By now, everyone knows the
Yardbirds legend, if not their
music; the band graduated three of
the great Ph.D.s of rock guitar:
Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy
Page. They created hard rock out of
standard twelve-bar blues, doubling
the tempos and whacking the amps up
to ten. On the British club scene,
the Yardbirds, the Animals, and the
Rolling Stones ruled the stages. The
Yardbirds expanded the range of the
electric guitar, experimenting with
feedback, sustain, and fuzztone.
They also coined and popularized the
rave-up, a kind of free-for-all
where you jam long and hard, not as
soloists, but in a tandem, until you
reach an epiphany about 10 or 20 or
30 minutes later, a shuddering
climax of decibels and pure energy,
and then—back into the song for one
more boom-boom chorus. The Yardbirds
were the bridge between the
tributary white R&B of early-sixties
London and the pastures of
fuzz-toned psychedelia and
power-chorded heavy metal plowed
much later in the decade and
throughout the seventies. Yes, the
Yardbirds laid the groundwork for
Rock Guitar As We Know It.
— from Parke Puterbaugh liner notes
to Rhino’s Greatest Hits, Vol. 1,
1964-1966
We really didn’t know what we
were doing in those days. We were
just trying everything and thumbing
our noses, not knowing that it would
become a blueprint for a lot of
stuff.
— Yardbirds co-founder Chris Dreja
We won’t attempt to write a book on
the Yardbirds here; that’s already
been done — three times (see the
print and online bibliography at the
end of this bio for further
reading). We’ll simply reiterate
that the Yardbirds, perhaps more
than any other group, brought guitar
pyrotechnics to rock & roll in the
1960s. By introducing Clapton, Beck
and Page to the world, and giving
them plenty of space to create, the
band set the template not only for
Cream, the Jeff Beck Group and Led
Zeppelin (whose original moniker was
the New Yardbirds), but for
virtually every rock group
featuring distortion, feedback and
in-your-face electric-guitar
virtuosity.
Now, that remarkable achievement
would be more than enough for any
band to fondly look back on, but
this band is aggressively moving
forward. Three years after their
1992 induction into the Rock & Roll
Hall of Fame ("We had roast duck,"
Chris Dreja says of that special
night), the Yardbirds reformed, but
they chose to stay below the radar,
tweaking their lineup and working up
material. That has changed with the
release of their first new studio
recording since 1967’s Little
Games. What’s surprising about
the new longplayer, Birdland
(on Steve Vai’s Favored Nations
Records), is that, a full 35 years
later, the sound remains distinctly
and electrifyingly that of the
Yardbirds. It’s also very much of
the moment, as another generation of
gritty, guitar-slinging units like
the White Stripes, the Hives, the
Strokes and the Vines connects with
the reinvigorated rock audience.
Among the talents of founding
members Dreja (rhythm guitar,
backing vocals) and Jim McCarty
(drums, backing vocals) is a knack
for locating brilliant guitar
players.
The Yardbirds tradition of working
with musicians of extreme individual
talent and potential has lead us to
passing the guitarists mantle to a
new generation of player. Twenty one
year old Ben King has stunned
everyone in the band with his
unbelievable natural gifts and feel
for our music. Ben will undoubtedly
be a future star that we are proud
to have discovered and we are very
excited to have this young and
brilliant prodigy in our ranks.
Filling out
the group are Detroit-reared
frontman/bassist John Idan, a
lifelong Yardbirds fan who views his
gig as a labor of love, and onetime
Nine Below Zero member
Alan Glen
blowing harp in the spirit of the
late Keith Relf, the band’s original
lead singer, who was electrocuted in
1976 while recording at home. Both
charismatic performers -- John with
his astonishing range and visually
exciting stage presence, and Alan, a
hauntingly soulful player and one of
the UK's most in-demand session
players -- have developed devoted
followings. Mesmerizing and most
blues-wailing indeed!
