Keith West (born 6 December 1943 in Dagenham, Essex, England as Keith Alan … Read Full Bio ↴Keith West (born 6 December 1943 in Dagenham, Essex, England as Keith Alan Hopkins) was the lead singer of Tomorrow, a 1960s psychedelic rock band. West composed most of the band's songs (duly credited to Keith Hopkins). Despite critical acclaim and support from DJ John Peel, who featured them on his "Perfumed Garden" Radio London show, the band was not a great financial success.
In 1964 West became lead singer of "In Crowd" a rock band from London, which was renamed to "Tomorrow" later. One of the members of the band was the guitarist Steve Howe (later "Yes"). In 1967 he became acquainted with Mark Wirtz, a producer who had already created the instrumental title "A Touch of Velvet, a Sting of Brass" (1965). Later on the melody became theme song for the German music TV show "Beat-Club" and "Musikladen".
West himself is perhaps better known as a participant of Mark Wirtz's A Teenage Opera, completed in 2002. He was the singer of "Excerpt from "A Teenage Opera"", also known as "Grocer Jack", which reached No. 2 on the UK Singles Chart in 1967. He also performed "Sam", which reached the bottom end of the Top 40 the same year.
In 1968 he released the single "On A Saturday" on Parlophone. Other musicians who appeared on the single were guitarist Steve Howe, bassist Ron Wood, and drummer Aynsley Dunbar. An excellent piece of pop-psychedelia, the record was a modest UK hit. It has since been re-issued on the CD of the self titled debut by Tomorrow.
In 1971 he released a solo L.P. "Wherever My Love Goes" on the German progressive rock-label Kuckuck. It features his songwriting-partner Ken Burgess and steel guitarist Glenn Campbell (ex-The Misunderstood). Two tracks of it were produced by Andrew Loog Oldham.
In the mid-1970s he was singer for Moonrider.
West continues to produce and record music, which is used primarily within the advertising industry.
In 1964 West became lead singer of "In Crowd" a rock band from London, which was renamed to "Tomorrow" later. One of the members of the band was the guitarist Steve Howe (later "Yes"). In 1967 he became acquainted with Mark Wirtz, a producer who had already created the instrumental title "A Touch of Velvet, a Sting of Brass" (1965). Later on the melody became theme song for the German music TV show "Beat-Club" and "Musikladen".
West himself is perhaps better known as a participant of Mark Wirtz's A Teenage Opera, completed in 2002. He was the singer of "Excerpt from "A Teenage Opera"", also known as "Grocer Jack", which reached No. 2 on the UK Singles Chart in 1967. He also performed "Sam", which reached the bottom end of the Top 40 the same year.
In 1968 he released the single "On A Saturday" on Parlophone. Other musicians who appeared on the single were guitarist Steve Howe, bassist Ron Wood, and drummer Aynsley Dunbar. An excellent piece of pop-psychedelia, the record was a modest UK hit. It has since been re-issued on the CD of the self titled debut by Tomorrow.
In 1971 he released a solo L.P. "Wherever My Love Goes" on the German progressive rock-label Kuckuck. It features his songwriting-partner Ken Burgess and steel guitarist Glenn Campbell (ex-The Misunderstood). Two tracks of it were produced by Andrew Loog Oldham.
In the mid-1970s he was singer for Moonrider.
West continues to produce and record music, which is used primarily within the advertising industry.
Kid Was A Killer
Keith West Lyrics
We have lyrics for these tracks by Keith West:
Excerpt from "A Teenage Opera" Two three four Counts the days into years His eighty two br…
Excerpt From a Teenage Opera Count the days into years his eighty two brings many fears Y…
Excerpt From A Teenage Opera. Two three four Counts the days into years His eighty two br…
Exerpt From a Teenage Opera 2,3,4 Counts the days into years Yes 82 brings many fears Ye…Grocer Jack 2,3,4 Counts the days into years Yes 82 brings many fears Ye…
Grocer Jack (Excerpt From A Teenage Opera) 2, 3, 4 Counts the days into years Yes 82 brings many…
On A Saturday Sunny days chase the night Waiting for the dawn Now the seas…
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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@leonardoilcaprone3900
GENIALE :) DANiELE
@cecopiteco
so great !!!
@tangomango69
Keith is a good mate of mine and can still rock the house when he wants to.
@impalaman9707
The greatest song Pete Townshend forgot to write for the Who
@leonardoilcaprone3900
TIMBRO UNICO!!! DANiELE
@Kylerk
ronnie wood on bass! this one shoulda been the a-sideĀ
@AnthonyMonaghan
I disagree. This is a great B-Side, but it's sonically nothing on the A-Side. "On A Saturday" is on a different level altogether. It's got that faintly autumnal late sixties melancholy that was so prevalent during the fading days of the summer of love. With the stand up bass, acoustic guitar and Mellotron, it's a song like no other, a song out of time and Keith's vocals are exceptional, where as here it all sounds a bit strained. "On A Saturday" should have been a huge hit , in the one hit wonder vein of Thunderclap Newmans "Something In The Air" Cheers.
@spidericemidasiosmusicprod1309
@@AnthonyMonaghan The drums are amazing on that track too š
@lamper2
NO! Kylerk is right@@AnthonyMonaghan
@scottmichaeloneil
Can anyone tell me the actual name of the album this is from? I can find Tomorrow records out the wazoo, but what I really want is his solo stuff.