Tuesday, March 11, 2025

The Glass Menagerie - Run To The Sun (1969)

In August 1967 guitarist John Kendall and bassist John Medley left their band The Truth and teamed up with three ex-members of The Raging Storms, being Lou Stonebridge on vocals, Keith O'Connell on organ and Bill Atkinson in drums. Inspired by the new wave of progressive and psychedelic rock, they started out as a covers band, playing material by Blood, Sweat & Tears, The Doors, Traffic, The Lovin' Spoonful, and Jefferson Airplane, and they quickly gained a reputation and a strong following, and in 1968 they signed a deal with Pye Records. After they moved to London, O'Connell left the group to join Geno Washington's Ram Jam Band, and so Stonebridge took over on organ as well as vocals. Their fist single for Pye was a cover of The Rolling Stones' 'She's A Rainbow', which was released in April 1968, and they followed that in June with another cover, this time tackling The Lovin' Spoonful's 'You Didn't Have To Be So Nice'. For their third single they covered Harry Nilsson's I Said Goodbye To Me', and backed it with a John Medley original in 'Frederick Jordan', but despite all three records containing some excellent music, and enjoying decent airplay, none of them were hits. The band continued to build up a popular live following through constant touring, broadcasts on John Peel's 'Top Gear' radio show, and regular appearances at clubs like The Marquee. In 1969 the band moved to the Polydor Record label, where they released two singles, 'Have You Forgotten Who You Are' and 'Do My Thing Myself', and they also recorded an album, which was never released, possibly due to the lack of success of the singles. By the end of 1969, both Kendall and Medley felt that they were getting nowhere with the group and so left, and the remaining members recruited Tony Dangerfield as the new bassist, and they continued for another year as a three-piece, before finally folding in 1970. The unreleased album has never surfaced, but we can have a guess at what might have been included on it, and as some of their radio sessions have survived, we know the sort of material that they were playing in 1969, and so here is my attempt to piece together what a Glass Menagerie album could have sounded like if it had appeared in 1969. 



Track listing

01 I Said Goodbye To Me
02 That's When I Start To Love Her
03 Watching The World Pass By
04 Life Is Getting It Together
05 Have You Forgotten Who You Are
06 Chequebook Girl
07 Do You Ever Think
08 Let's All Run To The Sun
09 Frederick Jordan
10 Run Out Of Time
11 Do My Thing Myself
12 Putting It Off Till Another Day
13 She Came From Hell

This album is the perfect companion to a recent post on the albumsthatshouldexist site, as it includes all their singles, alongside a few sessions for the BBC.  

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