This crack crew has plenty of
company on Birdland, which
features guest appearances by
six-string notables Brian May,
Slash, Joe Satriani, Steve Lukather,
Jeff "Skunk" Baxter, Vai and Jeff
Beck, who returns to take a spin in
his onetime vehicle. This array of
talent, along with the introduction
of their skilled contemporary Mayo,
makes the album a feast for
rock-guitar aficionados.
In order to introduce the group and
its oeuvre to a new generation of
music lovers, the band members, at
Vai’s urging, decided to make new
recordings of eight Yardbirds
classics: "I'm Not Talking" (with
Mayo taking the lead), "The Nazz Are
Blue" (featuring Baxter), "For Your
Love" (with the Goo Goo Dolls’
Johnny Rzeznik on vocals), "Train
Kept a Rolling" (Satriani), "Shapes
of Things" (Vai), "Over, Under,
Sideways, Down" (Slash), "Mr. You're
a Better Man Than I" (May) and
"Happenings Ten Years Time Ago" (Lukather).
"Some of the back catalog is
absolutely stunning live," Dreja
marvels, "and today, with better
sound equipment, it’s gone into the
21st century really
well."
"I consider it a great honor that
such highly respected musicians have
decided to come and join in," says
McCarty. "But then again, the
Yardbirds have always been a
collecting point for authentic and
explorative musicians, past and
present."
These reinterpretations are
interspersed with seven new songs
that perpetuate the Yardbirds’
musical tradition—"Crying Out for
Love," "Please Don't Tell Me ’Bout
the News," "Mr. Saboteur," "My Blind
Life", "Mystery of Being," "Dream
Within a Dream" and "An Original Man
(A Song for Keith)" — while giving
full rein to the range and firepower
of the new lineup.
"The current material connects with
the original material," McCarty
maintains, "in that there were
definitely two different sides to
the previous material, namely the
bluesy-riffy ideas such as ‘I'm Not
Talking’ and ‘I'm a Man,’ and the
more moody songs such as ‘For Your
Love’ and ‘Shapes of Things.’ I feel
that this is still evident with
songs like ‘Mystery of Being’ and
‘Dream Within a Dream,’ which are
both quite haunting, whereas ‘News’
and ‘Mr. Saboteur’ bring in more of
the bluesy influence."
McCarty composed five of the seven
new songs: "Mystery of Being,"
"Dream Within a Dream," "News," "Mr.
Saboteur" and the minor-key,
blues-based "Crying Out for Love."
"Jim’s a composer, so he probably
out of all of us possesses the
ability to bring a song to the
table," Dreja says of his partner.
"Then we Yardbirdize it — we
seriously birdshit all over it."
Dreja penned "My Blind Life" in the
spirit of Bo Diddley and Howlin’
Wolf, and "An Original Man" is a
group composition that pays tribute
to Relf.
Working with producer Ken Allardyce
(Weezer, Fleetwood Mac, Green Day,
Goo Goo Dolls), a relocated Scot who
fell in love with the Yardbirds when
he saw them open for the Beatles in
1964, the band cut the bulk of the
record at Vai’s Mothership Studios
in Hollywood, with additional work
done at two London facilities and
Jeff Beck’s home studio in Sussex.
"To make our first album in so many
years has been a lasting ambition of
ours," says Dreja. "We wanted to do
our original songs and our new ones
with modern production, while
preserving the essence of our sound.
To me, it doesn’t sound like we’ve
been away for 35 years. The
Yardbirds are still a kick-ass,
high-energy band, and that comes
across on this album."
What were once and future Yardbirds
up to in the years between the
breakup and the reformation? "In the
mid-’80s," Dreja recalls, "we felt
the need to record some more
material, which became the Box of
Frogs. We had people like Ian Dury,
Graham Parker, Roger Chapman, Jimmy
Page, Jeff Beck, Rory Gallagher and
Steve Hackett. It was not a touring
band; it was an outlet for
middle-aged men to get together and
play music — group therapy," he
quips. "Then there was another long
break because of other commitments —
other careers, really." Dreja has
been a professional photographer for
32 years, while McCarty, who, with
Relf, founded the ’70s group
Renaissance, has more recently
recorded several solo albums. "But
Jim and I always kept in contact.
