The Equals

The Equals
Release date
01 January 1970
The Equals
01 January 1970 |

If you are interested in booking The Equals, please contact one of our agents: info@international-artists.com

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An energetic East London combo, the Equals balanced maximum R&B with plenty of pop, plus a few nods to
vocalist Eddy Grant‘s West Indian background. Grant, born in British Guyana, moved to England with his family at
the age of 12, and settled in a council estate named Hornsey Rise in northeast London. Four years later, he formed
the Equals with schoolmates Lincoln Gordon (guitar), his twin brother Dervin Gordon (originally the vocalist), Pat
Lloyd (guitar, then bass), and drummer John Hall. The band began gigging around London, amazing audiences with
their apparently limitless energy and a distinct style fusing pop, blues, and R&B plus elements of ska and bluebeat.

By 1965, the Equals began doing dates in Europe as well, and released their first single.
Though “Hold Me Closer” didn’t perform on the charts, DJs began playing the flip side and by 1967 “Baby, Come Back” had hit the top of the charts in Germany and the Netherlands. One year later, the single hit number one in
Britain as well, and brushed the charts in America. Subsequent singles lacked the immediate punch of “Baby, Come
Back,” however, and the Equals landed only two more Top Ten hits: “Viva Bobby Joe” and “Black Skin Blue Eyed Boys,” the latter an apt message track from one of the few racially mixed bands of the era.

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For more information and available dates for The Equals, please contact one of our agents: info@international-artists.com

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