UFO (band)
Template:Short description Template:Distinguish Template:About Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox musical artist
UFO were an English rock band formed in London in 1968.<ref name="The Great Rock Discography">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="UFO retire">Template:Cite web</ref> They became a transitional group between early hard rock and heavy metal and the new wave of British heavy metal. The band's final lineup consisted of vocalist Phil Mogg, lead guitarist Vinnie Moore, rhythm guitarist and keyboardist Neil Carter, bass guitarist Rob De Luca, and drummer Andy Parker. They had gone through several line-up changes, leaving Mogg as the only constant member, and had disbanded three times (first between April 1983 and October 1984, second from 1989 to 1991 and third in 2024). The band's classic line-up comprised Mogg, Parker, bassist Pete Way, keyboardist Paul Raymond and former Scorpions guitarist Michael Schenker. In May 2018, Mogg announced that he would retire from UFO after one last tour as a member of the band in 2019;<ref name="UFO retire"/><ref name="leaving UFO">Template:Cite web</ref> however, their farewell tour was set to conclude in 2022 before it was cancelled, due to Mogg's health issues.<ref name="2022 tour">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="mogg health issues">Template:Cite web</ref> Mogg confirmed UFO's third disbandment in April 2024.<ref name="ufo breakup">Template:Cite web</ref>
Over a career spanning five decades, UFO had released 23 studio albums (including one album of cover songs), 14 live albums and 16 compilation albums. They achieved moderate success in the late 1970s and early 1980s with several albums and singles (including their 1979 live album Strangers in the Night) in the UK and US Top 40 charts,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and have sold over 20 million records worldwide.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Some of their most-recognised songs include "Doctor Doctor", "Rock Bottom", "Natural Thing", "Lights Out", "Too Hot to Handle" and "Only You Can Rock Me".<ref name="leaving UFO"/> UFO are considered one of the greatest classic hard rock acts,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and often cited as one of the key influences on the 1980s and 1990s hard rock and heavy metal scenes.<ref name="leaving UFO"/> The band were ranked number 84 on VH1's "100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
History
[edit]Beginning (1968–1972)
[edit]Template:More citations needed Lead singer Phil Mogg, guitarist Mick Bolton, bassist Pete Way and drummer Andy Parker formed the band in 1968.<ref name="The Great Rock Discography"/> Originally calling themselves Hocus Pocus, the group changed their name to UFO.<ref name="LarkinHM">Template:Cite book</ref> They signed to the Beacon Records label, headed by Antiguan-born Milton Samuel. Their first album, UFO 1, released in 1970, is a typical example of early hard rock; it includes a heavy version of the Eddie Cochran classic "C'mon Everybody". Neither their first nor their second album, UFO 2: Flying,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> reached the charts, but the song "Boogie For George" from the first album reached No. 30 on the German singles chart, and "Prince Kajuku" from Flying reached No. 26. At this time UFO attracted little interest in Britain and America.<ref name="LarkinHM"/> Some of their early work was strongly influenced by space rock (their second album, featuring a 26-minute title track and a 19-minute-long track "Star Storm", was subtitled One Hour Space Rock) that was modestly popular at the time, but the band soon realised the style was somewhat limited. They released the Live album, recorded at a concert in Tokyo, at the end of 1971. Mick Bolton left the group in January 1972 after arguments with Mogg and Parker,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and UFO set out to find a guitarist who could provide the band with a more standard rock sound.
International success (1973–1978)
[edit]After brief trial runs with guitarists Larry Wallis (February–October 1972) and Bernie Marsden (who toured with UFO in Europe and recorded a pair of demos, "Oh My" and "Sixteen") the band recruited Michael Schenker from the Scorpions in June 1973.<ref name="LarkinHM"/> Schenker was only 18 but already a well-respected guitarist. On a new label, Chrysalis Records, the revamped UFO recorded a non-LP single in 1973, "Give Her the Gun" and "Sweet Little Thing", with producer Derek Lawrence. In 1974, under producer Leo Lyons (formerly of Ten Years After), UFO recorded Phenomenon, which highlighted the band's harder-edged guitar sound.<ref name="LarkinHM"/> Phenomenon contains many fan favourites such as "Doctor Doctor" (later a minor hit single as a live track) and "Rock Bottom" (which was extended live to provide a showcase for Schenker).<ref name="LarkinHM"/> By the time of the Phenomenon tour, ex-Skid Row guitarist Paul "Tonka" Chapman joined the group, but he left in January 1975 to form Lone Star.
