At another Holiday Inn where rock musician culture must spend at
least a third of its time, Colin Carter, the long, tall, wire-haired
lead singer of Flash proclaims, "musicians have huge egos that they need
to prop up on stage and they carry it around with them all the time."
Colin is perfectly correct as one rarely meets professional performers
who are without ego. It would seem you don't make it in the record
business without one. Egos are what make rock stars and break up
successful groups. It's ironic, but painfully true. The Beatles, The
Byrds, Springfields and the list goes on. Every time a group breaks up
or changes personnel, at least one or two splinter bands arise. Flash is
one such act. Peter Banks is the odd man out. He was a founding member
(as they say in the New Musical Express) of Yes. Yes in those days lived
in the shadow of Led Zeppelin, then the golden haired boys of the
English branch of the Atlantic label. Hence Yes was left with a poorly
promoted first album and a tour of second rate English pubs and clubs at
the inset. As Peter explains the consistent grind of the road begins to
get to people. Musicians get so "they can't stand living with certain
members of the band." But they stay on the road. The frustrations of
playing the same "bloody" numbers night after night found Bill Bruford
leaving Yes, and Banks joking about punching time clocks when they went
on stage. Night after night they played the same songs over and over and
over again. Roy Flynn, the manager of the band, became the "bad guy."
Some members of Yes ignored him as best they could at times, "sending
him off to coventry" as the English say — meaning they didn't talk to
him. Peter shared the bands unhappiness but apparently did not like the
"coventry" bit. The expulsion of the manager did not solve the group's
problems. The nightly club appearances did not go away and English
audiences, according to Peter, "have seen so much and heard so much that
the whole babble of aesthetic performance and musical intensity has
just been pushed off." They just don't respond like American audiences.
They've seen it all. "Wait till Peter gets to the Whisky," I think, "and
encounters the friendly Los Angeles rock press and the legendary John
Ned Mendelsohn." With the manager gone, the record company became — with
some justification — the villain. "We were conned," Peter says with
some feeling. "I can honestly say that. I don't think Atlantic did
enough for the band." Another cop out? Every band in the world blames
THE record company for the sins of the world. Some of the time they're
right. Peter charges that Atlantic did not promote Yes until after
Fragile, especially in the lucrative American market. As a conscientious
PRM writer I push on, but Peter stops saying the case is in the English
courts. Obviously, Yes is still with Atlantic, so why isn't he? Peter,
who answers most of the questions, blames Tony Colton, lead singer of
Heads, Hands and Feet, who produced Yes' second album, Time And A Word:
"When I heard the final mix of the album, I was very upset. I felt like
crying; the guitar was gone. The guitar virtually disappeared." Shortly
afterward Peter departed Yes. Peter was the first to leave. Another
"founder member," Tony Kaye, who would appear in Flash on at least the
first album, also left Yes again over musical direction. Tony told
Melody Maker, "I'd not been happy with the band for a year. I Wasn't
getting into the music they were playing and the direction they were
going. I found myself left out...." Since the departure of Banks and
Kaye, Yes has added Steve Howe and Rick Wakeman and gone on to some
international acclaim. It is at this point that things become very muddy
and confusing. Peter and Tony left Yes because they just weren't
getting their share of the spotlight. They were two of the five
"founding members." So who is the rightful heir to the true Yes
identity? This is not simply an academic question because it defines
Flash's identity. But this is no question to pose to any rock act, as I
painfully have discovered from thousands of blues bands who "ain't never
heard of" Paul Butterfield or Muddy Waters, but sound exactly like
them.
Several hours prior to the dreary comforts of the Toledo
Holiday Inn, Flash had played the Agora Club. The Agora is the last
link in a chain of over-eighteen nightclubs which run bands from
Cleveland to Cincinnati through Columbus to the "glass capital of the
world." Not much for a glamorous American tour, but Flash is still dues
paying.
From the minute Flash comes on stage there is little
question that Peter Banks is the star. He stands alone on the far corner
of the stage picking Hendrix runs. Each song features a long — very
long — solo. Dreams of Heaven is a showcase for the lead guitar. The
lightning bolts and other electronic effects only highlight Peter. He
raises his arms as a Teutonic demigod while washed with flicking strobe
lighting. The audience goes crazy. The bolts and other electronic
effects now focus on Peter Banks as they never did with Yes. He seems
above it all. Even Colin's double strides around the stage seem
supportive. "They're just like Yes," someone says. "Yep, they are," I
respond, resisting the obvious pun. Peter is the leader and founder of
Flash.
