Nuggets II: No Good Without You Baby by The Birds

Even though they were better at spelling, they weren’t as successful as America’s Byrds.

  • Track 98, disc 4
  • Year: 1965
  • From: London, United Kingdom.
8/10

More about Nuggets II

Credits

PERSONNEL/ALI McKENZIE: vocals * RON WOOD: lead guitar, vocals * TONY MUNROE: rhythm guitar, vocals * KIM GARDNER: bass, vocals * PETE McDANIELS: drums
Produced by FRANKLIN BOYD
Recorded in London, England
Decca single #F-12257 (1965)

The Birds

It must be frustrating when another band forms in the same year, shares your name, spells it wrong, but goes on to worldwide success. Meanwhile, despite your superior spelling skills, you struggle in obscurity, only recording a handful of singles.

Such a fate befell London R&B band The Birds. Their career started well, sharing equal billing with The Who. But they were quickly eclipsed by the folk-rock Byrds, whose version of ‘Mr Tambourine Man’ was a worldwide smash in 1965.

The Birds are notable as the first band of lead guitarist Ronnie Wood – Wood went on to play with the Jeff Beck Group, The Faces, and The Rolling Stones.

Formed in Yiewsley, West London, in 1963, the band was briefly known as The R&B Bohemians before becoming The Thunderbirds (later shortened to The Birds, to avoid confusion with Chris Farlowe’s backing group). Signed to Decca in 1964, their second single, “Leaving Here,” scraped into the Top 50 for one week in May 1965, but that was as close as they ever came to a commercial breakthrough. On the English club circuit, however, they knocked them dead, and fans like Motörhead’s Lemmy still talk in awe of the magic of The Birds’ live performances.

“We didn’t make a lot of money,” remembers Tony Munroe, “but, by Christ, for four years we had a great time!”

Mike Stax, Nuggets II liner notes

No Good Without You Baby

‘No Good Without You Baby’ was penned by Motown songwriter William Stevenson. Stevenson also wrote (or cowrote) ‘Dancing in the Street’, ‘Stubborn Kind of Fellow’, and ‘Devil in a Blue Dress’.

The Aftermath

The band released one more single, ‘Say Those Magic Words’, as The Birds Birds. Their label suggested the name to differentiate them from The Byrds. They appeared in the 1966 horror film The Deadly Bees before breaking up.

Bassist Kim Gardner joined The Creation, along with Ronnie Wood.

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5 Comments

  1. It does suck that they had to change their name twice. They sound good…I love their sound and Wood’s guitar playing. I’ve read about this band while researching Ronnie Wood but I never heard them. I just looked up their performance from The Deadly Bees…Wood looks like a kid.
    I just wrote up a post on the Creation…they were really good.

  2. Hahahaha

    “It must be frustrating when another band forms in the same year, shares your name, spells it wrong, but goes on to worldwide success. Meanwhile, despite your superior spelling skills, you struggle in obscurity, only recording a handful of singles”

    You know what? It could happen to anyone. I told the guys in Deaf Leopard we were all wasting out time. But would they listen?

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