Kinks shows in the US had largely been played out by a decade of almost non-stop touring. As these outside pressures mounted, the internal strife in the group reached a critical point.
During the second half of 1983, Ray Davies started working on an ambitious solo film project,
Return to Waterloo, about a London commuter who daydreams he's a serial murderer. (The film gave actor
Tim Roth a significant early role.) Davies' commitment to writing, directing and scoring the new work caused tension in his relationship with his brother. Another problem was the stormy end of the volatile romance between Ray Davies and Chrissie Hynde. The old feud between Dave Davies and drummer Mick Avory also re-ignited. Soon Dave Davies wanted Avory replaced by the former drummer from
Argent (a band in which Jim Rodford had also been a member),
Robert Henrit, who had played drums on Dave's solo albums. It is also believed that Rodford also was instrumental in bringing his former bandmate in the fold.
These conflicts took a heavy toll on the band. Avory's relationship with Dave Davies had reached a breaking point. Dave Davies refused to work with Avory. Ray Davies said that Avory was his best friend in the band and he unwillingly had to choose sides, as said later in a 1989 interview: "The saddest day for me was when Mick left. Dave and Mick didn't get along. There were terrible fights, and I got to the point where I couldn't cope with it any more...Mick had an important sound. Mick wasn't a great drummer, but he was a jazz drummer - same school, same era as
Charlie Watts." Bob Henrit was brought in to take Avory's place. At Ray Davies' invitation Avory agreed to manage Konk Studios, where he also served as a producer and occasional contributor on later Kinks albums.
Between the completion of
Return to Waterloo and Avory's departure, the band had already begun work on
Word of Mouth, released in late
1984 with Avory still part of the line-up on three tracks. The album was similar to the last few Kinks records, but many of the songs had already been featured in solo versions on Ray Davies' companion album for
Return to Waterloo, and others lacked the heart, cleverness, and quality of the previous albums. The Kinks' rhythm section, no longer supported by Avory, was especially troubled, with a third of the tracks featuring Avory, others with Henrit, and still others supported by a drum machine which the band employed before the arrival of Henrit. Meanwhile, reports circulated that the Davies brothers were performing their album parts separately, unable to face each other in the studio. Despite everything, some standout material made the cut on
Word of Mouth, including Ray's ballad "Missing Persons", Dave's death-of-empire themed "Living on a Thin Line", and The Kinks' last Billboard Hot 100 entry, "Do it Again" (No. 41). Intense squabbles over song selections and singles released further strained the Davies brothers' working relationship. They have not made the Top 40 since.
Fall in popularity: 1985 – 1996
Word of Mouth was the last Kinks album for Arista Records. In early 1986, the group signed with MCA Records in the United States and London Records in the UK. Their first album for the new label,
Think Visual, (1986) was a moderate success, and holds interest as a result of songs like the ballad "Lost and Found", "Working at the Factory," which equated making records with blue-collar life on an assembly line, and the title track, an attack on the very MTV video culture the band seemed to be enjoying so much during the earlier part of the decade. During the
Think Visual sessions Mick Avory patched up his friendship with Dave Davies and played on Dave's composition "Rock 'N' Roll Cities". Avory was asked to rejoin The Kinks but declined, desiring a break from the non-stop schedule of recording, touring and performing. The Kinks followed
Think Visual in 1987 with another live album, titled
The Road, which was a mediocre commercial and critical performer. In 1989, The Kinks released
UK Jive - an out and out commercial failure. MCA Records ultimately dropped them, leaving The Kinks scrambling to find a label deal for the first time in over a quarter of a century. Longtime keyboardist Ian Gibbons left the group during this period, disappointed with the band's sudden lack of success, and was replaced by Mark Haley.