Two subsequent albums, Force It (July 1975) and No Heavy Petting (May 1976; recorded with ex-Heavy Metal Kids' Danny Peyronel, who served as a regular keyboardist as well as harmony vocalist and songwriter),<ref name="LarkinHM"/> and extensive touring brought UFO increased visibility with American audiences and increased their following in the UK. The song "Belladonna" from No Heavy Petting was popular in the USSR, owing to a cover version by Alexander Barykin.
In July 1976, the band recruited keyboardist and rhythm guitarist Paul Raymond from Savoy Brown to make 1977's Lights Out.<ref name="LarkinHM"/> The album's highlights include the songs "Too Hot to Handle", "Lights Out", and the seven-minute opus "Love to Love" among others. With Lights Out, the band received substantial critical acclaim,<ref name="LarkinHM"/> and the album saw them playing at arenas and theaters across the United States and Europe, opening for bands like Rush and AC/DC.<ref name="cygnus x1">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> With their new-found success, the band went back into the studio to record their next album Obsession (1978). While Obsession was not as successful as Lights Out, the band still maintained their arena status while touring for the album, playing with AC/DC and Rush again,<ref name="cygnus x1"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and other bands like Blue Öyster Cult, Styx, Foghat, Jethro Tull, REO Speedwagon and Molly Hatchet;<ref name="concertarchives">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> as part of the Obsession tour, UFO recorded the live album, Strangers in the Night, which was released in January 1979.<ref name="LarkinHM"/> Strangers was a critical and commercial success, reaching Number 7 in the UK Albums Chart in February 1979,<ref name="LarkinHM"/> and a tour to support the live album followed, playing with bands like AC/DC, Kiss, Cheap Trick, Journey, Thin Lizzy, Nazareth and Judas Priest,<ref name="concertarchives"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and appearing at the California World Music Festival with Aerosmith, Van Halen, Toto and April Wine.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Post-Schenker era and breaks (1978–1990)
[edit]Tensions grew between Mogg and Schenker in the late 1970s, possibly owing to Schenker often leaving before or during shows. Soon after UFO's show at the Keystone Palo Alto, on 29 October 1978, Schenker left the band.<ref name="LarkinHM"/> "Obviously we were disappointed," recalled Pete Way. "It's not easy to promote an album without a guitarist. We were starting to draw a lot of people and the album was selling. But he'd also disappeared on the Lights Out tour, so nothing surprised us."<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Schenker briefly returned to the Scorpions before forming his own Michael Schenker Group.<ref name="Music Legends">Template:Cite web</ref>
After Schenker's exit, UFO rehired guitarist Paul Chapman,<ref name="LarkinHM"/> who brought unused track ideas from Lone Star's drummer Dixie Lee. The band's next LP – No Place to Run, released in January 1980 – was produced by former Beatles producer George Martin. It failed to match the success of its predecessors,<ref name="LarkinHM"/> though it fractionally missed the UK Top 10.
Paul Raymond left at the end of the No Place To Run tour. He was replaced by John Sloman from Lone Star on keyboards for a couple of months, then by former Wild Horses guitarist and keyboardist Neil Carter, who helped fill the void in the songwriting left by Schenker's departure.<ref name="LarkinHM"/> Carter debuted with UFO on stage at the three-day Reading Festival on 23 August 1980, when the band played as the Saturday night headliner.<ref name="NME Rock 'N' Roll Years">Template:Cite book</ref>
At the beginning of the following year, UFO released the self-produced The Wild, the Willing and the Innocent, which had a lighter, contemporary pop rock sound. The album achieved mild success in the UK, reaching the UK Top 20, and the single "Lonely Heart" was released.
In February 1982, the band released Mechanix. It was successful in the UK, where it reached No. 8, the band's highest ever placing. Later that year, founding member Pete Way left the band to form Fastway with Motörhead guitarist "Fast" Eddie Clarke and then his own band, Waysted. He was replaced by Talas bassist Billy Sheehan. UFO released Making Contact in 1983, but the album was a critical and commercial failure.<ref name="LarkinHM"/> Thus, that March, UFO decided to disband.<ref name="NME Rock 'N' Roll Years 2">Template:Cite book</ref> The band played a UK farewell tour with Paul Gray (former bassist with Eddie and the Hot Rods and the Damned). However, there was a hint that this might not be permanent when UFO released a compilation album featuring songs by UFO (as well as other groups featuring ex-members of UFO) entitled Headstone, the sleeve of which showed a headstone, denoting UFO with their formation date but an incomplete end date.
