Design Copyright Davy OÕList 2007

 

 

A NEW ALBUM TO BE RELEASED BY

 

 

LATEST NEWS

 

A two-page article appears in the August 2008 issue of Shindig magazine, available at W.H. Smiths stores in England.  Another article appears in the CeskeNoviny daily newspaper in Czechoslovakia next month.

 

During the recording of the Second Thoughts album Dave Wagstaff has joined us on drums.  Dave was playing with Oliver WakemanÕs band but Oliver has now joined Yes, which has left Dave free to join Second Thoughts.

 

Due to record company interest the album is now being lengthened to include more tracks. The album is meant as a theoretical new approach to rock music. Some of the feedback and comments received from a cross section of audience so far include: ÒSounds like (a very modern version of) The Nice,Ó from Film Designer and Art Director Malcolm Stone, ÒVintage sound and great organ,Ó from InsideOut Music A/R Department, ÒI like those lyrics,Ó from Andy Tillison, ÒI like the singer very much, sounds very modern and exciting to listen to,Ó from a 19-year-old girlfriend into all sorts of music, Òsome very cool bits I want to hear more,Ó Prog Rock Records.  ÒCanÕt wait to hear it,Ó from many journalists fans and friends.  The Mojo magazine editor heard a preview too and wants to review it.  Classic Rock, Terrorizer and Shindig would like to review it too.  Uncut magazine re-released America (2nd Amendment) in July last year.

 

It is interesting to note AndyÕs new album Not As Good As The Book with The Tangent was influenced by my current trend in sci-fi writing and film design and the way I see the future of rock music.  Andy also features a live recording and tribute to America by The Nice on his latest DVD Going Off On One.  Andy and I have formed a unique partnership, which is now running in its third year and we are already planning to record a second studio album.  We should have much admiration for AndyÕs solo work on the album and the way he compliments me to get the best out of my singing and guitar playing.  You can be proud we held nothing back and pulled all the stops out. 

 

We invite keen record company executives, journalists, fans who wish to make an offer to contact us at info@davidolist.com -

 

Second Thoughts plan an international tour as soon as the album is released.

 

TV and CINEMA projects

 

I have been involved in TV and Cinema productions over the past few years.  Malcolm Stone and I have written a TV series called AD ASTRA Copyright 2008.  A Hollywood producer is now reading it.  It was good news that Malcolm and his design team was nominated for a Hollywood award for best Art Direction of a TV series for The Company televised in the UK in 2007.  Malcolm Stone is a well-known Film and TV Designer/Art Director and TV writer and is Treasurer of The British Film Designers Guild. Malcolm Stone was Art Director of Super Man III and cinema releases Underworld and The Cave, released during the summer of 2005.  He has several new productions being released in 2008 including the new cinema film Mirrors staring Kiefer Sutherland.

 

http://www.malcolmstonemightart.com/

 

 

 

Sam Baine Andy Tillison Davy OÕList recording in France

 

 

Andy and Davy Live

 

 

Here are some recently published articles to while away the time until the Second Thoughts album comes out.

 

February 19 2008 CeskeNoviny daily newspaper in Czechoslovakia publishes an article hailing me as the inventor of Prog Rock.

 

December 2007 Classic Rock Magazine publishes an interview with Davy OÕList about the Jimi Hendrix tour 1967.

 

November 2007 The Sun British newspaper printed an interview with Roxy Music. The first Roxy Music album was work produced by me. 

 

á      I want credit for making the group popular because I deserve it; 

á      Roxy Music fans should be buying Second Thoughts;

á      The fans have to be put right;

á      I deserve good public relations with audiences and fans;

á      My work with Roxy Music should make better album sales for Second Thoughts; 

á      Spread it around;

 

An interview with Roxy MusicÕs fan site titled ÒGetting in with the ÔinÕ CrowdÓ appears below the news.

 

October 2007 Mojo Special Editions publishes a book on the Pink Floyd Pigs Might Fly, which includes an interview about my friendship, association and performance with Pink Floyd.

 

October 2007 Terrorizer Magazine publishes an interview about me inventing Progressive Rock and expresses great interest to review the new album.

