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Andy Ellison
Andy Ellison
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Key Information

Andrew Ellison (born 5 July 1945 in Finchley, London, England) is an English musician and vocalist, best known as the frontman in John's Children, Jet and Radio Stars.[1]

Biography

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He attended Box Hill School in Surrey, where he met Chris Townson.[2] Ellison and Townson co-founded the rock group John's Children.

John's Children also featured Marc Bolan and Chris Townson. A song sung by Ellison, "It's Been A Long Time",[1] appears on the soundtrack to the film, Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush. "It's Been A Long Time" also featured on the compilation album, Backtrack 1, a Track Records release featuring The Who and Jimi Hendrix amongst others.[3]

Jet released an album on CBS Records in 1975,[4] toured as support to Hunter-Ronson and then became Radio Stars,[5] who had one UK Top 40 hit, "Nervous Wreck" in early 1978. It peaked at No. 39.[6] The B-side to the single was a cover of Marc Bolan's "Horrible Breath", a John's Children staple.[7]

Discography

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Solo albums

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Title Released
Cornflake Zoo 11 September 2006 [8]
Fourplay 2007

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Andy Ellison is an English singer and musician known for serving as the lead vocalist and frontman of the psychedelic rock band John's Children in the 1960s, as well as later groups Jet and Radio Stars. Born Andrew Ellison on 5 July 1945 in Finchley, London, he began his musical career as a solo singer in the early 1960s and released three singles during the late 1960s—"It’s Been A Long Time" on Track Records, "Fool From Upper Eden" on CBS Records, and "You Can’t Do That" on S.N.B.—which failed to chart at the time but have since become sought-after collector's items. Ellison gained prominence as a member of John's Children, an influential if commercially limited band in the British psychedelic and garage rock scenes. He subsequently performed with Jet before joining the quirky pop outfit Radio Stars in the late 1970s. In the 1990s, he participated in a reformation of John's Children and has continued to release solo material and perform into the 2000s and beyond. His career spans several decades of British underground rock, marked by transitions from psychedelic experimentation to punk-influenced and pop-oriented projects.

Early life

Birth and background

Andy Ellison was born on 5 July 1946 in Leatherhead, Surrey, England. He grew up in the Surrey area, particularly around Leatherhead and the nearby regions. During his youth, Ellison attended an outward-bound style boarding school at Box Hill in the Surrey Hills, where he met Chris Townson, who became a lifelong friend.

Early musical beginnings

Andy Ellison's early interest in music developed during his time at Box Hill Outward Bound School in Surrey around 1963, where he met fellow student Chris Townson. Both teenagers had rebellious backgrounds, having been expelled from previous schools, and they bonded while painting a school play backdrop, during which they playfully threw paint at each other. They soon began writing and performing music together, with Townson on ukulele and Ellison providing vocals and harmonica, even composing their first song, “Hey little Anaconda,” in the dormitory. After leaving school in 1963, Townson attended art school while Ellison worked as a photographer’s assistant in Soho. Townson later joined a local band called The Clockwork Onions after meeting the tutor’s son, Chris Dawsett, who played keyboards in the group alongside his sister on drums and Geoff McClelland on guitar; Townson auditioned successfully by claiming he could play drums. He invited Ellison to watch The Clockwork Onions perform at Fetcham Village Hall, where the original singer abruptly left the stage mid-performance; Ellison jumped onstage, played harmonica, improvised lyrics, and sang, leading the band to invite him to join as lead singer, initially contributing harmonica and vocals. The group soon renamed itself The Few and then The Silence, a name Ellison chose partly in reference to the 1963 Ingmar Bergman film and ironically because of their extremely loud playing. They rehearsed R&B and blues covers in the Dawsett family living room and a garage in Dorking, where they also recorded four demo tracks. Influenced early on by rock & roll and R&B artists such as Eddie Cochran, Elvis Presley, and Muddy Waters, as well as The Rolling Stones, they shifted toward a heavier sound after seeing The Who perform live in Guildford, which Ellison credits with giving blues an English twist through heavy guitar work. The band supported The Small Faces (along with Kiki Dee) at several gigs across southern England and Wales. Their early performances were marked by chaotic and energetic behavior, including Ellison using long microphone leads to run around venues and once diving from the top diving board into a swimming pool during a show at the Burford Bridge Hotel summer pool party, an act that fused the PA system when his microphone lead sparked in the water. The Silence later evolved into John's Children in 1966 following their encounter with manager Simon Napier-Bell.

