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ANTHOLOGY
We know that most 60s buffs love a full personal background on each member of the band and we are happy to give you this insight.
Where did it all start ?? Well you have Martin Murray an 18yr old hair dresser working in a hair salon in London's West End, his assistant was a 15yr old trainee hair dresser called Ann(Honey) Lantree, and they soon became a couple and got engaged.
In the evenings Martin spent his time dreaming of forming a pop group and practising his guitar skills with his friend on drums in his bedroom at his parents home.
Martin invited his now girlfriend Honey Lantree around to his home on a night he and his drummer had arranged a rehearsal. His drummer could not make it that night and Honey offered to try to play drums so he could practise, when Martin stopped laughing he suggested she should try it to see how difficult playing drums can be.
Honey in a somewhat angry at Martin mood sat on the drums and made Martin eat his words!!! she was a natural drummer, so stunned was Martin he sacked his friend and took Honey on board as his new drummer a move that was to reverberate around the world in time to come.
The first Bass Player
Honey Lantree had a brother who was a good pal of Martin in John Lantree in just three short months Martin taught John how to play Bass and like his sister Ann (Honey) he was a natural and took to it like a fish to water, and so the first family of Murray's Musicians was born....Martin Murray...Guitar...Honey Lantree...Drums...John Lantree...Bass guitar was born.
The hunt for a singer
Martin hunted high and low for a singer with no joy, now Martins father owned a driving school and taxi company that Martin used to work for part time. One day Martin was driving a customer to London Airport, and on a chance conversation his customer told him of a singer he knew who worked for a building company nearby, Martin turned the car around and drove to the building site to meet Dennis Dalziel. Martin and Dennis hit it off straight away and arranged an audition for that evening, to quote Martins words on the audition "DENNIS WAS MIND BLOWING" Dennis joined the band and took the name Denis De'll.
In search of a lead Guitarist
The band at this stage were growing very strong but were lacking in the need of a Lead guitarist. One day Martin saw an advert placed by a local guitarist looking for a band to play with, Martin invited this guitarist to an audition and met not just any guitarist but a man that was classic trained, could read and write music, needless to say this was Alan Ward who joined the band that night and the line up was complete. The birth of THE SHERATONS later to become THE HONEYCOMBS.
The group originally and in 1962 consisted of:-
Dennis D'Ell - born Denis James Dalziel on 14 October 1943, in Whitechapel, London. Died on 6 July 2005 - Lead singer and harmonica player
Martin Murray - born on 7 October 1941, in London - Rhythm guitar
Alan Ward - born on 12 December 1945, in Nottingham - Lead guitar
John Lantree - born John David Lantree on 20 August 1940, in Newbury, Berkshire - Bass guitar
Honey Lantree - born Ann Margot Lantree on 28 August 1943 in Hayes, Middlesex - Drums.
Later early members were
Peter Pye, who was brought into the band by Martin Murray to cover for him while his broken leg was in plaster
Colin Boyd (born Colin Nicol, in Bath, Wilts 1946), who was singer and songwriter for The Honeycombs ca. 1966, went on to form Honeybus and was from then on known as Colin Hare.
| Biography | by Richie Unterberger & Bruce Eder |
| Mostly renowned for their 1964 Top
Five hit "Have I the Right," the Honeycombs were pretty
much a front for producer Joe Meek and the songwriting-management
team of Ken Howard and Alan Blaikley. The group was
originally called the Sherabons and was formed in
Hackney during November of 1963 by Martin Murray.
His day job was managing a hair salon, and when he formed the band, he brought along his assistant, Anne Margot Lantree, who was nicknamed "Honey" and used that on-stage — she played drums and, with her good looks, was a double attention-getter. Her brother John joined on bass, and Alan Ward played lead guitar. And for a lead vocalist, they had Dennis D'Ell (born Denis Dalziel). Their original name was the Sherabons (some sources list it as the Sheratons) — something Murray remembers seeing on the side of a van — and they got a three-times weekly gig at a pub called the Mild May Tavern, on Balls Pond Road in London's East End, where they were lucky enough to be spotted by Alan Blaikley, who was attracted by the crowds of teenagers they drew. Visually, the group was highlighted by Lantree's presence at the drums, her good looks topped by a then-fashionable beehive hairdo. Rhythm guitarist and leader Murray also added to the appealing eccentricity of the band's look with his bespectacled presence — to see him on the cover of their albums, one would think he was the group's accountant, but what made the picture even better was that he was a great player in his own right. At that time, their music consisted entirely of R&B and rock & roll standards interspersed with instrumentals. Blaikley liked their sound and had a song to offer them — he and his business partner Ken Howard's had written a composition called "Have I the Right" and were looking for a group to record it, and this East End quintet seemed to fit the bill. Enter producer Joe Meek, a mad genius in the recording field who was always on the lookout both for songwriters and for groups that could benefit from his expertise. He produced the group's first recording session, for "Have I the Right," and found their sound something he could work with — equally important, the bandmembers themselves were willing to play along with his sometimes wild and unorthodox recording techniques; they even added their collective footstomps to a key rhythm phrase on the finished song, recorded in multiple overdubs as the five members stomped their feet on the staircase on Meek's building, where he kept his home studio. The record was released on the Pye label, but not before the quintet changed its name. Sources differ as to whether it was Meek, Pye Records managing director Louis Benjamin, or the bandmembers who