Wednesday 9 December 2020

Guy Darrell born 9 December 1944


John Swail (9 December 1944 - 3 May 2013), better known under his stage name Guy Darrell, was a British singer and musician active in the 1960s and 1970s. His biggest hit, "I've Been Hurt" reached number 12 on the UK Singles Chart in 1973. 

Born in Kent, he began his career in the early 1960s singing with Ray McVay's band. Two of his singles with McVay were "Daddy Cool", released in 1961, and "I’ve Been Hurt" a cover of the hit by Bill Deal And The Rondels, which was released in 1966. He also recorded "Turn To Me" and "Sing Me No Sad Songs". The latter, a composition by Elton John and Bernie Taupin, was released in 1969 and almost immediately withdrawn. He became front-man for the band Guy Darrell and the Midniters in 1964. Most of his early songs were covers of US originals, such as "Sorry" by The Impalas, "Stupidity" by Solomon Burke, and "Somewhere They Can't Find Me" by Paul Simon. None of them reached the charts, although some received radio play, especially on pirate radio stations. 


                            

In 1966, he released "I've Been Hurt" on the CBS label, a 1965 song by Ray Whitley which had already been covered with some success in the US by The Tams. Despite the involvement of Des Champ, this release also failed to reach the UK chart, although it was a top ten hit in South Africa. During the remainder of the 1960s, Darrell continued to record for various UK record labels. He was able to record, through his connections with Roger Easterby and Des Champ, a version of Elton John's song "Skyline Pigeon" almost a year before the composer's own version was released. 

Darrell with Bob Dylan @ CBS
In 1967, Darrell married Lyn Webster. In 1969, he formed the band Guy Darrell Syndicate with musicians with whom he had been working at BBC radio. The band included: Darrell on vocals; Martin Jenner, guitar and Dave Green, bass/flute (both ex-Summer Set); Derek Elson, keyboards, and Graham Jarvis on drums. Among the band’s songs were "Birds Of A Feather", for which composer credit was given to Joe South, and "Keep The Rain From My Door". 

Guy Darrell & The Midniters

After one single release "How Are You?" on Page One Records in October 1969, the Guy Darrell Syndicate morphed into Deep Feeling. At this point, Darrell abandoned the Guy Darrell stage name temporarily and reverted to his given name John Swail; press releases for Deep Feeling made no mention of his previous career as Guy Darrell. While they continued to release 45 RPM cover versions of US songs such as Bobby Freeman's "Do You Want To Dance" and a further version of "Skyline Pigeon", the group (including Swail) also began to compose in their own right. Their range of cover versions began to expand from the musical mainstream toward progressive rock. 

Deep Feeling

In 1971, they released their only album, also titled Deep Feeling, once more produced by Easterby and Champ, released by DJM Records. The album moved yet further toward progressive rock, and though little noted at the time, Deep Feeling has received subsequent critical reassessment and notice, and has been re-released several times up to the present day. Also in 1971, the group composition "Sweat, Dust And Red Wine" was covered by Chicory Tip on their album Son Of My Father. 

Throughout the early 1970s, Deep Feeling regularly performed live, playing a mixture of their own material and covers from progressive bands such as Yes and Led Zeppelin in east London and throughout the UK. (Deep Feeling are not to be confused with the short-lived band of the same name, of which Jim Capaldi and Luther Grosvenor were members). 

Meantime, the song "I've Been Hurt" had once more been a US hit in 1969 for Bill Deal and the Rhondels, and this version became popular in northern soul clubs such as the Twisted Wheel. Roger Easterby and Des Champ were setting up their own record label, Santa Ponsa Records, and having noted the popularity of the song, made one of the new label's first issues a re-release of Darrell's 1965 recording of it, backed with the original B-side "Blessed" written by Paul Simon. The re-release made its way into the UK Singles Chart, earning Darrell a spot on Top of the Pops (broadcast 20 September 1973) backed by the other members of Deep Feeling. This despite the fact that none of them had played on the recording in question. The song reached a chart high of No. 12 for the week ending 29 September 1973. 