Music career

John's Children (1966–1968)

Andy Ellison served as the lead singer of John's Children, a mod-influenced rock band formed from his earlier group The Silence. In mid-1966, while performing in France, drummer Chris Townson met Yardbirds manager Simon Napier-Bell, who agreed to manage the group despite his low opinion of their musicianship. Napier-Bell renamed the band John's Children after bassist John Hewlett to ensure his retention and styled them in all-white outfits to emphasize their outrageous stage behavior. The band's debut single "Smashed Blocked" / "Strange Affair" appeared in late 1966 (released in the UK as "The Love I Thought I'd Found" / "Strange Affair"), with the A-side recorded by session musicians in Los Angeles. Their follow-up, "Just What You Want – Just What You'll Get" / "But You're Mine", arrived in early 1967 and featured a Jeff Beck guitar solo on the B-side. After switching to Track Records, they released "Desdemona" in May 1967, written by Marc Bolan, which the BBC banned due to the lyric "lift up your skirt and fly". Subsequent singles included "Come And Play With Me In The Garden" and "Go Go Girl" later that year. Marc Bolan replaced guitarist Geoff McClelland in early 1967, bringing songs such as "Desdemona" and briefly contributing as a guitarist and songwriter during his short tenure before departing in mid-1967 to pursue other projects. The band's only album, Orgasm, was recorded in 1967 as a simulated live set with added crowd effects and screams overdubbed from Beatles recordings, but its intended US release on White Whale was delayed until 1970 due to objections from the Daughters of the American Revolution over the title and sleeve. John's Children became notorious for extreme live performances encouraged by Napier-Bell, involving fake blood capsules, pillow-ripping to scatter feathers, stage fights, instrument destruction, and audience provocation that often led to chaos. During a 1967 German tour supporting The Who, their antics—such as Bolan whipping his guitar with a chain and the band simulating violence—sparked a riot in Ludwigshafen, resulting in their removal from the tour. Napier-Bell acquired the Bluesette club in Leatherhead and renamed it John's Children Club, where the band rehearsed and hosted performances. Following Bolan's departure, the band continued as a three-piece before disbanding in late 1967 after a final German tour and their last show at the Star-Club in Hamburg.

Solo singles (late 1960s–early 1970s)

Around the end of John's Children in late 1967, Andy Ellison continued his music career as a solo artist under the management of Simon Napier-Bell, releasing three singles in quick succession. His first solo release was the single "It's Been a Long Time" (backed with "Arthur Green") on Track Records in December 1967. The track served as a theme song for the 1968 film Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush. This was followed in March 1968 by "Fool from Upper Eden" (backed with "Another Lucky Lie") on CBS, and in May 1968 by a cover of the Beatles' "You Can't Do That" (backed with "Cornflake Zoo") on the SNB label. Despite the rapid output, the singles received little publicity and commercial attention, later becoming sought-after collector's items. After these releases, Ellison stepped away from the music industry, traveling in Europe—including a period living in France—before returning to recording in the mid-1970s with the formation of Jet. No further solo singles appeared during the early 1970s.

Jet (1974–1975)

Jet was formed in 1974 after Andy Ellison returned from France and was contacted by former John's Children drummer Chris Townson, who was working with Martin Gordon following his departure from Sparks. The band consisted of Ellison on vocals, Townson on drums, Gordon on bass, Davy O'List on guitar (formerly of Roxy Music), and Peter Oxendale on keyboards. They adopted a striking glam rock image featuring elaborate costumes, including Martin Gordon in a riding outfit, Davy O'List in a dinosaur suit, and Ellison in white attire with a cape emblazoned with "Jet" on the back and white boxer boots. Signed to CBS Records, Jet released their self-titled debut album in 1975. The band supported Ian Hunter and Mick Ronson on tour, and during the second night at Glasgow Apollo, while performing the opening song "Cover Girl," Ellison leapt from the stage expecting to land on a platform several feet below, only to fall approximately 25 feet into the orchestra pit after the platform had been lowered; he navigated out through corridors, was initially denied re-entry, climbed back via speaker scaffolding, and rejoined the performance as the band continued the intro. Following the album, CBS sent the band to an old church in Bruton, Somerset, to record a second album, but after two weeks of heavy local cider consumption and minimal progress, they improvised a rock opera for label executives, whose negative reaction led to CBS dropping the band and confiscating their equipment. Leftover songs were later taken to smaller labels, leading to the formation of Radio Stars.