Flash, as in "he's a flash," exists due to the
generosity of English film financiers who feel that collecting rock
groups as an investment is nearly as good as stocks and bonds. Peter
talked Bolting Brothers of British Lion Ltd. — and all that — into
band-rolling him as he was the lead "the greatest rock and roll band in
the world." With $15,000, he was ready to go.
With British pounds in the hand and the management firm
of Two Worlds Artists and the aid of Ben Nisbett and Derek Lawrence of
Wishbone Ash, Peter assembled his group. Colin Carter, who came from a
band called Mushroom — "with a sound not far removed from the things
Peter and Yes were doing" — convinced Banks to include him after reading
an article in Melody Maker. Drummer Mike Hough was recruited through an
ad in the same paper. Mike says he "just came along for the blow," a
statement best left to liner notes. Ray Bennett, a Banks' acquaintance
from the Yes days, joined as bassist. Coincidentally, Ray had played in a
band with Yes drummer Bill Bruford at one time. Incestuous, I say to
myself. Banks wanted a keyboard man, but couldn't find one. Having
assembled the group they immediately went into the studio. Ex Yes-man
Tony Kay [sic] was invited to "come along" which he did. Flash is the
result of that eight-day session. Remember, it gets confusing.
Flash, as
patrons of the Agora remarked, does sound like Yes. Flash refuses to
accept this. After several Cokes mixed with Scotch, a combination few
Americans can say, yet alone drink, Colin Carter explained the mix up:
"Peter was on the first two Yes albums and the rest of the band was
obviously influenced by the way he played, so when they got a
replacement they still thought on the same lines. He (Steve Howe) was
obviously a replacement." Peter quickly adds, "Steve Howe sounds like
me." Strange, that's like Wings claiming the Beatles sounded like them.
Colin returns saying, "We're not the sort of people who would jump on a
particular bandwagon to make money. It's just not that way... We're four
individual people playing our music. This is Flash music, and nothing
to do with Yes." As usual this question has hit the right chord. Mike
Hough, quiet for most of the interview, jumps in, "Like you have to put
my influences, then Pete's influences and then Ray's and..." Seeing my
poorly hidden disbelief and recalling Colin's remark about musician's
egos, "When they get compared to someone else whom they don't imagine
themselves to be they take offense," Peter says softly, "People have
said after hearing the album, which I can understand...but nobody's ever
said it after hearing (seeing) us." At the show they played their
album. I really didn't have the heart or the courage to repeat the
comparisons made at the Agora during the show.
Flash does have many elements of the Yes of yore. Both
on stage and in a studio many gimmicks associated with the "other" band
are found in Flash. How much of this is unconscious and coincidental or
roots is really a matter of speculation. About the album, now on the
charts, there is little question. Peter admitted to the New Musical
Express that the band had little time to practice. "It would have been
better to record after we'd been on the road for a few weeks. You never
know a number well until you have played it at least half a dozen
times." Considering the backgrounds of the musicians, strains of Yes
could not help but come out of the album. Peter will not appreciate
this, but it's true. Nothing played or said this warm night will change
the comparison made between Yes and Flash.
Leaving the Holiday Inn it is apparent that Flash is
Peter Banks. He put it together and directs it on and off stage. It is
his trip. Capitol Records bills the group "Peter Banks and..." by the
request of the band I'm told. Peter's head is still part of the
nostalgia of Yes. Perhaps he hasn't forgotten being edited out of their
second album. Whatever ghost haunts him, Peter will have to either
acknowledge it or live with being compared to Yes. As I said, it's all
very confusing.
