The Parachute Club

The Parachute Club
Origin Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Genres Pop, dance, Caribbean
Years active 1982 (1982)–1988 (1988)
2005 (2005)–2008 (2008)
2011-
Labels Current Records, licensed to
RCA Records
BMG
EMI International
Website pclubblog.wordpress.com
Members Lorraine Segato
Dave Gray
Lauri Conger
Julie Masi
Steve Webster
Art Avalos
Past members Billy Bryans
Margo Davidson
Keir Brownstone
Rebecca Jenkins
Aaron Davis
Mystic Walsh
Miranda Jackie Walsh
Ashley Wey
Chendy Leon, Jr.
Glenda del Monte
Rebecca Campbell
Chris Brown
Vicki Randle
Rachel Oldfield

The Parachute Club was a Canadian band formed in Toronto in 1982. They released three top 40 hits in Canada between 1983 and 1987, including "Rise Up",[1] ""At the Feet of the Moon" and "Love Is Fire" (which featured guest duet vocals from John Oates). The band was well known for being one of the first mainstream pop acts in Canada to integrate world music influences, particularly Caribbean styles such as reggae and soca, into their sound.

"The Chutes", as they were known, broke up after touring to promote their third and final album, and played their final gig in the summer of 1988. A reconstituted version of the Parachute Club (including four of the earlier band members) played a number of live shows between 2005 and 2008. The band reunited again in 2011, and continues to play occasional shows.

History

Formation and early years (1982–1983)

The original Parachute Club band consisted of Lorraine Segato on vocals and guitar, Lauri Conger on keyboards and vocals, Billy Bryans on drums, Margo Davidson on saxophone and vocals,[2] Julie Masi on percussion and vocals, Steve Webster on bass and Dave Gray on guitar. Segato and Conger had previously been associated for several years as the nucleus of Mama Quilla II, a band that gained respect in Toronto in the late 1970s and early 1980s for their integrated musical and sexual politics—elements that would continue with The Parachute Club. Billy Bryans had been a well-known percussionist and producer in Toronto since the early 1970s, primarily associated with the Downchild Blues Band during this period.

Segato and Bryans first met in 1979, and started to collaborate musically. By 1982, they were both members of the Toronto band V, which was formed while Mama Quilla II was then on hiatus. In the late summer of 1982, Bryans was offered a chance to play at the inaugural Festival of Festivals in Toronto.[3] With other members of V unavailable, Bryans approached Segato to form a new one-off band to play at the festival. They added Lauri Conger from Mama Quilla II, as well as local musicians Margo Davidson, Dave Gray and Steve Webster. The band was well received at the festival, and shortly thereafter received and accepted an offer for both a management and recording contract with Current Records. The Parachute Club was thereby formed, while Mama Quilla II made their 'hiatus' permanent, and disbanded.[4]

Early success (1983–1984)

The Parachute Club's eponymous first album, released in 1983, was produced by Daniel Lanois, who had previously been the producer of Mama Quilla II's sole release, an EP released in 1982.[5] The group had to write material for the album rather quickly, and consequently recruited poet/artist Lynne Fernie to assist with some of the lyrics. Though Fernie would never be an official member of The Parachute Club, she would contribute lyrics to all their albums, and function as an unofficial honorary member of the group.

The song "Rise Up", from Parachute Club's first album, won a Canadian Juno Award in 1984 for Single of the Year, while the group won a Juno award for Most Promising Group of The Year.

During 1983, Steve Webster left the band, to perform with Billy Idol.[6] On their 1983/84 touring dates, bassist Russ Boswell stepped in for Webster; he would then leave the band to join Corey Hart's backing band. Keir Brownstone, formerly with Bob Segarini,[7] became the band's new permanent bassist in mid-1984.

The band's second album At the Feet of the Moon was released In October 1984, and the title track became the group's second Canadian Top 40 hit. This album (and single) was produced by Michael Beinhorn.

Later success (1985–1987)

In 1985, the group received the Juno Award for Group of the Year. A album of remixed tracks, Moving Thru The Moonlight, was also issued in late 1985.

