TheBay City Rollers are a Scottishpop rock band known for their worldwideteen idol popularity, as a band in the 1970s. One of many 70s acts heralded as the "biggest group sincethe Beatles",[4] they were called the "tartan teen sensations from Edinburgh", and sold 5 million albums. Their classic line-up during their peak popularity, included guitaristsEric Faulkner andStuart Wood, singerLes McKeown, bassistAlan Longmuir and his younger brotherDerek Longmuir on drums.
Bay City Rollers | |
---|---|
![]() Bay City Rollers in the Netherlands in 1976 | |
Background information | |
Also known as | The Saxons, The Rollers, The New Rollers |
Origin | Edinburgh,Scotland |
Genres | |
Years active | 1964–1987, 1990, 1996, 1999–2000, 2015–2016, 2018–present |
Labels | Bell,Arista,Epic |
Members |
|
Past members |
|
Website | Bay City Rollers |
The Bay City Rollers' first album,Rollin' (1974) debuted atop the UK Albums Charts and spent a combined total of fifty-eight weeks on the UK Albums Chart.[5] Their follow up studio albumOnce Upon a Star (1975) continued this success, again, debuting atop the UK Albums Chart.[6] The album yielded the successful singles "Bye, Bye, Baby", which topped the charts in the United Kingdom, Ireland and Australia,[7][8][9] and "Keep On Dancing". "Bye, Bye, Baby" was the bestselling single in the United Kingdom in 1975.[10] Their first album to be released in the United States and Canada,Bay City Rollers (1975) peaked at number twenty on the U.SBillboard 200 and number one in Canada.[11][12]
Their international sales continued with the release ofWouldn't You Like It? (1975),Rock n' Roll Love Letter (1976),Dedication (1976) andIt's a Game (1977). Their significance in international charts began to decline in 1978 upon the release ofStrangers in the Wind, which failed to chart in the United Kingdom, but reached the top five in Japan. Further releasesElevator (1979) andVoxx (1980) made little impact on international charts.
Despite their international prominence during the 1970s and early 1980s, the Bay City Rollers never made the transition fromboy band, as their members aged, and their career was marked by financial difficulties and mismanagement. Several members accused managerTam Paton of sexual assault, but no charges were laid.
The current line-up (since 2018) includes rhythm guitarist Stuart "Woody" Wood, the only member to appear on all of the band’s studio albums, vocalist and lead guitarist Ian Thomson, bassist Mikey Smith, keyboardist John McLaughlin and drummer Jamie McGrory.[13]
History
editEarly days and formation: 1964–1971
editIn 1964, a trio called the Ambassadors was formed in Edinburgh, Scotland, by 16-year-oldAlan Longmuir on acoustic guitar, his younger brotherDerek Longmuir on drums, and their older cousin Neil Porteous on acoustic guitar. The group never performed publicly under this name,[14] just a family wedding where they covered "Wake Up Little Susie". They changed their name to the Saxons, and Derek invited a friend from school, Gordon "Nobby" Clark, to be the lead singer. Porteous moved from acoustic to electric guitar, and Alan Longmuir followed suit by changing to electric bass.[15] The Saxons played occasional dance hall concerts while the band members completed their schooling or worked during the day (Alan apprenticed as a plumber). Porteous left the band in July 1965, with new guitarist Dave Pettigrew filling the spot after answering an advertisement placed by the band in an Edinburgh newspaper. Pettigrew was more advanced musically than the others, and pushed the band to improve. Their repertoire included American R&B/pop songs such as "Please Mr. Postman" and "Heat Wave". They played at least one gig at the Gonk Club as the Deadbeats, but they discovered a conflict: Another band was playing locally as Rock Bottom and the Deadbeats.[14]
While taking a technical class at Napier College, Alan met fellow plumbing student Gregory Ellison, who joined the Saxons on electric guitar, with Pettigrew shifting to keyboards. Gregory's older brother Mike joined as a second lead singer, allowing more complex harmonies, especially useful for the Motown songs they liked to perform. The band convincedTam Paton, a formerbig band leader[16] and influential local band and club manager, to audition them at the Longmuirs' house. Paton booked them for a Thursday night at his club, the Palais, then assigned them to open for the Hipple People at Top Storey. More gigs followed.[14]
More successful now, the Saxons moved out of the Longmuirs' back room to practice in Hermiston at a church. They played a couple of contemporaryKinks numbers but favored American songs, including a new one: "C.C. Rider" byMitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels. Desiring a better name for the band, they settled on "Rollers", but needed a more powerful American-sounding term in front of that. Derek Longmuir threw a dart at a map of the United States, landing first on Arkansas. This did not meet anyone's approval, so a second dart was thrown. It landed nearBay City, Michigan. The band agreed on the name, the Bay City Rollers.[17] Short-term members from this period included bassistDavid Paton (from 1969 to 1970) and keyboardistBilly Lyall (1969–71), who went on to be founding members of another Edinburgh bandPilot.