This proved to be a short break; just short of two years later, in late 1984, Mogg assembled a new UFO line-up, featuring Paul Gray on bass again, ex-Diamond Head drummer Robbie France (replaced in 1985 by former Magnum drummer Jim Simpson), and Atomik Tommy M (Tommy McClendon), a former roadie who also wrote lyrics for Loudness, on guitar, with Paul Raymond rejoining shortly afterward,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and released Misdemeanor. Raymond left again in 1986 and was replaced by David Jacobson, who along with Gray would leave in 1987, and Pete Way rejoined on bass. Before Gray's departure, the band recorded the EP Ain't Misbehavin which was released in 1988. Despite the renewed activity of the band, neither release was financially successful and they officially disbanded again in 1989 after a string of guitarists replacing McClendon: Myke Gray of Jagged Edge in late 1987,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> former Starfighters guitarist Rik Sandford and Tony Glidewell in 1988, and finally in 1989 future Cold Sweat guitarist Erik Gamans.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Reunion(s) (1991–2003)
[edit]In 1991, Mogg and Way decided to put a new UFO line-up together with former Wild Horses members Clive Edwards on drums, Laurence Archer on guitar, and keyboardist Jem Davis joining the band and they released High Stakes & Dangerous Men. While only released on a small independent label, High Stakes was enough to generate serious interest in a full-blown reunion. The following year, the classic late-1970s UFO line-up – Mogg, Schenker, Way, Raymond and Parker – reunited, and the resulting album was Walk on Water (1995). This line-up (barring Parker's replacement by AC/DC's Simon Wright on drums) went on a world tour. However, tensions arose again, and Schenker left the band only four shows into the tour, walking off stage mid-set in the very venue, the Keystone Palo Alto, where their October 1978 tour died. Thereafter, the other members again went their separate ways. Template:Citation needed However, Schenker returned to the fold in 1998, and the band embarked on another tour, with Parker again replaced by a new drummer. They played at the Astoria, Charing Cross Road, London in 1998.
Mogg and Way continued working together throughout this fluctuating band membership, releasing two albums under the Mogg/Way name in the late 1990s, Edge of the World and Chocolate Box.
In 2000, Schenker rejoined UFO again and the band released the double CD Covenant (with Aynsley Dunbar on drums), which contained a disc of new material and a disc of live classics. In 2002, the band recorded Sharks; shortly after Sharks was released, Schenker left the band yet again and was replaced with Vinnie Moore.<ref>[[[:Template:AllMusic]] UFO on AllMusic]</ref> and the official announcement was made in July 2003.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2003, Michael Schenker and Pete Way released The Plot with drummer Jeff Martin.
Vinnie Moore-era and return to chart success (2004–2017)
[edit]In 2004, UFO released their 17th studio album You Are Here with their new permanent guitarist Vinnie Moore and Jason Bonham on drums (intermittently). UFO recorded their live set and released a double-DVD recording titled Showtime (2005) along with a double live CD on SPV in November 2005, mixing a number of re-recorded studio songs. In November 2005, Andy Parker returned to the band to play in the Piorno Rock Festival in Granada, Spain. UFO's eighteenth studio album, titled The Monkey Puzzle, was released in 2006.
Andy Parker returned in early 2007, after recovering from leg surgery. On the 2008 tour, Pete Way was unable to get a work visa to enter the United States, Rob De Luca (Sebastian Bach's band, Of Earth, Spread Eagle) filling in.<ref>[1] </ref>
UFO released their 19th studio album, The Visitor, in June 2009,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and followed with a tour of the UK, but without Pete Way, who was suffering from a medical condition.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Bass tracks on The Visitor were played by Peter Pichl, and Pete Way was not credited as a band member on The Visitor cover, nor was any other bassist. However, the album saw UFO's return to the UK Albums Chart for the first time in almost 15 years.
In July 2009, UFO released a six-CD live concert box set, containing recordings of six concerts between 1975 and 1982, as well as previously unreleased live songs.
On their 2011 tour, they were accompanied by Barry Sparks playing bass.