 

September 2007 The Marquee Club – an interview with me about how I was discovered at The Marquee, which made The Nice appearances possible.

 

http://www.themarqueeclub.net/interview-with-david-olist-from-the-nice

 

May 2007 Austrian Pink Floyd Fan Site publishes an interview with Davy OÕList taking over from Syd Barrett.

 

pulse-spirit.dyndns.org/Int-29-05-07-Davy-O-List.html

 

April 2007 Australian Pink Floyd Fan Site publishes an interview with me:

 

http://www.pinkfloydz.com/davyo.htm

 

October 2006 Neptune Pink Floyd Fanzine publishes a tribute to Syd Barrett with an interview with me:

 

    http://www.neptunepinkfloyd.co.uk/magazine/2006/10/davy-olist-interview.php

 

October 2006 Paul McCartney Magazine publishes an interview after my hailed appearance at the Jimi Hendrix festival in Rome; Issue 12, October 2006:

 

http://www.paulmccartney.fm/

 

Getting Roxy Music in with 'The 'In' Crowd' - An Interview With Davy OÕList by the Roxy Music fan site 25 April 2004

 

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Buy the David OÕList solo CD Flight of the Eagle for £15.00 from

 

OMIKRON Music

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W14 8HH

 

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CD/ @ £1 for first CD 25p each additional CD

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INTERVIEW

 

Various members of Roxy Music, books and magazine interviews have told the story of the Genesis of Roxy Music in several places. I managed to have a chat recently with Davy OÕList who was an integral part of the formation of Roxy Music and helped arrange many of the songs for the first album. Davy was the second guitarist to join Roxy Music, as the band was being put together, after the departure of original guitarist Roger Bunn.

 

VRM: How did the Roxy Music job come about?

 

D.O'L.: During the late summer of 1971 I ran an advertisement in the Melody Maker music magazine saying: ÒWell-known guitarist seeking image conscious, progressive, rock group with recording contract and agency.Ó Bryan Ferry replied to my advertisement. I told Bryan who I was. Bryan got very excited saying he had been looking for me for months to complete the line up of Roxy Music (they were called Roxy Music by this time).

 

VRM: Did Bryan know at that time it was your advert?

 

D.O'L.: I am not sure. He may have guessed it was as there would not have been too many well-known guitarists advertising at this time. I asked Bryan if the group had a recording deal with gigs. Bryan hesitated and said no. All the record companies had turned down Roxy Music so far. ItÕs just not commercial enough yet, Bryan said, thatÕs why I want you. Then Bryan said he would be most excited and grateful if I would play and produce Roxy Music to make it commercial enough for a recording deal. I said although I was a record producer and produced hits for The Nice I had really advertised for a name group with a recording and agency deal and needed to earn top money straight away. I had just been filming with Led Zeppelin and Eric Clapton.

 

Bryan replied that he was an avid fan of mine and watched me play at Newcastle City Hall with The Nice in 1968. Interestingly enough this live performance by The Nice (with Bryan Ferry in the audience) has just been released on ÒHere Comes The Nice - The Immediate AnthologyÓ - 3 CD Set, Catalogue No: CMETD 055. It is available now through Sanctuary Records.

 

Realizing Bryan was a fan I asked for the line up of Roxy Music. He told me about the Avant Gaurde percussionist, VSC 3 synth player, oboe/sax player, with himself on electric piano and vocals and Bryan wanted me to complete the line up. It began to sound interesting especially for a group in 1971. I had produced The Nice into recording stars from nothing and perhaps I could produce and transform Roxy Music into a hit group, too.

 

VRM: What changed your mind about them if you were put off by them not having a record deal?

 

D.O'L.: I was interested in the unusual line up. Roxy Music was using a synthesizer and they seemed to have good ideas. Keith Emerson, who I had played with, was the only performer using a synthesizer at that time. Therefore I became interested to try out Roxy Music because of the line up.