Breakthrough: 1971–1973
editAfter signing withBell Records, the band's first hit was "Keep on Dancing" (UK No. 9, 1971), a cover of a 1965 hit bythe Gentrys.[17][18] Upon this release's success, they made appearances onBBC One'sTop of the Pops.
Several non-charting singles were released over the following two years. This period saw the addition of long-term member guitaristEric Faulkner. In mid-1973, they narrowly missed theUK Singles Chart with their fourth single, "Saturday Night". By the end of 1973, Clark had become disillusioned with the band's musical direction and decided to leave just when his recording of "Remember (Sha-La-La-La)" climbed the chart to No. 6. He was replaced as lead singer byLes McKeown. A couple of months later, in early 1974, what became known as the classic line-up[17] was completed; guitarist John Devine was replaced by Stuart "Woody" Wood.
In 1987, Les McKeown was a guest onJonathan Ross's chat show where he told Ross that The Bay City Rollers did not perform on the first four singles.
Rise to prominence: 1974–1975
editIn late 1973, McKeown recorded lead vocals on "Remember (Sha-La-La-La)", and a lead-in to a series of UK chart hits. 16-year-old Stuart Wood completed the "classic five" line-up in February 1974, a week after the band had debuted the "Remember" single onTop of the Pops. (John Devine had mimed the piano part). By early 1975, the band was well on the way to achieving global success. The "classic five" line-up consisted of: Alan Longmuir, Derek Longmuir, Stuart "Woody" Wood, Eric Faulkner and Les McKeown. Beginning with "Remember" (UK No. 6), the Rollers' popularity exploded, and they released a string of hits on the UK chart. Following in succession were "Shang-a-Lang" (UK No. 2), "Summerlove Sensation" (UK No. 3), and "All of Me Loves All of You" (UK No. 4).[4] By early 1975, they were one of the biggest-selling acts in the UK. The successful 1975 UK tour prompted newspaper headlines about the rise of "Rollermania"[18] (alluding toBeatlemania a decade before). The Rollers were the subject of a 20-week UK television series,Shang-a-Lang.
A cover ofthe Four Seasons' "Bye, Bye, Baby" stayed at No. 1 in the UK for six weeks in March and April 1975, selling nearly a million copies and becoming the biggest seller of the year. The subsequent single, "Give a Little Love" topped the chart in July 1975, achieving their second No. 1 hit.[4][17] Two albums were produced during this period:Once Upon a Star (1975) andWouldn't You Like It? (1975). Faulkner and Wood undertook the majority of the songwriting duties. By this time, Bay City Rollers fans had a completely distinctive style of dress, featuring calf-lengthtartan trousers and tartanscarves.[17]
English singer-songwriterNick Lowe wrote a "jaundiced" (in Lowe's words)[19] paean to the band titled "Bay City Rollers We Love You". The track was "carefully sculpted" to be poor enough to get Lowe out of a recording contract with United Artists. The strategy backfired. UA issued the record as by the Tartan Horde,[20] which was the name given to Rollers fans in England, and it became a substantial hit in Japan.[19] Lowe was obliged to record a follow-up song called "Rollers Show", which did not meet with the same commercial success. This follow-up song was included on the U.S. release of Lowe's first albumPure Pop for Now People.
