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Artist
Alan Bown (a.k.a. The Alan Bown Set, The Alan Bown!, The Alan Bown) were a British band of the 1960s and 1970s whose music evolved from jazz and blues through soul and rhythm and blues and ended up as psychedelia and progressive rock. The band achieved limited chart success and is best known for the role it played in developing the careers of numerous musicians including Mel Collins, John Helliwell, Robert Palmer, Jess Roden and Dougie Thomson. Alan Bown (born Alan James Bown, 21 July 1942, Slough, Berkshire), a trumpet player, joined The Embers in 1963, when he left the RAF. This group played both American rhythm and blues and jazz, and were a very successful live act, playing at venues like The Star-Club, Hamburg at the same time as The Beatles. Bown left the group to join The John Barry Seven, who were backing Brenda Lee, and toured and recorded with the band until it broke up in 1965; Barry having made Bown the leader of the touring band, so he could spend more time composing. Bown then formed The Alan Bown Set in May 1965, initially with three former members of The John Barry Seven : Jeff Bannister (lead vocals and organ) (born Jeffrey Bannister, 7 January 1943), Dave Green (sax, clarinet and flute) and Stan Haldane (bass) together with Pete Burgess (guitar) and Vic Sweeney (drums). They played American R&B and soul and played the same club circuit as Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames and Cliff Bennett and the Rebel Rousers. In 1965 Tony Hatch signed to them to Pye Reco

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Stretching Out
Strangely Strange But Oddly Normal - An Island Records Anthology 2009/Compilation
Strangely Strange But Oddly Normal: Island Records 1967-1972
Producer's Archives Vol.1

Outward Bown
A Trip to Toytown

The Alan Bown!
El Pea
The Alan Bown

Outward Bown (First Album)
A Trip to Toytown (119 Top Toytown Tunes)disc 1