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Ten Years After

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Ten Years After are a brit-pop band that gained prominence in the 60s due to their well even and interesting mix of hard rock, blues and jazz. Though the band’s primary offerings were reportedly awkward sounding, they found their place within Britain’s musical landscape in a short time period.

Front man Alvin Lee led an assortment of virtuoso musicians in Ten Years After, which included guitarist Chick Churchill, drummer Rick Lee, and bassist Leo Lyons. Prior to the band’s formation several core members were in a group called Ivan Jay and the Jaycats. The band after several name and line up changes would morph into Ten Years After. The group would later assume the name Jaybirds and then Ivan Jay and the Jaymen.

They became very popular locally but branched off to London in 1966 to play with the Ivy League. This same year they completed their official lineup with the addition of keyboardist Chick Churchill. The band altered their name two more times before settling on Ten Yeats After. They changed it to Blues Trip upon signing Chris Wright as their manager and to Blues Yard during their show at the Marquee Club.

In 1967 they entered in a recording contract with a subsidiary of Decca called Deram and released their self-titled debut. The album featured 4 cover songs, two of those being Willie Dixon compositions “Spoonful” and “Help Me”. Though the release did not receive enthusiastic reviews, it created awareness of their presence and gave them a chance to showcase their potential.

Their second album “Undead” more than made up for the insecure start set by their previous release. “Undead” was recorded live in an intimate jazz club in London called Klooks Kleek. It flaunted the band’s deep understanding of blues and boogie music, paying a particular amount of attention to jump blues. The album contained only 5 tracks; however, they were considerably more lengthy than the standard pop song. The shortest track which was the Gershwin cover “Summertime” clocked in at 5:44 and the band original “I May Be Wrong, But I Won’t Be Wrong Always” took up 9:49 worth of space on the album. It was the track “I’m Going Home”, which threw Ten Years After into commercial stardom. The single became a hit in both the US and UK and boosted album sales significantly.

The band amped up the production of albums within the next 2 years, yielding 4 studio releases during this time frame. “Stonedhenge” came out in 1969 and consisted of mostly original tracks with the exception of the 59 second rendition of the folk traditional “Three Blind Mice”. “Ssssh” was also released that year and rose to No. 20 on the Billboard 200 and No. 4 on the UK charts.

The band’s follow up “Criklewood Green” received glowing reviews and entered the Billboard 200 at No.14. The album was released in 1970 as was “Watt”, which was another album consisting of entirely original material apart from the closing track “Sweet Little Sixteen” written by Chuck Berry.

The band fulfilled their contract with Deram after the release of Watt and released their next album “A Space in Time” through Columbia. The band departed from their improvisational psychedelic blues style and went into a more coherent pop direction. Though this approach worked initially, it’s success did not cross over to their 1974 album “Positive Vibration”. After this release the group decided to call it quits.

The band reformed approximately 10 years after their break up, performing at the Reading Festival. The concert was recorded and released on CD as “The Friday Rock Show Sessions”. The group took yet another break but got back together in 1988 to play a few concerts and record the album “About Time”, which was released in 1989. Ten Years After did not release another album until 2004s “About Time”, which was followed in 2008 by “Evolution”; however, both recordings did not feature principal songwriter Alvin Lee.

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One of the most successful bands to ever come out of Nottingham, Ten Years After are typical of the kind of blues rock success stories that emerged from the late sixties and early seventies; whilst they never enjoyed the kind of longevity that, if anything, has gone on to define many of their peers, they at least knew what it was to take the charts by storm during the relatively brief time that the original lineup was together, with a career that spanned eight years to begin with. They turned out a hugely impressive eight albums in eight years between 1966 and 1974, with all of them charting on the UK top forty and on the Billboard rundown in the United States, too; there’s no question that they enjoyed genuine Transatlantic success. After a one-off reunion at the Reading festival in 1983, a lineup that closely resembled the original one reformed to tour in 1988, releasing a new album, About Time, the following year. That lineup underwent a dramatic reshuffle earlier this year, perhaps prompted by the death of Alvin Lee last year; Leo Lyons and Joe Gooch left the band, and have been replaced accordingly as the group continue to line up new dates.

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Joeg_67’s profile image

Great show in Osnabruck, fantastic gitar-solo's by Marcus Bonfanti. Playing all there hits. An almost two hours non stop show. They still going strong and sound fantastic. Chick, Ric ( members from the first moment ) and Colin and Marcus, THANKS, we have had a very good evening !! When they paly in our neigbourhood we surely come again !!

gerard-schouwink’s profile image

wonderful !

Ric and Chick are fantastic.

Marcus is a great guitarist !

I spent a fine moment. TYA was my favourite band in the seventies !!! It was a real pleasure to present TYA to my daughter.

pouspous’s profile image

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Ten Years After are an English blues rock band, most popular in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Between 1968 and 1973, Ten Years After scored eight Top 40 albums on the UK Albums Chart. In addition they had twelve albums enter the US Billboard 200, and are best known for tracks such as "I'm Going Home", "Hear Me Calling", "I'd Love to Change the World" and "Love Like a Man". Their musical style consisted of blues rock, and hard rock.

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Ten Years After

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Latest setlist, ten years after on july 12, 2024.

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The troubled tale of Ten Years After: from Woodstock to the world

Woodstock made Ten Years After into world stars, but instead of capitalising on their new-found fame they lost the plot

Ten Years After

It was getting dark by the time Ten Years After took the stage at Woodstock back in 1969. The rain had come bucketing down mid-way through the afternoon, just as they’d been about to go on, drenching the stage and turning the site into a quagmire. 

The audience – variously estimated at between 350,000 and 500,000 – was wet, chilled and bedraggled; many of them were the worse for wear after three days in the open. The band weren’t in much better shape, having travelled overnight from St Louis, making the last leg by helicopter and then being cooped up on-site in the back of a trailer, waiting for the rain to stop. 

In the movie of Woodstock, the camera picks out the skinny frame of TYA’s Alvin Lee, his boyish face ringed by shoulder-length blond hair. “This is a thing called ‘I’m Going Home’… by helicopter!” he announces, and for a dozen seconds he rattles out notes on his trademark Gibson guitar that sound like a sustained burst of machine-gun fire. 

The band then kick into a breakneck boogie and the song takes off; Alvin spits out the vocals, filling in the spaces with more guitar salvos. The camera remains fixed on him; there are just occasional glimpses of keyboard player Chick Churchill, drummer Ric Lee (no relation) and bassist Leo Lyons, who is headbanging furiously. Alvin leads the song high and low, never letting the pace flag, until nine minutes later he builds to a final warp-speed cacophony. 

The crowd, their central heating now restored, erupts.

When the Woodstock movie came out in late 1970 (more than a year after the festival) it did for Ten Years After what Live Aid did for Queen and U2 : transformed them into superstars. Suddenly TYA were the new heroes of British blues rock. Or, as Alvin puts it: “That’s when 14-year-old girls started showing up to our gigs with ice-creams.” 

