ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Guns N Roses - Live Era 87-93
ADVERTISEMENT
Guns N Roses - Live Era 87-93
ADVERTISEMENT
Guns N Roses - Live Era 87-93

When Camel Came Along With Phillip Goodhand-Tait

Before they became prog superstars, Camel auditioned to become Phillip Goodhand-Tait’s backing band and played on’ I Think I’ll Write a Song’.

Published on

phillip goodhand tait I think I'll write a song

Phillip Goodhand-Tait is one of those people whose name crops up in the gig ads that are found in early 1970s copies of the Melody Maker, where he can be found playing at clubs in and around the London area. He came originally from Yorkshire, but moved to Guildford in Surrey in 1957, which is where he started out playing in a band called Phill Tone and the Vibrants that was later renamed, in 1961, to Phill and the Stormsville Shakers.

uDiscover Music Crate Finds
uDiscover Music Crate Finds
uDiscover Music Crate Finds

By 1966, Phillip had a deal with Parlophone and recorded three long-forgotten singles. These came out under the name of the Stormsville Shakers, and then in 1969, they changed the name of the band to Circus and recorded a self-titled album for Transatlantic, but by this time Goodhand-Tait had left; Mel Collins who was later in King Crimson was in Circus.

And after having written some singles for Love Affair in 1969, Goodhand-Tait managed to get a recording contract with Decca, but it only lasted for one single release…it was a song that went nowhere. In 1971 he signed to DJM Records and recorded an album entitled, I Think I’ll Write A Song – there were high hopes for this singer-songwriter, but as one rather harsh critic described him, “He was the poor man’s Elton John.”

Philip Goodhand-Tait - I think I'll write a song (1971)

Click to load video

Meanwhile, guitarist Andrew Latimer, drummer Andy Ward, and bass player Doug Ferguson were calling themselves The Brew and gigging around the Guildford area. On February 20, 1971, they auditioned to become Phillip Goodhand-Tait’s backing band, and having got the gig, it was them that played on I Think I’ll Write a Song.

It was their first and last album with Goodhand-Tait. Shortly after it came out in August 1971, the trio recruited Peter Bardens and, after an initial gig to fulfill Bardens’s commitment in Belfast, Northern Ireland on October 8, 1971, they changed their name to Camel. As Camel, their first gig was at Waltham Forest Technical College, as the support band for Wishbone Ash in December 1971. And the rest is history…

Listen to the best of Camel on Spotify.

Click to comment
Comments are temporarily disabled and will return shortly.
The Beatles
The Beatles
Anthology Collection
12LP Box Set
ORDER NOW
The Smashing Pumpkins - Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness Super Deluxe 6LP
The Smashing Pumpkins
Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness
Super Deluxe 6LP
ORDER NOW
Various Artists
Various Artists
Classic Holiday Singles Box
14 x 7in Singles
ORDER NOW
The Rolling Stones - Black And Blue 5LP and Blu-ray
The Rolling Stones
Black And Blue
5LP and Blu-ray
ORDER NOW
Guns N' Roses - Live Era
Guns N' Roses
Live Era '87-'93
4LP
ORDER NOW
Carly Rae Jepsen - E•MO•TION 2LP
Carly Rae Jepsen
E•MO•TION
Magenta Swirl Color Vinyl 2LP
ORDER NOW
uDiscover Music - Back To Top
uDiscover Music - Back To Top