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Caravan was formed in Canterbury, England in 1968 by Pye Hastings (guitar/
vocals), Dave Sinclair (keyboards), Richard Sinclair (bass/ vocals) and Richard
Coughlan (drums). The four had previously played at various times with a local
band, The Wilde Flowers, which also featured Kevin Ayers and future Soft Machine
members Robert Wyatt and Hugh Hopper.
Caravan was
the first UK act to sign with American label MGM/ Verve and their debut album,
entitled 'Caravan' was released late in 1968. It was favourably received by
the critics and the debut single, Place of My Own was described as having a
'gripping compulsion' with 'scintillating organ work'. John Peel played the
album regularly on his radio show 'Top Gear'.
A second
album saw a move from Verve, as they had closed down their rock/pop division
and Decca took up the cause. September 1970 was the release date for 'If I Could
Do It All Over Again, I'd Do It All Over You'. At this time relationships within
the band were strong. They got on well and they looked on course to succeed
as a band.
Still together
as a unit, the band recorded 'In the Land of Grey and Pink' which was released
in September 1971. By now a loyal fan base was developing and they were playing
some prestigious gigs, for example in front of 250,000 in Rotterdam. The album
was described as 'virtually faultless' and the band looked set fair for national
and international recognition. At this crucial point, Dave Sinclair decided
to leave. As Pye Hastings explained, 'Dave was developing faster than the rest
of us and I think he was getting frustrated at seeing other bands of dubious
talent getting greater financial reward. The management must have been beside
themselves: the band were getting somewhere, a new album is released and the
main player decides he is off.'
Steve Miller
came in as a replacement for Dave: he had been recommended to Richard Sinclair
by Phil, Steve's guitarist brother. This line up did not go down so well with
fans who saw a change to a jazzier feel based around Steve's piano- orientated
keyboards. This style dominated the next album release, Waterloo Lily, released
in May 1972. No longer was Dave's unique keyboard sound- based around his Hammond
organ- in evidence. Even Pye's older brother Jimmy Hastings appeared to be surplus
to requirements, appearing only on 'Love in Your Eye' on sax and flute, the
bulk of this work going to Lol Coxhill.
Next: Part 2 >>
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