brought about the name change to the Honeycombs. But one consequence of the new name was to reinforce the attention paid to their most unusual visual asset, Honey Lantree at the drums. After an initial stall midway in the charts, the single was picked up by the renowned pirate station Radio Caroline, and "Have I the Right" reached number one in England (and also, subsequently, in Australia, South Africa, and Japan as well) and number four in America. With bee-sting guitar leads and D'Ell's wobbling vocals, which sounded like a Gene Pitney unable to hold notes, "Have I the Right" was a single that one either loved or hated, but couldn't forget. The relatively faceless group afforded Meek perhaps his fullest artistic expression in the studio; all the Honeycombs' singles and albums feature variable-speed vocals, ghostly organ, unpredictable runs, majestically thudding drums, and super-compressed sonics. A self-titled album followed in October of 1964, which highlighted something of the range of the members' talents: Martin Murray's superb guitar playing was showcased on "I Want to Be Free," while Honey Lantree shared the lead vocals on "That's the Way," and Ward's distinctly lead sound was all over everything. In between the single and the LP's release there was a frantic ten months of international touring, television appearances, and shooting spots in jukebox movies, made more complicated when Murray broke his leg. And amid that flurry of work, the group managed a couple more minor American hits — "Is It Because" and "I Can't Stop" — but their fortunes in their own country soon began to fade. "Is It Because" and their rendition of the Ray Davies-authored ballad "Something Better Beginning" barely made it into the Top 40, although "That's the Way" reached number 12. The Honeycombs weren't exactly one-hit wonders, though they never found anything to match "Have I the Right" in sheer impact on listeners around the world. But as a result of that single, their debut album was released outside of England. (The American version of their debut album was released by Vee-Jay Records on their newly created Interphon imprint, and, in fact, was the only LP ever issued on that label). Their sound was a strange combination of influences — Ward's ringing, stinging lead guitar, paired with John Lantree's bass, Murray's rhythm guitar, and Honey Lantree's drumming (all displaying a larger-than-life sound) generating a thumping beat, combined to form a sonic texture strongly reminiscent of the Tornados, Meek's previous resident band — and placed behind D'Ell's weirdly quavering vocals, often all ornamented with what sounded like an outsized roller-rink organ, the effect was sonically mesmerizing. The Honeycombs' records all possessed a manic and impassioned edge, even by the standards of the British Invasion. Between the outsized sound of the musicians and D'Ell's vocals, "Color Slide" and "Once You Know" seemed to embody the kind of passionate desperation that characterized many a teen crush, and each was a frantic, crisply metallic-sounding pop-symphony paean to romance as only the young seem to rush into and drown in it — like Phil Spector in steel. The ballad "Without You It Is Night" treaded on Roy Orbison quasi-operatic territory, while "That's the Way" — offering Honey Lantree's singing — gave a slightly more cheerful, upbeat outlook on romance. And all of it, with Meek's trademarked sound compression, hit the listener subliminally like a punch in the chest.As rapidly as their success came, so the band began to fall apart after less than a year. Frustrated by their inability to repeat their debut success, Martin Murray quit the group he'd organized and led in November of 1964 and started a new band, the Lemmings, who managed to get out one single on Pye before disappearing. He then went solo with a one 45 release to his credit. His replacement, Peter Pye, who'd previously sat in on the band's sessions during Murray's convalescence, joined as a permanent member in late 1964 and the group continued, cutting quite a few singles and two albums before Meek's death in early 1967 effectively finished the group as well. Their fortunes had faded long before that in England and America — by 1965, rock & roll had moved past the sound that the Honeycombs were known for, but it was just then that their popularity soared in northern Europe, Germany, and, especially, Japan and the Far East. They toured to rousing audience response and their records were soon aimed at those markets as well, with German-language singles and a whole Japan-only LP issued. This shift coincided with Howard and Blaikley's decision to move Honey Lantree out from behind the drum kit and into center stage (Viv Prince of the Pretty Things stepped into the drummer's spot on-stage). It was a long time to their second album, All Systems Go, which didn't see the light of day until November of 1965; and that same month, in Japan, an album called Honeycombs in Tokyo was issued. All Systems Go included a pair of covers of Ray Davies songs, one of which, "Emptiness," was apparently never recorded by anyone else. But Honeycombs in Tokyo featured several rarities, including the group's recordings of "I'll Go Crazy," "She's About a Mover," "Wipe Out," "Lucille," "Kansas City," "Goldfinger," and "What'd I Say," all of which seemed to represent their original stage act more accurately than the content of their two more widely circulated albums did. The group shifted the focus of their work to the cabaret circuit, the last refuge of past-their-prime rock & roll acts. Meek's suicide in 1967 closed the door to chances of any further recording success, and they disbanded, though D'Ell released a pair of 45s for British CBS and Decca that same year. He later passed through bluesier, less pop-oriented bands, and also fronted various latter-day versions of the Honeycombs into the 1990s. In 2004, Martin Murray reactivated the group with a new lineup reported to be the best since 1964 |
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Our line up today is by far the best since the 60s and have founder member Martin Murray as Captain
These periods will soon be listed in detail
Martin with the blessing of all the founder members permanently re-formed the band in 2003