Following this belated success, Darrell resumed the use of his stage name for recordings, and made several more records with Easterby and Champ for Santa Ponsa; Deep Feeling also released one final single on the same label. For these releases he relinquished progressive rock and reverted to his previous style of covering more mainstream songs. However, no further chart success was forthcoming, and Darrell's final record release came in 1975. 

Guy Darrell died of cancer in Spain on 3 May 2013. (Edited from Wikipedia)

5 comments:

boppinbob said...

Unfortunately the only download I could find of this album is in low bit rate (110-120) which is ok for assessment only. So if anyone has a copy to share for better listening please acknowledge. I have put out a few requests on various forums so fingers crossed.


For “Guy Darrell - I've Been Hurt: The Complete 1960s Recordings” go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/12619436/Guy_Darrell_Complete_1960_s.rar.html


1 Go Home Girl
2 You Won't Come Home
3 Sorry (I Ran All The Way)
4 Sweet Dreams
5 One Of These Days
6 Stupidity
7 Somewhere They Can't Find Me
8 It Takes A Lot To Laugh. It Takes A Train To Cry
9 I've Been Hurt
10 Blessed
11 My Way Of Thinking
12 Big Louie
13 Hard Lovin'
14 I've Never Had A Love Like That
15 Crystal Ball
16 Didn't I
17 Evil Women
18 What You Do About That
19 Cupid
20 What's Happened To Our Love
21 Skyline Pigeon
22 Everything
23 Turn To Me
24 What's Her Name
25 Birds Of A Feather
26 Keep The Rain From My Door
27 How Are You?
28 The Turtle Tortoise & The Hare

Tracks
1-4 Guy Darrell & The Midniters
5-6 Guy Darrell & The Wind Of Change
7-26 Guy Darrell
27-28 Guy Darrell’s Syndicate



Guy Darrell is probably best-known for his 1973 hit I’ve Been Hurt, actually a reissue of a 1966 single which had been revived by the Northern Soul scene. The Kent-based vocalist may have been a one-hit-wonder but he was actually a prolific recording artist across the 1960s, making rare Beat-Era 45s for Oriole (with backing band The Midniters), CBS, Pye and Page One (latterly as the Guy Darrell Syndicate). In the 1970s, Darrell continued to record with rock band Deep Feeling, as well as capitalising on the belated success of I’ve Been Hurt. This 28-track compilation is the first-ever official retrospective of Darrell’s Sixties work, remastered from original master tapes. Sixties/Mod collectors will appreciate such tracks as Guy’s amazing version of Stupidity, the Psych classic Evil Woman, those elusive Oriole tracks and the first-ever version of Elton John’s Skyline Pigeon.

Bakeliedjes said...

It's just variable bitrate Bob. You can switch it to 320kbps.

rntcj said...

Hi!

Thanx for this one. A "new" artist here = "new" hears here. Not "thechi"(?) enough to change bitrates so hope a 320 version comes along.

Cheers!
Ciao! For now.
rntcj

Rick said...

This is to Bakeliedjes and other similarly minded people. Changing a lower bit rate to a higher bit rate does NOTHING to improve the quality of an audio file. It just increases a file's size. Once you lose quality by ripping at a low bit rate you CANNOT recover the data that was lost by simply converting to a higher bit rate. The CD/vinyl must be completely re-ripped at a higher bit rate.

It is a very common and sad reality that many people download low bit rate files and then convert them to 320kbs. Then they re-upload them as their own, claiming they are 320kbs when they are not - and never can be - true 320kbs quality.

Cheers,
Rick

boppinbob said...

Thanks Rick, that's why I've left it as it is. Better still buy the CD. I have bought quite a few from Amazon, Magpie & Avid but unfortunately on my pension I can't buy 'em all. Mind you I do visit lots of Charity shops for the odd bargain. Regards, Bob.