Ten Years After had been in the vanguard of the second (heavier) invasion of the US by British groups, touring relentlessly and rapidly reaching top-of-the-bill status. “We had this thing – and looking back I’m a bit ashamed of it now – that we had to sting any band that went on after us,” Alvin recalls. “We used to go out of our way to blow them off and make them look bad. 

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“It wasn’t so much playing well as going down well; we’d learnt that from our years on the club circuit. And there were a lot of bands in America who wouldn’t go on after us. At Woodstock, Country Joe whipped his equipment on before us because he’d played after us at the Fillmore East and died a death. We used to wear the audiences out. It really was a heads-down-let’s-go-for-it attitude. Leo used to shake his head off. That was fine on stage, but he’d do it in the studio, too. We used to have to gaffer-tape his headphones to his head.” 

Leo’s headbanging style even got him an offer from Frank Zappa to appear in a movie he was planning called The Choreographers Of Rock ‘N’ Roll . And the bassist reveals the secret of TYA’s vigorous live shows: “Ric and I egged each other on when we flagged. I’d yell: ‘Hit ’em, you bastard!’ And he’d shout back: ‘Fuck off.’” Leo would also spur Ric on by spitting at him – anticipating the punk movement by a decade – but the drummer never minded “because he always missed”.

Riding the crest of this high-energy wave, Alvin would sneer and pout outrageously as he tore through solo after solo. Even on the slower songs his bursts of notes seemed faster than mere human fingers could manage. No wonder the American media dubbed him Captain Speedfingers.

But behind the bravado that had propelled Ten Years After into the premier league was another, more insecure Alvin who couldn’t handle the superstar status that the Woodstock movie had bestowed on the group: “We’d been playing for the heads, the growing underground audience,” he recounts. “But then it got bigger, and people had to come to ice hockey arenas and stadiums to see the band. And we lost any contact with the audience.

I often wonder what the rest of our career would have been like if the Woodstock movie had used another song Alvin Lee

“You had police with guns, and cotton wool in their ears, sneering at the band and looking for half a chance to beat up the audience. It was awful. It had all gone wrong and I was thinking, what the fuck am I doing here?” 

And the song that had made Ten Years After famous was becoming an albatross: “You’d walk on stage and people would be shouting for I’m Going Home , which was the last song. I often wonder what the rest of our career would have been like if the Woodstock movie had used another song. As it was, everything became focused on the last song, the high-energy number.” 

To make matters worse, Alvin was also becoming estranged from the rest of the band: “I think they began to resent me because I started to back off then,” he admits. “I couldn’t help it, I hated it. I used to go on stage and go: ‘dong!’ [mimes a big chord] and the audience would go: ‘Yeahhh!’ You could do anything. It was just crazy. It was horrible. 

“My problem was that I couldn’t communicate it to anybody. The band thought I was looney. I went into sulks and things like that. Maybe I should have tried to talk more with them, but it didn’t work for some reason. They started to get jealous because they thought I was being singled out to do all the interviews and the photo sessions. I wasn’t getting singled out. I was the songwriter, singer and lead guitarist, after all, so obviously I was the one they wanted to talk to.”

Alvin Lee onstage

There was indeed resentment from the rest of the band. But it was born out of frustration rather than jealousy. Around the time of Woodstock, TYA’s management had decided to focus all the attention on Alvin. Fair enough, you might think, as Alvin was the frontman, guitar hero and pin-up. But Ric and Leo believed Alvin was temperamentally unsuited to the role: “I felt it would be too much pressure for Alvin, and told our manager, Chris Wright, that he was creating a monster he couldn’t control,” Leo says. 

Their misgivings were well-founded. At the very moment that Ten Years After should have been seizing the initiative, they were in fact losing the plot. On his own admission, Alvin retreated behind a wall of dope smoke. Whenever Ric and Leo, angry at being marginalised, managed to provoke a reaction out of Alvin it was invariably the wrong one. It created a rift. And the recriminations continuing to this day. 

What added to the bitterness was how close the group members had been up to then. Ric describes Alvin and Leo’s relationship as “a well-oiled marriage”. It dates back to 1960 when Leo started playing with Alvin, already a precocious guitarist, in local Nottingham band The Jaybirds. They even went through the classic 60s rock group apprenticeship together, playing a five-week stint at Hamburg’s Star Club in 1962 – just a week after The Beatles . 

“We stayed in a two-room apartment above a mud-wrestling/sex club,” Ric remembers. “The rooms were filled with bunks, and there were probably 10 or 12 people living there. I was 18, Alvin was 17, and we were exposed to prostitutes, pep pills and music 24 hours a day.” 

Alvin confirms that the Hamburg experience was “a real rite of passage. One day I went into the bathroom and there was one bloke sitting on the toilet, a guy in the bath and another guy washing his socks in the bath water. And all of a sudden another bloke runs in and fires a gas gun into the room. It was madness. There was also a scary side to it with the gangsters. One guy had this big welding glove, and when you used to see him going out with it you’d think: ‘Uh-oh, trouble’.”

When the band returned to England, Alvin bought his first Gibson ES335 – which would become his trademark guitar. Ric, who came from nearby Mansfield, replaced the previous drummer in 1965, and soon afterwards they brought in Chick Churchill on keyboards. The following year they started tapping into the burgeoning blues market in Britain that John Mayall had opened up. 

“I threw myself headlong into that,” says Alvin, who had grown up listening to his dad’s collection of pre-war bluesmen such as Big Bill Broonzy, Lonnie Johnson and Josh White. But the jazzier influences in the group meant they were always, as Ric says, “a bit sideways-on to the blues”. 

That paid off when Chick got them an audition for London’s then legendary Marquee Club early in 1967, and equally legendary club manager John Gee was impressed by their version of Woody Herman’s ‘Woodchopper’s Ball’. To celebrate, they changed their name from the now outdated Jaybirds to Ten Years After – which Leo found while flicking through the pages of the Radio Times. 

Via the Marquee, TYA landed a spot on the 1967 Windsor Jazz & Blues Festival (which later became the Reading Festival), and got a standing ovation there in front of 20,000 people. Among them was noted blues producer Mike Vernon, who was there checking out one of his charges, Fleetwood Mac . Vernon later signed Ten Years After to Decca’s new Deram label (ironically, the band had recently failed an audition for Decca). 

In keeping with the times, TYA slapped down their first album inside five days. “Mike could see we were a bit radical as far as his kind of blues was concerned,” Alvin recalls, “but he basically gave us the freedom and said get on with it.” The album caught TYA’s raw, jazzy approach to the blues, which could be high-velocity, as on the opening I Want To Know , or slow, extended and mood-building, on the closing Help Me .

The record was rough and ready, but it attracted the attention of famed American promoter Bill Graham, who was looking for new bands to play his Fillmore venues in San Francisco and New York and figured there must be more where Cream and Hendrix had come from. 

