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June 2023
|Record Collector
Evolving from blues-rock through prog and several different points in-between, East Midlanders Family perhaps don’t get the recognition they deserve these days, possibly because of such wilful refusal to stay in one musical lane. With a clutch of reissues ready to prompt a revision of that reputation, Roger Chapman tells his side of a tortuous tale to Michael Heatley.
"Family came on in brilliant form. The lead singer, with his stoned, haunted, Trotskyite eyes, smashed his tambourine mid-way through the second number and then set upon the microphone, hurling it about the stage.”
This graphic description of Leicester band Family supporting The Rolling Stones in Hyde Park in July 1969 comes from Richard Neville’s book, Playpower. Published the following year, it explains how frontman Roger Chapman came to be the face of the band, even though they were at pains to operate as a democratic outfit. And we haven’t even mentioned his vibrato-soaked howl, a visceral sound that remains unique to this day.
“I suppose I was the sound of Family because I apparently had a weird voice!” he cackles. “That’s really what people put it down to: ‘Oh, yeah, that’s Family because it’s Roger Chapman.’ I never wanted to be the star: we were just a bunch of musicians trying to make good music.” As for the tambourine-bashing and mike-stand throwing, “I can’t stop myself doing what I do onstage, that’s what I am. I get led away by this feeling and off I go…”

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