Why can't a band sound like another one when they have the
same roots. Is Usual Place by the J. Geils band lousy because it sounds
very much like Time Is On My Side? Not at all! America certainly gets
accepted despite Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young. Ray Bennett proves to
be my favorite psychologist of the evening saying, "Musicians have a
giant ego coupled with some inferiority complexes at the same time, and
it's sort of one's batting against the other all the time." In that
sentence the bassist defined the nitty gritty of Flash, and many other
groups. Every time a performer leaves and established group and starts
another it must involve a lot of ego just to battle the comparisons
which will be made. Eric Clapton has Cream, Peter Banks is stuck with
Yes.
**********************************************************************************
Ah,"YES", the comparisons....(by Sherry Noland)
This 1972 "Phonograph Record
Magazine" article/not-much-of-an-interview is a prime example of how the
press often takes a little bit of truth, runs with it, and comes up
with hilarious results.
The first comical statement -- the
article's very first sentence:
"Colin Carter, the long, tall,
wire-haired lead singer of Flash...". At 5'6", Colin has been
called
many things, I'm sure, but LONG,TALL isn't one of them! If you can't
trust the guy on something that easy...
Then the author calls Peter
"the
leader and founder of Flash" -- not true. I guess the facts are
just too complicated for Mr. Denisoff who laments,
"it's all too
confusing." Or maybe, having made up his mind, he simply
didn't ask.
In fact, Colin Carter got the ball rolling when he contacted Banks with
some song ideas and the notion that they might work together. They
met in Pete's apartment, played some music and decided to give it a go.
Ray Bennett came on board next through his connections with Banks and
Bruford.
Then drummers were auditioned, and Mike Hough won the day. It IS true,
Pete's track record with Yes gave them a leg up getting financial
backing. Ray and Colin were the songwriters, and it was, from the
beginning,
a collaboration, as Pete says.
More from Mr.
Denisoff..
."it is apparent that Flash is Peter Banks. He put it
together and directs it on and off stage. It is his trip. Capitol
Records bills the group "Peter Banks and..." by the request of the band
I'm told."
I wonder who told him that? He's wrong on all counts. Notwithstanding
his inaccurate description of how the band functioned, the fact is,
Capitol
Records added "Flash,
featuring England's Peter Banks" to their
name on the third album for legal reasons
without consulting the
band.
There was a name challenge in the courts from a local California band
calling themselves Flash!
The many Flash comparisons with Yes
are inevitable, and are a testament to the fact that Peter Banks is a
brilliant, adventurously unique and talented guitarist who would have
made
his mark in any band. As reviewers have said - in Flash, which was more
guitar-centered, he really got to shine. And Colin Carter's
high-pitched, soft voice (before Flash he sang bass!
) just happened to sound a bit like Jon A.
Carter has also been compared to Roger Daltrey - looks and voice! And
Bennett's bass playing to John Entwistle. And on and on. Whoever gets
famous first, gets compared TO. The real question is, are artists being
original, or copying? Look for the differences, not just the
similarities, and you'll find them. For instance, Flash ROCKS; Yes, not
so much. All the Yes, and Flash musicians are creative powerhouses in
their own right. That's why both bands are distinctive. That's why we
like to listen. And why we remember.....
As for Pete being "the
star of Flash",
here's a scoop! This has never been reported
before...
When Flash producer, Derek Lawrence, saw serious
trouble brewing with Peter, he had such confidence in the talent and
promise of the band (Ray, Colin and Mike) that he took Ray aside and
advised him to drop Pete
and find a replacement before Pete took everybody down (an astounding
turn of events since he had known Pete the longest, had worked with him
before, and helped find the all-important financing for the band).
Derek even went so far as to suggest possibilities - Richie Blackmore,
or Eric Clapton. Lawrence was an older, experienced guy, very savvy in
the music biz. Ray and Colin were young, and perhaps a bit naive. They
decided to continue as they were, hoping to hold things together.
Impossible. Relations continued to deteriorate until one day on
tour, everyone was fed up with Pete, and just walked away from it all,
leaving Pete
in a hotel in Albuquerque, NM., and the band nowhere. Peter isn't the
only one with regrets.
Finally, that long-ago misstep is being
rectified. When talk of a reunion began, there were problems once again
with Banks almost immediately. But Bennett and Carter were undeterred
this
time. They clicked into working together as they always had -
hand-in-glove. Now, with Ray's virtuoso playing applied to lead guitar,
and years of hard knocks, wisdom, and music under their belts, Flash
sets sail again...