World impact: 1976
editAs the group's popularity swelled to superstardom in the UK, a concerted effort was made byArista Records (the record company that evolved from Bell) to launch the Rollers in North America. The new Arista headClive Davis was instrumental in grooming and overseeing the project. His work paid off, as in late 1975 the Rollers reached No. 1 on the USBillboard Hot 100 with "Saturday Night". "Saturday Night" had missed the UK chart completely two years earlier.[17] The Rollers gave the track their American debut, via a satellite-link performance onSaturday Night Live, with Howard Cosell. In Canada, it fared equally well, hitting No. 1 on theRPM national singles chart on 10 January 1976.[21] TheBay City Rollers (1975) album (North American release only) hit No. 1 in the same chart on 7 February.[21]
A second North American hit came with "Money Honey", written by Faulkner and Wood, which hit No. 9 in the US. In Canada, it fared better, following its predecessor to the top, giving them their second No. 1 in theRPM national singles chart on 13 March 1976.[22]
The North America/Japan release albumRock n' Roll Love Letter (1976) jumped from No. 25 to the top position in a single week in Canada. This deposed their ownBay City Rollers (1975) at No. 1 on the national chart, on 27 March 1976,[23] However, it only managed to achieve the No. 31 spot on the U.S.Billboard chart.
They were also extremely popular in Australia. On October 23, 1976 they appeared on the long-running Australian music TV showCountdown, a date which happened to coincide with atotal eclipse of the sun. The show's directorTed Emery recalled:[24]
(there)... were thousands of kids done up in tartan pants that didn't reach the top of their shoes, constantly bashing on theplexiglas doors. They would do anything...to get into that television studio. There's 200 kids bashing on the door and a total eclipse of the sun occurred. I'd never seen one. On this day we all stopped in the studio and the Rollers went up on the roof. We stood out there and watched the flowers close up and all the automatic street lighting come on. It was chilling, the most fantastic thing you'd ever see. Downstairs the kids never turned around, staring into the plexiglas waiting to see the Rollers come out of the studio, go down the corridor and into the canteen. (They) never noticed the total eclipse of the sun.
Alan Longmuir had left the group by early 1976, due to both the pressures of the band's success and feeling discomfort at being a member of a teen band whilst in his late twenties.[17] He was replaced for seven months by 17-year-old Ian Mitchell from Northern Ireland; he was the first band member born outside Edinburgh.[17] With Mitchell, the group released an album titledDedication (1976), and hit the chart with a cover version of theDusty Springfield song "I Only Want to Be with You. " The song reached US No. 12, as well as "Yesterday's Hero" (featuring live material from a 1976 personal appearance in Toronto'sNathan Phillips Square),[25] and "Dedication".
Decline and line–up changes: 1977–1979
editAs the Rollers' popularity waned, the shuffling of personnel continued; Mitchell quit the band. He was replaced by guitaristPat McGlynn. Further struggles involved the direction of their sound, as the members wished to pursue more sophisticated styles. They settled onDavid Bowie's producer,Harry Maslin, and in August 1977 releasedIt's a Game as a four-piece group, comprising McKeown, Wood, Faulkner and Derek Longmuir. TheIt's a Game tour was recorded in 1977 at Japan'sBudokan Hall, and was later released in 2001 asRollerworld: Live at the Budokan 1977.
On the tour, they covered "It's a Game", an unsuccessful 1973 single byString Driven Thing, to give them their final UK Top 20 hit (No. 16 in May 1977). Oddly enough, this single provided them with their highest-charting German hit, reaching No. 4 in the same year.[26] The follow-up "You Made Me Believe in Magic" made No. 34 in July in the UK and No. 10 in the U.S., and this single was their final major success.[17]
The Bay City Rollers were onThe Krofft Superstar Hour, later named theBay City Rollers Show, an hour-long show that aired from September 9, 1978, to January 27, 1979. During this time, the classic line-up released their last album together,Strangers in the Wind, which charted only in Australia, (No. 61) Japan, (No. 5) and the US (No. 128).
The Rollers: 1979–1980
editAt the end of 1978, the band had split with McKeown, then fired manager Tam Paton shortly after, and decided to continue in a morenew wave, rock-oriented sound. Their name was now The Rollers. South African-bornDuncan Faure joined the band as new lead vocalist, guitarist and songwriter. With Faure, the line-up produced three albums:Elevator (1979),Voxx (1980) andRicochet (1981).[17] Following the expiry of the band's Arista contract, none of the releases sold as well as expected, and they stopped touring by late 1981.
