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This late-'60s high-powered U.K. trio had an interesting ancestry, as two of its members were the offspring of
the Kinks’ irreverent and exuberant road manager Sam Curtis.
Paul Curtis (aka
Paul Gurvitz) and
Adrian Curtis (aka
Adrian Gurvitz) joined drummer
Louie Farrell at a time when the boundaries between pop and progressive music were still a matter of hot debate.
Gun were featured on
John Peel’s influential BBC Radio show
Top Gear, and enjoyed a strong chart hit with the driving, riff-laden "Race with the Devil" in 1968, which was uncannily similar to
Moby Grape’s "Can’t Be So Bad." Uncertain of their appeal in the pop market, they came unstuck with their follow-up, the frantic "Drives You Mad," and when "Hobo" also flopped, it was clear that their chart days were over. Their record label attempted to market them as counterculture heroes with advertisements proclaiming "the revolutionaries are on CBS," but
Gun failed to establish themselves as album artists. After dissolving
Gun,
Adrian and
Paul Gurvitz formed
Three Man Army. After three albums they teamed up with
Ginger Baker to form
the Baker Gurvitz Army. In 1982,
Adrian Gurvitz achieved a surprise U.K. Top Ten hit with "Classic." AMG.
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