 

I told Bryan I would like to audition Roxy Music with the intention of producing and writing for it. I ensured him that with my press, agency and record company contacts I could obtain a recording deal for Roxy Music if they were good enough and if I liked them. Bryan was overjoyed to hear this. I asked Bryan to guarantee royalties for my writing, performance and production work once Roxy Music had a recording contract if I did join. Bryan agreed and then I agreed to meet Bryan Ferry with current members, Andy MacKay, Brian Eno and Graham Simpson at AndyÕs house in Battersea the next evening. (Andy was teaching music during the day at Holland Park Secondary School, which is why it was in the evening.

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VRM: So what was the set up like when you went to those rehearsals, and how did the material sound then?

 

D.O'L.: They were set up in a small studio room in the house with small amplifiers with Bryan sitting at an electric piano. I assessed the material (which evolved into the first album) was needing new arrangements/more chords/chord progressions/more melodies with more interesting mood changes in order for it to become commercial. They heartily agreed. Roxy Music needed to be directed by a successful commercial writer to succeed.  They just werenÕt commercial.

 

VRM: Could someone else have done that for them, was it just a case of someone giving them that bit of direction?

 

D.O'L.: Yes and no, they obviously were an interesting band and had good ideas but I don't think there was anyone else already in the business at the time who would have given them their time and effort and take a chance with them. All the record companies had already turned them down once and were not prepared to nurture or produce their sound themselves.

 

Bryan, Andy, Eno and Graham pleaded with me strongly to join the group. It was up to me to take them on and I decided to become their producer. I explained that after I had done this I wanted their assurances that I could make solo albums through the deal I got them. I made it transparent (as I had to Bryan previously on the telephone) it would also be on condition that I received royalties and credit for all my work as a writer/arranger/performer/producer in Roxy Music. Roxy Music knew I had a great deal of music business contacts and that my name could obtain all their aims and objectives. They were aware I could transform the group. My job was to ensure commercial success for Roxy Music. Once they had agreed this I said I would join Roxy Music amid loud cheers from Bryan, Andy, Eno and Graham.

 

A photographer friend of Bryan's, who sometimes worked for Time Out magazine, owned a large photographic studio in Hampstead. He would lend it to us for one or two evenings a week to rehearse in. Bryan and Andy secured a loan from a bank to buy a PA system. We were able to store the PA in the loft of the studio when we were not using it. The material we began rehearsing became the group's first album release. I wanted to be involved with the writing that was part of my deal. I selected two songs to start with which I was intending to release as solo singles but had not found the right calibre of musicians to record them.

 

VRM: What were these songs called?

 

D.O'L.: One, 'Green Willow Tree', the other was ÒWhite Indian ButterflyÓ. They suited Bryan's voice and we started singing them together as a duet. I had been the lead vocalist for The Nice.

 

VRM: How did these songs sound, and were there any recordings of them?

 

D.O'L.: ÒGreen Willow TreeÓ was like a slightly faster ÒChance MeetingÓ. The songs were never recorded with Roxy Music although we were intending to record them for the first album. I had recorded demo versions before but the tapes were lost, unfortunately.

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VRM: When did Paul Thompson come into all this?

 

D.O'L.: At the beginning Roxy Music had an avant-garde percussionist (Dexter Lloyd) who was great fun to play with. Eno was experimenting treating the various percussion instruments through AndyÕs VCS 3 but I knew the group needed a commercial rock drummer to make it. I discussed this with the group and the following week an advertisement appeared in the Melody Maker for a rock drummer. Several applied; one was a female called Sue. We discussed using Sue; she would have been an interesting image inclusion if she had been a more experienced drummer. Things started to move on faster.

 

VRM: Is this the Susie that the debut album is dedicated to?

 

D.O'L.: No, I believe that was Susie who was a girlfriend of Bryan's at the time. Susie used to drive us around a lot and help with transport for rehearsals and gigs.

 

VRM: What do you feel you brought to the songs that had already been written by Bryan Ferry?

 

D.O'L.: I completely rearranged the songs, rewrote parts of them and added new melodic sections to make the songs sound more fashionable. I added new beginnings, new middles, and new endings and generally beefed up the sound, as Bryan wanted me to. You can hear the evidence of all my work on Roxy MusicÕs first album. It was all kept in of course otherwise Roxy Music would not have got their contract with Island Records. Phil did not add anything to the guitar parts or arrangements when he recorded the songs, the new producer did not add anything new either. Phil replicated note for note and chord for chord what I recorded for the Roxy Music John Peel Show even buying the same Fender guitar to obtain the same sound.