The A.V. Club comparedRicochet to the pop/new wave style ofThe Cars and recommended the album be "rescued from obscurity".[27]
Breakout and touring: 1980–1990
editDuring the 1980s and 1990s, there were a few short tours. Seven past members played Japan in 1982, and again in 1983. A reunion album,Breakout, was released in Japan and Australia in 1985, and added drummer George Spencer.Breakout was written primarily by McKeown and McGlynn with minor contributions from Faulkner, Wood, and Mitchell. In the late 1980s, a version of the band called the New Rollers was formed featuring Faulkner on lead vocals, Karen Prosser on vocals, Jason Medvec on guitar, Andy Boakes on bass, and Mark Roberts on drums. The band toured extensively throughout the US and Canada as well as tours of the UK and Australia. This group also released an independent four-song EP titledParty Harty.
In 1990, Wood and Alan Longmuir joined with Faulkner to tour under the Bay City Rollers name and issued several CDs of re-recordings of the old Roller tunes.
Re–union: 1996–2000
editIn 1996, the classic line-up reunited and performed "Saturday Night" on a Japanese television show to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Rollermania.[28][29]
The classic line-up (minus Derek Longmuir)[30] performed a one-off New Year's Eve millennium concert, the last official Bay City Rollers concert (1999–2000) in the shadow of Edinburgh Castle in Scotland. Interest was rekindled in the UK by various television documentaries about the group; and the television-advertised compilationVery Best of the Bay City Rollers entered theUK Albums Chart on release in 2004 at No. 11.[4]
Spin–off and financial dispute: 2000–2015
editDuring the late 2000s, Ian Mitchell led his own Bay City Rollers band, which included lead vocalistKyle Vincent. Mitchell was the only ex-Roller involved.
Sexual assault allegations against manager
editMembers of the Bay City Rollers have accused former managerTam Paton of sexual abuse. In 2003, McGlynn accused Paton of trying torape him in a hotel room in 1977.[31] However, the police decided there was insufficient evidence to prosecute Paton. Paton had previous arrests for sexual misconduct with underage boys.[32] In 2009, McKeown accused Paton of raping him.[33] In the 2023 documentarySecrets of the Bay City Rollers, potential band member Gert Magnus claimed that Paton offered him a place in the band in exchange for sex.[34]
Lawsuit to reclaim royalties from Arista
editIn March 2007, six former members of the group (Faure plus the "classic line-up") announced a lawsuit againstArista Records in hopes of claiming what they described as "tens of millions of dollars" of unpaid royalties. Gordon "Nobby" Clark threatened to sue the other band members if their lawsuit was successful, stating that he was the creative force behind the band's success, even though he left the group in 1973, before the bulk of their fame and fortune began.[35][36]
In September 2010, Clark, Ian Mitchell and Pat McGlynn filed a complaint in the courts in the United States against the six members (Faure plus the "classic line-up") over being excluded from the case against Arista records. Clark, Mitchell and McGlynn were seeking to have their rights determined and were seeking financial damages against the other Bay City Rollers for alleged breach of contract. In 2013, a judge in the United States Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against the three due to the statute of frauds, which establishes that certain agreements must be in writing under certain conditions, and the appellate judge's ruling stated: "A claim for unjust enrichment must be based on the value of plaintiffs' contribution to the joint effort of the band at the time it made the relevant records, not on the income stream resulting from a revival over thirty years later."[37]
In March 2011, a New York judge determined that the Bay City Rollers could move forward with their four-year-old lawsuit against Arista Records. Arista denied responsibility for the majority of the royalties, citing a New York statute of limitations. The statute limits plaintiffs from recovering damages post six years in contract disputes, which therefore would negate the Rollers' claims for royalties incurred before 2001. However, because Arista had continued to promise the Bay City Rollers their royalties in writing, the judge ruled that the statute was not applicable.[38] After almost a decade, the legal battle came to an end with an out-of-court settlement in 2016. Arista Records' parent companySony Music is believed to have paid $3.5 million, with each band member receiving £70,000.[39]
Second re–union: 2015–2018
editOn 22 September 2015, the Bay City Rollers, including McKeown, Wood, and Alan Longmuir, announced they were reforming and would play a show at the Glasgow Barrowlands on 20 December.[40][41][42] Eric Faulkner was unable to contribute because of health concerns, almost dying in February 2015 after contracting viral encephalitis.[43] The band released one new single, "Boomerang", and discussed plans for a new album. The reunion continued into 2016 before Wood ended the reunited line-up on 9 July 2016 because no shows were being booked for the so-called reunion. After the 2015 Christmas shows Les was booking shows only for himself and his band during 2016 (except T In The Park) which caused the reunion to end.[44] Plans for a new album and various tours that were hoped to take place in 2017 never materialised.[44][45] Prior to the reunion and after the end of the tour, McKeown continued to tour as "Les McKeown's Bay City Rollers".
