Kensington Market (band)
Kensington Market | |
---|---|
Origin | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Genres | Pop rock |
Years active | 1967–1969, 2006–present |
Labels | Warner Bros. Records |
Members | Jimmy Watson Gene Martynec John Mills-Cockell |
Kensington Market was a Toronto-based rock band, active from 1967 to 1969. Named after a downtown Toronto neighbourhood, it was formed by singer/songwriter and guitarist (born November 20, 1947 in St Albans, England, immigrated to Canada in April 1953), formerly with The Vendettas, with guitarist and pianist Gene Martynec (born March 28, 1947 in Germany) from Bobby Kris & The Imperials. The original line up was completed with former Vendettas' bass player (born January 6, 1943 in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario) and drummer Jimmy Watson (born August 23, 1950, Belfast, Northern Ireland). Former Luke & The Apostles frontman, singer/songwriter (born November 5, 1946 in Toronto) was added later in 1967, and synthesizer player John Mills-Cockell (born May 19, 1943 in Toronto) was a member in 1969.
History[]
Brought together around May 1967 by musical entrepreneur Bernie Finkelstein, the Market debuted at the Night Owl on June 4 and performed initially in Toronto coffeehouses such as the Red Gas Room, and high schools. In mid-August, after the dissolution of Luke & The Apostles, the Market recruited Luke Gibson by which time they had already released two singles for Stone Records. These singles achieved minimal success but Finkelstein was able to sign them to Warner Brothers in New York City. In 1968, the Market did the soundtrack to the NFB film The Ernie Game. Later that year, they released the album Avenue Road, produced by Felix Pappalardi, followed by a tour of the United States. In 1969, keyboardist John Mills-Cockell joined, and their follow-up, Aardvark, was released, once again produced by Pappalardi, followed by their second US tour. However, this wasn't done in enough time to save the splintering band who split that same year.
Demise of the Market[]
Although it was short lived and did not enjoy great commercial success, Kensington Market was one of the first Canadian rock bands to develop a style – texturally complex, lyrically eloquent – independent of US and British models. Its LPs did not capture the exuberant, improvisatory nature of its live performances. Darou died in the early 1970s. Watson retired from the world of music. Finkelstein founded True North Records. John Mills-Cockell went on to record with synth-prog band Syrinx before trying his own solo career – both projects were on Finkelstein's True North Records. Pappalardi died on April 17, 1983 from a gunshot to the neck. Martynec subsequently worked in Toronto studios, while Gibson and McKie have had minor and intermittent solo careers. Gibson made the LP (TNorth TN6) in 1971 and McKie released (Quantum QR-81003) in 1981.
Members[]
- - Lead Vocals, Rhythm Guitar (1967–1969, 2006–present)
- - Bass Guitar (1967–1969)
- Jimmy Watson - Drums, Percussion, Sitar (recording only) (1967–1969)
- Eugene Martynec - Lead Guitar, Piano (1967–1969)
- - Backup Vocals, Rhythm Guitar, Harmonica (1967–1969)
- John Mills-Cockell - Synthesizer (1969)
- John Jackson - Lead Guitar (2006–present)
- - Bass (2006–present)
- Mitch Lewis - Drums (2008–present)
Discography[]
Studio albums[]
(1968, Warner WS-1754)
Warner Bros. Records
CD reissue Pacemaker 2008
Original issue peaked at #39 on the RPM Canadian album charts in 1968.
Track listing Side A:
1. I Would Be The One (2:32)
2. Speaking Of Dreams (2:23)
3. Colour Her Sunshine (2:54)
4. Phoebe (3:39)
5. Aunt Violet's Knee (4:10)
Track listing Side B:
1. Coming Home Soon (2:41)
2. Presenting Myself Lightly (2:11)
3. Looking Glass (3:15)
4. Beatrice (2:15)
5. Girl Is Young (2:59)
(1969, Warner WS-1790)
Warner Bros. Records
CD reissue Pacemaker 2008
Did not chart.
Compilations[]
(1968)
Canadian National Film Board
Singles[]
Mr. John
(1967)
(Stone)
Peaked at #76 on RPM's Canadian Top 100 chart in September, 1967.
Bobby's Birthday
(1967)
(Stone)
I Would Be The One
(1968)
(Warner Bros.)
Peaked at #59 on RPM's Canadian Top 100 chart in September, 1968.
Witch's Stone
(1968)
(Warner Bros.)
Help Me
(1969)
(Warner Bros.)
Sources[]
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2007) |
- "The Market: In Town", by Peter Goddard, Toronto Telegram's After Four section, October 12, 1968, page 7
- Canadian pop rock music groups
- Musical groups from Toronto
- Musical groups established in 1967
- Musical groups disestablished in 1969
- 1967 establishments in Ontario
- 1969 disestablishments in Ontario
- Canadian psychedelic rock music groups