Founder Member and Rhythm Guitar
Martin has also written some of and arranged all of The Honeycombs recordings.
He is one of the few people that was allowed access to the inner sanctum of Guru JOE MEEK.
Its the fire in Martin that has kept the flame burning in The Honeycombs for over 40yrs.
| Born | 07th Oct 1939 |
| Starsign | Libra |
| Favourite food | Lobster |
| Favourite Tipple | White wine |
| Favourite TV prog | Fools and horses |
| Favourite film star | Natalie Wood |
| Favourite band | The Honeycombs |
| Food Dislike | Pasta |
| Best time of day | Early Evening |
| Best day of my life | Reaching no 1 with Have I the Right |
| Family pet | Dog smokie |
| First record purchased | Rock around the clock |
| Last wish | Being remembered for trying my best |

Drummer
Jim has been in the business for over 36yrs, playing with local bands. Jim turned pro very early on and has toured the UK and abroad.
He is also a very talented session musician for the CBS label, making friends along the way with John Peel, Sir Jimmy Savile and Diddy David Hamilton.
He owned a recording studio in The States as he is also a top sound engineer, recording acts like Albert Lee, Steve Marriot, Kevin Ayres and Sam Brown.
Jim has been The Honeycombs Drummer for over 5yrs and involved with Martin Murray for over 25 years
| Born | 15th Nov 1951 |
| Starsign | Scorpio |
| Favourite food | Roast Chicken |
| Favourite Tipple | Jack Danials |
| Favourite TV prog | On The Buses |
| Favourite film star | Clint Eastwood |
| Favourite band | The Honeycombs |
| Food Dislike | Being Hungry |
| Best time of day | Afternoon |
| Best day of my life | Meeting Buddy Rich |
| Family pet | 2 cats Merlin + Ellie |
| First record purchased | Gene Krupa Drumming man double album |
| Last wish | To find a way to take my Money with me |

Lead Vocalist
Tony has been in the business since his school band of 1965, he has always been involved with the 60s scene as that is where his heart is.
Over the years he has served his time working in various bands and shows and has had the the good fortune to work with acts such as.
Heinz Tommy Bruce Jet Harris Mike Berry Billie Davis PJ Proby The Searchers Peter Sarsteadt Wee Willie Harris
The Swinging Blue Jeans The Baron Knights The Merseybeats The Bachelors Danny Williams The Tornados Hermans Hermits
John Leyton The Allisons Dave Sampson Liberty Mountain Craig Douglas Cliff Bennett Lord Such to name but a few.

