The Birds

  • London, England
    hometown
  • Classic Rock
    genre
  • 1964
    started
  • Bio
    full story
  • Share
  • Similar
Close

About The Birds


The Birds were one of the hard-luck outfits in the annals of '60s British rock. By reputation, they were one of the top R&B-based outfits in England during the mid-'60s, with a sound as hard and appealing as the Who, the Yardbirds, or the Small Faces. In contrast to a lot of other acts that never charted a hit, the Birds are remembered slightly by some serious fans, and are mentioned in several history books -- but for entirely the wrong reasons. The Birds are remembered for the fact that Ron Wood got his start in the band before moving on to bigger things with the Faces and the Rolling Stones; and that they shared a name, albeit spelled differently, with an American band of considerable prominence. Nobody knows a lot about their music, however, which, on record, consisted of fewer than a dozen songs. Ron Wood (guitar, harmonica, vocals), Tony Munroe (guitar, vocals), and Kim Gardner (bass) grew up within a block of each other, along with original drummer Bob Langham (succeeded by Pete Hocking, aka Pete McDaniels), and had gotten together with lead singer Ali McKenzie to form a band in 1964, while all were in their teens. They were based in Yiewsley in West London, and played the local community center regularly, building up a serious following, which led to their turning professional. The name the Birds came about when they were forced to change their original name, the Thunderbirds, owing to the name of Chris Farlowe's backing band of the period. Their music was hard R&B with a real edge to to it, and was good enough to get them into in a battle-of-the-bands contest held under the aegis of Ready, Steady, Go, the weekly music showcase series. They didn't win, but got a television appearance out of it, on which they were spotted by executives from Decca -- a contract followed, resulting in the recording of their first single, "You Don't Love Me," in November of 1964. Early the following spring, they tried again with a second single, "Leaving Here," which they got to perform on television.

The group seemed poised for success. Their bookings placed them ahead of the Pretty Things and the early Jeff Beck group the Tridents, and they were billed with the Who on some of the same gigs. In that company, there seemed to be no way that they could fail, especially with their sound, a loud, crunchy brand of British rhythm & blues-based rock, roughly akin to early Who, the Yardbirds, and the Kinks.

Disaster struck the band from a completely unexpected quarter -- across the Atlantic -- at in the spring of 1965, however. Fresh off of their first U.S. hit came a Los Angeles-based quintet called the Byrds. Their debut single, "Mr. Tambourine Man," released on the newly established British CBS Records label, was burning up the British charts, and "Leaving Here" by the Birds was left there, on record store shelves (when it was ordered at all). That summer the rival group toured England for the first time, and although the Birds' manager tried to take legal action, it was to no avail -- the spellings were different, and both groups' claim to the name were about equally good. A third Decca single in late 1965 brought their relationship with that label to an end. The group then moved to Reaction Records, at first under the name Birds Birds, but their debut single for the label, "Say Those Magic Words," was delayed in release for almost a year due to a contractual dispute. They also cut a version of Pete Townshend's "Run Run Run" highlighted by Wood's crunchy guitar and McKenzie's punked-out vocals, that could've given the Who a run for their money in a chase up the charts by rival singles. And they got one delightfully bizarre film appearance under their belt, performing a Ron Wood/Tony Munroe song, "That's All I Need," in the horror chiller The Deadly Bees, in 1966. Munroe was out of the band not long after, and Wood left in 1967, passing through the lineup of the Jeff Beck Group before joining the reconfigured (Small) Faces with Rod Stewart in 1969.

The Birds were one of the better bands of their era, as evidenced by the large following they built up from their live performances, playing a hard, loud brand of R&B, with polished vocals and a forceful, crunchy guitar sound. They weren't far removed from the Small Faces or the Who in sound, and perhaps they might've fared better, or had a longer run at success, if they hadn't been signed to a label that already had the Small Faces and the Rolling Stones under contract. The name confusion probably killed whatever chance they had of cracking the English charts, as well as eclipsing their musical virtues for posterity. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

Scroll up Scroll down

News

From position 0, showing 6 items, asking 10
See All
  • The Birds
    'Star Trek Into Darkness' Spoiler Special: Burning Questions Answered
    MTV News
    May 20, 2013
    Co-writer Damon Lindelof exclusively addresses the mysteries surrounding the blockbuster.
    Read More
  • The Birds
    MTV Artist To Watch: Jake Bugg
    MTV Buzzworthy
    May 20, 2013
    Meet MTV's latest Artist To Watch: freewheeling alt-folk wunderkind Jake Bugg. When The Telegraph calls you "an East Midlands Bob Dylan ," you...
    Read More
  • The Birds
    Hangout Hotties Chrissy Teigen + Katherine Webb Brave The Mega Drop
    VH1 Tuner
    May 19, 2013
    Want to watch us drop two models from 10 stories? Good, because our kick ass correspondent Chrissy Teigen and hometown hero Katherine Webb were more...
    Read More
  • The Birds
    Kendrick Lamar Jets In For Huge Hangout Festival Set
    MTV News
    May 19, 2013
    Compton MC caught a private plane to make it for his hour-long shout-along with a superfan Alabama crowd.
    Read More
  • The Birds
    Kendrick Lamar Jets In For Huge Hangout Festival Set
    MTV News
    May 19, 2013
    Compton MC caught a private plane to make it for his hour-long shout-along with a superfan Alabama crowd.
    Read More
  • The Birds
    Kendrick Lamar Brings Great Vibes To Hangout Music Festival
    MTV RapFix
    May 19, 2013
    By Sowmya Krishnamurthy "This will be the livest motherf--king show," Kendrick Lamar said at one point during his set at the Hangout Music Festiv...
    Read More

Tour Dates

From position 0, showing 1 items, asking 50
See All
  • Apr 26 Thursday
    Osaka, Japan Municipal Central Gymnasium
    Buy Ticket
Are You The Birds? Claim this page | Learn more about Artists.MTV | FAQ for Artists
The Birds Bio | The Birds Tour Dates |
MTV | MTV Jobs | Privacy Policy | User Content Agreement | Copyright | Artist Index | Social Projects Agreements | Ad Choices |
Portions of this page powered by
This site contains content from artists, fans, and writers from around the internet in it's natural form. Such content is not representative of Viacom Media Networks.

©2012 Viacom International Inc. All Rights Reserved. MTV and all related titles and logos are trademarks of Viacom International Inc.

  • Explore
    • Popular
    • Emerging
    • Genres
      • Rock
      • Hip Hop
      • Indie
      • Electronic/EDM
      • Country
      • Pop
    • Collections
    • Artist To Watch
  • Search
  • Are you an artist?
    • Claim Your Page
    • Learn More
    • FAQ
    • Opportunities