In June 1968 Ten Years After started a seven-week US tour at the Fillmore West: “That first tour was great,” Alvin recalls. “We had such a good time out there. We lost around $35,000, but we got asked back so we knew we were on the way. The strange thing was that we had gone to what I considered to be the home of the blues but they’d never heard of most of them. I couldn’t believe it – ‘Big Bill who?’ We were recycling American music and they were calling it the English sound. And the American bands all had Fender equipment, which sounded really tinny compared with the juicy sound you get from Marshalls.”

We were recycling American music and they were calling it the English sound Alvin Lee

Then, of course, there were the psychedelic delights of the West Coast. TYA had already been part of the London underground scene during 1967’s Summer Of Love; they had even made a whimsical, trippy single in early 1968 called Portable People , and played at the hip Middle Earth. 

Publicity shots of the time reveal TYA’s garish fashion sense: “Ah, Paisley shirts!” Alvin laughs. “That was my girlfriend, Lorraine. She was the wild one. She had me wearing my mother’s curtains for trousers, with those lampshade frills round the bottom. 

“I loved the underground,” he says. It was so experimental. Everything opened up, you could try anything. And by now the drugs were taking effect. That was all part of it – the opening of consciousness.” 

In America, you had to be careful not to find your consciousness expanded unwittingly. “There was one gig at the Fillmore West,” he remembers, “where somebody gave me this joint as we were going on stage. And I, Mr Bravado, had to have a toke. And it turned out to be angel dust. By the time I got to the stage my left leg felt a mile long. I hit the first note on my guitar, and it struck the back of the hall and I saw it bounce back hitting the heads of the audience and ricochet up into the roof. 

"And I was just standing there going: ‘Wow’. I don’t know how I managed to play, but I noticed at one point the band were looking at me strangely. After we finished the song I said: ‘What’s wrong?’ And they said: ‘We just did the same song twice!’. But the audience were in the same state. It didn’t seem to matter."

Needing a new album to promote, TYA hastily recorded a live album at a club called Klook’s Kleek in London. Undead caught the sweaty, small-club atmosphere and the band’s free-form approach to Won’t Be Wrong Always and Woodchoppers Ball , the moody blues of Spider In Your Web and a younger but already potent I’m Going Home . 

“Basically, that album put it in a nutshell,” Alvin reckons. “I was so happy with it. When I first heard it I thought, what are we going to do next? After that my attitude was, ‘Let’s go into the studio and experiment, because we’ve already made the ultimate album’.” 

That’ll be the not-so-subtly titled Stonedhenge , then, Ten Years After’s psychedelic blues album. “Pipes and stuff like that all over the place,” is Alvin’s recollection. “But it was very experimental in places. I was into my musique concrete phase. There’s quite a lot of [avant garde industrial composer] Todd Dockstader in there. It was still very underground at that point, and we were making music for that audience – for ourselves, really, because we were that audience too.”

After we finished the song I said: ‘What’s wrong?’ And they said: ‘We just did the same song twice!’ Alvin Lee

Stonedhenge could fairly claim to by TYA’s most innovative album: light and trippy on the insistent Going To Try and the bouncy Hear Me Calling , a positively spooky on A Sad Song . And despite the substances the band were tight and confident. 

Released in February 1969, the record set up Ten Years After for a momentous year. In fact Woodstock was just one of half a dozen festivals they played that summer, including Texas, Seattle and the prestigious Newport Jazz Festival – the only year rock bands were allowed in. At Flushing Meadow in New York they played alongside Vanilla Fudge and Jeff Beck . 

Led Zeppelin also turned up to check out the competition. In Richard Cole’s notorious Stairway To Heaven kiss-and-tell, the former Zeppelin tour manager relates how Jimmy Page was awestruck by Alvin’s playing. Much to the annoyance of an inebriated John Bonham , who suddenly lurched forward and threw a glass of orange juice over Alvin’s guitar, slowing up his fingerwork as the strings and fretboard got stickier. 

Alvin doesn’t remember anything being thrown, although Ric confirms the story. He also remembers a more amusing incident at the end of the show when he and Bonzo joined Jeff Beck for the encore: “There was Robert Plant, Rod Stewart, Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, and three bassists I think. Bonzo was beating out a riff on the drum kit, so I grabbed a floor tom and started thrumming hell out of it. 

"The crowd were going apeshit as we banged out a blues standard, and Bonham, who was already stripped to the waist, took off his trousers and underpants. He was sitting there naked, playing away. And the police saw him. And then I saw Peter Grant and Richard Cole spotting the police. The number fizzled out, and all I saw was Peter and Richard running on stage, each grabbing one of his arms, and his bare arse disappearing as they carried him off.” 

Alvin tended not to get involved in the rock’n’roll high jinks, however: “The reason I didn’t mix with bands like Led Zeppelin and The Who too much and go in for all that hotel wrecking was that I was a doper; I was always carrying hashish around, and in those days you could get 12 years if you got caught with a joint in somewhere like Texas. 

Even legal drugs such as alcohol could also be hazardous for Alvin, particularly if they were being brandished by someone like Janis Joplin . “She used to chase me around a bit,” he chuckles, “but I wouldn’t have it. She was just too dangerous. 

“There was a show we did with them at the Fillmore East and they were handing her bottles of Southern Comfort on stage and she was drinking them. I thought it must be something like sweet wine. She came off stage and grabbed my ass and gave me a bottle. So I drank it, and promptly collapsed and passed out in a quiet corner. When I woke up it was about five in the morning and there was just some guy sweeping up. I didn’t even know which hotel we were staying at."

In fact, on the Richter scale of rock groups behaving badly Ten Years After barely registered (“I tried to start a food fight one night, and everyone went: ‘Behave yourself’,” Ric admits). So it’s something of a surprise to find them appearing in the grossly overrated movie Groupie . In a scene that attempts to prove guilt by insinuation, Leo is seen with a young lady in a hotel coffee shop, ordering tea, while the soundtrack plays TYA’s Good Morning Little Schoolgirl . 

“Oh boy, was my friend Iris pissed off when she saw the movie,” Leo laughs. “Someone sent me a copy recently, and I watched it while hiding behind the sofa with one eye closed. But it’s pretty tame stuff now. The musical segments are worth watching, but Spinal Tap would be a better buy for the backstage antics.”

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It was TYA’s Ssssh album, recorded just before they embarked on their US summer tour in 1969 – that included Woodstock and the other festivals – that opened up the rift in the band. The album itself wasn’t a problem. After the laidback trip of Stonedhenge , Alvin was up and flying again; his blistering solo on I Woke Up This Morning was a corker, and the reworked riff that anchors Good Morning Little Schoolgirl was tougher than the rest. The problem was the sleeve, which, in Ric’s words, “stuck it to everyone. We’d done a photo session together, and suddenly we were presented with the album cover with just Alvin on the front. And we went: ‘What the fuck is this?’” 

