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Encyclopedia > The Tourists

The Tourists (1977 - 1980) were a moderately successful British pop band, but are better known for two of their members (Annie Lennox & David A. Stewart) who went on to achieve superstardom as Eurythmics. Annie Lennox (born Ann Lennox on 25 December 1954) is a Scottish musician, vocalist, and Academy Award-winning songwriter. ... David Allan Stewart, often known as Dave Stewart (born September 9, 1952 in Sunderland, Tyne and Wear), is an English musician and record producer best known for his work with Eurythmics. ... For the approach to music education, see Eurhythmics. ...

Contents

Formation

The band formed around a nucleus of two musicians from Sunderland in north-east England, Peet Coombes and Stewart. Coombes was a guitarist singer-songwriter with a folky style. As a teenager, guitarist Stewart had been a member of folk band Longdancer, who were signed to Elton John's Rocket Records label. For other uses, see Sunderland (disambiguation). ... Peet Coombes (died 1997) was the guitarist and vocalist with Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart in the two pre-Eurythmics bands, The Catch, who only released one single, Borderline/Black Blood (1977, Logo) and the Tourists, who had quite a few UK hits in the late 70s. ... Longdancer was a music group in England from the early 1970s. ... Sir Elton Hercules[1] John CBE[2] (born Reginald Kenneth Dwight on 25 March 1947) is a five-time Grammy and one-time Academy Award-winning English pop/rock singer, composer and pianist. ...


The two moved to London and encountered Scottish singer Annie Lennox, who had dropped out of her course at the Royal Academy of Music, where she had been studying flute and keyboards to pursue her ambitions in pop music. Lennox & Stewart quickly became lovers. Annie Lennox (born Ann Lennox on 25 December 1954) is a Scottish musician, vocalist, and Academy Award-winning songwriter. ... The Royal Academy of Music (RAM) is a constituent college of the University of London, and is one of the worlds leading music institutions. ...


The three of them initially called themselves The Catch, and released a single Borderline under this moniker in 1977 on Logo Records, which failed to chart. When Transatlantic Records closed in 1977 it re-appeared as Logo Records. ...


Career

By 1978, they had become a viable live gigging band, recruiting Singapore-born bass guitarist Eddie Chin and memorably nicknamed drummer Jim "Do It" Toomey, re-christening themselves The Tourists. Eddie Chin was born in Singapore 3 November 1948. ...


This saw the beginning of a productive two years for the band - they recorded three albums (The Tourists, Reality Effect, and Luminous Basement) and half a dozen singles, including (minor) hits : "Blind Among the Flowers" (1979), "The Loneliest Man in the World" (1979), "Don't Say I Told You So" (1980), and two major hits : the Dusty Springfield cover "I Only Want to be with You" (1979) and "So Good to be Back Home Again" (1980), both of which reached the top 10 in the UK. "I Only Want To Be With You" was also a top 10 hit in Australia, and made the lower rungs of the US pop charts at #83.


Coombes was the band's main songwriter, although later releases saw the first fledgling compositions by Lennox and Stewart. The bands music expanded upon their folk roots, demonstrating some punky energy (often termed power-pop at the time) and also reggae and 1960s pop influences. A key development was their decision to record later material with legendary German avant-garde producer Conny Plank. Reggae is a music genre developed in Jamaica in the late 1960s. ... Konrad Conny Plank (frequently spelled Planck) (born about 1943 in Austria, died December 18, 1987 in Cologne) was a record producer. ...


The band were unhappy with their Logo contract (which saw their management, song publishing and recording contract all owned by the same company), and legal wranglings secured a transfer to RCA Records in 1980. RCA Records is one of the flagship labels of Sony BMG Music Entertainment. ...


The band toured extensively in the UK and abroad, including a support role on the Roxy Music "Manifesto" tour, but despite modest chart success, they tended to be given a critical savaging by the punk-championing UK music press. This, combined with the legal wranglings and also some personal tensions, led to the group disbanding in 1980 whilst on a world tour.


Break-Up

Coombes and Chin reputedly began a new project Acid Drops, but this met with little success and Coombes, despite originally being the main artistic force behind The Tourists, drifted out of the music business into obscurity.


Lennox and Stewart split as a couple, but decided to continue working as an experimental musical partnership, under the name Eurythmics. They retained their RCA recording contract and links with Conny Plank, and by 1983 had achieved global success with their hit single Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This). For the approach to music education, see Eurhythmics. ...


The Tourists' back-catalogue is largely unavailable at present on CD, with only a compilation album being issued by BMG on its Camden imprint.


Discography

Albums

  • 1979 The Tourists #72 UK
  • 1979/1980 Reality Effect #23 UK
  • 1980 Luminous Basement #75 UK; #7 US
  • 1984 Should Have Been Greatest Hits
  • 1997 Greatest Hits (Tourists album)

Also: 1979 by Smashing Pumpkins. ... Also: 1979 by Smashing Pumpkins. ... Year 1980 (MCMLXXX) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link displays the 1980 Gregorian calendar). ... Year 1980 (MCMLXXX) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link displays the 1980 Gregorian calendar). ... This article is about the year. ... For the band, see 1997 (band). ...

Singles

  • 1979 Blind Among The Flowers #52 UK
  • 1979 The Loneliest Man In The World #32 UK
  • 1980 Don't Say I Told You So #40 UK
  • 1980 From The Middle Room (bonus with Luminous Basement album)

Also: 1979 by Smashing Pumpkins. ... Also: 1979 by Smashing Pumpkins. ... Also: 1979 by Smashing Pumpkins. ... Year 1980 (MCMLXXX) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link displays the 1980 Gregorian calendar). ... For the song by Hootie and the Blowfish, see Only Wanna Be with You. ... Year 1980 (MCMLXXX) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link displays the 1980 Gregorian calendar). ... Year 1980 (MCMLXXX) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link displays the 1980 Gregorian calendar). ... Year 1980 (MCMLXXX) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link displays the 1980 Gregorian calendar). ...

Compact Disc Release

  • "Luminous Basement" was re-issued on CD in 1998.
  • The US version of "Reality Effect" (actually a compilation of the first two UK albums) was re-issued on CD in 2007.
  • Currently there are no plans to re-issue The Tourists debut album.

External links

  • The Tourists/Eurythmics at Trouser Press
  • - David's Eurythmics collection - over 1000 items of music and memorabilia

  Results from FactBites:
 
Tourist (3507 words)
Tourist had run with the best in most of his races, and had won an important race, although he was not a patch on his sire at that age, and he might have been expected to do better the following year, but Bailey decided to divest himself of all his racing stock that fall.
Tourist II, carrying 148 lbs., ran second by a length to Joseph Widener's great steeplechaser Arc Light, who set a track record of 5:40, but a foul was lodged against the winner, and the stewards disqualified Arc Light, moving Tourist II up to first, but allowing Arc Light's record to stand.
Tourist II was sold to Marion DuPont Scott, and joined her famous steeplechaser Battleship -- the first American-bred and American-owned horse to win the Aintree Grand National -- at Montpelier Stud in Virginia.
Tourism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2483 words)
A tourist is someone who travels at least eighty kilometres (fifty miles) from home for the purpose of recreation, as defined by the World Tourism Organization (a United Nations body).
The terms tourist and tourism were first used as official terms in 1937 by the League of Nations.
Initially it was supported by the growing middle classes, who had time off from their work, and who could afford the luxury of travel and possibly even staying for periods of time in boarding houses.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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