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The New
Seekers
From 1969 to the present day the New Seekers have been through
many changes in their line up.
The current line-up
is:
Mick Flinn, Mark Hankins, Donna Jones
Paul Layton, Francine Rees.
Known chiefly for making a Coca-Cola
jingle into a massive worldwide hit, the New Seekers ostensibly
grew out of the ashes of the Australian folk-rock outfit the Seekers,
famous for Georgy Girl. Although their clear harmonies,
pop leanings, and squeaky-clean image were similar to the original
band, their actual connection was tenuous at best.
After the Seekers disbanded, guitarist/vocalist
Keith Potger put together an otherwise completely new band in late
1969 with female vocalists Eve Graham and Sally Graham (no relation),
guitarists/vocalists Laurie Heath and Marty Kristian, and bassist/vocalist
Chris Barrington. Potger christened them the New Seekers and produced
their self-titled 1970 debut album, and while he did sing with them
at first, he soon retired from both performance and production to
become their manager, leaving them with no members of the original
Seekers. His last appearance was on the ironically titled follow-up
Keith Potger and the New Seekers, which was issued before the end
of the year and featured numerous personnel changes; only Eve Graham
and Marty Kristian remained, joined by singer Lyn Paul and guitarists/vocalists
Paul Layton and Peter Doyle.
Thus constituted, the New Seekers scored
their first American hit with a cover of Melanie's Look What They
Done to My Song, Ma in late 1970. They toured the US in early 1971
and appeared on several variety shows, and the title track of Beautiful
People was a significant follow-up success.
They also broke through in the UK later
that year with a version of Delaney Bramlett's Never Ending Song
of Love. Their biggest success, however, came from an unlikely source,
an ad jingle they recorded for Coca-Cola, which became part of a
hugely popular campaign that summer, so popular that radio listeners
actually called in to request the commercial. It was decided to
release the song as a single called "I'd Like to Teach
the World to Sing (In Perfect Harmony), with the lyrics rewritten
to remove product references. Since the New Seekers were unavailable
at the time, a country-tinged version by the Hillside Singers was
actually released first. The New Seekers recorded their own version
while touring America toward the end of the year, and since it naturally
sounded more like the commercial, it proved the bigger hit, reaching
the US top ten despite stiff competition from the alternative recording.
Helped by the ad campaign, I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing was a smash hit all over the world, topping the charts in several
countries (including the UK) and giving the New Seekers their biggest-ever
hit.
In 1972, the New Seekers were placed
second in the annual Eurovision Song Contest with Beg, Steal or
Borrow, which was their highly successful UK follow-up to I'd Like
To Teach The World To Sing. The title track of Circles was another
hit that summer.
The New Seekers kicked off 1973 by playing
Richard Nixon's inaugural ball, but subsequently tried to hip up
their image and gain a little more critical respect by recording
more rock-oriented numbers. It didn't work, and their sales began
to slip as a result. Peter Doyle left the group that summer and
was replaced by Peter Oliver. The singles You Won't Find Another
Fool Like Me and I Get a Little Sentimental Over You (featured on
the 1974 album Together) returned them to the UK top ten, but both
female singers, Eve Graham and Lyn Paul, decided to leave the group
in early 1974. They embarked on a farewell tour of the UK that spring,
and entered the studio one last time to record The Farewell Album,
which was issued that summer after they had officially disbanded.
However, this wasn't the end of the
New Seekers, although it was the end of their commercial prime.
The group re-formed in 1976 with original members Eve Graham, Marty
Kristian and Paul Layton, plus newcomers Kathy Ann Rae and Danny
Finn. They recorded the album Together Again and began playing the
UK cabaret circuit with other non-rock pop acts. While they would
land a few minor hits over the next two years, none were on the
scale of their previous successes, and after one final album, 1978's
Anthem, Graham and Finn left the group to marry and perform as a
duo. With their departure, the New Seekers effectively ceased to
be an active recording concern. Kristian and Layton continued to
lead various New Seekers line-ups into the '80s and sporadically
during the '90s, but despite continued world tours; they were strictly
a nostalgia act.
Peter Doyle died of throat
cancer on October 13, 2001.
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