“This” was the new management strategy of putting the focus on Alvin. And Alvin admits the pressure got to him almost immediately: “There’s this story about how I nearly didn’t play Woodstock because I had a bad back. It wasn’t a bad back, it was a bad head. I couldn’t face the tour. I looked at the 13 week list of dates and thought, I’m not going to get through this. 

“I pretty much had a nervous breakdown at the beginning of the tour. I’d done five days of interviews before it started, I’d left my girlfriend back in England, and I really wasn’t feeling very capable. I just collapsed. It was our American manager, Dee Anthony [who went on to manage Peter Frampton ], who got me through it. He used to give me all these pep talks – ‘Stay on the bus. It’s your music. Forget all the bullshit. That one and a half hours on stage is all that counts’. But I was still getting upset. I was still going on stage saying: ‘This is horrible’.” 

Nevertheless, the relentless schedule continued – successfully, too. The 28 US tours they notched up between ’68 and ’74 was unequalled by any other British band. And the albums got bigger. Cricklewood Green (not quite as exotic-sounding as Acapulco Gold or Lebanese Black, admittedly, but then the grass is always greener…), in 1970, cracked the American Top 20 and was TYA’s biggest-selling UK album, helped by the hit single Love Like A Man . Alvin remembers writing most of the songs in the taxi on the way to the studio.

Watt , released at the end of the year, failed to capitalise but Alvin finally got the time he wanted to write songs for the next album, A Space In Time and came up with the band’s biggest hit, the deceptively simple, catchy but left-field I’d Love To Change The World . It was a crucial opportunity for the band. 

“But by then I was too confused to take it,” Alvin says. “‘I’d Love To Change The World’ was a hit, and I hated it because it was a hit. By then I was rebelling. I never played it live. To me it was a pop song.” 

Even worse, Alvin vetoed the record company choice for the follow-up single, which annoyed the head of their US label, the redoubtable Clive Davis, who had earlier told the band: “Give me the tools and I’ll do the job”, and promptly made I’d Love To Change The World a Top Ten hit. 

Ric remembers being invited to a Columbia Records marketing meeting chaired by Davis, with all the radio promotions people saying that Tomorrow I’ll Be Out Of Town was a perfect radio cut. When Ric said the band didn’t want that as a single, Davis growled: “So why is that track on the album? If you want me to do the job, don’t give me the tools and then take them away from me.” 

“He’d been on our side up until then,” Ric says. “But after that the albums never sold as well and we never had another hit. If the artists didn’t co-operate, then the record company would simply move on to one that did; they weren’t going to wait around for us to get our act together. It was a lesson in reality.” 

Not that even Clive Davis could have done much with Rock And Roll To The World which was recorded and sold pretty much on auto pilot. And while Recorded Live fared better, it also highlighted the fact that the core of the set had remained unchanged since Woodstock four years earlier. “What’s the point?” was Alvin’s response. He didn’t have the inclination, he was miserable, and communication within the band was generally reduced to “shouting and screaming matches”.

Leo contends that Alvin in turn made the band’s lives a misery: “It stressed me out so much that I stopped trying to reconcile things. I still enjoyed playing live shows, provided there were no tantrums. If there were confrontations, I stupidly rose to the bait every time.” Amid such an atmosphere, the management kept their distance. 

Eventually TYA took a six-month break for the second half of ’73. Alvin recorded a solo album with gospel singer Mylon Lefevre (who had supported them on tour) at his newly finished home studio. “Mylon was great. He arrived and said: ‘Where do all the musicians hang out?’ I told him the Speakeasy. He went straight off, and came back about six hours later and said: ‘I got us a band.’ And in walked George Harrison , Steve Winwood and Jim Capaldi! Mylon really had a silver tongue. He captivated everyone.” 

Harrison even goaded Alvin into putting on his own gig. Alvin: “He said: ‘I bet you couldn’t.’ And I did. I rang up and got a booking at the Rainbow Theatre. I had 24 songs that hadn’t worked with Ten Years After, and I rehearsed them with a band that included Boz Burrell, Tim Hinkley and Mel Collins.” 

The titles of the Mylon Lefevre album ( On The Road To Freedom ) and Alvin Lee & Co’s live In Flight both seemed to offer broad hints about Alvin’s intentions. But, surprisingly, there was a new TYA album in 1974, Positive Vibrations . Except that it wasn’t. 

Alvin didn’t seem to know what he wanted: “I did an American tour with Alvin Lee & Co. It was all new material; I didn’t play ‘I’m Going Home’ or any of that. We were playing little theatres, getting good reviews. But, to tell you the truth, I did miss the oomph of the audience. I’d got used to that. I mean, they enjoyed it and clapped and stuff, but there wasn’t the oomph there. Then I did a Ten Years After tour and got the oomph back.” 

Not for long, though. Another petulant spat resulted in a threat to put the band on wages. They limped through one more US tour before it all disintegrated. Alvin then embarked on a solo career as Alvin Lee & Co, the Alvin Lee Band, Alvin Lee & Ten Years Later and even plain old Alvin Lee. Meanwhile, the others got on with music-related careers – playing, sessions, producing, managing.

In 1983 Ric got a call from the Marquee presuming that Ten Years After would be playing at the club’s 25th anniversary celebrations. “I rang round the others and said: ‘I think we should do this’.” 

Alvin felt “it showed us we could do it. And it was fun, actually. We had one rehearsal in the afternoon, and then we plugged in and played and it was Ten Years After. That amazed me. And we thought that from that gig there would be a reunion. But it didn’t happen. It was a funny time in music. We weren’t legends, we were old farts.” 

Ten Years After petered out when the bickering started up again. It also hampered subsequent reunions at the end of the 80s and the late 90s which included a nostalgic appearance at the Woodstock 29th anniversary festival, billed as A Day In The Garden. Their reactions to that are revealing. 

Alvin: “It was a big disappointment. There I was, standing in a field that they tell me is exactly where it happened. But the people weren’t there, the vibe wasn’t there. It had nothing to do with it.” 

Leo: “It turned out to be a series of flashbacks for me. We were booked into what used to be the Holiday Inn, Liberty – Tranquility Base in 1969. I didn’t realise until I walked into the hotel bar. It stopped me in my tracks. I swear I could see and hear Jimi, Janis, Jerry [Garcia], Bob [Hite], all of them gone now. We were together in that room 29 years ago.” 

Ric: “Disappointing, really. We hadn’t played for a while. I was certainly rusty. The original thing was funky, this was all very clinical. It was like an MOR concert. Still, at least we had dressing rooms, which we never had the first time…”

It was a funny time in music. We weren’t legends, we were old farts. Alvin Lee

For TYA it all came to a head at the last of a series of European festival shows in 1999. A vicious spat between Leo and Alvin buried any reunion hopes under a mound of perceived grievances on all sides. Alvin went back to his own band, while the others remained together, occasionally playing and recording with various American guitarists. 