 

Word had got around that Davy OÕList had a new group called Roxy Music. Record company and press awareness was raised on the group. My name/reputation obtained The John Peel Show, a gig at John Peel's club Perfumed Garden supporting Genesis and the Richard Williams article in the NME. I confirm that the taped John Peel Show, which I produced for Roxy Music in December 1971, secured the record contract with Island Records. The Roxy Music sound was there, we only needed better equipment to rise to top level.

 

Roxy Music had arrived, several record companies would be interested, and I knew it. Bryan had decided to go to E'G Management with the Peel tape, he said because they managed ELP and there was a strong connection between The Nice/ Davy OÕList /ELP and Roxy Music. After listening to The John Peel Show tape (the first album) E'G expressed a keen interest in signing the group before any other company could. EG complimented me for changing the music style of Roxy Music. They had turned down the group before but were now very interested. EG wanted to see the band perform live and hired an old theatre/cinema near Clapham, now a bingo hall. Roxy Music only had to perform the tape live to get the contract.

 

VRM: Were there the tensions in the band at that time that we know of further down the line?

 

D.O'L.: There was some tension between Bryan Ferry and Brian Eno over who was the focal point in the group. On the way to perform for EG there was a tension between them in the car. It was not relaxed, fun and jovial as usual. Communication levels were low on the stage. During the performance Eno decided not to play much and observed the group on stage from the back of the hall with another person, Phil Manzanera who was masquerading as a road manager by then. It didnÕt look right. Phil Manzanera turned up at the previous rehearsal, which never happened as Bryan and Paul didnÕt arrive. Andy was trying to make excuses but I knew something was wrong. I was surprised to see Phil and asked him who he was. He said he was the new road manager and he needed a list of new equipment I wanted. I asked him who was going to buy it. He replied the record company. It sounded suspicious.

 

I had been ill for a couple of weeks before this rehearsal and had unfortunately missed a synth/guitar session with Eno at his home. I guess this had put EnoÕs back up. But the set was tight and I did not feel there would be any problem with EG. Anyway I knew I could get a deal elsewhere and that EG were trying to contract Roxy Music before anybody else could. They liked the tape and the theatre set up was just a formality before they signed a contract with Roxy Music. On hindsight I suppose Eno instigated a change of guitarist, even though he was talking about me producing the first album just a few weeks before.

 

Roxy Music had toured in preparation for a larger tour when the first record came out. The first public appearance of Roxy Music was at a large reception hall above a large pub, The ÒHand and FlowerÓ opposite Olympia I London. The show was for an all American Girls College. I remember being suitably dressed for Roxy MusicÕs first show in a pink satin jacket and silver boots. The second appearance was at the 100 Club in Oxford Street. It was specially put on so that Richard Williams could view the group before writing his article for the NME. The article was needed to put Roxy Music in the limelight for the record companies. Bryan Ferry and I were really good friends. We often drove around together in his nice girlfriend's Mini (I remember her name was Susie and she was a great aid to the group by providing transport) planning the future of the group.

 

On one drive Bryan told me about a gorgeous girl he had followed in his car. I said it should be a theme for a new song, we should write it. At the next rehearsal Bryan had written words and I put down some chords. I was never credited or received any money for it but I had more than a hand in writing, ÒRe-make/Re-modelÓ. Phil copied me exactly on the album version. The ending is something I played with The Pink Floyd; I also had the idea that in the middle of the song we should all do a little solo.

 

Roxy Music headlined at Bristol University, too. There was not enough room in the van for everybody so Eno and Andy took it in turns to lie on top of the equipment at the back of the van. Roxy Music headlined at London University and at a South London college, too. Roxy Music also did a show supporting The Pretty Things, which turned out to be a mismatch of programming but Bryan and I laughed about it on the way home in the Mini.