In 1986, The Parachute Club released their third album, Small Victories. The album included the group's third and final top 40 hit, "Love is Fire", featuring Segato singing a duet with John Oates of Hall & Oates. Oates produced the single, as well as several other Small Victories tracks; The Parachute Club and Mike Jones were credited as producers on the remainder of the album. In 1987, the group's video of their single, "Love Is Fire" received the Juno Award for Video of the Year. Julie Masi left the band after their Canadian tour in support of the album, and was replaced by percussionist/singer Rebecca Jenkins.

In 1987, they composed and performed four songs for the Canadian and U.S. versions of the anime series, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. During 1987, Lauri Conger also left the band, and Aaron Davis of Canadian jazz-fusion band Manteca was brought in as the group's new keyboard player.

Winding down (1988–1989)

After a final non-album single in 1988 ("Big Big World"), the band's final performances were in July 1988 at the Ontario Place Forum, in Toronto,[1] where the remaining band members were rejoined by Lauri Conger, filling in for an ill Davis. In early 1989, the original Parachute Club formally disbanded, with band members going their separate ways. Some members, such as Lorraine Segato and Billy Bryans, continued as professional musicians, while other members, such as Margo Davidson and Lauri Conger, substantially left the music business.[8]

In 2005, critic Greg Quill wrote in the Toronto Star that "No musical collective bespoke this city during a specific period as powerfully as Parachute Club did in the 1980s. Their infectious, inclusive, soca-soaked dance music carried important messages about the social changes Toronto was experiencing at the time, about sexual and personal politics, about the need for hope and courage in an age of confusing, impersonal rhetoric from local policymakers and world leaders."[9]

Advertising controversy (1998)

In 1998, the Parachute Club song "Rise Up" was licensed by EMI Music Canada to McCain Foods Limited for a television commercial for self-rising pizza dough. Members of Parachute Club publicly opposed this commercial use of the song. In a news release issued at the commencement of litigation, band members stated that "(a)s a result of its use on the ad...the song, the people who believe in it and the reputation of its creators have suffered damage within the sphere of public credibility and our personal reputations."[10] The action was settled before trial, with the result that band members were able to recover from EMI Music Canada all of the band members' music publishing rights.[11]

Reunion and band revival (2005–2008, 2011-present)

In 2005, a reconstituted Parachute Club commenced performing, co-headlining a reunion show with Martha and the Muffins and headlining at Toronto's City Roots Festival. The reconstituted band included original members Segato, Bryans, and Gray, as well as Brownstone (who was a member of the band for their second and third albums). Masi, Conger, Webster and Davidson were not part of this revived line-up. New members of the revived line-up were Mystic Walsh and Miranda Walsh (daughters of Eric Walsh, lead singer of Toronto reggae band Messenjah) on vocals, and Ashley Wey on keyboards. By 2008, these new members had been replaced by Chendy Leon Jr, Glenda del Monte and Rebecca Campbell (although Miranda Walsh subbed for an absent Campbell at one 2008 show).

In 2006, The Parachute Club was inducted into the Canadian Indies Hall of Fame. Founding member Margo Davidson died May 17, 2008, aged 50.

Through 2008, the reconstituted band performed on a regular basis, although they did not release any new material.[12] The Parachute Club did not play any dates after August 2008, and the band's website was not updated after this time.

Segato performed "Rise Up" at the state funeral of Jack Layton on August 27, 2011, with the choir of the Metropolitan Community Church of Toronto. The Parachute Club reunited again on September 30, 2011, for a free show in Toronto's David Pecaut Square to celebrate their induction to Canada's Walk of Fame.[13] The band line-up for the reunion consisted of original members Lorraine Segato (vocals), Dave Gray (guitar), and Steve Webster (bass) with new recruits Chris Brown (keyboards), Art Avalos (drums) and Vicki Randle (percussion, backing vocals). Billy Bryans, too ill to perform for the entire show, did join the band on drums for their last two numbers, including "Rise Up".[14] Bryans, one of three musicians to be part of every Parachute Club lineup, died April 23, 2012 at age 63, following a long battle with cancer.

