Head East

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Head East
Origin South Central Illinois, USA
Genre(s) Classic Rock, Hard Rock
Years active 1973 - present
Label(s) A&M, Pyramid Records
Members
Roger Boyd
Steve Huston
Mark Oatman
Tony Gross
Dan Odum
Former members
John Schlitt
Mike Somerville
Dan Birney
Tim Day

Head East is a hard rock quintet originally from East Central Illinois, then Champaign, Illinois. The band was formed by vocalist John Schlitt, guitarist Mike Somerville, keyboardist Roger Boyd, bassist Dan Birney, and drummer Steve Huston. They met and formed the band while studying at the University of Illinois, Champaign. The band achieved success during the 70s, but fell into obscurity in the following decades.

Contents

[edit] Band History

Head East was formed in 1969. They released their first album, Flat as a Pancake, in 1974 on their own record label (Pyramid Records) selling all 5,000 records and 500 eight-tracks produced. With those sales, and the song "Never Been Any Reason" on radio, A&M was impressed enough to sign the band and re-release the album in 1975[1]. The album reached gold status by 1978 and would remain their most popular album spawning another hit in the song "Love Me Tonight", which peaked at #54.

The band followed with the albums Get Yourself Up and Gettin' Lucky, released in 1976 and 1977 respectively. Both albums didn't achieve the success of their debut album. However, their fourth album simply titled Head East (1978) presented another hit with the band's cover of former Argent singer Russ Ballard's "Since You Been Gone" that peaked at #46.

On 1979, the band released the double-LP Head East Live! and A Different Kind of Crazy. The former also peaked on the US Top 100 charts. The band also performed on the soundtrack to the comic anthology film J-Men Forever[2].

However, in March of 1980, bassist Dan Birney and guitarist Mike Somerville left the band, while singer John Schlitt was fired due to a drug dependency[3]. He would later recover, become a born-again Christian and become the singer and the face of one of Contempory Christian Music's most successful all-time bands, Petra. Schlitt was with Petra from 1985, until the band was retired in 2005.

Remaining members, Boyd and Huston, hired Mark Boatman, Tony Gross, and Dan Odum to record their following album titled U.S. 1, released in October 1980. The album was their last to reach the charts and last recorded release on A&M.

The band continued with little success releasing albums on small labels. Some of them were Onward and Upward (1982) on Allegiance Records and Choice of Weapons (1988) on Dark Heart Records, among others. Tim Day, drummer from Daddy's Girl joined the band and toured from 99-01. They would still continue to play around, with guitarist Somerville returning from 1994 to 2003.

In 1999, a live album titled Live on Stage was released. The album featured songs from two shows at Denver's Rainbow Music Hall. The first five tracks are from a 1980 show featuring the classic lineup and the last 10 tracks are from a 1981 show featuring the latter lineup.

[edit] Band Members

  • Roger Boyd - keyboards
  • Steve Huston - drums
  • Mark Boatman
  • Tony Gross
  • Dan Odum

[edit] Former Members

[edit] Discography

  • (#126) 1974: Flat as a Pancake
  • (#161) 1976: Get Yourself Up
  • (#136) 1977: Gettin' Lucky
  • (# 78 ) 1978: Head East
  • (# 96 ) 1979: Head East Live!
  • (# 65 ) 1979: A Different Kind of Crazy
  • (#137) 1980: U.S. 1
  • (none) 1982: Onward and Upward
  • (none) 1988: Choice of Weapons
  • (none) 1999: Concert Classics Volume 7
  • (none) 2000: Live On Stage (edited version of Head East Live)

(Peak on Billboard's Pop Album Chart)

[edit] Notes

[edit] See also

[edit] External links