 

It is not previously known but Roxy Music had a manager then who left before the John Peel Show to live and work in the U.S. He used to wear groovy looking jump suits to the shows. It was a shame he went as he was looking after me and making sure I was happy with everything that was going on. He knew my influence was going to guarantee Roxy Music a quick deal and appreciated what I was doing for them. IÕm sure if he had been there to the end the line up would have stayed the same. There was a hole after he had gone which the others found difficult to fill by themselves.

 

VRM: So how did it come about that you worked again with Bryan in 1974 on his 'Another Time Another Place' album?

 

D.O'L.: After Roxy Music split up I contacted Bryan Ferry and said let's rejoin forces and produce a stunning hit. Bryan seemed excited about the reunion and we produced ÒThe 'In' CrowdÓ which I earned my first gold disc for. I was only to play on The 'In' Crowd, Chance Meeting and Let's Stick Together (though I am not credited for LST on the sleeve which is wrong). The recordings were a good experience and I wished to do more with Bryan Ferry including live stadium appearances.

 

VRM: What can you tell us of those sessions?

 

D.O'L.: The backing tracks were finished, with all the horns, etc. and Bryan had done a guide vocal by the time I arrived at the studio. We recorded it at Pete Townsend's studio, Ramport that was hidden beneath a tower block in Battersea. Pete Townsend had recorded Quadrophenia there. There was an amazing atmosphere to the place. I also re-recorded Chance Meeting there, which Bryan asked me to play the way I played it for Roxy Music. But it turned out better than the first album version and Bryan thought so too. I believe Roxy MusicÕs first album would have turned out even better had I been given the chance to record for Island Records after all I had a big hand in writing and producing it.

 

VRM: Have you met any of the band since then?

 

D.O'L. I met Phil & Andy when they were working with The Explorers in the mid '80s and I met Brian Eno around 1994. I bumped into Bryan Ferry at the end of last year as his studio is near where I live. We had a brief chat about my new film work.

 

VRM: ...and Graham Simpson?

 

D.O'L: Graham was a very nice guy. I have never seen him since then. Graham also played Cello, which would have been an interesting addition if he remained with the band. He was always into computers and music was not the be all and end all in his life. It was something he did as a pastime and never really wanted to get too serious about it. He never wanted to give up his day job. I think the pressure of being in a vehicle moving faster than he wanted to go got to him and he just wanted out.

 

David OÕList and Roxy Music and Bryan Ferry have not received their just deserts in the annals of pop music criticism as the true story of how Roxy Music made it has never been told publicly until now.

 

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VRM: So what have you done since those days and what are you doing now?

 

***********

Before I go into a brief history of what happened next I would like to say that I would very much enjoy playing with Bryan and Roxy Music again sometime in the future and I hope this is going to be possible. From my experiences with Roxy Music I began to write a new song repertoire and played it on acoustic guitar around local low-key gigs in London.

 

I would like to mention that prior to Roxy Music I had made a film with Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce (this was after The Cream) Roland Kirk, Buddy Guy and Led Zeppelin called ÒSuper SessionÓ.

 

Again ÒThe ÔInÕ CrowdÓ came to the attention of John Cale (The Velvet Underground) who as you know did some work with Eno and Phil. I had met John Cale at the Velvet UndergroundÕs flat in New York in 1967 while on tour with The Nice where they gave me a promotion copy of their famous first album. I had this copy well before it was released in the U.K. and new all about their sound well before anybody else did here.  When I re-met John Cale in London in late 1977 he complimented me on my work on ÒThe ÔInÕ CrowdÓ and offered me a tour of Europe as his guest star! The tour was long, lucrative, very well organized with luxury hotels and beautiful theatres to play in. The fans in Europe were very, very happy to see me at last. I had to sign original copies of my first album ÒThe Thoughts Of EmerList DavJakÓ in Berlin when the wall was up. It was very exciting being on John CaleÕs tour and to experience so much fan adoration, something I had not experienced since leading The Pink Floyd on the Jimi Hendrix tour.

 

By 1985 my label was set up and I released two singles, ÒSeal It With A LovingÕ KissÓ and ÒYou and IÓ. The B-side of ÒSeal It With A LovingÕ KissÓ is ÒFacts of LifeÓ; it became a hit on a South London Black Underground radio station before it was released. All three singles are on the album ÒFlight of the EagleÓ.

