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The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore | The Walker Brothers | 03:03 | |
Make It Easy On Yourself | The Walker Brothers | 03:12 | |
No Regrets | The Walker Brothers | 05:43 | |
The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore | The Walker Brothers | 03:14 | |
Land Of 1000 Dances | The Walker Brothers | 02:36 | |
Love Minus Zero | The Walker Brothers | 03:06 | |
Stay With Me Baby | The Walker Brothers | 03:16 | |
After The Lights Go Out | The Walker Brothers | 04:02 | |
Stand By Me | The Walker Brothers | 03:57 | |
Deadlier Than The Male | The Walker Brothers | 02:33 |
Shutout | |
Fat Mama Kick | |
Nite Flights | |
The Electrician |
John Maus had already achieved a mild degree of success in the duo John and Judy with his sister after adopting the surname Walker when he met bass player Scott Engel (of The Routers). They joined The Surfaris and then formed the Walker Brothers Trio with drummer Al 'Tiny' Schneider. They later released one single 'Pretty Girls Everywhere' and appeared on various TV shows as a duo after Schneider's departure. New drummer Gary Leeds (of The Standells) - who had recently toured the UK with P.J. Proby - persuaded them to try their luck in Britain and, with Scott Engel's deep voice and moody persona taking the central spotlight previously occupied by John Walker, they quickly found a teen audience in the UK, getting to number one in 1965 with a dramatic orchestral arrangement of 'Make It Easy On Yourself', a Bacharach-David song that had previously been a hit for Jerry Butler.
Other major hits like 'My Ship Is Coming In', 'The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Any More' and 'Another Tear Falls' swiftly followed as The Walker Brothers became one of the era's most successful acts. With Scott Walker reacting badly to the pressures of fame howver, often suffering from stage fright, they split in 1968. They reformed six years later, returning to the charts with a cover of Tom Rush's 'No Regrets', recording three more albums 'No Regrets' (1975), 'Lines' (1976) and 'Nite Flights' (1978) before splitting again in 1978. John Walker died in May 2011 and Scott Walker died in March 2019, aged 67 and 76, respectively.