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| IN
THE
BEGINNING
.... |
It
all began in Nova Scotia late in 1969. The Henman brothers, David and Ritchie,
got together with their cousin Jim Henman and fellow musician Myles Goodwyn to
form a band called April Wine, a name chosen simply because they were two words
that sounded good together. Fifteen studio albums, three live releases, numerous
compilations, a boxed set and thousands of concerts later April Wine has become
enormously popular in Canada, the United States and throughout the world.
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THE
FIRST
DECADE
.... |
By the spring of 1970 April Wine had relocated from Halifax to Montreal and
were making a self-titled album for Aquarius Records. This first album established
Myles Goodwyn as a composer with Fast Train receiving
much airplay throughout Canada and becoming the main reason April Wine was able
to record a second album. In the fall of 1971 Jim Henman left the band and was
replaced by Montreal native Jim Clench.
Famed producer Ralph Murphy worked with the group on their second album On
Record. Murphy's mission was to give April Wine a major international hit and
he came very close to doing just that. The album pushed the band into the North
American public spotlight for the first time. You Could Have
Been a Lady, originally recorded in England by Hot Chocolate, was a phenomenal
hit for April Wine. This song provided the band with a #1 hit in Canada and allowed
them to crack Billboard's Top 30 in the USA where it remained for 11 weeks. On
Record also included another notable tune; a cover of Elton John's Bad
Side Of The Moon.
Following the Gold success of the second album it was clear that April Wine
had the chance to become one of Canada's most significant rock bands. Ralph Murphy
would be back to produce the follow up album but there would be changes in the
band. By the completion of Electric Jewels a new April Wine would emerge. This
band would no longer include the Henman brothers.
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THE
NEXT
GENERATION
.... |
Early
in 1973 the two remaining members, Myles Goodwyn and Jim Clench, faced the dilemma
of taking the band to the next level. After a few auditions Jerry Mercer and Gary
Moffet joined the band and April Wine became a tighter, flashier band. The two
new members helped to complete album number three; Electric Jewels. This album
remains a fan favorite with such classic songs as Weeping Widow,
Just Like That and Lady Run Lady
Hide. It provides a great example of the writing talents of Goodwyn and
Clench. The following spring the band hit the road with a national tour called
The Electric Adventure. This tour was the first to use
dramatic lighting and pyrotechnic displays as an integral part of their show,
a feature that would prove to be extremely popular during their international
stardom and would lend influence to various emerging artists, Garth Brooks for
one.
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THE
MAKING
OF
THE
CLASSICS
.... |
Forever
For Now, the band's sixth album, included a Canadian music milestone for the band;
the best selling Canadian single the band ever released. Both the single, You
Won't Dance With Me, as well as the album reached critical acclaim with
the single reaching Gold and the album reaching Gold then Platinum in Canada.
Many people consider Stand Back to be one of the band's greatest accomplishments.
This album provided the hits Tonight Is A Wonderful Time To
Fall In Love and I Wouldn't Want To Lose Your Love
but the non-hits were even more remarkable. Songs like Cum
Hear The Band, Slowpoke, Don't Push Me Around and Oowatanite
helped push Stand Back to Double-Platinum status in Canada.
With the release of The Whole World's Goin' Crazy, Steve Lang had replaced
Jim Clench on bass guitar. This album made April Wine the first Canadian band
to achieve Platinum advance sales orders and included another April Wine classic
in the ballad Like A Lover, Like A Song.
Forever For Now, the band's sixth album, included a Canadian music milestone
for the band; the best selling Canadian single the band ever
released. Both the single, You Won't Dance With Me, as well as the album reached
critical acclaim with the single reaching Gold and the album reaching Gold then
Platinum in Canada.
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A
LITTLE
HELP
FROM
OUR
FRIENDS
.... |
The year was 1977 and
when The Rolling Stones decided to record Love You Live at the El Mocambo Club
in Toronto April Wine was the "smoke screen". April Wine was selected
to pose as the headliner for a charity event with a group called The Cockroaches
as the opening act. Of course the Cockroaches, to everyone's delight, turned out
to be The Rolling Stones. April Wine's album Live At The El Mocambo was a compilation
of April Wine's most popular concert songs with two additional covers and the
studio track She's No Angel, which went onto become
a Canadian hit. The subsequent tour led to yet another change for the band.