Partly at Bryans' insistence that the group continue without him, The Parachute Club decided to stay together to perform gigs. During the 2012 Edmonton (Alberta) Folk Music Festival, the band performed on August 11, 2012 at the volunteer after party and at Stage 2 on August 12. They also played at the Niagara Co-op Expo on 13 October 2012, in St. Catharines, Ontario.[15] The Parachute Club now includes founding members Lorraine Segato, Dave Gray, Julie Masi, Lauri Conger and Steve Webster. Prior to this reunion, Webster had not played with the group for 27 years, Masi for 25 years and Conger for 24 years.

In 2014, the surviving band members released a contemporary dance remix of "Rise Up", in conjunction with Toronto's hosting of the 2014 edition of WorldPride.[16]

Discography

Singles

Release date Title Chart peak Album
Canada
RPM
July 1983 "Rise Up" 9 The Parachute Club
1983 "Alienation"
1984 "Boy's Club"
October 1984 "At the Feet of the Moon" 11 At the Feet of the Moon
February 1985 "Act of an Innocent" 61
June 1985 "Sexual Intelligence"
October 1986 "Love Is Fire" 24 Small Victories
February 1987 "Love and Compassion" 81
May 1987 "Walk to the Rhythm" 90
January 1988 "Big Big World" 86 Non-album single

Albums

Compilation inclusions

References

  1. 1 2 "Parachute Club - The Canadian Encyclopedia". Thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 2014-05-19.
  2. Davidson at the time was one of very few female saxophonists playing professionally, predating such artists as Candy Dulfer and Katja Rieckermann, the latter being a solo artist and member of Rod Stewart's band.
  3. Which evolved into the Toronto International Film Festival.
  4. http://www.pcclubblog.wordpress.com
  5. KKK//Mama Quilla/Angry Young Woman (Tupperwaros); see Canadian Pop Encyclopedia,Biography of Mama Quilla II; www.jam.canoe.ca.
  6. Webster, a co-writer of Parachute Club's best known song, "Rise Up", later contributed to Idol's well-known Rebel Yell album (1983). Webster also toured with Idol during the 1983-1984 period, but did not participate in later Idol recordings. Webster subsequently worked with Alannah Myles, where his bass work is featured in particular on one of her best known songs, "Black Velvet" (1989).
  7. Don't Believe a Word I Say, with Bob Segarini; www.fyimusic.ca. Blog commentary of August 19, 2009. Browstone also recorded with Segarini, on Segarini's first EP for A & M Records.
  8. Davidson, who died in 2008 at the age of 50, became a creative writer and community activist for the homeless. See Michael Badawoy, Margo Davidson, Juno Award Winner, Dies, May 23, 2008; www.cd989.com. Davidson, who continued to be based in Toronto, became a director of St. Clare's Multifaith Housing Society and was also an outreach worker at Eva's Phoenix, a transitional housing project dedicated to life skills and homeless youth. See St. Clare's Multifaith Housing Society Annual Report 2003 at p. 6.
  9. Greg Quill, "Ready to rise up", Toronto Star, 1 September 2005, page G1
  10. Barry M. Robinson, A Simple Guide to Copyright and Other Intellectual Property (revised 2008), p. 6; www.barrymrobinson.com. Retrieved 09-02-18.
  11. "Parachute Club". Kemp Law. Retrieved 2014-05-19.
  12. "About Us | PClubBlog". Pclubblog.wordpress.com. Retrieved 2014-05-19.
  13. "Canada's Walk of Fame". Canadaswalkoffame.com. 2011-08-24. Retrieved 2014-05-19.
  14. "Lorraine Segato remembers Billy Bryans | CTV News". Ctv.ca. 2012-04-24. Retrieved 2014-05-19.
  15. "Iconic band Parachute Club plays St. Catharines co-op event | Events | St. Catharines Standard". Stcatharinesstandard.ca. 2012-10-13. Retrieved 2014-05-19.
  16. "The Parachute Club releases remix version of ‘Rise Up’". Toronto Star, June 23, 2014.

External links

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