Then, after you guys honored us in
’92, there came a discussion about
playing again, if we could find the
right people for the Yardbirds."
McCarty picks up the narrative
thread: "Motivation for reforming
the band came in about 1995, when
Chris and I were approached by an
agent who was already working with a
reformed Animals. I had been playing
since about 1989 in the Jim McCarty
Band, a London blues band formed
with Top Topham, the original
Yardbirds` guitarist from 1963, who
was replaced by Eric Clapton after
playing with the band for about six
months. A recording of the band made
in 1993 was recently released for
the first time. We had met John Idan
while he was in London buying
guitars for a U.S. business, and he
decided to join up with us.
Eventually, Top left and was
replaced by Ray Majors, who had
played on a track for Box of Frogs
back in 1984.
"John and Ray were invited to join
the new Yardbirds lineup, with John
on bass. John brings to the band an
energy and enthusiasm, as well as a
very good knowledge of the original
group and a respect for the original
material. He also looks a bit like
Keith Relf, but sings more like a
Chicago blues singer. We then asked
Laurie Garman, another musician who
would occasionally jam with us in
the pubs, to join us on harmonica.
We started with some ‘retro’ shows
and festivals, finding it good fun
and enjoying playing the old songs.
Ray was a pretty heavy guitarist,
and we thought it would be better to
replace him with somebody more
spontaneous in his playing, a la
Jeff Beck. Laurie Garman had played
with Gypie Mayo previously in a band
called the Cobras, and so we gave
him a go. It was obvious to me that
Gypie was just right for the band,
as he was incredibly creative,
especially on stage.
"Over the process of creating the
new material for Birdland, we
have all opened up much more to our
various individual and collective
potentials," McCarty says of the
modern-day Yardbirds, "and there is
now a new dynamism amongst us — the
original excitement and energy is
still there, but with added
experience, which definitely helps
in some aspects."
Dreja explains how the band managed
to attract that impressive array of
big-name guests for the project:
"All the guitar players, people in
music, especially in America, have
always held a sort of reverence for
the Yardbirds. Steve and the gang in
America helped to get Slash and
Satriani on board. Once the ball
started rolling, you get one or two
great people on it and others want
to follow. This is an album of
passion and love, not a marketing
exercise."
What would Dreja say to skeptics who
will inevitably question the band’s
motives in revisiting vintage
material and wheeling out the guest
stars? "The decision to remind
people of the energy of those
original songs was important because
we went away. We were not a band
like the Who or the Stones that just
carried on and everybody grew old
with — we took a long holiday.
"Every artist likes to better what
they did originally, and I really
prefer a lot of our interpretations
now to the originals. The originals
were done in a short amount of time,
and the production was crap. It was
very interesting to go back and
stage the play again, so to speak.
And anyway, the album is a mix of
new and old, and the old material
has subtle changes, and of course
those guests really knocked their
socks off to put something special
into those songs. When I listened to
the reference master, I tried to
distance myself. And I realized that
this band still has that urgent
edge. There’s blood and sweat, which
is what this album took."
And what of those who would accuse
the band of cashing in now that its
musical approach has become popular
again? "That garage sound never
really went away," Dreja replies.
"I’ve been hearing it all over the
place for years, and for some reason
it’s fashionable again. But that’s
not us picking up the phone saying,
‘Hey man, it’s all coming back.
Let’s get out there and make an
album.’ We were way ahead of that.
It just sort of happened that the
album’s coming out at a time when
the Hives and the Strokes are
getting a bit of press. And believe
me, it’s not easy getting a record
deal after 35 years," he says with a
rueful laugh, "especially with all
the reshuffling at the major
companies, who were dropping very
good acts themselves. Steve came
along and said if we could do it
this way, he’d love to do an album.