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NOW
WE'RE
FIVE
.... |
Following
the release of Live At The El Mocambo a fifth member was added to the band. Brian
Greenway joined the lineup for the summer 1977 tour and gave the group some added
flexibility. Brian could sing, write and play harmonica but his greatest contribution
to April Wine was on guitar. Since Myles was a surprisingly skilled keyboard player
it was invaluable to have a third guitar player and April Wine could now create
arrangements for three guitars which would develop into the group's trademark
power rock image during the following years.
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THE
CAPITOL
YEARS
.... |
The
band's seventh studio album would prove to be the group’s turning point.
It was the third single from First Glance that made April Wine an international
success. Radio listeners in Flint Michigan made Roller
a top request number. This single was eventually a Top 30 hit in the U.S.A. and
First Glance became the band's first Gold record outside of Canada. Roller remained
on Billboard's Hot 100 Singles chart for 11 weeks while First Glance stayed on
Billboard's 200 Album chart for 11 weeks as well. 1979 proved to be a very good
year for Canadian Wine indeed.
Major artists such as Rush, Journey and Styx requested that April Wine open
their shows in the United States. American audiences were finally being exposed
to this "new" band called April Wine. Canada's best kept secret was
finally out in the open.
It was a confident group that recorded Harder...Faster in the summer of 1979.
The album featured the hardest rock that April Wine had ever recorded. This album
included such powerful songs as I Like To Rock, which
American radio embraced, and Say Hello which went to
the top of the charts in Canada. The popularity of these songs helped keep the
album on Billboard's 200 Album charts for a whopping 40 weeks! Harder...Faster
helped the group collect more Gold and Platinum awards on both sides of the border.
The first months of 1980 saw April Wine touring as Nazareth's opening act
throughout the United States. In city after city promoters remarked on the powerful
pairing of the bands. Most felt that the show would be a better draw if April
Wine headlined. The time had finally come for April Wine to take top billing outside
of Canada. A decade of hard work had finally paid off.
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THE
SECOND
DECADE
.... |
The
group's ninth studio album, The Nature Of The Beast, became April Wine's greatest
success. Released in January of 1981, the first single Just
Between You and Me broke Billboard's Top 20 and remained on the their Hot
100 Singles chart for 16 weeks. The same song hit position number 11 on Billboard's
Album Rock Track chart and charted for an incredible 10 weeks. Later that year
the millionth copy of the album was sold in the U.S.A. and April Wine had finally
attained international "Platinum" status. The song Crash
And Burn was even featured in an NBC Movie of the Week! The album remained
on Billboard's 200 Album chart for 34 weeks peaking at the 26th position. The
album went on to claim more awards for the group as it collected Gold and Platinum
on both sides of the border and Double Platinum in Canada.
During the 1980's April Wine had the strongest concert repertoire ever and
the demand for appearances had never been greater. They were in demand in Canada,
the United Sates, England and Germany. In fact it seemed their popularity was
traveling more than they were. There was the feeling that the band could tour
forever.
Whether writing the songs, producing them, or promoting them, Myles Goodwyn
had been working against some kind of "deadline" for the last three
years with no significant time off. He needed a break... so he took one. After
a hiatus of 18 months, during which the band recorded Power Play with such cutting
edge hits as Anything You Want You Got It and Enough
is Enough, the band was ready to tour again. The 1982 Power Play tour was
the largest tour April Wine had ever attempted. It incorporated the most elaborate
stage the band had ever used. Their return to Canada, after two years away, saw
them sell out shows across the country. Yes the band was welcomed home with open
arms but Power Play, even though successful, did not meet with the critical international
acclaim that the group's previous two albums enjoyed. Both Enough
Is Enough and If You See Kay charted on Billboard's
Album Rock Tracks and remained there for a number of weeks but Enough
Is Enough only remained on Billboard's Hot 100 Singles chart for 8 weeks.
However the album itself peaked Billboard's 200 Album chart at 37 and remained
on the chart for a strong 20 weeks, still a phenomenal accomplishment, but perhaps
not enough for this perfectionist band from Canada.
With the release of Animal Grace, the group's eleventh undertaking, things
took a turn for the worse. This Could Be The Right One
entered the charts very quickly but stalled just as abruptly. The album had taken
an extremely long time to record and a rift had begun to form in the band.
In a move that seemed to symbolize the distance between Myles and the band,
he and his family moved to the Bahamas. The group would get together once more
for a farewell tour of Canada. The tour was a bittersweet one, with the die-hard
fans realizing what lay ahead. A twelfth studio album was released that featured
only two remaining members of the group; Myles and Brian. The rest had decided
to go their separate ways.