Recent history: 2018–present
editOn 27 February 2018, Stuart 'Woody' Wood announced that a "new generation" Bay City Rollers would be performing in Tokyo, Japan in June of the same year. The band comprises the original classic five members Stuart 'Woody' Wood on guitar, Ian Thomson on lead vocals and guitar, Marcus Cordock on bass (later replaced by Mikey Smith) and Jamie McGrory on drums.[46] Bassist Alan Longmuir died on 2 July 2018 after falling ill while on holiday with his wife in Mexico.[47] His autobiographyI Ran with the Gang: My Life in and Out of The Bay City Rollers was published posthumously in November 2018; the book was written withMartin Knight. In his book, Alan Longmuir mentioned his hope for McKeown and Wood to put aside their differences and reunite one more time.[48] In 2019, after rumors related to Alan Longmuir's wishes, both McKeown and Wood denied any chance of another reunion and did not want to work with each other,[48][49] though McKeown did mention his desire to work with Faulkner.[45]
After both McKeown's and Wood's bands were sidelined by the coronavirus pandemic, McKeown mentioned in August 2020 that he would be willing to reunite with Wood again with more planning.[50] On 1 September 2020, Ian Mitchell died at the age of 62 after suffering from throat cancer.[51]
On 20 April 2021, Les McKeown died aged 65.[52]
For the period between 9 March and 10 December 2023, however, a total of 11 concerts and appearances at festivals were planned again with the line-up of Ian Thomson, Stuart 'Woody' Wood, Mikey Smith and Jamie McGrory, nine of them in the UK and one each in Denmark and Germany. The band are currently chalking up festivals and more shows throughout 2024.[53]
On 13 September 2024, the bands tour van, that included all of their instruments and equipment, was stolen while touring inWalsall.[54][55] Wood's tartan-painted guitar was the only piece of equipment not stolen, as he had travelled separately from the band (via train), and had his guitar with him.[54] A local music shop rented out their equipment for the band for subsequent events.[56]
Members
editCurrent members
| Former members
|
Timeline
editSources:[57]

Discography
editStudio albums
edit- Rollin' (1974)
- Once Upon a Star (1975)
- Bay City Rollers (1975)
- Wouldn't You Like It? (1975)
- Rock n' Roll Love Letter (1976)
- Dedication (1976)
- It's a Game (1977)
- Strangers in the Wind (1978)
- Elevator (1979)
- Voxx (1980)
- Ricochet (1981)
- Breakout '85 (1985)
- A Christmas Shang-A-Lang (2015)
- Keep on Rollin'(2024)
References
edit- ^Ian Brown (26 November 2010).From Tartan to Tartanry: Scottish Culture, History and Myth: Scottish Culture, History and Myth.Edinburgh University Press. pp. 201–.ISBN 978-0-7486-4449-0.
- ^Mark Johnson (1 April 2016).Seditious Theology: Punk and the Ministry of Jesus. Routledge. pp. 13–.ISBN 978-1-317-05785-7.
- ^"Bay City Rollers - Biography & History".AllMusic. Retrieved27 October 2018.
- ^abcdRoberts, David (2006).British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.).London:Guinness World Records Limited. p. 45.ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
- ^"BAY CITY ROLLERS".Official Charts. 18 September 1971. Retrieved6 September 2024.