However, the success of some Ten Years After reissues – plus a fine previously unreleased 1970 show at New York’s Fillmore East – prompted Ric, Leo and Chick to revive the band again in 2002. After Alvin turned them down again, they went looking for a new guitarist and found one via Leo’s son, who told them about a “shit-hot” guitarist he’d known at school, 25-year-old Joe Gooch. 

“Initially I was sceptical because of his age,” Ric admits, “but as soon as I saw him play I had no doubts.” A couple of European dates convinced all of the band that Joe was the man to replace Alvin. “He has his own style but he can still deliver all the Ten Years After hits,” Ric says. 

Alvin found the new Ten Years After situation “very sad. Ten Years After used to be a credible name and I was proud of it,” the guitarist says. “Now it’s just an embarrassment. I asked them to change the name slightly, so as not to confuse the fans, but they refused.” 

Alvin recorded an album with Elvis Presley’s original backing musicians, guitarist Scotty More and drummer DJ Fontana (“my teenage heroes”) in Nashville, titled In Tennessee , also reckons that “it’s a shame the new guitarist, who must be pretty good to play my licks, is copying somebody else’s style instead of playing his own music. If I had taken a job copying somebody else’s music when I was starting out there would never have been a Ten Years After."

This feature was originally published in 2003, in Classic Rock 56. Alvin Lee died in 2013. Joe Gooch left Ten Years After in 2014 . 

Hugh Fielder has been writing about music for 47 years. Actually 58 if you include the essay he wrote about the Rolling Stones in exchange for taking time off school to see them at the Ipswich Gaumont in 1964. He was news editor of Sounds magazine from 1975 to 1992 and editor of Tower Records Top magazine from 1992 to 2001. Since then he has been freelance. He has interviewed the great, the good and the not so good and written books about some of them. His favourite possession is a piece of columnar basalt he brought back from Iceland.

“I realised on the very first tour that this was no kind of life… Should I be excited about leaving my family? No”: Neil Peart’s love, pain and thoughts on playing live before Rush bowed out

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Listen: remixed version of bob neuwirth’s ‘kiss money,’ 50th anniversary reissue of debut album set for cd and vinyl release, young powerhouse manager jeff delia steers legacy artists to new career heights, shemekia copeland sets the blues bar standard with ‘blame it on eve’.

American Blues Scene

The Complete Ten Years After Woodstock 1969 Standalone Set is a Remasterpiece

David Scott

Watching Ten Years After perform live at Nottingham Boat Club in 1968 whilst a college student was a memorable, thrilling musical experience which has never been surpassed in a lifetime of listening to and reviewing British blues and rock artists. What stood out was not just Alvin’s sheer strength, charismatic stage presence and abundant energy but the depth of feeling and the emotion which he channeled through every note. The synergy between Alvin and Leo was breathtaking, the speed incredible, Ric’s grooves thunderous, Chick Churchill’s swirling Hammond keys harmonious. The whole band’s jamming was inventive whilst also retaining a melodic structure without missing a beat.

tour ten years after

In some respects the early video and audio recordings of Woodstock were disappointing as they did not always reflect the fans’ experiences of how bands like Ten Years After performed. All that changed on August 17 th 2024 with the release of Ten Years After Woodstock 1969 by Chrysalis Records. For the first time in over half a century, blues and rock aficionados across the world are able to hear with superb clarity all five songs and a drum solo giving them a front of stage experience on that unforgettable Sunday night at the greatest festival in the world. For most of us this is the closest we will ever be to Woodstock 1969. 

Making this technological miracle possible were the production staff and cutting edge state of the art equipment, as Paul Cartledge explains:

I work primarily as a sound engineer and producer with a music production and composition company, Yellow Boat Music, based in Soho, in the heart of London’s West End. I jointly own the company along with the music composer and arranger Philip Jewson. Our studio is located within Dean Street Studios and my association with the premises is long and intricately tied up with my background in the music business. At first only one tape was available. It was the section of the show that included “Help Me” and the band’s breathtakingly brilliant performance of “I’m Going Home” that had previously been released. Alvin’s daughter Jasmin (Jazz) wanted to know if the songs could be restored and remixed using modern technology and could that process be extrapolated to include mixing the whole show IF the other tapes could be found and IF the band would agree to such a thing. There was also the benchmark of the well-known and much loved mix of ‘I’m Going Home” to consider. I was given a digital transfer of the 8 track multitrack and got cracking. I didn’t know if a more ‘modern’ approach would work but the more I got into the process the more I enjoyed it so I kept going! It was quite a forensic mission and I dived deep into each track using a multitude of plugins and applications to clean, tidy, polish, de-noise and generally restore each track to sound more like a modern recording. Eventually I thought ‘Help Me’ was good enough to play to Jazz who really enjoyed it. She then encouraged me to attempt ‘I’m Going Home.’ Again she was positive when I played her the first mix. Using those two as examples she was able to get the band on board in principle to mixing the whole set and the great news was that Dermot James and Jeremy Lascelles at Blue Raincoat also had positive feedback. Evi Lee was a great support as was Suzanne Lee Barnes. They told me Alvin was very particular about how his parts sounded and that they were convinced he would have been happy with the results we were getting. We are absolutely delighted with the finished album. It was such a pleasure to work on. There is a copy of ‘Big Red’ at the studio and whenever I felt the mixes were getting close I would pick the guitar up and riff along! Not being a guitarist of Alvin’s facility I will admit to resorting to a bit of air guitar in the fancy bits! There were questions about actually releasing the whole set, but when we put it together it tells a fabulous story. You can hear the band warming up, you can feel the delays and frustration receding as they power up, and when they really start cooking it is triumphant. It’s blistering. When Alvin hits the solo in ‘I’m Going Home’ there is a definite sense that Ten Years After are the best band on the planet at that moment and everyone in the crowd is involved. Listening to the whole set is a very special experience. The blend of band members and the audience interaction is incredibly powerful and we are lucky that Eddie Kramer recorded it for posterity. In my musical heaven, Alvin and the TYA gang will be performing the whole set from Woodstock along with “I’d Love to Change the World” … and they certainly did!

tour ten years after

Jasmin Lee, Managing Director of Dean St Studios gives her verdict on Woodstock 1969 :

I’m so delighted this standalone set of TYA at Woodstock got the love and devotion from Paul Cartledge it deserved!!  After hearing the version put out in 2019 as part of the 38-CD Woodstock Boxset, we were gutted we couldn’t do anything to improve the mix.  After consulting with Blue Raincoat, and the label spending countless hours negotiating the license, it’s now finally seeing the light of day.   This is such an iconic performance and will always hold the most special place in my heart.  A big thanks from me to everyone that was involved, especially Paul Cartledge at Yellow Boat Music, Dean St. Studios and Blue Raincoat Records, but most of all the fabulous Ten Years After! I hope everyone enjoys listening to it as much as we have enjoyed bringing this amazing performance to life.