He was really cool about…and he did
a great solo too." Shrewd move,
Chris, giving props to the label
head.
McCarty was at London’s Festival
Hall last year when the White
Stripes played some Yardbirds songs
with none other than Jeff Beck in a
sort cross-generational rave-up. "I
spoke with Jack the singer
afterwards," Jim recalls, "and he
was very complimentary towards me.
The set with Jeff was exciting and
full of youthful enthusiasm."
These Yardbirds are channeling a
similar enthusiasm, three-and-a-half
decades down the line, as these
inveterate rock & rollers wail away,
still capable of achieving godhead,
still having a blast.
"It’ll be extremely fascinating to
see what happens — who lambastes us,
who doesn’t," Dreja reflects. "We
are obviously going to come to
America and work the album; it’s
very important to us. None of us are
youngsters, of course, and we don’t
know how many years left of touring
there may be. So this is going to be
a pivotal moment for us, no doubt.
But this is a band. That is
what the Yardbirds are — warts and
edginess and all. It’s the real
thing."
Billy-Boy
has also joined The Yardbirds
and started touring with them in
October 2003. His musical career
started in the summer of 1987
when he was watching Belfast’s
blues man Jim Daly with whom Van
Morrison had started his career.
Daly invited Billy-Boy on stage
to play and from that moment on,
the ‘blue’s bug’ bit. He formed
R&B outfit Black and Blue Jam
within a month of that meeting.
It's a long way from the
back streets of Belfast to
rubbing shoulders at a Hollywood
Premier with actor Bruce Willis.
Billy-Boy's musical career
started in the summer of 1987
when he was watching Belfast's
blues man Jim Daly, with whom
Van Morrison had started his
career, when Daly invited him on
stage to play; from that moment
on, the 'blue's bug' bit. He
formed R&B outfit Black and Blue
Jam within a month of that
meeting.
BBJ were essentially a Nine
Below Zero cover band with some
Stone's songs thrown in to break
up the set a bit. They played
very successfully for a semi pro
band until 1991when NBZ reformed
and ruined everything!
When NBZ came to Belfast in
1991, Billy-Boy managed to claim
the support slot. NBZ's front
man Dennis Greaves spotted the
raw talent in Billy-Boy and kept
in touch.
In 1992 Billy-Boy got offered a
gig in the Blue's Experience;
BBJ had run its course so off he
went. The band were, Billy-Boy
on harp; a fine blue's guitarist
and blue's shouter Ronnie Greer,
a great bass player Jackie
Flavelle of Chris Barber fame,
and a seventeen year old jazz
genius called Darren Beckett,
who later went on to play with
The Buddy Rich Orchestra. This
successful band went on to do
all the blues festivals in
Ireland and several television
shows.
In 1995 NBZ's original harp man
Mark Feltham left the band and
NBZ rang him offering him a job
in the band. Without hesitation
he left The Blue's Experience
and flew to London.
Billy-Boy played with NBZ for
six years and to list all of the
highlights would take too long,
so here are just a few:
Billy-Boy's first gig with the
band in Athens where he played
with Alvin Lee of Ten Years
After and the second gig at Le
Mans 24 car race where they
played to an audience of 25,000
people. When NBZ played at the
movie premier of 'Twelve
Monkeys' and swapping harp
stories with actor Bruce Willis.
Rockpalazt, Germany sharing the
bill with David Bowie, Iggy Pop,
The Band, Lynnard Skynnard and
The Muddy Water's Blue's Band. A
European stadium tour with
Italian super star Zuccero
After leaving NBZ, Billy-Boy
formed The Strutts, which were
Billy-Boy on vocals and harp,
Aaron Loughern on Bass, Lawrence
McKweon on drum and Neil
Cunningham on guitar. It was
here that Billy-Boy started
writing and performing his own
songs. He moved back to London
to record his debut solo album
'Billy-Boy Comes Clean', which
is due for release.