Heads Hands and Feet Lyrics

Heads Hands and Feet Lyrics

HEADS HANDS & FEET (Inc. POET AND THE ONE MAN BAND and other Ray Smith (music)/Tony Colton (lyrics) compositions.) LYRICS Compiled by Robin Dunn & Chrissie van Varik. With grateful thanks to Ray Smith for his interest, advice and input. Highly regarded but shamefully underrated, HEADS HANDS & FEET (HH&F) started out as the late 1960s folk/psychedelic rock band POET AND THE ONE MAN BAND (P&TOMB) - named from a line in Paul Simon’s ‘Homeward Bound’. By then Ray Smith (composer) and Tony Colton (lyricist) (Anthony George Chalk, 11th February 1942 - 24th August 2020) were established songwriters and highly regarded (session) musicians in their own right. Tony also produced. The short-lived Tony Colton and The Big Boss Band had been formed in 1964. They recorded only one single for Decca, ‘Lose My Mind’. In 1965 Tony recorded three solo singles for Pye. A move to Columbia Records resulted in ‘In The World Of Marnie’s Dreaming’ but none of these provided the big break Tony and Ray were seeking. They returned to composing. Ray returned to session work, including tracks for Zoot Money among many others. P&TOMB, formed with fellow (backing/session) musicians Tony and Ray, who had been working together throughout the ‘60s, recorded an excellent self-titled album in 1968 of which two versions were issued in 1969 with differing track-listings and sleeve designs - UK (on Verve) and US (on Paramount). After a change in the line-up, P&TOMB became HH&F in 1971. They were a very hot band set for stardom with lucrative recording contract offers, but despite great recordings and live shows, frictions set in and at the end of 1972, when Albert Lee left, the band had effectively split. Their first official release (there is another album - we will get to that) was the self-titled 1971 album that, like P&TOMB, was issued in two versions: a double album in the US (on Capitol) and a single album, with of course fewer tracks, in the UK (on Island Records). This time the sleeve covers, designed by band member Mike O’Neill, were the same and both had a gatefold sleeve. The complete album was released on CD in 1996 by See For Miles Records but is very difficult - and expensive - to obtain. The 1972 follow-up to HEADS HANDS & FEET was TRACKS (on Capitol in the US and Island in the UK), later released on CD as TRACKS - PLUS which includes two bonus tracks. The final official album OLD SOLDIERS NEVER DIE, was recorded in the autumn of 1972 and issued in 1973, after the band had broken up. It saw its first release on CD in 2008 by Wounded Bird Records and is now hard to come by. As mentioned above, a full album had been recorded as early as December 1968 and is believed by many to be the original debut album of HH&F. However, as Ray Smith told us, this was really intended to be the second P&TOMB album. The recording sessions were held between October and December 1968 under extraordinary circumstances - at the time referred to as the “Pirate Sessions” as much of it was done late at night after official (i.e. paying) recording sessions had finished for the day. Many musicians and singers got involved for little or no money and/or for fun. By April 1969 Tony and Ray had the second album ready. However, the first album had come out in March and six weeks later they were told by Ian Ralfini, musical director of MGM, “Sorry Ray, I’m taking everybody to WEA. You can have the rights to the second album but don’t release it in England for five years.” They weren’t happy but did as they were told. Danny Secunda, their manager, later tried to convince Tony Colton to issue it as the HH&F debut album but by then Pat Donaldson had left - replaced by Chas Hodges. Tony Colton, altruistically, felt that the first album should reflect the new line-up (with Chas), and consequently the album was kept in the can until it finally saw the light in 1995 as HOME FROM HOME (The Missing Album). The reason it was attributed to HH&F and not P&TOMB is that HH&F had by then earned a cult status - and thus would sell better. Tony Colton had told Ray Smith: “We won’t call it Poet 2. We’ll call it Heads Hands And Feet: The Missing Album.” (Quotes: Ian Ralfini and Tony Colton from the Albert Lee biography Country Boy by Derek Watts.) In addition, there is a bootleg release called HEADS HANDS AND FEET AND ALL PARTS IN BETWEEN comprising live recordings and a copy of ‘Hail The Conquering Hero’, recorded for the film The Hero (aka Bloomfield in the UK). Two download albums were released in 2013, entitled