- ^"Official Albums Chart on 27/4/1975".Official Charts. Retrieved6 September 2024.
- ^Kent, David (1993).Australian Chart Book 1970-1992.St Ives, New South Wales: Australian Chart Books.ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
- ^"The Irish Charts - All there is to know".Irishcharts.ie. Retrieved6 September 2024.
- ^"Official Singles Chart on 16/3/1975".Official Charts. Retrieved6 September 2024.
- ^"Music Week - 27 December 1975"(PDF).MusicWeek. Retrieved7 September 2024.
- ^Canada, Library and Archives (17 July 2013)."Image : RPM Weekly".www.bac-lac.gc.ca. Retrieved6 September 2024.
- ^"Bay City Rollers | Biography, Music & News".Billboard. Retrieved6 September 2024.
- ^"BAY CITY ROLLERS – OFFICIAL WEBSITE".baycityrollers.co.uk. Retrieved27 October 2018.
- ^abcSpence, Simon (2016).When The Screaming Stops: The Dark History of the Bay City Rollers.Omnibus Press. pp. 33–35.ISBN 9781783237050.
- ^Coy, W. (2005),Bay City Babylon: The Unbelievable But True Story of the Bay City Rollers, pp 12–13. Hats Off Books,ISBN 978-1587364631
- ^Finney, Ritchie."Tam Paton Spills The Heinz Baked Beans!".Bilbo Baggins Home Page. Morley Enterprises. Archived fromthe original on 10 September 2016. Retrieved31 May 2011.
- ^abcdefghijStrong, Martin C. (2000).The Great Rock Discography (5th ed.). Edinburgh:Mojo Books. pp. 2–3.ISBN 1-84195-017-3.
- ^abRoberts, David (1998).Guinness Rockopedia (1st ed.). London: Guinness Publishing Ltd. p. 30.ISBN 0-85112-072-5.
- ^ab"Q and A with Nick Lowe".Canada.com. 6 October 2007. Archived fromthe original on 1 May 2014. Retrieved24 April 2014.
- ^"NICK LOWE DISCOGRAPHY – PART 1".Nicklowedisc.tripod.com. Retrieved24 April 2014.
- ^ab"Collectionscanada.gc.ca".Collectionscanada.gc.ca. Archived fromthe original on 15 October 2012. Retrieved16 July 2011.
- ^"Item Display – RPM – Library and Archives Canada".Collectionscanada.gc.ca. Archived fromthe original on 15 October 2012. Retrieved16 July 2011.
- ^"Item Display – RPM – Library and Archives Canada".Collectionscanada.gc.ca. Archived fromthe original on 20 October 2012. Retrieved16 July 2011.
- ^Wilmoth, Peter –Glad All Over – The Countdown Years 1974–1987 McPhee Gribble/Penguin Books, 1993. p. 149
- ^"Youtube.com".YouTube. 15 June 2009. Archived fromthe original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved16 July 2011.
- ^Starke Zeiten, Hit-Bilanz, 1988 BMG-Ariola 258850
- ^Blevins, Joe (8 August 2016)."Read This: This Bay City Rollers LP should be rescued from obscurity".News.avcluv.com. Retrieved27 October 2018.
- ^"Bay city rollers in Japan 1998".YouTube. 31 August 2009.Archived from the original on 11 December 2021. Retrieved14 August 2021.
- ^"Bay City Rollers (in Japan 1996) - SATURDAY Night -".YouTube. 10 February 2013.Archived from the original on 11 December 2021. Retrieved14 August 2021.
- ^Longmuir, Derek."Former Bay City Roller escapes jail on child porn charges".The Guardian.
- ^Edward, Rhiannon (22 August 2007),"Former Rollers manager Paton cleared of rape claim",The Scotsman, Edinburgh, retrieved10 April 2009
- ^"Tam Paton bedroom bulldozed after 'seedy' history".Edinburghnews.scotsman.com. Archived fromthe original on 26 July 2019. Retrieved1 December 2017.
- ^McEwen, Alan (17 October 2016)."Bay City Rollers pervert Tam Paton urged band to have sex with paedophile DJ".Daily Record. Retrieved30 June 2023.
