

"In the United States," Steve Ferrone once said, "there is music all the time.

Their "overnight" success left them reeling and wealthy - so much so that they left Glasgow to become tax exiles in America. The music trade magazines were overflowing in awards to AWB, as they eventually became known, and awards from other publications, such as Playboy, were also numerous. In the summer of 1975 there was a second Top 10 hit, "Cut the Cake." "Pick Up the Pieces" was certified a million-seller by the RIAA on March 6 and was later nominated for a Grammy Award as Best R&B Instrumental of the Year (it lost, to MFSB's "T.S.O.P."). But black youngsters - and deejays - loved it, and helped the band top the album and singles charts simultaneously in February 1975. At first, the song was shunned by black stations because the band was chiefly white. It featured a tenor sax solo by Malcolm and the dual guitars of Onnie and Hamish. The highlight was an instrumental, "Pick Up the Pieces," written by Roger and Hamish.
#PICK UP THE PIECES FULL#
Their second album, Average White Band, was full of disco music. It was thought that the band might break up, but in January 1975, Steve Ferrone, a close friend of Robbie's, stepped in as their new drummer. However, the next day, Robbie was found dead, alone, in his motel room. Another party guest, Cher Bono, kept him awake and out of a coma, until the crisis passed. Before he left, Alan Gorrie sampled it and soon after began displaying symptoms of poisoning. Sometime during the night drummer Robbie McIntosh was sold a small amount of cocaine, which had been spiked with strychnine. On September 22, they attended a party held in their honor in West Hollywood, California. The group had a new album in the can, a road crew, and - at last - their own equipment. He turned out to be just the man they needed to bring them their first real success.īy the fall of 1974, things were looking up. Jerry Wexler, a co-founder of Atlantic Records, then signed the band and put them in the studio with arranger-producer Arif Mardin. The tour and the album were both bombs, and the group was quickly dumped from the MCA roster.

In November, they made their first American tour, using equipment borrowed from the Who, and doing their own road work. After that, they entered a cheap demo studio and produced their first album, Show Your Hand, which they sold to MCA. In January 1973, the band achieved a major breakthrough by appearing as the supporting act at Eric Clapton's comeback concert at the Rainbow Theatre in London. They did a lot of work all over Europe, playing American bases in Germany and many black clubs. The group debuted later in the year at the Lincoln Festival in England. It was Bonnie Bramlett, of Delaney and Bonnie, who suggested their name - the Average White Band. In 1972, the four joined Robbie McIntosh and Hamish Stuart to form a sextet. When it was over, they realized that they had created their own individual sound, a kind of jazz-oriented soul, modeled after American bands such as James Brown's and Booker T and the MGs. He got Onnie, Roger, Malcolm, and some other friends to play on the session. It was there that they first heard Dundee Horns, a rival group that featured Roger Ball and Malcolm "Molly" Duncan.Īlan had written some songs he wanted to experiment with, so he booked some time in a local studio. Lthough raised in Scotland, the six men who came to form the Average White Band grew up listening to and playing the music of black Americans: R&B, jazz, and the Motown hits of the sixties.īassist Alan Gorrie, along with Onnie McIntyre, led an R&B band called Forevermore, while attending college in Perth.
