Band, IE
Musician of Pop and Rock
The Memories formed in 1963 in Ireland when school friends and Phibsboro church choir members Mick Swan, Daire Doyle, Colm Harpur and Jim Barry combined with guitarist Ray Crowe to perform acoustic folk music with vocal harmonies on the cabaret circuit. By 1967 they had made national TV and signed with Rex Records, with whom they recorded twelve singles and one album over the following seven year period. The second of these singles reached the Irish charts in 1968. According to the sleeve notes for their debut album, the band had their own hour-long TV spectacular in early 1972, for which they a played a well-received pop music set, prompting them to make the switch from folk. Drummer Chris Heenan was added to an electric line-up of Mick Swan (keyboards/flute/vocals), Daire Doyle (bass/vocals), Colm Harper (lead vocals/guitar), Jim Barry (lead vocals) and Ray Crowe (guitar/vocals). They avoided becoming a full showband by continuing to perform complex vocal harmonies and writing some original material, mostly by Mick Swan and Daire Doyle. Album The Time Is Now followed later in 1972 (billed simply as “Memories“) and included three band originals alongside pop and ballad covers. Notable among the former are the haunting Tuesday Morning and the heavier The House Fell Down, while the latter included soulful readings of Didn’t You Hear? and Neil Diamond’s The Time Is Now. Between then and the end of 1974 The Memories enjoyed three more top ten Irish hits on Rex Records, including glam-rocker Lay It On Me and its comically crude but equally heavy flip side Did Ya Get It? (finishing with a brief blues jam), but from 1975 to 1994 they recorded for a succession of different labels including Stop, Hawk, NEMS, Spex, Ritz and Dino. Liam McKenna, formerly with The Creatures and The Real McCoy, stood in for an injured Daire Doyle in 1974 and stayed on after Doyle’s return, while founder member Colm Harpur left in 1975. A second (and final) LP – Time To Go On – was released by this line-up in 1976, featuring songs from stage musicals and covers of Queen and The Eagles. Ray Crowe left in 1978, and in the early ’80s the remaining members spilt into two rival groups (The Memories and The Message) before Swan, Doyle and Barry reunited at the end of 1983. They recorded a TV special as part of the RTE series Best of the Bands in 1981 and entered the National Song Contest in 1979 and 1990, while football anthem The Game (a re-write of Billy Joel’s We Didn't Start The Fire) became their long-awaited first number one hit in 1990. Jim Barry eventually retired around 2004, with Mick Swan and Daire Doyle apparently winding down the band soon after.
Liam McKenna eb |
Track list and 30sec audio provided by
Title | Artist | Year | Type |
---|---|---|---|
The Game | The Memories | 1990 | Single |
Stairway To Heaven | The Memories | 1984 | Single |
Easy Come, Easy Go | The Memories | 1984 | Single |
So Hot | The Memories | 1983 | Single |
Marianne | The Memories | 1982 | Single |
The Main Attraction | The Memories | 1979 | Single |
All The Kings Horses | The Memories | 1977 | Single |
Skyin' | The Memories | 1976 | Single |
What 'Ya Gonna Tell Your Mama | The Memories | 1976 | Single |
A Child's Time (The Christmas Story) | The Memories | 1975 | Single |
Part Of The Road | The Memories | 1974 | Single |
Lay It On Me | The Memories | 1974 | Single |
Say Good Morning | The Memories | 1972 | Single |
The Time Is Now | The Memories | 1972 | Album |
She | The Memories | 1971 | Single |
Exodus Main Theme | The Memories | 1970 | Single |
Indian Lake | The Memories | 1968 | Single |
The Likes Of Heffo's Army | The Memories | 1968 | Single |
Oh, No! | The Memories | 1968 | Single |
A Summer Song | The Memories | 1967 | Single |
Classic Memories | The Memories | Compil. |