Dutch proggers Kayak got here near breaking America within the 70s, however a lot of components received in the way in which. In 2018, when the band launched Seventeen, Kayak’s final remaining authentic member Ton Scherpenzeel regarded again over their profession and mentioned what went incorrect, his hopes for the longer term and his worry of flying…
Nor ought to there be any, in fact. Kayak’s historical past dates again to 1972, when the teenaged Scherpenzeel and drummer Pim Koopman turned mates at a volleyball membership in Hilversum. The pair knew their eventual lead vocalist Max Werner as a fellow scholar at a neighborhood music conservatory, finishing the group with guitarist Johan Slager and bassist Cees van Leeuwen. The band achieved big success proper off the bat with the next yr’s debut album See See The Solar and its hits, Lyrics and Mammoth.
“We have been very younger then. Too younger, in truth,” Scherpenzeel considers. “They known as us a supergroup, however we hadn’t even left Holland. All the identical, with two Prime 20 singles at residence, it was nearly as good a begin as anybody might have wished for.”
For a interval of 5 albums, Kayak loved stability, till, in a reverse ‘Phil Collins in Genesis’ situation, Max Werner determined to desert the mic and change into a drummer. The timing of such a swap couldn’t have been any worse, as 1978 had seen their single, Need You To Be Mine, attain Quantity 55 on America’s Billboard chart and threaten to climb larger nonetheless. Pressured to hunt a alternative singer and unable to tour there due to Scherpenzeel’s worry of flying, Kayak’s American dream was deserted to wither and die.
“Max hated his personal voice – he had by no means wished to be the lead singer once we began,” Scherpenzeel states. “So he informed us, ‘If you’d like me to stay within the band, I’ll drum.’ He wasn’t the very best drummer on this planet, however we rationalised that if he stayed, we’d nonetheless have his voice alongside the drums, and we’d discover a new singer. In these days, with out the web, America felt loads additional away than it does now. Every part was performed by letters and cellphone calls however with out having to vary issues round one thing very large might have occurred for Kayak there.”
Many years afterwards, disappointment can nonetheless be heard in Scherpenzeel’s voice. To have come inside touching distance should have been particularly heartbreaking?
“On the time, the total significance didn’t actually daybreak on me,” he admits. “We had
a primary album in Holland and we have been busy, nevertheless it’s solely afterwards if you see the paperwork and statistics, after they’re on the market on the web, that you just realise, ‘Hey, Kayak might actually have been one thing.’”
In 1982, the group known as it a day as a result of what Scherpenzeel now describes as
“a mixture of many various setbacks, together with monetary points and private and musical issues”. The truth that Max Werner had a solo hit in Germany represented a further hurdle. “There have been additionally difficulties with our supervisor and we simply didn’t operate anymore,” Scherpenzeel relates sadly. “The spirit was gone: it was like Spinal Faucet yet again.”
Scherpenzeel used Kayak’s absence to hitch Camel from 1984 onwards. With the
two bands sharing a US label, Janus Data, Scherpenzeel was thrilled to hook up with Andy Latimer and firm, alternating between full-time band membership and touring muso standing and showing on Stationary Traveller, the reside album Strain Factors, Mud And Desires and Rajaz. It was the keyboardist’s issues with aviation that made it troublesome for this relationship to proceed. Regardless of having sought numerous potential treatments, issues haven’t actually modified for him.
“If it’s not actually obligatory for me to fly, I gained’t do it,” he sighs.
Nearly twenty years after they broke up, Kayak have been invited to look on a preferred Dutch TV present. Issues went so properly that Scherpenzeel had no qualms
with a everlasting reunion, although this wasn’t so simple as it sounds.
“I had remained involved with Pim Koopman, the opposite necessary member of the band who, moreover drumming, additionally wrote and produced, and we took issues slowly at the beginning,” he relates.
In truth, Scherpenzeel and Koopman first mentioned working collectively once more in 1995, however it will take an additional 4 years for Kayak to be reborn. “We had a supervisor who forbade us to make use of the identify,” Scherpenzeel explains. “He was a lunatic – a genius, however a lunatic all the identical. It took his loss of life in ’98 for us to obtain the all-clear.”
Regrettably, Koopman additionally died unexpectedly in 2009. In 2014, a number of
line-ups later, an additional impediment arose when Kayak misplaced co-lead singers Edward Reekers and Cindy Oudshoorn earlier than a tour for the rock opera Cleopatra – The Crown Of Isis, a undertaking that the group had spent two years getting ready for. Kayak’s present biography pointedly describes these exits as “surprising and inconvenient”.
“I can not say it any higher than that,” feedback Scherpenzeel via gritted
enamel. Kayak changed a person and girl with a solitary male – Bart Schwertmann – and their newest, all-new line-up additionally contains Kristoffer Gildenlöw, previously of Ache Of Salvation, although Scherpenzeel performed many of the album’s bass components himself.
So belated was Kayak’s tie-in with InsideOut that, following a Pledge Music marketing campaign, an authentic pre-sale date was delayed. Nevertheless, Scherpenzeel is thrilled by the chances of affiliation with one of many greatest and most forward-thinking labels of the style.
“That is the primary time in 12 or 13 years that we’ve had a file label,” he chuckles. “Self-releasing your music is ok, however the expertise taught us that to take issues additional you actually do want additional assist.”
Kayak’s music is definitely blessed with business potential. The tracks Any person and God On Our Facet, as an illustration, are melodic sufficient to go as pop songs, although at 11 and 10 minutes respectively the grander items La Peregrina and Stroll By Fireplace actually permit them to stretch out.
“For me, music should sound natural – it’s not a matter of how intelligent it’s,” Scherpenzeel stresses. “I like shorter songs simply as a lot because the epic ones. These are extra of an journey, however the format of verse-chorus-verse-chorus is simply as fulfilling. Pop music has been part of our repertoire: we’re a two-sided band and that has generally confused our viewers, nevertheless it’s one thing that I can not change.”
Andy Latimer is a visitor on Ripples On The Water, an exquisite instrumental piece
that Scherpenzeel wrote deliberately for the guitarist.
“Andy has such a method, he performs one notice and it’s him,” Scherpenzeel smiles. “I’ve all the time liked Camel’s music. His enjoying and my very own are a superb match, I feel. We come from the identical soul. Possibly I’ll return to Camel sometime: it’s as much as Andy.”
Within the meantime, Kayak look set to be busy over the following couple of years. As talked about above, they final carried out within the UK again in March 1977 on a invoice with Jan Akkerman and singer Kaz Lux who have been selling their idea album Eli.
“Jan didn’t need to play any Focus materials which left the audiences upset, so it was lower brief,” Scherpenzeel remembers.
Sadly, this was the band’s one and solely foray to Britain to this point. After such a very long time, in fact Scherpenzeel is anxious to return below extra beneficial circumstances. And by chance, with simply the English Channel between our two nations, transatlantic flights are pointless.
“No,” he laughs. “European gigs are all the time attainable – I did some two years in the past with Camel. After all Kayak need to play wherever attainable. It’s all right down to budgets. If folks purchase the album, in all places we will play we are going to play. After three weeks the bus will get pungent, however I like being on the street.”