Gun (1960s band)


Gun were a late 1960s British rock guitar trio who had a single British Top Ten hit, "Race with the Devil" and recorded two albums before disbanding. The band included brothers Paul Gurvitz and Adrian Gurvitz.

History

Gun were renamed in 1967 from The Knack, formed by guitarist/vocalist Paul Gurvitz. The Knack changed their name in the spring/summer of 1966, and the setup was Paul Curtis on guitar and vocals, Louie Farrell on drums, Gearie Kenworthy on bass guitar, Tim Mycroft organ, and later for a short while, Jon Anderson of Yes. Gun performed at the UFO Club, supporting bands such as Pink Floyd, Arthur Brown and Tomorrow. Recording sessions at Olympic Studios produced the unreleased single "Lights on the Wall", while in November 1967 they recorded for the BBC alternative music radio programme Top Gear and twice played on air. In early 1968 the band changed its line-up to a trio, with Paul Curtis on bass, Louie Farrell on drums and Adrian Curtis on guitar.
After being signed to CBS Records in early 1968, the band scored a hit with the opening track from their eponymous album, "Race with the Devil". Issued as a single in October 1968, it reached the top 10 in the UK Singles Chart, number 35 on the Australian Singles Chart and number 1 in many UK territories in March 1969. Jimi Hendrix quoted the song's riff during his song "Machine Gun" at the Isle of Wight Festival in 1970, as did Status Quo on their song "Forty Five Hundred Times" during a stage show at Apollo Theatre in Glasgow in 1976. "Race with the Devil" has been covered by Judas Priest, Black Oak Arkansas, Girlschool, and Church of Misery.
Their debut album's cover is noteworthy as it was the first by Roger Dean. AllMusic described it as having a "distinctive psych-flavoured proto-metal" sound. Their second album, Gunsight was released in 1969.
Despite releasing a number of other singles, and an attempt by their record label to identify them with the underground counter-culture, the band had no further hits.

Aftermath

After a short time working separately, the Gurvitz brothers formed Three Man Army in 1971 and recorded three albums.
Between 1974 and 1976, Three Man Army became the Baker Gurvitz Army with Ginger Baker, the former drummer for Cream, in the line-up. The trio recorded three albums: Baker Gurvitz Army, Elysian Encounter and Hearts On Fire. During the same period, the Gurvitz brothers recorded two albums under the name The Graeme Edge Band, with drummer Graeme Edge of The Moody Blues: Kick Off Your Muddy Boots and Paradise Ballroom. It was not a touring band, and also featured Baker. Paul Gurvitz now tours as the Paul Gurvitz and the New Army.

Discography

Side One
  1. "Race with the Devil", 3:35
  2. "The Sad Saga of the Boy and the Bee", 4:49
  3. "Rupert's Travels", 2:12
  4. "Yellow Cab Man", 4:15
  5. "It Won't Be Long ", 4:26
Side Two
  1. "Sunshine", 4:25
  2. "Rat Race", 3:55
  3. "Take Off", 11:01

    Personnel