Sailor (band)

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Sailor are a British pop group, best known in the 1970s for their hit singles "A Glass of Champagne" and "Girls, Girls, Girls", written by the group's lead singer and 12-string guitar player, Georg Kajanus.

In the 1970s

The group's leader, Georg Kajanus, had previously written "Flying Machine" for Cliff Richard in 1971, although it was Richard's first British single that failed to reach the Top 30. Sailor was formed out of the earlier incarnation of singer-songwriter duo, 'Kajanus Pickett', after Phil Pickett and Kajanus met in 1970 at E H Morris, a music publisher where Pickett briefly worked. They later recorded the album Hi Ho Silver for Signpost Records. Sailor first came together in 1973 with the addition of musicians Henry Marsh (ex-Gringo) and Grant Serpell (ex-Affinity).

The groups' work included Kajanus' invention, the Nickelodeon, made of pianos, synthesisers, and glockenspiels that allowed the four piece band to reproduce on stage the acoustic arrangements that they had done in the recording studio.

The group's first UK single was "Traffic Jam" from their first album, Sailor. "A Glass of Champagne", issued late the following year from the Trouble album, reached #2 in the UK Singles Chart. The follow-up, "Girls, Girls, Girls", also made the Top 10, but of their subsequent singles, only "One Drink Too Many" registered in the UK Top 40.[1]

Sailor's original line-up split up in 1978,[1] although Pickett and Marsh released more material as Sailor with Gavin and Virginia David in 1980, with an album of Pickett compositions called Dressed for Drowning, produced by James William Guercio at his Caribou studio in Colorado (Epic/Caribou).

Revival

In 1989, Sailor reformed to release a new album after a ten year silence with two new singles, "The Secretary" and "La Cumbia". The band started touring again in 1993, and performed on many television programmes in Europe. In 1995, Kajanus departed the band again to pursue other projects.[1]

The arrival of Peter Lincoln saw Sailor issue their first live album, Live In Berlin. Original member Marsh left in 1999, and was replaced by Anthony England. In May 2001, England left the band to be replaced by Rob Alderton, and the new line-up recorded their first DVD in November 2002.[1] In 2004, Sailor were voted the 45th most successful pop band of the last 40 years in Germany.[citation needed] A biography of Sailor by James McCarraher entitled A Glass Of Champagne - The Official Sailor Story was published in June 2004. In July 2005, Alderton left, and Marsh returned to the line-up.

In February 2006 Buried Treasure was released, a double album of previously recorded material. By September, Lincoln left Sailor to join Sweet. Afterwards, Marsh's classically trained son, Oliver, joined the band as their new guitarist and lead singer. He was replaced in 2009 by Nick Parvin but re-joined in May 2011 along with his brother Thomas who joined as drummer, replacing Grant.

Band members

Georg Kajanus (born Prince Georg Johan Tchegodaieff, 9 June 1946, Trondheim, Norway)
1973–1979, 1990–1995: lead vocals, 12-string guitars, acoustic guitars, charango, Veracruzana harp, harmonium, synthesisers, "Klockwork machinery"
Henry Marsh (born Ian Henry Murray Marsh, 8 December 1948, Bath, Somerset)
1973–1999, 2005–present: Nickelodeon, accordion, piano, marimbas, synthesised brass and reed, synthesisers, acoustic/electric guitars, computer programming, vocals
Phil Pickett (born Philip Stuart Pickett, 19 November 1946, Münster, Germany)
1973–present (except Checkpoint): bass Nickelodeon, piano, guitarron, synthesised strings, calliope, xylophone, bass, cruz bass, Hammond organ, mandolin, autoharp, vocals (lead vocals on Dressed for Drowning)
Grant Serpell (born Stephen Grant Serpell, 9 February 1944, Maidenhead, Berkshire)
1973–1979, 1990–2011: drums, percussion, vocals
Gavin David
1980: vocals
Virginia David
1980: lead and backing vocals
Peter Lincoln
1996–2006: 12-string and 6-string acoustic guitars, electric guitar, charango, lead vocals
Anthony England
1999–2001: Nickelodeon, vocals
Rob Alderton
2001–2005: Nickelodeon, accordion, vocals
Oliver Marsh
2006–2009: guitar, lead vocals
Nick Parvin
2009-2011:guitar, lead vocals
Oliver Marsh
2011– present: guitar, lead vocals
Thomas Marsh
2011–present: drums, percussion, vocals

Discography

Studio albums

  • 1974 Sailor
  • 1975 Trouble (UK #45)
  • 1976 The Third Step
  • 1977 Checkpoint
  • 1978 Hideaway
  • 1980 Dressed for Drowning
  • 1991 Sailor II
  • 1992 Street Lamp
  • 1998 The Very Best of Sailor (new recordings)

[2][3]

Compilations

  • 1978 Greatest Hits Vol.1
  • 1990 Girls, Girls, Girls: The Very Best of Sailor
  • 1994 Hits and Highlights
  • 1995 Greatest Hits - Best of the Best
  • 1996 Legacy: Greatest and Latest
  • 1999 Girls, Girls, Girls
  • 2002 Sailor
  • 2005 Best: Down By the Docks
  • 2006 Buried Treasure (double CD)
  • 2007 Buried Treasure (single CD)
  • 2007 The Best of Sailor
  • 2007 A Glass of Champagne: All the Hits
  • 2008 Traffic Jam: Sound and Vision (CD/DVD)

[2][3]

Live albums and DVDs

  • 1998 Live In Berlin
  • 2003 Pirate Copy: Sailor Live in Concert (DVD)
  • 2005 Sailor Live
  • 2005 Sailor Live: One Drink Too Many

[2][3]

Singles

  • 1974 "Traffic Jam" / "Harbour" (AUS #47)
  • 1975 "Blue Desert" / "Blame It on the Soft Spot"
  • 1975 "Sailor" / "Open up the Door"
  • 1975 "A Glass of Champagne" (UK #2, AUS #4)/ "Panama"
  • 1975 "Girls, Girls, Girls" (UK #7, AUS #21) / "Jacaranda"
  • 1976 "Stiletto Heels" / "Out of Money"
  • 1977 "One Drink Too Many" (UK #35) / "Melancholy"
  • 1977 "Down by the Docks" / "Put Your Mouth Where the Money Is"
  • 1977 "Romance" / "Istanbul 6.25"
  • 1978 "All I Need is a Girl" / "Copacabana"
  • 1978 "The Runaway" / "Put Your Mouth Where the Money Is"
  • 1978 "Give Me Shakespeare" / "I Wish I Had a Way With Women"
  • 1978 "Stay the Night" / "Pyjama Party"
  • 1979 "Stranger in Paris" / "Jamaica Girl" [European release only]
  • 1980 "Don't Send Flowers" / "Don't Look a Gift Horse"
  • 1981 "Danger on the Titanic" / "Starlight"
  • 1991 "Music" / "Music" (Instrumental) [European release only]
  • 1991 "La Cumbia" (Radio Mix) / "La Cumbia" (Tropical Mix)
  • 1991 "Knock Knock" / "Soapland" [European release only]
  • 1992 "The Secretary" / "Cumbia"
  • 1992 "Latino Lover" / "Vera from Veracruz" [European release only]
  • 1992 "It Takes 2 to Tango"

[2][4]

Sailor, the Musical Journey

July 2006 saw the premiere of Sailor, the Musical Journey at the Carnegie Hall, Dunfermline, Scotland. Written by Bill Blenman, the new musical was made up entirely of Kajanus compositions.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Sailor Albums
  4. Sailor Singles
Other sources

External links