Musically this period coincided with a British boom of traditional jazz, with several Kingston venues helping to develop a New Orleans inspired scene: the Jazz Boat was a converted barge on the Thames, complete with sails; Norbiton was home to The Railway Hotel, and Surbiton had The Bun Shop; while The Grey Horse on Richmond Road and The Fighting Cocks on Old London Road in Kingston’s town centre are two examples of old jazz venues still hosting live music today. As the trad boom took hold, esteemed names such as Ken Colyer, Acker Bilk, and Humphrey Lyttelton came to Kingston to play larger concerts at The Coronation Hall on Denmark Road.
Simultaneously many in the region began to be influenced by an altogether different Stateside sound. While rock ‘n’ roll was beginning to reach a wide audience as it infiltrated the airwaves, others were sourcing and learning from rarer records by American bluesmen. Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, and Jimmy Reed’s form of electrified Chicago blues were an enormous inspiration to The Yardbirds, formed from alumni of Hollyfield School on Surbiton Hill Road and a springboard for Top Topham, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck. The Rolling Stones, based in neighbouring Richmond, injected rock ‘n’ roll rhythm into the heartfelt soul of blues, developing the 1960s R&B sound that would later open the door to heavier, psychedelic and more experimental styles of rock.
Kingston’s importance in this musical story is underwritten by the volume of illustrious and innovative names that played live in the borough. The ABC and Granada Cinemas doubled up as major concert venues, hosting the likes of Cliff Richard, The Everly Brothers, Roy Orbison, Cilla Black, The Rolling Stones, The Kinks, and The Who. The Cellar Club was at the forefront of the R&B revolution, with live performances from The Animals, Small Faces, and Cream, while Kingston Polytechnic was able to attract the likes of Yes, Queen, and Pink Floyd. The Toby Jug in Tolworth later typified the psychedelic and experimental direction popular music was headed – Fleetwood Mac, Led Zeppelin, and Jethro Tull were all performers, but perhaps the most significant night for the ‘Jug’ and Kingston’s live scene overall was in February 1972, when David Bowie publicly adopted his Ziggy Stardust persona for the first time.
The Kingston RPM: Cradle of Rock (Live Venues) Spotify playlist is a chronological exploration of tracks from artists who played live shows within the vast network of venues that populated Kingston between the 1950s and 1970s. Included are those whose connections with the town lie deeper: The Yardbirds have their origins in Hollyfield School in Surbiton, who in turn were the genesis for Led Zeppelin via members Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page – indeed the original name for Led Zep was ‘The New Yardbirds’.
The tracks selected were released by the artists around the time of their first known live appearances in Kingston, highlighting the evolution of popular music over this time period. As time goes on concert crooners and rock n rollers such as the Everly Brothers, Roy Orbison and Cliff Richard begin to make way for R&B and ultimately psychedelic sounds that in Kingston could largely be found in Tolworth’s Toby Jug pub. The playlist concludes with David Bowie, who as a teenager played in neighbouring Richmond’s Eel Pie Island and launched his Ziggy Stardust persona at the Toby Jug in 1972.
View our Gig Timeline for a more detailed glimpse of who played where.