| Born | 29th April 1952 |
| Starsign | Taurus |
| Favourite Food | Beef..Lamb..Chinky..Indian..Bacon And Eggs |
| Favourite Tipple | Vodka |
| Favourite TV Prog | Thomas The Tank Engine |
| Favourite Film star | May West |
| Favourite band | The Honeycombs |
| Food Dislike | Anything that swims |
| Best time of day | Night |
| Best day of my life | Birth Of My Daughter |
| Family pet | Ozzie The Rottie and Spike The Physco Cat |
| First record purchased | Rawhide Frankie Laine |
| Last wish | See my Mum on the other side |

Bass Guitar
Colin is a very talented session musician on the scene for many years and is a real addition to The Honeycombs his CV includes
Glenn Elliot band Bison Band Callan Ray Band Raw Deal Alan Hayes Band Damien McCabe Band
Doc K'S Blues Band Rich T and the Biscuits Memphis Elvis Band
| Born | 10th Jan 1953 |
| Starsign | Capricorn |
| Favourite Food | Shepard's pie, Indian food, Home made |
| Favourite Tipple | Wine/Bitter |
| Favourite TV Prog | Avengers/50s 60s 70s Sci fi |
| Favourite Film star | Marilyn Munro/Peter Cushing |
| Favourite band | The Honeycombs |
| Food Dislike | Badly Prepared |
| Best time of day | Morning |
| Best day of my life | Passing Exams |
| Family pet | Dogs and more dogs |
| First record purchased | Beatles probably |
| Last wish | To be remembered fondly |

Lead Guitar
Greenie has worked as a freelance guitarist backing many famous acts
Suzi Quatro, Mick Taylor, Screaming Lord Such, Ricky Valance, John Leyton, Eden Cane, Craig Douglas, Sweet.
He recently produced and played on Tony Dangerfield's "The Rebels Got Soul" album one of Joe Meeks prodigies from the 60s
Sadly it was Tony's last album as he passed away on 20th July 2007, he will be sadly missed

Click here to visit Greenie's website
| Born | 15th Dec 1950 |
| Starsign | Sagittarius |
| Favourite food | I eat pea's with honey, I have done it all my life. It make's the pea's taste funny but it keeps them on the knife. |
| Favourite Tipple | Tea |
| Favourite TV prog | Monty Python |
| Favourite film star | Yul Brinner we share the same hairdresser |
| Favourite band | The Honeycombs |
| Food Dislike | Pea's with honey |
| Best time of day | Just before, during and after the gig |
| Best day of my life | Today |
| Family pet | Eric The Half Bee |
| First record purchased | Midnight to six man by the Pretty Things |
| Last wish | Someone to say "Look i think he moved" |
Kelly Walsh

Backing Vocals
Kelly has joined us from the club circuit where she has worked as a semi pro artist, and has added new dimensions with her vocal talent.
Kelly's love of 60s music comes from the heart and maybe her parents playing it 24/7 as a little girl.

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Born |
25th April 1977 |
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Starsign |
Taurus |
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Favourite food |
Chinese |
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Favourite Tipple |
Vodka and Redbull |
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Favourite TV prog |
Shameless |
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Favourite film star |
Tom Hanks |
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Favourite band |
The Honeycombs |
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Food Dislike |
Tomatoes eewwww |
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Best time of day |
Night time |
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Best day of my life |
Having my 2 kids/Brean Sands Honeycombs gig |
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Family pet |
Jake my Cat |
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First record purchased |
Got to be Certain-Kylie Minogue |
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Last wish |
To have had a least 1 hit record |
Steve Watts

Keyboards
Steve has joined us and has made a very big impact.
A very talented addition Steve come from the tribute band Think Floyd
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Our Prodigy

Sophie Franks
The Honeycombs went on to world wide fame some of their hit recordings


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Singles
E.P.
L.P.s
Jan 2007 Into The 21st Century- A Stunning remake EP |
THE OFFICIAL JOE MEEK HONEYCOMBS RECORDINGS LISTING