WIZZ KIDS and TRUCKERS MUSIC, put together by Ray Smith and comprising some different and/or adapted recordings of previously released tracks as well as ‘new’ unreleased ones. Another download album, EVERYBODY’S HUSTLIN’ saw the light in 2014 - also put together by Ray Smith. HH&F provided the core backing for Jerry Lee Lewis’s album The Session, recorded in London from 7th to 11th January 1973. Some members of HH&F, including Albert Lee and Ray Smith, featured on Don Everly’s 1974 solo album Sunset Towers, produced by Tony Colton who, with Ray Smith, wrote most of the tracks including some previously recorded by HH&F. Albert Lee played lead guitar on the album and toured with Don during his solo years; later he became The Everly Brothers’ post-1983 reunion tour bandleader/ arranger and lead guitarist. See: https://robindunnmusic.wordpress.com/the-everly-brothers/. Albert also played and recorded with Emmylou Harris’ Hot Band, The Crickets and numerous other bands as well as having a successful solo career. Still in high demand until 2015 he toured with his band Hogan’s Heroes plus making many solo appearances and played with Bill Wyman’s Rhythm Kings. Ray Smith, the musical genius behind most P&TOMB and HH&F songs (and earlier compositions on many of which he also played), continued with composing after the band split - e.g. Leo Sayer’s ‘Rumours’ composed with Mark Alan. On his own and with a number of collaborators he has composed many songs - including jingles for commercials. He moved to Wales where he still resides with his wife Jo Jo. He has also issued, as downloads, HH&F material much previously unreleased. Ray with Tony also scored music for films including A Man Called Horse, The Hero (both starring Richard Harris), The Vengeance of She and Popdown (references included here as they are Colton/Smith compositions - sometimes with Johnny Harris). Other films are Shadows in the Storm (1990 - starring Ned Beatty) and Fortune Strangers the music for both of which has yet to be located. They composed music for a 1969 TV movie, Destiny of a Spy, starring Lorne Greene, Rachel Roberts and Anthony Quayle. Following a rough period, Tony Colton began working as a songwriter and producer in Nashville after Ricky Skaggs had recorded ‘Country Boy’ and taken it to # 1 on the country charts in 1985. The renewed interest in him and his work caused Tony move to Nashville and found him working with Willie Nelson, Ray Charles, The Allman Brothers, Johnny Cash, Tom Waits, Trisha Yearwood and Garth Brooks among others. He also played festivals and gigs of his own. Tony died 24th August 2020. Chas Hodges, had a long history in rock ‘n’ roll beginning with Joe Meek’s studio band, The Outlaws and with Cliff Bennet and The Rebel Rousers. After HH&F he later formed one half of the duet Chas ‘n Dave with Dave Peacock and they became legends of Cockney pub rock. Sadly Chas died in 2018. Pete Gavin, who came up with the name Heads Hands & Feet, was briefly in Vinegar Joe (featuring a young vocalist, Robert Palmer), played on sessions of many rock stars and joined Albert Lee in several bands before retiring from music - taking up a new career remodelling houses. Mike O’Neill revived his old instrumental band Nero & The Gladiators in 1991 (Mike as ‘Nero’), an outfit he had formed in the early 60s with Rod “Boots” Slade. They toured until 2005. He eventually reunited with several musicians of the 60s in The Pioneers Of Rock ‘N’ Roll. A prolific session musician, Mike played with the Beatles, Jerry Lee Lewis, Dusty Springfield, Shirley Bassey, Deep Purple and Chuck Berry. He jammed with Jimi Hendrix, who reportedly thought about taking Mike on as his pianist. Mike also played on Donovan's album A Gift from a Flower to a Garden, toured with Joe Cocker and even gave Dire Straits their name. Mike died in October 2013. 2 ALBUMS (most available on CD and/or download): POET AND THE ONE MAN BAND (US Paramount - 1969) POET AND THE ONE MAN BAND (UK Verve - 1969) Track list and artwork differs on US and UK versions. HEADS HANDS & FEET (US Capitol Records - 2-LP set, 1971) - released prior to the UK (see below) HEADS HANDS & FEET (UK Island - single album 1971; half of the US album) TRACKS (UK Island, US Capitol, 1972) BLOOMFIELD (aka THE HERO) (UK Pye, US Capitol, 1972) movie soundtrack, HH&F contributed 3 tracks OLD SOLDIERS NEVER DIE (UK Atlantic, US Atlantic, April 1973) HOME FROM HOME (THE MISSING ALBUM) (UK - See For Miles Records, 1996) See track notes below.

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