Apart from the amazing high fidelity soundtrack, the other standout feature is the strong blues focus of the TYA set which accounts for around 50 of the 70 minutes running time. This is not surprising given that Alvin was steeped in the blues from an early age as his first influences were his dad’s rare collection of jazz and blues 78s. Alvin was only 12 years old when he met Big Bill Broonzy when his father brought him home having seen him at a gig in Nottingham This vivid firsthand memory of American blues stayed with Alvin; he loved America and Ten Years After would ultimately tour the USA 28 times in seven years.  

Alvin’s first words to the 500,000 festival goers was the understatement “a bit of old blues to warm us up” to introduce Willie Dixon’s “Spoonful” first recorded by Howlin’ Wolf. With its pounding bass line and metronomic percussion the song was the perfect platform for Alvin’s soulful vocals and tasteful guitar licks of increasing speed and complexity.

Despite the false starts, “Good Morning Little Schoolgirl” is a classic interpretation of the Sonny Boy Williamson original with its deep and provocative meaning reflected in Alvin’s vocal delivery. Trademark solos are played at lightning speed and the dueling with Leo’s pulsating bass is phenomenal. 

On “The Hobbit,” Ric Lee exhibits all of the characteristics which make a great drum solo; musicality, innovation, power, speed, precision and technique. His intricate stick work including carefully executed and accentuated rimshots on snare and cymbals is impeccable. These qualities, particularly high velocity, made him a perfect fit for the band as few drummers could keep up with the relentless pace set by Alvin and Leo. The intervals of light and shade in Ric’s playing, plus extended drum rolls, deservedly won generous applause.

Al Kooper’s “I Can’t Keep From Crying Sometimes” based on the Blind Willie Johnson original is a masterclass in keyboard playing from Churchill The interplay between Alvin and Chick has never been more inspirational than on this album, a series of crescendos taking the extended version of this song to a new level. Alvin introduces jazz phrases, rhythms and even violin sounds from his considerable repertoire.

The captivating keyboard dominates the dramatic intro to the 1963 blues classic “Help Me” alongside Alvin’s blues-drenched vocals and piercing six-string interpolations. Drums and bass increasingly come to the fore, driving this blues tour de force towards its central theme of despair.

The album’s iconic finale, the mesmeric  “I’m Going Home,” is more than a rock and roll medley; it is a national anthem which cemented Lee’s reputation as Captain Speedfingers. However, he was not just the fastest in the west but also the most innovative, powerful, tasteful and above all, respected guitarist of his generation.

Alvin deserves to have the final say about Woodstock:

We had to hang around for several hours due to a storm and they’d run out of ciggies backstage so I volunteered to go out in the audience and blag some and I came back with about 30, so I was quite popular. We were then told that we couldn’t go on stage in case we got electrocuted as there was still some rain and I just said, ‘Oh come on, if I die at Woodstock we’ll sell lots of records.’  Actual playing wise it didn’t seem that special, and the solo on the movie sounds pretty rough to me these days, but it had the energy which was what Ten Years After were all about at the time. Even after we’d done the gig, apart from being declared a national disaster by the US government, it didn’t seem that big a deal. I think the movie is what made it big and suddenly I was on all three screens. I never wanted to be singled out but when you are the lead guitarist and the singer you get the spotlight whether you want it or not.

tour ten years after

ALVIN LEE: Vocals, Guitar

LEO LYONS: Bass

RIC LEE: Drums

CHICK CHURCHILL:  Organ, Piano

Recorded at the Woodstock Festival, Bethel, New York

Executive Producer: Dermot James

Product Manager: Dan Walton

Design: Ryan Art

Sleeve Notes: Chris Welch

Mixed by Paul Cartledge (Yellow Boat Music)

Mastered by Phil Kinrade at AIR Mastering

Special thanks to: Jasmin Lee, Evi Lee, Suzanne Wigley, Ric Lee, Chick Churchill, Leo Lyons, Chris Kimsey, Jeremy Lascelles, Robin Millar and Chris Wright.

CHRYSALIS RECORDS

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Review/gallery: tab benoit and anders osborne bring the thunder to tucson, sean taylor finds hope at ‘the end of the rainbow’, shawn hall, aka the harpoonist, set to release solo album ‘did we come here to dance’ on october 4, ten years after premiere their complete 1969 woodstock festival set.

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Past Events

Here are the most recent UK tour dates we had listed for Ten Years After. Were you there?

  • Sun 21 May London, Bush Hall Chelsea Blues, Rhythm & Rock Festival 2023 Ten Years After, Catfish, Mississippi MacDonald, Brave Rival, Robert J Hunter
  • Fri 12 May Grimsby, Yardbirds Ten Years After

August 2022

  • Fri 19 Aug → Sun 21 Aug Faversham, Mount Ephraim Gardens A New Day Festival 2022 Jethro Tull, Ten Years After, Hugh Cornwell Electric, Stray, Kaz Hawkins…

January 2022

  • Mon 24 Jan London, 100 Club January Blues Festival 2022 Ten Years After, Ric Lee, Chick Churchill, Colin Hodgkinson, Marcus Bonfanti
  • Fri 21 Jan → Mon 24 Jan Butlins Minehead Giants of Rock Nazareth, Atomic Rooster, Ten Years After, FM, King King…
  • Fri 14 Jan → Mon 17 Jan Skegness, Butlins The Great British Rock & Blues Festival Walter Trout, Ten Years After, Dr Feelgood, Chicago Living Legends, Nine Below Zero…
  • Sat 20 Jul Hampton Open Air Swimming Pool The Blues Band, Ten Years After

September 2018

  • Sat 22 Sep O2 Academy Edinburgh Edinburgh Blues 'n' Rock Festival 2018 Ten Years After, Dana Fuchs, The Rising Souls, The Mitch Laddie Band, Mitch Laddie…
  • Sat 15 Apr → Sun 16 Apr O2 Academy Sheffield HRH Blues Weekend 3 King King, Ten Years After, Simon McBride, Pig Iron, Erja Lyytinen…
  • Sat 16 Apr O2 Academy Sheffield The Yardbirds, Ten Years After, Mick Ralphs Blues Band, Larry Miller, The Graveltones, Pig Iron, Henry's Funeral Shoe, Sugarman Sam & The Voodoo Men …
  • Fri 15 Apr Southampton, The 1865 Ten Years After
  • Fri 16 Jul Abertillery Blues Festival Ten Years After, Gregg Wright Blues Band, Mud Morganfield AKA Muddy Waters Jr, King King Ft. Alan Nimmo, Mojojim and The Muddy Wulfs, Mike Markey And Nick Jones, Paul Lamb And The Kingsnakes, Kyla Brox Band, Big Mamma's Door, Chantel McGregor Mud Morganfield (AKA Muddy Waters Jr)…
  • Sat 19 Jun Ross-On-Wye, Alma Inn Ten Years After, The Stumble, Hokie Joint, Eugene 'Hideaway' Bridges, Rory Ellis, Nico Backton …

November 2008

  • Sun 30 Nov Dudley, JB's Ten Years After

September 2008

  • Thu 25 Sep Inverness, The Ironworks Ten Years After
  • Wed 17 Sep Dudley, JB's Ten Years After

Ten Years After image © Image by Blackham

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Tiger woods involved in pga tour-saudi meeting in nyc to work on liv golf agreement.