In 1990, their first year of eligibility, The Kinks were inducted into the
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame alongside
The Who,
Simon and Garfunkel,
The Four Seasons,
The Four Tops,
Hank Ballard, and
The Platters. Mick Avory and Pete Quaife were on hand for the award. When receiving the award Ray Davies looked out at the audience and said, "Seeing everybody makes me realise rock 'n' roll has become respectable. What a bummer." The prestigious induction, however, didn't bring back The Kinks' stagnated career. In 1991, a compilation from the
MCA Records period,
Lost & Found (1986-1989) was released to fulfill contractual obligations and their MCA period officially ended. The band signed with
Columbia Records and released the 5-song EP
Did Ya, which, despite a new studio re-recording of the band's 1968 British hit "Days," failed to chart.
The Kinks' first album for Columbia,
Phobia (1993), was released and recorded by the band as a four piece. Following the departure of Mark Haley after the bands sell out performance at the Royal Albert Hall, London, Gibbons rejoined for a US tour and again became part of the band. The record was critically well received, but yet again a commercial failure, only managing one week in the US Billboard chart at No. 166. As usual, no impression was made on the group's home country chart in the UK. The album contained a disproportionate contribution from Dave Davies and an at times overzealous heavy rock sound. But
Phobia had moments of interest, including the call and response duet "Hatred," in which the Davies brothers sent up their fractious reputation as brawling brethren. One single, "Only a Dream" narrowly failed to reach the UK chart, climbing to No. 79. "
Scattered", the album's final candidate for release as a single, was announced and TV and radio promotion followed, but the record couldn't be found in the shops. Several months later a small number appeared on the collector market.
Following this failure, the group was dropped by Columbia in 1994. In 1994 the band released the first version of the album
To The Bone on their own Konk label in the UK, a live album recorded partly on the highly successful UK tours of 1993 and 1994, and in the Konk studio before a small invited audience. Two years later the band released a new improved double CD live set in the USA, still called
To The Bone, which now consisted of two new studio tracks ("Animal" and "To The Bone") paired with effective new treatments of many old Kinks hits. The record drew respectable press but failed to chart in either the US or the UK. After the Hall of Fame induction, The Kinks decided to make some moves in the "unplugged" direction and softened their live performances, giving sensitive treatment to little-played songs from their early career such as the aforementioned "Days" and "
I'm Not Like Everybody Else" from 1966.
In 1995, Dave Davies co-composed the soundtrack to horror filmmaker
John Carpenter's remake of the 1960 alien invasion classic
Village of the Damned.
The band's name and profile rose considerably in the mid 1990s, mainly due to the British rock boom called "
Britpop" by the UK press. Several of the most prominent bands of the decade, including
Blur,
Pulp,
Suede and
Oasis, acknowledged The Kinks as a major influence on their careers and proclaimed themselves as among The Kinks' most admiring students. Blur frontman
Damon Albarn and Oasis' chief songwriter
Noel Gallagher especially stressed that The Kinks were one of the bands that made the biggest impact on their songwriting as well as their development as artists and musicians. Sadly, all these accolades made little difference to the commercial viability of the group. Rumours of a final break-up began to unfold.
Ray Davies took to his familiar role as a touchstone for yet another generation of British rockers, and acted as Britpop's "godfather" in a manner reminiscent of his relationship to The Jam and The Pretenders in the late-1970s. His intricate autobiographical novel
X-Ray was published in early 1995, while the Britpop hysteria was at its peak in the UK. Not to be outdone, brother Dave Davies responded with his memoir
Kink, published in the spring of 1996.
Disintegration and solo work: 1997 – present
The Kinks performed the last time in mid-1996. Band members are focusing on their own solo projects with Ray and Dave releasing acclaimed studio albums. Talk of a Kinks reunion has circulated (including an aborted studio reunion of the original band members in 1999), but both Ray and Dave Davies had shown little interest in playing together again. One of Ray's projects has included a choral work commissioned by the
Norfolk and Norwich Festival, performed but never recorded.