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THE
SOLO
YEARS
.... |
Myles Goodwyn subsequently
released a self-titled solo album on Aquarius Records in Canada and Atlantic Records
in the States while living in the Bahamas. Brian Greenway released Serious Business
on Atlantic Records in the States as a solo project in 1988. Jerry Mercer helped
form the Buzz Band with Breen LeBoeuf and did various studio projects.
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THE
THIRD
DECADE
.... |
In
late 1988 Myles moved back to Montreal and started to receive phone calls from
the United States about the possibility of a new April Wine album. The demand
was there and Myles had already been talking to the other band members about a
possible reunion. In July of 1992 April Wine played its first concert in 8 years
to a sold out audience in the Canadian province of Manitoba. For the balance of
that summer they played to sold out shows right across Canada. The band was welcomed
home again!
The demand south of the border was strong as well. The band was selling out
shows across the States with 20,000 people coming out to see them in San Antonio,
Texas. In fact St. Louis, Missouri ended up adding a second show and the scalpers
in Las Vegas were getting a high dollar for the valued tickets.
In 1992 the band consisted of Myles Goodwyn, Brian Greenway, Jerry Mercer,
Jim Clench and Steve Segal. The group’s thirteenth studio album, Attitude,
was released in 1993. It was their first studio release in 10 years. Attitude
went Gold in Canada, driven by the hit If You Believe In Me.
Segal remained with the band for the 1994 release of studio album number fourteen;
“Frigate”.
1995 saw Steve Segal leave April Wine. April Wine returned to their roots as
a 4 piece Rock band with 2 guitars, bass and drums as they were when they first
started out in 1969.
From 1995 to 2000 April Wine continued to tour Canada and the USA doing 80-100
shows a year playing to their ever growing legions of fans.
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2000
TO PRESENT DAY ... |
The studio
album, “Back To The Mansion” released in 2001 was April Wine's 15th
studio album and first new release since 1994, and featured original members Myles
Goodwyn (vocals, guitars and keyboards), Brian Greenway (guitars, vocals), Jim
Clench (bass, background vocals), Jerry Mercer (drums).
“April Wine Live 2003” was released in spring of 2003
and featured the band’s live
stage show. It was recorded in Kitchener Ontario. It also featured Carl Dixon
on keyboard,vocals and guitar who had joined the band for 3 tours.
June of 2004 saw April Wine travel to Sweden to be part of “Sweden
Rock 2004”
They shared the stage with HEART, FOGHAT, UFO and many others.
In 2006 April Wine celebrated their 37th anniversary together
with the release of their 16th studio album, “Roughly Speaking”. (Released
November 21st 2006)
Jim Clench left the band in January of 2007. He was replaced by
Breen LeBoeuf, a talented Bassist and Singer, and a longtime friend of Jerry and
Brian. Breen brings the experience of his many years as a member of the legendary
Quebec rock band “Offenbach” with him to April Wine. The fans accepted
Breen right from the first show
at Higher Ground in Burlington Vermont in February of 2007.
In
November 2008, April Wine signed with ARM Entertainment of St. Paul, MN. as the
April Wine’s agency in the USA. Roger Anderson and his company have been booking
many shows for the band in the USA to the delight of American fans. S.L. Feldman
& Associates continues to represent April Wine in Canada. Late 2008 also saw the
departure of Jerry Mercer from the band. About to turn 70 years of age in April
of 2009, Jerry decided to retire. Jerry had been the driving drumming force of
April Wine for 35 years!
Blair
Mackay joined April Wine as the new drummer in January 2009. Blair has a Master
of Music degree in performance, and like Breen, was accepted by the fans right
from the first show, coincidentally at Higher Ground in Vermont.
In
March of 2009, April Wine was inducted into the Canadian Music Industry Hall of
Fame during Canadian Music Week in Toronto. They also received The Lifetime
Achievement Award for being part of Canadian Music History for 40 years.
On
April 18th of 2010 at the Juno Awards, April Wine will be inducted in to the
Canadian Music Hall of Fame.
2010
sees the band continue their hectic pace touring both the United States and
Canada to acclaimed reviews. They continue to satisfy fans with a live mix of
straight ahead rock n' roll and power ballads, an April Wine mainstay.
In
2011, April Wine did 62 shows through Canada and the USA to very receptive fans,
including 14 sold out shows in 17 days in British Columbia theaters.
In
July of that year, Breen announced he was leaving the band. After a search for a
suitable replacement, Richard Lanthier was chosen as the new bassist bringing a
new tighter bass sound to the rhythm section.
2012
will see April Wine enter into their 42nd year as a band, with just as busy a
schedule as ever... quite an accomplishment for any rock n' roll band!
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BGG
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