 

ÒYou and IÓ was play listed on Super Channel satellite TV is co-written by Satu Redmond. She also co-wrote the track ÒPale Girl of the Neat White UniformÓ which is all about an Air HostessÕs flying career. The guitar sound is sort of ÔInÕ Crowdie. Suzie OÕList my sister sings backup vocals on the opener ÒSeal It With A Loving KissÓ and on ÒOutside BroadcastÓ. ÒOutside BroadcastÓ was recorded after my John Cale Tour and there is evidence of that in the track. I had been playing twin guitars with John, which was a treat. The sound which sounds like a synthesiser is actually a guitar using a tremolo arm. I also play most of the keyboards, guitars, drums and basses on the album.

 

I originally called the group SEAL. The record was reasonably distributed and Capital Radio, GLR Radio and Satellite TV station Super Channel play listed the singles. However I could not handle all the distribution and promotion work by myself as well as the performing and recording so I thought it appropriate to go for help from a major. I ended up at Warner Brothers Music where one of Bryan FerryÕs solo albums was released which I was on. The A&R manager thought the image of the word SEAL was very worthwhile marketing but he did not take the singles on, instead he said record a new track and bring that back to him. To my surprise, a few months later, while I was producing the track W.B. launched SEAL but it wasnÕt me at all, it was Henry Samuels. There were all sorts of confusion at record shops and radio stations as WB had taken my name but that was the end of my SEAL and it was time to rethink and rethink about trusting record companies.

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About the ÒFlight of The EagleÓ album the bonus track on the album is titled ÒNylon CowboyÓ and is 8 minutes 11 seconds long. I wrote it as a theme for ITVÕs live virtual TV game ÒThe RaceÓ which was shot on location in Arizona in 2002. The guitar describes an archetypal cowboy character that clinks his spurs as he walks through town. I have always wanted to do a western. The title track ÒFlight of The EagleÓ is the theme to the first movie I ever made. It was also written in remembrance of my days with the Pink Floyd hence its Floydion guitar style, which I hope you will appreciate.

 

At the same time I was recording some of the album with Michael Seraphim from Starlight Express and The Bill I was taking an MA in Film at Central Saint Martins in London and Brian Eno was asked to give a lecture at the college. I hardly recognized him. I was working outside the college when EnoÕs lecture actually happened making promotion films for Ericsson Telephones and producing TV promotion films for Sony/BMGÕs Destruction label. Two of my own films that I wrote and directed for myself actually got in to the British Short Film Festival in 1992.

 

I recently finished a Post Graduate Lecturers Course at The University of Greenwich (NelsonÕs old Naval college) and have been lecturing film production and computer music production at Westminster Kingsway College London. I am also proposing to get a Science Fiction/Super Reality TV series off the ground that I co-wrote with Malcolm Stone Art Director of Superman (one of a long list of his films). The title is ÒAD ASTRAÓ (To the Stars).  We did shoot a short ÒteaserÓ of it at Pinewood Studios (where Bat Man was produced) as a test and have now developed it into a TV series.

 

The latest music project came about two years ago when my first group The Attack suddenly sold over 75,000 copies of their first single ÒWe DonÕt KnowÓ in Japan on a box set released by Universal that featured James Brown, Marvin Gaye and The Who. A mod music collection called funnily enough ÒThe ÔInÕ CrowdÓ - the ultimate mod collection. I decided to write a follow up to capitalize on its success and came up with ÒWe Still DonÕt Know!!Ó You never know it could happen all over again!

 

John Peel used the B-side of The AttackÕs second single, ÒAny More Than I DoÓ as the signature tune for his first ever radio programme. It was a very popular programme broadcasting from a pirate radio ship and everybody on the scene listened to it. From this regular broadcast I received offers from John MayallÕs Blues Breakers to replace Eric Clapton and from P. P. Arnold (ÒFirst Cut is the DeepestÓ). ÒAny More Than I DoÓ broke me in to stardom.