Golf great Tiger Woods is reportedly taking part in planned talks between the PGA Tour and reps from Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund in New York this week. 

ESPN reported the talks were taking place over multiple days as the two sides attempted to hammer out a deal that would see the PIF invest more than $1 billion into PGA Tour Enterprise and could end the longstanding war between the Tour and LIV Golf. 

The PIF has financed the rebel golf league since its launch three years ago and started a division inside the sport.

Tiger Woods is reportedly involved in the PGA Tour's talks with the Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund in NYC.

Woods, along with golfer Adam Scott, PGA Tour Enterprises chairman Joe Gorder and Fenway Sports Group owner John W. Henry, have been negotiating with the PIF over an agreement. 

The PGA Tour and PIF made the shocking announcement on June 6, 2023 that they signed a framework agreement that would bring the sides together. 

However, a deadline to reach an agreement expired on Dec. 31, and the sides have continued to try to work on a deal.

The PGA Tour has yet to reach and agreement with the Saudi-backed LIV Golf.

The talks between the sides in New York have drawn criticism from 9/11 Justice , a group that has accused the Saudi government of supporting terrorists and took umbrage with the fact the meetings are taking place near the anniversary of the attacks. 

“Tomorrow, we commemorate the 23rd anniversary of the 9/11 tragedy, yet here we are today, in New York City, down the street from Ground Zero, and the PGA Tour and Tiger Woods are negotiating with them,” president of 9/11 Justice Brett Eagleson said in a statement to ESPN. “As has been confirmed in the last few weeks by CBS reporting, the Saudi Arabian government played a role in the horrific attacks of 9/11.

“It is disgusting, unacceptable, and incredibly painful that the Tour and Woods would do this — especially now.”

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Simone Biles talks new GOAT tour, mental health after 2024 Olympics

Biles, the most decorated gymnast of all time, talks to nbc 5 about texas talent, mental health, and her new goat tour, by laura harris • published august 6, 2024 • updated on august 6, 2024 at 9:36 am.

Simone Biles , from Spring, Texas, is the undisputed greatest gymnast of all time. The four Olympic medals she won in Paris were just icing on the cake for a career that has spanned three Games.

“You know, it's bittersweet,” Biles said. “You’ve worked your whole life for moments like this and you almost take it for granted how fast it goes. Last night I definitely had a good cry about it, because I couldn’t believe it was over I called my mom and my sister and I was like, ‘It’s done’. But they were happy tears.”

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On the gold medal team with Biles in the team all-around competition was Plano-transplant Hezly Rivera , who at 16 years old was the youngest member of Team USA.

“She made it here so fast! She is so strong. She’s a great competitor. I was super excited to have her on the team with us. She is like our little baby Hezly ! To just be able to guide her through this process, I don’t believe this will be her last Olympics,” Biles said.

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Rewatch Simone Biles' showstopping performances from the Paris Olympics

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She also talked about why it is so important for her to be open about her mental health.

“For me, it’s about being relatable. It takes vulnerability. It takes some strength and some courage. Through therapy, I found that’s where I find my strength. If it can help a little girl out there or even a little boy or a grown person, then that’s what I’m going to do,” Biles said.

She said what she is doing now is paving the way for the future .

“I really do this to inspire the younger generation. That’s exactly why we’re doing it. Finding joy and making sure that they have an easier ride than we are. If we can give any tips, pointers, helpers. That’s what I want to do. Hopefully, they’ll be in the crowd at the Gold Over America Tour,” Biles said.

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They will bring their talents from the world stage to the GOAT stage in a high-flying pop concert-style spectacle. Other cast members joining them on tour include Katelyn Ohashi, Peng-Peng Lee, Mélanie Johanna De Jesus Dos Santos, Casimir Schmidt, and more to be named.

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NEWS... BUT NOT AS YOU KNOW IT

Zhao Xintong’s return to snooker after match-fixing scandal: where, when and against who?

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Betfred World Snooker Championship - Day Six

Zhao Xintong is returning to snooker after serving his ban for his part in a serious match-fixing scandal, although it will only be on the amateur circuit for now.

10 players were hit with bans in June last year, with Zhao handed the shortest of the punishments which expired on 1 September 2024.

The former UK Championship and German Masters champion had been found in breach of being party to another player fixing two matches and betting on snooker matches himself.

With his ban now at an end, the 27-year-old will enter the next Q Tour event, to be held from 20-22 September in Sofia, Bulgaria .

Q Tour is a series of amateur tournaments, with the top ranked player from the string of seven events earning a place on the professional circuit. There is also a Q Tour Global Playoff at the end of the season featuring players who have performed well over the campaign, with another place on the World Snooker Tour available to the winners.

The first event was held in Leeds last month – won by Estonia’s Andres Petrov – with the next in Bulgaria next week, followed by tournaments in Sweden, Manchester, Austria, Switzerland and Landywood.

Zhao will be hoping to do well enough in those competitions to earn himself a place on the World Snooker Tour for the next two years.

Zhao Xintong

His first match back in the sport will be against Lithuania’s Vilius Schulte-Ebbert on Friday 20 September at 11am UK time.

The Chinese Billiards and Snooker Association (CBSA) took the step of extending the bans for the guilty players, with Zhao remaining banned until July 2025, although the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association has confirmed that only applies to mainland China.

‘The Chinese Billiards and Snooker Association has now confirmed that their sanction only applies to mainland China and that Zhao Xintong is permitted to play in events outside of China from the end of his WPBSA suspension,’ the WPBSA stated.

‘Zhao will have served the suspension imposed by the Independent Disciplinary Commission by 1st September 2024, and he has paid his costs order. This means that he is eligible to play in WPBSA-governed events from 2nd September 2024.’

Yan Bingtao Zhao Xintong

Speaking to Metro last month , WPBSA chairman Jason Ferguson said of Zhao: ‘He is young enough and talented enough to make a comeback in the sport.  We also recognise that he got caught up in something in which he was perhaps not one of the main perpetrators.’

Four-time world champion John Higgins expects a swift return to the professional ranks for the two-time ranking event winner now he is back on the baize.

‘He’s served his time now,’ Higgins told the Daily Record . ‘He’s a great young talent for the game. He looked as if he was going to be one of the top players in the world. I’ve heard he’s still been practicing really hard and I’m sure he will fit back in seamlessly. He’s too talented not to get back on the tour.’

Of the other players suspended as part of the match-fixing scandal, Chang Bingyu is the next to see his ban end on 7 December 2024.

