Biography
A vocal duo featuring Tony Crane and Billy Kinsley, the Merseys were a British pop group who had a career-defining smash hit with the 1966 single "Sorrow." With expert harmonies and inventive arrangements, the Merseys' best work bridged the gap between the end of the British Beat era and the dawning of psychedelic pop, and their recordings found them working with a number of future stars, including Jack Bruce of Cream, John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin, and Joey Molland of Badfinger. The Merseys were an offshoot of the successful Liverpool combo the Merseybeats, and the complete catalog of both groups can be heard on the 2021 anthology I Stand Accused: The Complete Merseybeats Merseys Sixties Recordings.

Guitarist and singer Tony Crane was fifteen years old and bassist and singer Billy Kinsley was just fourteen when they were introduced by a mutual friend and discovered they could do Everly Brothers-style harmonies with ease. The two formed a band in 1961, initially called the Mavericks and briefly known as the Pacifics before the booker at Liverpool's Cavern Club gave them the name the Merseybeats. They were soon gigging regularly in Liverpool and the surrounding area alongside fellow Merseyside acts like the Fourmost, the Swinging Blue Jeans, and Gerry the Pacemakers; they often shared bills with the Beatles, and were said to have played alongside the Fab Four more often than any other Liverpool act. In 1963, they signed with Fontana Records, and their debut single, "It's Love That Really Counts," was a success, peaking at Number 24 on the British Pop chart. Their second disc, "I Think of You," was plugged by their pals the Beatles on the pop music show Juke Box Jury, and their endorsement helped it make the Top Five in February 1964. While the band was selling records and playing good-paying engagements, little of the money was making its way to the musicians, which Billy Kinsley believed was due to their manager shortchanging them. Kinsley responded by leaving the Merseybeats, and Johnny Gustafson, a veteran of the band the Big Three, took over on bass and vocals. By the end of 1965, Johnny Gustafson was fired by the group's management, supposedly for asking too many questions about their finances. Tony Crane responded by breaking up the Merseybeats.

In the immediate wake of the end of the Merseybeats, Tony Crane reunited with Billy Kinsley, and launched a vocal duo they called the Merseys. Fontana opted to maintain their relationship with Crane and Kinsley, and their first single as the Merseys, "Sorrow" (recorded with a session band that included Jack Bruce and John Paul Jones), was a major hit, topping out at Number 4 on the U.K. singles charts. The Merseys headed out on tour with a band called the Fruit Eating Bears serving as their backing band; the guitarist, Joey Molland, would go on to become an international star with Badfinger. By this time, Kit Lambert, who was managing the Who, also took on the Merseys as clients, and he spirited away Pete Townshend's "So Sad About Us" for the group to record as their second single. (John Lennon had offered to produce a cover of the Beatles' "I'll Be Back" for the Merseys, but Lambert nixed the proposal in favor of the Townshend tune.) The Merseys toured as the Who's opening act, and in early 1967, they were added to the bill of a package tour headlined by American soul stars the Four Tops. Increasingly disappointed with Kit Lambert -- who they felt was spending too much time on the Who while the Merseys' records were failing to chart -- Crane and Kinsley fired him and finally signed on as part of Brian Epstein's stable of talent. Less than a month later, Epstein died, which did little to help the group's prospects or morale. After a pair of 1968 singles came and went with little notice, Crane and Kinsley brought out one final single under the group name Crackers, "Honey Do" b/w "It Happens All The Time," before retiring the banner the Merseys.

Around the time of the Crackers single, Crane and Kinsley's manager was successfully booking them on the cabaret circuit as the Merseybeats, but Kinsley grew tired of revisiting their old hits and left the act. He worked as a session bassist on several early Apple Records projects, and later formed the band Liverpool Express. Crane continued to lead various lineups of the Merseybeats, and the group's reputation got a boost in 1973 when David Bowie recorded a cover of "Sorrow" for his album Pin Ups that would become a hit single in its own right. Seven years later, Elvis Costello would tip his hat to the Merseybeats with a fiery performance of their song "I Stand Accused" on his album Get Happy!! In 1993, Kinsley rejoined the Merseybeats, and they successfully worked the nostalgia circuit in England and Europe for many years. In 2021, Grapefruit Records issued I Stand Accused: The Complete Merseybeats Merseys Sixties Recordings, which collected the full catalog of both groups in a two-CD set. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi




 
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The Merseys - Sorrow
The Merseybeats - Sorrow
Merseybeats -Poor Boy From Liverpool
Music of the Sixties "SORROW" The Merseybeats
The Merseys - Sorrow (1966)
The Merseybeats - I Think of You (TV, April 1964)
The Merseys - Sorrow
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