| 64-06 | Honeycombs | Have I The Right | Pye | 7N 15664 A | Howard/Blaikley |
| 64-06 | Honeycombs | Please Don't Pretend Again | Pye | 7N 15664 B | M/Lawrence |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | Colour Slide | Pye | NPL 18097 | Howard/Blaikley |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | How The Mighty Have Fallen | Pye | NPL 18097 | |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | I Want To Be Free | Pye | NPL 18097 | |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | It Ain't Neccessarily So | Pye | NPL 18097 | |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | Just A Face In The Crowd | Pye | NPL 18097 | |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | Leslie Ann | Pye | NPL 18097 | |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | Me From You | Pye | NPL 18097 | |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | Nice While It Lasted | Pye | NPL 18097 | M |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | Once You Know | Pye | NPL 18097 | |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | She's Too Way Out | Pye | NPL 18097 | M/Davies |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | That's The Way | Pye | NPL 18097 | |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | This Too Shall Pass Away | Pye | NPL 18097 | |
| 64-09 | Honeycombs | Without You It Is Night | Pye | NPL 18097 |
| 64-09? | Honeycombs | Hab ich das Recht (**) | Dt. Vogue | DV 14210 A | |
| 64-09? | Honeycombs | Du sollst nicht traurig sein (**?) | Dt. Vogue | DV 14210 B |
| 64-10 | Honeycombs | Is It Because | Pye | 7N 15705 A | |
| 64-10 | Honeycombs | I'll Cry Tomorrow | Pye | 7N 15705 B | M |
| 64-11 | Honeycombs | I Can't Stop | Interphon | 7713 A | Howard/Blaikley |
| 64-11 | Honeycombs | Eyes | Pye | 7N 15736 A | |
| 64-11 | Honeycombs | If You've Gotta Pick A Baby | Pye | 7N 15736 B | M |
| 64-11 | Honeycombs | I Can't Stop | Pye | NPL 18132 | Howard/Blaikley |
| 65-03 | Honeycombs | Something Better Beginning | Pye | 7N 15827 A | |
| 65-03 | Honeycombs | I'll See You Tomorrow | Pye | 7N 15827 B |
| 65-10 | Honeycombs | Is It Because | Pye | 7N 15705 A | Howard/Blaikley |
| 65-10 | Honeycombs | She's Too Way Out | Pye | NEP 24230 A2 | M/Davis |
| 65-10 | Honeycombs | Colour Slide | Pye | NEP 24230 B1 | Howard/Blaikley |
| 65-10 | Honeycombs | This Too Shall Pass Away | Pye | NEP 24230 B2 |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | This Year Next Year | Pye | 7N 15979 A | Howard/Blaikley |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | Not Sleeping Too Well Lately | Pye | 7N 15979 B | M |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | All Systems Go | Pye | NPL 18132 | |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | Emptiness | Pye | NPL 18132 | |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | I Can't Stop | Pye | NPL 18132 | |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | I Don't Love Her No More | Pye | NPL 18132 | |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | If You Should | Pye | NPL 18132 | |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | Love In Tokyo | Pye | NPL 18132 | |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | My Prayer | Pye | NPL 18132 | |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | Nobody But Me | Pye | NPL 18132 | |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | Ooee Train | Pye | NPL 18132 | |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | Our Day Will Come | Pye | NPL 18132 | |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | Something I've Got To Tell You | Pye | NPL 18132 | |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | There's Always Me | Pye | NPL 18132 | |
| 65-11 | Honeycombs | Totem Pole | Pye | NPL 18132 | M |
| 66-07 | Honeycombs | It's So Hard | Pye | 7N 17138 A | |
| 66-07 | Honeycombs | I Fell In Love | Pye | 7N 17138 B | M |
| 66-09 | Honeycombs | That Lovin' Feeling | Pye | 7N 17173 A | |
| 66-09 | Honeycombs | Should A Man Cry | Pye | 7N 17173 B | M |
THE TEA CHEST TAPES
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1 |
Have I The Right |
Backing track |
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2 |
Time |
Unreleased track |
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3 |
Santa Claus |
Unreleased track |
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4 |
Silent Night |
Unreleased track |
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5 |
Goldfinger |
Unreleased track |
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6 |
That Other Girl |
Unreleased track |
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7 |
White Sands |
Unreleased track |
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8 |
Somewhere Along The Way |
Unreleased track |
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9 |
Hurricane |
Unreleased track |
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10 |
Music Train |
Unreleased track |
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11 |
I Can Tell Something's Up |
Unreleased track |
© Graham Hill
The Tea chest Tapes are a collection on hundreds of Joe Meek master recordings of all of Joe Meeks acts on reel to reel tape that are held in Tea chests by a person that will not hand them over to be preserverd for posterity.
These tapes will rot if not saved and a large part of music history will be lost forever.
We all live in hope that all the Tea Chest Tapes will be saved before its too late.