By December 2010, UFO had been working on a twentieth studio album, which was supposed to be released in June 2011.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Titled Seven Deadly,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> was released on 27 February 2012, with Lars Lehmann on bass, to almost universally good reviews and a higher chart position than The Visitor also charting in Germany, Sweden, and the Billboard indie charts.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In 2011, former band members Danny Peyronel, Laurence Archer, and Clive Edwards teamed up with bassist Rocky Newton (ex-McAuley Schenker Group) to form a band entitled X-UFO. In live performances, X-UFO played sets of vintage UFO songs, later renamed House Of X to perform their own material. Their eponymous album was released on 24 October 2014.
In 2013, Paul Raymond revealed that a new UFO album was in the works, but there was "no detailed talk of that yet."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The album, titled A Conspiracy of Stars, was released on 23 February 2015.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
On 10 September 2016, guitarist Vinnie Moore announced on Facebook that UFO were in the studio recording a covers album.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref> The album, titled The Salentino Cuts, was released on 29 September 2017.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
50th anniversary tour and retirement (2018–present)
[edit]In May 2018, vocalist Mogg announced that UFO's 50th anniversary tour in 2019 would be his last one as the frontman of the band, who may also either split up or move on with a replacement for him. Mogg explained, "This decision has been a long time coming. I've considered stepping down at the end of UFO's previous two tours. I don't want to call this a farewell tour as I hate that word, but next year's gigs will represent my final tap-dancing appearances with the band." He added that "the timing feels right" for him to quit, and that "there will be a final tour of the U.K. and we will also play some shows in selected other cities that the band has a strong connection with. But outside of the U.K. this won't be a long tour."<ref name="UFO retire"/> Despite earlier reports that Mogg had intended to leave the band in 2019, the band planned to resume their touring activities in 2022, which had been pushed back from a year earlier due to the COVID-19 pandemic.<ref name="2022 tour"/> UFO's last-ever show was intended to take place on 29 October 2022 in Athens, Greece, where the band performed its first show with current guitarist Vinnie Moore 18 years earlier. However, the show was cancelled.<ref name="Blab">Template:Cite web</ref>
Longtime keyboardist and guitarist Paul Raymond died from a heart attack on 13 April 2019 at the age of 73.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Two weeks later, it was announced that Raymond's initial replacement Neil Carter would be rejoining UFO for the remainder of the band's final tour.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Former guitarist Paul Chapman died on his 66th birthday on 9 June 2020.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Chapman was followed two months later by original bassist Pete Way, who died from accident injuries at the age of 69.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In late August 2022, Mogg suffered a heart attack.<ref name="Blab"/> On 1 September 2022 doctors pronounced a strict performance ban for Mogg, after having performed several detailed examinations in the previous days. This resulted in the farewell tour, which was set to occur across Europe in October 2022, being cancelled.<ref name="mogg health issues"/>
When asked in April 2024 by Ultimate Classic Rock about the future of UFO, Mogg said, "I think it's come to a conclusion. We did that last U.K. tour in 2019, just before COVID. So that was kind of the end of it and the time was right."<ref name="mogg health issues"/>
Members
[edit]Template:Main Final lineup
- Phil Mogg – lead vocals Template:Small
- Andy Parker – drums Template:Small
- Neil Carter – keyboards, rhythm guitar, backing vocals Template:Small; saxophone Template:Small
- Vinnie Moore – lead guitar Template:Small
- Rob De Luca – bass guitar, backing vocals Template:Small
Discography
[edit]- UFO 1 (1970)
- UFO 2: Flying (1971)
- Phenomenon (1974)
- Force It (1975)
- No Heavy Petting (1976)
- Lights Out (1977)
- Obsession (1978)
- No Place to Run (1980)
- The Wild, the Willing and the Innocent (1981)
- Mechanix (1982)
- Making Contact (1983)
- Misdemeanor (1985)
- High Stakes & Dangerous Men (1992)
- Walk on Water (1995)
- Covenant (2000)
- Sharks (2002)
- You Are Here (2004)
- The Monkey Puzzle (2006)
- The Visitor (2009)
- Seven Deadly (2012)
- A Conspiracy of Stars (2015)
- The Salentino Cuts (2017)
References
[edit]External links
[edit]- Pages with broken file links
- 1968 establishments in England
- Articles which contain graphical timelines
- Chrysalis Records artists
- English hard rock musical groups
- English musical quintets
- English space rock musical groups
- Metal Blade Records artists
- Musical groups established in 1968
- Rock music groups from London