- ^Latif, Leila (29 June 2023)."Secrets of the Bay City Rollers review – one of the most disturbing accounts of abuse imaginable".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved30 June 2023.
- ^"Scottish News – The Scotsman".Scotsman.com. Archived fromthe original on 28 March 2007.
- ^"Scottish News – The Scotsman".Scotsman.com. Archived fromthe original on 17 May 2007.
- ^Gardner, Eriq (29 August 2013)."Three Ex-Members of Bay City Rollers Denied in Royalty Collection Attempt".Hollywoodreporter.com. Retrieved17 September 2013.
- ^Mickie (1 June 2011)."Mickie's Zoo: Bay City Rollers to continue suit against Arista Records".Mickieszoo.blogspot.com. Retrieved16 July 2011.
- ^"Bay City Rollers legal battle reaches end of the road".Scotsman.com. 15 October 2016. Retrieved16 April 2020.
- ^Dingwall, John (22 September 2015)."Bay City Rollers are back: Watch our video as pop icons announce reunion".Dailyrecord.co.uk. Retrieved17 October 2019.
- ^"Bay City Rollers announce reunion".Bbc.com. 22 September 2015. Retrieved14 August 2021.
- ^Powell, Emma (22 September 2015)."Bay City Rollers announce reunion and world tour for 2016".Standard.co.uk. Retrieved14 August 2021.
- ^Longmuir, Alan; Knight, Martin (14 November 2018).I Ran With The Gang: My Life In and Out of the Bay City Rollers. Luath Press Ltd.ISBN 9781912387212.
- ^ab"Bay City Rollers Guitarist Announces Departure From Band; Watch Final Performances".Billboard.com. Retrieved14 August 2021.
- ^abFulton, Rick (24 October 2019)."Bay City Roller Les McKeown says he'll never work with Stuart 'Woody' Wood".Daily Record. Retrieved14 August 2021.
- ^"New generation Bay City Rollers to perform 2 nights in Tokyo".Japantoday.com. 9 March 2018. Retrieved17 October 2019.
- ^"Bay City Roller Alan Longmuir dies".Bbc.com. 2 July 2018. Retrieved17 October 2019.
- ^ab"Bay City Rollers stars quash rumours of reunion".Glasgow Times. Retrieved14 August 2021.
- ^"Ex-Bay City Rollers members tell fans they can 'forget' about future reunion".Edinburghnews.scotsman.com. 23 October 2019. Retrieved14 August 2021.
- ^"EXCLUSIVE: Edinburgh's Les McKeown reflects on in lockdown and his hope of another Bay City Rollers' reunion".Edinburghnews.scotsman.com. 3 August 2020. Retrieved14 August 2021.
- ^"Bay City Rollers member Ian Mitchell dies".Bbc.co.uk. 2 September 2020.
- ^Aitchison, Jack (22 April 2021)."Bay City Rollers star Les McKeown dead aged 65 as family pay tribute".Heraldscotland.com.Archived from the original on 22 April 2021. Retrieved22 April 2021.
- ^"Bay City Rollers | Tour Dates 2018".Baycityrollers.co.uk. Retrieved12 February 2024.
- ^ab"Bay City Rollers: Band's van stolen during UK tour".BBC News. 13 September 2024. Retrieved16 September 2024.
- ^Balloo, Stephanie (13 September 2024)."Bay City Rollers tour van stolen in Walsall as band joke of 'emergency tartan'".Birmingham Live. Retrieved16 September 2024.
- ^"City music store to the rescue for Scottish chart-toppers ahead of Waterfront gig".Eastern Daily Press. 14 September 2024. Retrieved16 September 2024.
- ^"The Bay City Rollers History".www.bcr1.de. Retrieved16 September 2024.
Further reading
edit- Brigitte Tast, Hans-Jürgen Tast:Wie weit ist vorbei? Ein Konzert, eine Party und Meldungen aus der ganzen Welt. Kulleraugen – Visuelle Kommunikation Nr. 48, Schellerten 2016,ISBN 978-3-88842-048-1.
External links
edit- Bay City Rollers discography atDiscogs
- Bay City Rollers atIMDb
- Bay City Rollers atIMDb as Les McKeown's 70's Bay City Rollers