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Finally I am pleased to be offering signed copies of my solo album ÒFLIGHT OF THE EAGLEÓ at £15.00 a copy from my site info@davidolist.com.

 

Best wishes to you all,

 

Davy OÕList

 

Professional journalists wishing to write about the importance of me to Roxy Music and how I was vital to its success are invited to contact me at info@davidolist.com

 

 

Stay tuned for further newsÉ

 

 

LET'S RENDEZVOUS 2005 TOUR

 - ALL THINGS NICE AND BEAUTIFUL – 

 

Rob LeightonÕs Imagine program on Radio Caroline and Chris BentÕs Toward The Unknown Region program (broadcasting on FridayÕs at 11 PM) have play-listed Feel This Way, And We Still DonÕt Know and Any Way You Choose, tracks for a new album on Charly Records that also features unreleased tracks by The Nice and Roxy Music.  Radio program Web site addresses are at the base of this page. 

 

Davy O ListÕs Walthamstow gig in London recorded live on 13 May 2005 is available from this site @ £15.00.   Featuring: Maybe, LetÕs Rendezvous, Rondo 2005, America 2005 and Azriel 2005. 

 

David O ListÕs solo album Flight of The Eagle at £15.00 is still available from this site.  Order at info@davidolist.com this email address is also for keen journalists, promoters, agents, record companies and fans wishing to make contact.

 

Concerts 2004-5

 

MTV Romania and TVR 1 Romania - Saturday 2 Oct 2004. I was interviewed with Carl Palmer while producing and promoting The Jimi Hendrix Festival in Bucharest.

 

Stazione Birra Club - 26 November 2004 – Davy O List live at The Jimi Hendrix Festival in Rome is filmed live by SKY TV and I was interviewed about my friendship with Jimi Hendrix and what we got up to.

 

Software: Microsoft Office

Davy OÕList Live on SKY TV

 

Photographed by Simone Cecchetti

 

Hi Davy!  I like very much your show...I love your guitar styleÉ

There aren't much guitarist with this "sixties" touchÉa very good show.  Simone

 

Underworld - Saturday 26 March 2005.  Camden, London with Audience.  

 

Riga Music Bar - Thursday 21 April 2005.  Southend, Essex.

 

Limelight Club - Sunday 1 May 2005.  Crewe.  

 

Standard Music Venue - Friday 13 May 2005.  Walthamstow, London.

Recorded live for Radio Caroline first broadcast Rob Leighton show, midnight Wednesday 3 August 2005.

 

ÒSECOND THOUGHTSÓ

 

Mojo Magazine, Terrorizer Magazine, Chris Welch, The Classic Rock Society, Classic Rock Magazine, Rob LeightonÕs Imagination show on Radio Caroline, Radio SeagullÕs Chris Bent, Paul Baker's Progressive Show ARfm (Sky Digital), BBC Essex, BBC Stoke, Francis GeronÕs Progressive show on The Spirit of 66 Radio Show in Belgium, Art Rock in Sweden, Eifel Events Radio in Germany, Steve Elsdon from the Patti Pavilion in Wales, and Radio Heemskerk in Holland continue to promote Davy OÕList 's new releases and up and coming tours.

 

DAVY O LIST - LIVE AT THE ROYAL STANDARD - 13 MAY 2005

Photographed by Malcolm Stone

 

LET'S RENDEZVOUS 2005 TOUR REVIEWS

 

Davy OÕList at Underworld 26 March 2005

 

It was great to see Davy O List's band in action at the Underworld.  Having seen Keith Emerson's gigs in the past, David's performance has only reassured me about the amazing potential he has transferred to his nowadays' line-up.  The highlights of the evening, Rondo and America, fitted perfectly with a new, remarkable piece Let's Rendezvous.  The unfaultable rhythm section backed him in an exciting way and merged so well the result was simply an explosive, mind-blowing performance I've heard in ages.  I'm a keyboard player myself, playing for Arthur Brown and my own band Instant Flight, and with the latter we were truly delighted to support Davy O List that evening.  The spirit of his band, the energy, and improvisational resourcefulness has become a new source of inspiration for our own future performances.

