Despite their
slightly unimaginative name, The Phantoms’ history is far from the usual. As a
local band composed of underage teens from the seaside town of Buckie,
Scotland, they didn’t have much to expect as far as stardom is concerned. They
were one of many groups playing mostly weekend dance gigs in the neighbouring
areas, far from big cities and far from record label talent hunters. They
didn’t get a chance to make a record in their country. They got in communist
Poland, which they toured in the summer of 1966, giving concerts on the
country’s biggest stages, treated as top shelf beat stars.
The Phantoms' EPs, released in 1966 on the Pronit label. |
The band was most likely formed in 1964 by local teenagers: Stuart Geddes, Frank Hay, William Smith, Stephen Wojcik and Brian Calder, aged 15-17. Shortly after their formation, the band came second in the North East Beat Group competition held in the village of Kemnay in October 1964. The Phantoms played their first paid gig in Nairn in the same month and it was then that a legal problem occurred. Three of the band’s members were too young to play for money according to the Scottish law and as a result, their promoter Albert Bonici was fined with the princely sum of 2 pounds and the fathers of the underage musicians were admonished. The band continued to give concerts on a regular basis in 1965, participating in the Cullen House Beat Festival held in September, where they shared the stage with fifteen other beat groups, including Manchester’s The Toggery Five who had released two singles on Parlophone.
Somewhere between
1965 and 1966 The Phantoms’ line-up underwent several changes. The summer of
1966 would see the band composed of : William Smith – aged 17 – lead guitar;
Steve Coull – aged 15 – saxophone; Stephen Wojcik – aged 16 – electric organ,
vocals; Stewart Geddes – 16 – drums and Eric Farquhar – 16 – bass, vocals. This
period marked the most important event in the group’s history as Stephen
Wojcik’s father Emil, a Polish immigrant, took on the role of the Phantoms’
manager and organized a six-week concert tour of beat-hungry communist Poland,
which allowed the boys to taste what they could never expect in their homeland:
stardom.
Promoted as “the
youngest British beat group” and “the first Scottish band in Poland”, they
played to tens of thousands strong crowds of enthusiastic Polish audience, who
treated the Scots almost as if they were one of the biggest rock bands of the
time. No one really knew whether The Phantoms’ had had any success in the
United Kingdom or whether they had released any records. All that counted was
that they were British and that they played decent cover versions of the
English hit-makers such as The Small Faces and The Hollies. Poles crowded
beneath the stages not only to hear the music but also and perhaps more importantly
just to see them, to get a glimpse of the way the group dressed, to see what
equipment they had. Although The Phantoms were far from being the first British
rock act to tour Poland (Robb Storme and The Whispers and The London Beats
visited the country in 1964), their gigs were a major attraction. From late
July to the last days of August, they shared the country’s biggest stages with
the most prominent Polish beat groups such as Niebiesko-Czarni (The
Blue-Blacks). The Phantoms’ Polish tour culminated on August 21 1966 with two
concerts at one of Warsaw’s biggest venues: The Gwardia Hall.
Just like The London
Beats, at some point during its visit to communist Poland the Buckie group was
approached by the state-owned recording company Polskie Nagrania for a
recording session which resulted in three extraordinarily rare EP sides
released shortly after on the Pronit label:
N0432 – “Hello
Josephine” / “What Kind of Girl” / “Talking About You” / “Since I Lost My Baby”
N0434 – “You Must
Believe Me” / “Hey Girl” (side A only, side B contained two tracks by Polish
beat group Pięć Linii).
Pronit N0432 - side A |
Pronit N0432 - side B |
Pronit N0424 - side A |
The recording quality
is surprisingly good for what presumably was a makeshift session and it does
justice to the band’s musical abilities which were not too shabby bearing in
mind their young age. The Phantoms could rock, projecting sharp guitar riffs -
their cover of The Small Faces’ “Hey Girl” comes rather close to the
mesmerizingly dirty sound of Steve Marriott. The group played a rather wide
variety of teenage dance music, going further than just copying what was
successful on the British charts of the time. Their first two sides are filled
with refreshed cover versions of Fats Domino’s “Hello Josephine”, Chuck Berry’s
“Talking About You” and a great, raw, soulful rendition of The Temptations’ “Since
I Lost My Baby”. The only thing that keeps these 7-inchers from being one of
garage rock holy grails are Eric Farquhar’s vocals which may seem a bit
unconvincing and mild-mannered. On the other hand, what should you expect from
a 16 year old vocalist from an unimportant local beat band?
The huge amount of
errors on their first record’s label may be a symptom of haste to release the
material as quickly as possible. All of the tracks are mistakenly credited to
The Phantoms, save for “Since I Lost My Baby” which is mysteriously described
as The Copycats’ composition. Who were The Copycats and how did they find
themselves on the label? Buckie Advertiser snippets available at the Buckie
& District Fishing Heritage Centre mention another local beat group under
this name, active contemporarily with The Phantoms. It could be that the latter
learned the song from The Copycats, perhaps unaware of it’s proper source.
The two EPs must have
been pressed in very limited quantities and due to lack of publicity, they
didn’t sell too well. Nowadays they are probably the rarest beat 45s released
in 1960s communist Poland. Compared to other records of this genre released
through every one of the three recording labels active in the country, The
Phantoms are close to being unfindable unless one wishes to spend several years
searching for a playable copy.
The band continued to
gig with variable regularity, playing local concerts in Buckie and neighbouring
areas at least until 1969, unable to reclaim their short spell in the
limelight. The Phantoms were one of hundreds if not thousands amateur beat
groups active in mid-1960s UK and if it hadn’t been for their brief stay behind
the Iron Curtain, they would have been easily forgotten. Apprentice technicians
practicing their licks between other daily activities in their homeland, in
Poland they were heroes, at least during their stay as nowadays, the band
remains completely unknown and wasn’t mentioned in any publication on the
subject of 1960s Polish beat scene.
The Phantoms' recordings are available here.
The Phantoms' recordings are available here.
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