Yan Bingtao was the other major-winner to be banned, but he remains out of the game until 11 December 2027, while Liang Wenbo and Li Hang were handed lifetime bans.

For more stories like this,  check our sport page .

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COMMENTS

  1. Ten Years After tour dates 2024

    After a one-off reunion at the Reading festival in 1983, a lineup that closely resembled the original one reformed to tour in 1988, releasing a new album, About Time, the following year. That lineup underwent a dramatic reshuffle earlier this year, perhaps prompted by the death of Alvin Lee last year; Leo Lyons and Joe Gooch left the band, and ...

  2. Ten Years After Concert & Tour History (Updated for 2024)

    Ten Years After Concert & Tour History (Updated for 2024)

  3. Ten Years After Tickets, 2024 Concert Tour Dates

    Rating: 4 out of 5 Fun show, many great names from the past by Steavis on 8/19/13 Bergen Performing Arts Center - Englewood. It was great to see all those classic performers. Two of my all time favorite bands are Canned Heat and Ten Years After and this was the first time I had seen either one.

  4. Ten Years After Tickets, Tour Dates & Concerts 2025 & 2024

    Ten Years After Tickets, Tour Dates & Concerts 2025 & 2024

  5. Ten Years After Concerts & Live Tour Dates: 2024-2025 Tickets

    There were efforts to mount a reunion in the late 80's and 1990's and a band by the name of Ten Years After did tour..and continue to do so worldwide as a fantastic blues-rock band with Joe Gooch as lead guitarist and Leo Lyons, Ric Lee and Chick Churchill from the original band. Find tickets for Ten Years After concerts near you.

  6. Ten Years After

    About Ten Years After. Ten Years After are an English blues rock band, most popular in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Between 1968 and 1973, Ten Years After scored eight Top 40 albums on the UK Albums Chart. In addition they had twelve albums enter the US Billboard 200, and are best known for tracks such as "I'm Going Home", "Hear Me Calling ...

  7. Ten Years After

    Ten Years After - Band. 218,565 likes · 2,304 talking about this. Official Facebook page for the band Ten Years After

  8. Ten Years After

    Ten Years After

  9. Ten Years After

    Find concert tickets for Ten Years After upcoming 2024 shows. Explore Ten Years After tour schedules, latest setlist, videos, and more on livenation.com

  10. Ten Years After Tickets, 2024 Concert Tour Dates

    Find the best prices on Ten Years After tickets on SeatGeek. Discover Ten Years After concerts, schedule, venues and more. Tickets protected by Buyer Guarantee.

  11. Ten Years After

    in chronological order. TYA - The Classic Years. Alvin Lee Leo Lyons Chick Churchill Ric Lee. TEN YEARS AFTER. The Era From 2002 - 2013. Leo Lyons Chick Churchill Ric Lee Joe Gooch. Photo Gallery and Concert Reviews. TYA Line-Up since 2014. Ric Lee Chick Churchill Marcus Bonfanti Colin Hodginson.

  12. TourDateSearch.com: Ten Years After tour dates

    Ten Years After. Shows: 1321. Earliest: Jun 30, 1967. Latest: Jul 12, 2024. Next Show: Sun Oct 20,2024 at Arcada Theatre in Saint Charles, IL. view all upcoming shows >. Tweet. [WikiPedia] Ten Years After are a British blues rock group, most popular in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Between 1968 and 1973, the band had eight consecutive Top 40 ...

  13. Ten Years After Tickets

    View More >. Ten Years After is an English blues rock band, most popular in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Between 1968 and 1973, the band scored eight Top 40 albums in the UK Albums Chart ...

  14. The troubled tale of Ten Years After: from Woodstock to the world

    The troubled tale of Ten Years After: from Woodstock to ...

  15. The Complete Ten Years After Woodstock 1969 Standalone Set is a

    Alvin was only 12 years old when he met Big Bill Broonzy when his father brought him home having seen him at a gig in Nottingham This vivid firsthand memory of American blues stayed with Alvin; he loved America and Ten Years After would ultimately tour the USA 28 times in seven years. Alvin's first words to the 500,000 festival goers was the ...

  16. Ten Years After Concert Setlists

    Get Ten Years After setlists - view them, share them, discuss them with other Ten Years After fans for free on setlist.fm! setlist.fm Add Setlist. Search Clear ... Ten Years After Concert Setlists & Tour Dates. Upcoming Shows. Date and Venue Doors Scheduled. Oct 12 2024. La Traverse Cléon, France Add time. Add time Add times.

  17. Ten Years After Tour Archive

    Background This is a website dedicated to the archival of Ten Years After tour dates from the beginning in June 1967 until June 1974 when Alvin Lee initially set out on his own and then the "Farewell Tour" in North America July - September 1975.Over time we hope this archival collection will include setlists, photos, ticket stubs, posters, performance reviews and of course details of ...

  18. Ten Years After Concert Map

    1. View the concert map Statistics of Ten Years After by tour and year!

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  20. TEN YEARS AFTER

    Ten Years After - Tour Dates 2019 Colin Hodgkinson, Ric Lee, Chick Churchill, Marcus Bonfanti. TOURDATES 2019 / 2020. TEN YEARS AFTER - 2019 28.09.2019 D-HELMBRECHTS, Bürgersaal - SOLD OUT 01.10.2019 D-HAMBURG, Fabrik - The original Woodstock Legends Live In Concert ... The official TYA website www.ten-years-after.co.uk. Last Update: 18 ...

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  22. Ten Years After

    Ten Years After

  23. Ten Years After tour dates & tickets 2024

    Abertillery Blues Festival. Ten Years After, Gregg Wright Blues Band, Mud Morganfield AKA Muddy Waters Jr, King King Ft. Alan Nimmo, Mojojim and The Muddy Wulfs, Mike Markey And Nick Jones, Paul Lamb And The Kingsnakes, Kyla Brox Band, Big Mamma's Door, Chantel McGregor Mud Morganfield (AKA Muddy Waters Jr)…. June 2010.

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  27. Ten Years After Tour Archive

    Ten Years After concert tour archive . Menu. TEN YEARS AFTER TOUR ARCHIVE 1971 (ALVIN LEE, LEO LYONS, CHICK CHURCHILL, RIC LEE) (updated 8/23/22) 2/24/1971 Odense, DEN, Fyens Forum 2/25/1971 Stockholm, SWE, Konserthaus Mick Abrahams Band 2/26/1971 Gothenburg, SWE ...

  28. Ten Years After Tour Archive

    Ten Years After concert tour archive . Menu. TEN YEARS AFTER TOUR ARCHIVE 1970 (ALVIN LEE, LEO LYONS, CHICK CHURCHILL, RIC LEE) update (11/17/22) 1/24/1970 Liverpool, ENG, University Students Union Jan Dukes de Grey 1/30/1970 Sunderland, ENG, Locarno Junco Partners 2/8/1970 London, ENG, Lyceum ...

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