 

LUCIE REJCHRTOVA - INSTANT FLIGHT (27.3.05)

 

Instant Flight + Davy O List + Audience - Camden Underworld 26/3/05.  By Steve Snelling

 

Those who are familiar with this living legend will know Davy was the founder member of The Nice who started out as backing band for P. P. Arnold who had a massive hit with a Cat Stevens song The First Cut Is The Deepest.  A short while later The Nice decided to go it alone, The Nice, Keith Emerson, Lee Jackson, Brian Davison, Davy O List were the first to cut the ground and pave the way for the term we use today Prog Rock.  There was no band quite like The Nice.  If you don't own a copy of the "Here Comes The Nice", Immediate Anthology, CMETD 055 then I strongly suggest you immediately go and hunt yourself a copy because it contains this truly awesome band at the height of their power - with some of Davy O List's scorching, blistering, guitar work committed to CD.  I did not see the original The Nice but I was lucky to have seen Refugee when I was fourteen in '74 at Hemel Hempstead Pavilion.  Not hearing a great deal else I finally saw ELP and saw The Nice reunion 2004 comeback tour which was fantastic but I had a nagging doubt, where was Davy?  On 20 Nov 2004, I attended the Progeny Festival at the Astoria with the soul purpose of seeing our hero in action.  Unfortunately, this did not happen due to circumstances beyond his control.  However, having said this I did get to meet the great man and could not believe what a friendly and warm person he is.  So on 26 March 2005 at Camden Underworld I was in the venue very early to make sure I didn't miss this one-off special occasion sandwiched in between Instant Flight and Audience.  Davy O List and his band make their stage entrance and from when the first chord was struck, we all knew we were in for a 'nice treat' so to speak.  The whole band fired-off on all four burners starting off with The Thoughts Of EmerList Davjak then Azriel Angel Of Death, Flower King Of Flies, Rondo and some new material which sounded great.  Davy and his band gave it their all, one hundred per cent.  The crowd down the front loved it with cries of "Nice one" and in deed it was.  It came to a spectacular ending with what I would call The Nice signature song America played at full throttle - it was sheer bliss I went home a very happy man, "NICE ONE LADS!"

 

By Steve Snelling - Skeletons Making Love Fanzine 2005.

 

Editors Note: Chris Welch the famous rock music journalist and Keith EmersonÕs agent also saw my performance on 26 March 2005.  They remarked that it sounded really great and it was great to hear those Nice tunes again played in a modern way, a must see magical event.

 

Club Riga 21 April and Limelight 1 May

 

It was great to watch your performance on Sunday, I LOVE eccentricity and you certainly didn't disappoint!  When you performed at the Riga bar last month I had a real-time call from our on the spot Caroline man to say, "This man is away with the fairies!" - just as it should be.  It struck me you're a man who's happy with himself and his lot?

 

By DJ Rob Leighton, Radio Caroline

 

After this show Rob Leighton introduced me to Andy Tillison and we began planning to release the new album.

 

TOUR SET

 

 

The Thoughts of EmerList DavJack

Azriel 2006

Flower King 2006

War and Peace 2006

Feel This Way

Anyway You Choose

She Belongs To Me 2006

Maybe

Rondo 2006

Second Thoughts  (old version)

LetÕs Rendezvous 

America 2006

 

Genesis of The Nice

 

 

ÒOn the way to the first show I was talking to P.P. Arnold, saying her band (Davy OÕList, Ian Haige, Keith Emerson and Lee Jackson) ought to have a name as it didnÕt have one and Pat said think of one.  As Pat talked about her Gospel choir experiences in the USA an idea came to me.  Pat was saying her preacher was hip and he spoke to his congregation like this, ÔThe Nazz came down and said unto all the people.Õ  I asked her what The Nazz meant and Pat replied it was a Negro term for Almighty God.  But what does Nazz mean, I inquired?  ÒOh, that was the preacherÕs accent he means, The NiceÓ, she laughed.  ÒOh, The Nazz could be a good name for the band but how could we be called God we could be called The Nice!Ó  Everyone laughed and agreed the name stuck so I took the idea of THE NICE and the