Despite all the post-break-up activity (or lack thereof), the old ties could still bind. In 1998, Ray Davies released the solo album
Storyteller (a companion piece to his autobiographical novel
X-Ray) which celebrated his old band and his estranged brother. Before becoming an album,
Storyteller began life as a cabaret-style show in 1996. Seeing the programming possibilities inherent in Ray Davies' music/dialogue/reminiscence format, the American music television network
VH-1 launched a series of similar projects featuring established rock artists, titling their show "VH-1 Storytellers".
In the autumn of 2005, The Kinks were inducted into the "
UK Music Hall of Fame", where all of the original band members were present again
(External Link
) (indeed, they're now the only major British Invasion band whose original members are all still alive). The award was given by long-time Kinks fan and friend of Ray,
The Who's guitarist and songwriter
Pete Townshend, who expressed his wishes to see The Kinks reunited in 2006.
In August of 2007 a re-entry of
The Ultimate Collection, a compilation of material spanning the bands' entire career, reached #48 in the UK Top 100 album chart and #1 in the UK Indie album chart.
Solo work
- Ray Davies was awarded the rank of Commander of the British Empire, or CBE (the rank below Knighthood), by Queen Elizabeth II in 2004 for "services to music." On January 4 of that year, Ray Davies was shot in the leg while pursuing a thief who had snatched the purse of his companion in the French Quarter of New Orleans. Ray Davies began working on songs for a solo studio album in the late 1990s. Several of the tracks which finally appeared on album had previously received their first airing at a series of concerts at New York's Jane Street Theatre with backing from Yo La Tengo. New tracks performed over the three night residence included "Next Door Neighbour", "Creatures of Little Faith", "The Morning After", "The Deal", 'The Empty Room", "Stand-up Comic", "Otis Riffs" and "Vietnam Cowboys". Several of these songs appeared six years later on his first full studio album. Titled Other People's Lives, the album was released in January 2006 to critical acclaim. Amazingly, Other People's Lives gave Ray Davies his first top 40 album chart success in the UK for almost 40 years. In October 2007, Ray released his second full solo album with the title Working Man's Café, followed by a successful Australian and US tour early 2008 ending at the prestigeful Beacon Theater in NYC.
While a member of the band Dave Davies released three solo releases: his self-titled Dave Davies in 1980 and the less successful Glamour in 1981 and Chosen People in 1983. After The Kinks' demise, he toured and released solo albums, such as Purusha and the Spiritual Planet (1998), Fortis Green (1999), and Fragile (2001). In 2003 Dave Davies released the critically acclaimed concept album Bug, based in Davies' belief that he was contacted telepathically by space aliens in the 1970s (the incident is also the subject of "True Story", a track from Chosen People). On June 30, 2004 Davies suffered a stroke in an elevator at the London offices of the BBC, where he'd been promoting Bug. Davies was hospitalised and released shortly afterward, though he's still recovering as of early 2007. Davies released a new studio album, Fractured Mindz, in January of 2007.
Since leaving The Kinks in 1984, Mick Avory has engaged in little session work or touring. However, he remains a manager of the Konk Studios and keeps in touch with the Davies brothers. Avory, along with former Kinks' supporting players John Dalton and John Gosling, perform in Europe as The Kast Off Kinks (with non-Kink singer/guitarist Dave Clarke). They are occasionally joined by Ray Davies' first wife Rasa (who replicates the back-up vocals she contributed on Kinks tracks of the mid-to-late 1960s) as well as Pete Quaife. In 2004 Avory joined a "supergroup" of 1960s British pop veterans called The Class of '64 (the name refers to the year of the British Invasion music breakthrough). Besides Avory, the line-up consists of Chip Hawkes from The Tremeloes, Eric Haydock from The Hollies, and features guitarists "Telecaster" Ted Tomlin and Graham Pollock. The band tours internationally and has recorded both an album of hits from the primary band members' pasts and an original single. In 2007 Haydock, Avory, Pollock and Tomlin left the band and then brought in Martin Lyon of Love Affair and are currently touring under the new name of The Legends of the Sixties.
Personnel
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