The Relatives & Phil Miller

Virtually

The Relatives & Phil Miller

8曲 • 43分 • JUN 15 2013

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℗© RelativesRecords

アーティスト略歴

A group that fuses gospel, funk, and psychedelic soul, the Relatives were formed in 1970 by Dallas, Texas natives Reverend Gean West and Reverend Tommie West. While they released some singles that made some impact on a local level, they were known more for their performances and opened for the likes of the Staple Singers and the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi. Once the '70s gave way to the '80s, the group went inactive but resumed in the wake of Don't Let Me Fall, a compilation released by Heavy Light in 2009. They signed to the Yep Roc label and recorded their first album, The Electric Word, with Spoon's Jim Eno as producer and Zach Ernst, formerly of Black Joe Lewis, on guitar. ~ Andy Kellman

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Inimitable guitarist Phil Miller was a longtime fixture in British progressive music, beginning in 1966 when, at only 17 years of age, he was a founding member of the band Delivery, whose varying lineups would also include British progressive mainstays such as drummer Pip Pyle, saxophonist Lol Coxhill, bassist Roy Babbington, and pianist Steve Miller (Phil's brother). His first compositions can be heard on the 1970 Delivery album Fools Meeting (featuring vocalist Carol Grimes). In 1971, Miller helped establish Matching Mole with drummer/vocalist Robert Wyatt of Soft Machine. Matching Mole broke up after releasing two LPs, Matching Mole and Little Red Record. Miller then formed Hatfield and the North with keyboardist Dave Stewart (Egg), bassist/vocalist Richard Sinclair (Caravan), and drummer Pyle. Hatfield recorded two LPs for Virgin in the mid-'70s: Hatfield and the North and The Rotters' Club.

Hatfield evolved into National Health, which recorded National Health, Of Queues and Cures, and D.S. Al Coda. All three LPs were reissued by East Side Digital on a two-CD set, Complete, and the first two discs were subsequently re-released, with their tracks intermixed, on another two-disc set, Dreams Wide Awake (Atom Music), before again reappearing as individual reissues on Esoteric Recordings in 2009. East Side Digital also released another National Health CD, Missing Pieces, and the Cuneiform label issued a live set, entitled Playtime, by a later incarnation of the band featuring Miller, Pyle, keyboardist Alan Gowen, and bassist John Greaves. Following the breakup of National Health, Miller worked on collaborative projects and with his band In Cahoots. He released several efforts on Cuneiform (Cutting Both Ways, Digging In, and All That), as well as numerous CDs on his own Crescent Discs label (Double Up, Live in Japan, Recent Discoveries, Parallel, Out of the Blue, Conspiracy Theories, and Mind Over Matter). Miller died on October 18, 2017 at the age of 68. ~ Jim Dorsch

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