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Bearfoot was a Juno Award-nominated Canadian rock band, founded by Jim Atkinson, Terry Danko, Dwayne Ford, Hugh Brockie and Brian Hilton.[1][2] Initially going by "Atkinson, Danko and Ford", they changed their name out of practicality and because they didn't want to sound as though they were a law-firm. They released three albums and five singles through Columbia Records.
Bearfoot | |
---|---|
Also known as | Atkinson, Danko and Ford Atkinson, Danko and Ford (with Brockie and Hilton) Dwayne Ford and Bearfoot |
Origin | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Genres | Rock, country rock |
Years active | 1969 | –1970s, 1985–?
Labels | Columbia |
Past members | Jim Atkinson Terry Danko Dwayne Ford Hugh Brockie Brian Hilton Mal Turner Malcolm Tomlinson Chris Vickery Marty Cordrey Penti 'Whitey' Glan Jerry Baird |
Biography
editThe founding members came together as part of Ronnie Hawkins' Rock and Roll Revival and Travelling Medicine Show, first meeting at the Graham Bell Hotel in Brantford, Ontario. Hawkins' group played the upstairs lounge that day while Danko and Atkinson's group, Tin Pan Alley, played downstairs. Hawkins hired the two as part of his group, which Ford, Brockie and Hilton were already part of.
Bearfoot eventually formed in 1969 and left Hawkins to sign with Columbia. They released three albums and five singles through the label. Their first, 1972 album was released under the name "Atkinson, Danko and Ford (with Brockie and Hilton)". They were nominated for the 1974 Juno Award for Most Promising Group of the Year, which Bachman-Turner Overdrive would win. Danko and Atkinson left in 1973 to pursue work as musicians in California. The group continued without them, releasing their final album as "Dwayne Ford and Bearfoot" in 1975. Danko and Atkinson returned to Canada in 1985 and reformed the band for a time with Jerry Baird. The group is now presumably defunct.
Discography
editAlbums
editYear | Title | Label | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1972 | Atkinson, Danko and Ford (with Brockie and Hilton) | Columbia | *as "Atkinson, Danko and Ford (with Brockie and Hilton)" |
1973 | Bearfoot | *re-issue of first album, as "Bearfoot" | |
1973 | Friends with Bearfoot | ||
1975 | Passing Time | *as "Dwayne Ford and Bearfoot" |
Singles
editYear | Title | Label | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1972 | Right On/Holy, Holy, Holy | Columbia | |
1972 | Right On/Mark Twain | *alternate B-side *issued in the USA | |
1973 | Only A Soldier/Life Goes Too Fast | ||
1973 | Molly/St. Augustine | ||
1974 | Passing Time/She Comes to Me | ||
1975 | Cable to Carol |
Compilation inclusions
editYear | Song | Album | Label | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1976 | "Passing Time" | Canada's Finest | K-Tel |
Citations
editExternal links
edit- "Bearfoot[usurped]". Canadian Pop Encyclopedia. Great White Noise. Retrieved 2010-12-16.
- "CanConrox entry"
- "CanConRox entry for Dwayne Ford"
- "Bearfoot". Allmusic.com. Retrieved 2010-12-16.
- "Atkinson, Danko And Ford (With Brockie And Hilton)[usurped]". Canadian Pop Encyclopedia. Great White Noise. Retrieved 2010-12-16.
- "Danko, Terry[usurped]". Canadian Pop Encyclopedia. Great White Noise. Retrieved 2010-12-16.
- "Ford, Dwayne[usurped]". Canadian Pop Encyclopedia. Great White Noise. Retrieved 2010-12-16.
- "Terry Danko - Authorized Biography". Caffin, Carol. theband.hiof.no. Retrieved 2010-12-16.