Radio Stars (1977–1980s)

Following the end of Jet in 1976, Andy Ellison formed Radio Stars in 1977 with bassist and primary songwriter Martin Gordon, guitarist Ian MacLeod, and later drummer Steve Perry. The band signed to Chiswick Records and released their debut album Songs for Swinging Lovers in 1977, establishing their presence on the fringes of the punk and new wave scenes with a quirky rock sound built around Gordon's clever songs and Ellison's enthusiastic vocals. They followed with The Holiday Album in 1978 after adding Trevor White on guitar. The original lineup effectively ended when Gordon left shortly after the second album's release due to its commercial disappointment. Radio Stars released several notable singles during this period, including "Dirty Pictures", "Nervous Wreck" (which reached No. 39 on the UK charts in 1978), and "No Russians in Russia". The band undertook extensive UK tours, including a 1977 package with Eddie & The Hot Rods and Squeeze. They maintained an almost endless schedule of live shows, with Ellison continuing his extreme stage stunts—such as trampoline performances and hanging from lighting rigs—that pushed his physical limits and resulted in injuries including a broken back.

Reunions and later work (1990s–present)

In the 1990s, Andy Ellison reactivated John's Children after guitarist Boz Boorer approached him about joining a reformed line-up, leading to rehearsals and several live performances with original members Chris Townson on drums and Martin Gordon on bass. This renewed activity extended into the 2000s, including live recordings from shows in London, Berlin, and Amsterdam in 2000 that formed the basis for the 2001 live album Music for the Herd of Herring, credited to John's Children / Jet / Radio Stars and featuring Ellison on vocals and guitar across a selection of songs from his various bands. The group later released the studio album Black & White in 2011 on Acid Jazz Records, consisting of new material including the energetic opening track "I Got The Buzz." Ellison's solo output during this period included the 2006 compilation Cornflake Zoo, which gathered his solo singles, demos, and previously unreleased rarities spanning 1967 to 2005, among them the collaboration "Heather Lane" with Andy Lewis. He followed this with the limited-edition Fourplay EP around 2007, a home-recorded release of approximately 200 copies featuring tracks such as "Cluster Bombs" and "Anyway Goodbye," the latter including Boz Boorer on guitar and keyboards. Further collaborations with Lewis appeared on tracks like "Top of the Tower," originally from Lewis's You Should Be Hearing Something Now. Ellison has maintained occasional live performances into the 2010s and beyond, with interviews noting ongoing plans for shows and a continued stage presence despite accumulated injuries. In 2023, he announced an upcoming solo album titled Let's Wake Up the Neighbours, comprising 16 new tracks including "Was He Pushed," "Blister Bird," "Losing All My Friends," "When I Was Young," "Platform," and the title song.

Film and television appearances

Soundtrack contributions

Andy Ellison contributed to the soundtrack of the 1968 British comedy film Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush by performing the song "It's Been a Long Time" (uncredited). The track appeared on the film's original motion picture soundtrack album, which featured contributions from various artists including Traffic and the Spencer Davis Group. "It's Been a Long Time" was originally released as Ellison's solo single in late 1967 on Track Records, with "Arthur Green" as the B-side. This release came during his early solo period. No other soundtrack contributions by Ellison to films are documented.

Television performances

Andy Ellison made several television appearances as himself, often in his capacity as a musician and performer, particularly during the late 1970s with Radio Stars and later in documentaries about Marc Bolan. In 1977, he appeared as Self – Musician on two episodes of the music series Marc, presented by his former John's Children bandmate Marc Bolan. The following year, to promote Radio Stars' single "Nervous Wreck," Ellison performed with the band on BBC programs, appearing as Self (as Radio Stars) on one episode of Top of the Pops in 1978 and one episode of The Old Grey Whistle Test in 1978. In later years, he featured in tribute programs about Bolan, appearing as Self – John's Son in the 1997 TV special Marc Bolan: Dandy in the Underworld and as Self in the 2007 TV movie Marc Bolan: The Final Word.

Personal life

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