The Ventures
Not the first but definitely the most popular rock instrumental combo, the Ventures scored several hit singles during the 1960s -- most notably "Walk -- Don't Run" and "Hawaii Five-O" -- but made their name in the growing album market, covering hits of the day and organizing thematically linked LPs. Almost 40 Ventures' albums charted, and 17 hit the Top 40. And though the group's popularity in America virtually disappeared by the 1970s, their enormous contribution to pop culture was far from over; the Ventures soon became one of the most popular worldwide groups, with dozens of albums recorded especially for the Japanese and European markets. They toured continually throughout the 1970s and '80s -- influencing Japanese pop music of the time more than they had American music during the '60s. The Ventures' origins lie in a Tacoma, Washington group called the Impacts. Around 1959, construction workers and hobby guitarists Bob Bogle and Don Wilson formed the group, gigging around Washington state and Idaho with various rhythm sections as backup. They recorded a demo tape, but after it was rejected by the Liberty Records subsidiary Dolton, the duo founded their own label, Blue Horizon. They released one vocal single ("Cookies and Coke"), then recruited bassist Nokie Edwards and drummer Skip Moore and decided to instead become an instrumental group. The Ventures went into the studio in 1959 with an idea for a new single they had first heard on Chet Atkins' Hi Fi in Focus LP. Released on Blue Horizon in 1960, the single "Walk -- Don't Run" became a big local hit after being aired as a news lead-in on a Seattle radio station (thanks to a friend with connections). In an ironic twist, Dolton Records came calling and licensed the single for national distribution; by summer 1960, it had risen to number two in the charts, behind only "It's Now or Never" by Elvis Presley. After Howie Johnson replaced Moore on drums, the Ventures began recording their debut album, unsurprisingly titled after their hit single. Two singles, "Perfidia" and "Ram-Bunk-Shush," hit the Top 40 during 1960 and 1961, but the Ventures soon began capitalizing on what became a trademark: releasing LPs that featured songs very loosely arranged around a theme implied in the title. The group's fourth LP, The Colorful Ventures, included "Yellow Jacket," "Red Top," "Orange Fire" and no less than three tracks featuring the word "blue" in the title. The Ventures put their indelible stamp on each style of '60s music they covered, and they covered many -- twist, country, pop, spy music, psychedelic, swamp, garage, TV themes. (In the '70s, the band moved on to funk, disco, reggae, soft rock and Latin music.) The Ventures' lineup changed slightly during 1962. Howie Johnson left the band, to be replaced by session man Mel Taylor; also, Nokie Edwards took over lead guitar with Bob Bogle switching to bass. One of the few LPs not arranged around a theme became their best-selling; 1963's The Ventures Play Telstar, The Lonely Bull featured a cover of the number one instrumental hit by the British studio band the Tornadoes and produced by Joe Meek. Though their cover of "Telstar" didn't even chart, the album hit the Top Ten and became the group's first of three gold records. A rewrite of their signature song -- entitled "Walk -- Don't Run '64" -- reached number eight that year. By the mid-'60s, however, the Ventures appeared to be losing their touch. Considering the volatility of popular music during the time, it was quite forgivable that the group would lose their heads-up knowledge of current trends in the music industry to forecast which songs should be covered. The television theme "Hawaii Five-O" hit number four in 1969, but the Ventures slipped off the American charts for good in 1972. Instead, the band began looking abroad for attention and -- in Japan especially -- they found it with gusto. After leaving Dolton/Liberty and founding their own Tridex Records label, the Ventures began recording albums specifically for the Japanese market. The group eventually sold over 40 million records in that country alone, becoming one of the biggest American influences on Japanese pop music ever. Nokie Edwards left the Ventures in 1968 to pursue his interest in horse racing for a time, and was replaced by Gerry McGee; though he returned by 1972, Mel Taylor left the group that year for a solo career, to be replaced by Joe Barile. (Taylor also returned, in 1979.) By the early '80s, the Ventures' core quartet of Wilson, Bogle, Edwards, and Taylor could boast of playing together for over 20 years. Edwards left the band for good in 1984 (replaced again by Gerry McGee), and the following decades were marked by the deaths of several of the group's earliest members -- Mel Taylor died midway through a Japanese tour in 1996 (replaced by his son Leon), co-founder Bob Bogle died in 2009, and Nokie Edwards himself died in 2018 -- yet latter-day incarnations of the Ventures continued to pack venues around the world. Co-founder Don Wilson died on January 22, 2022, in Tacoma, Washington; he was 88 years old.© John Bush /TiVo Read more
Not the first but definitely the most popular rock instrumental combo, the Ventures scored several hit singles during the 1960s -- most notably "Walk -- Don't Run" and "Hawaii Five-O" -- but made their name in the growing album market, covering hits of the day and organizing thematically linked LPs. Almost 40 Ventures' albums charted, and 17 hit the Top 40. And though the group's popularity in America virtually disappeared by the 1970s, their enormous contribution to pop culture was far from over; the Ventures soon became one of the most popular worldwide groups, with dozens of albums recorded especially for the Japanese and European markets. They toured continually throughout the 1970s and '80s -- influencing Japanese pop music of the time more than they had American music during the '60s.
The Ventures' origins lie in a Tacoma, Washington group called the Impacts. Around 1959, construction workers and hobby guitarists Bob Bogle and Don Wilson formed the group, gigging around Washington state and Idaho with various rhythm sections as backup. They recorded a demo tape, but after it was rejected by the Liberty Records subsidiary Dolton, the duo founded their own label, Blue Horizon. They released one vocal single ("Cookies and Coke"), then recruited bassist Nokie Edwards and drummer Skip Moore and decided to instead become an instrumental group.
The Ventures went into the studio in 1959 with an idea for a new single they had first heard on Chet Atkins' Hi Fi in Focus LP. Released on Blue Horizon in 1960, the single "Walk -- Don't Run" became a big local hit after being aired as a news lead-in on a Seattle radio station (thanks to a friend with connections). In an ironic twist, Dolton Records came calling and licensed the single for national distribution; by summer 1960, it had risen to number two in the charts, behind only "It's Now or Never" by Elvis Presley. After Howie Johnson replaced Moore on drums, the Ventures began recording their debut album, unsurprisingly titled after their hit single.
Two singles, "Perfidia" and "Ram-Bunk-Shush," hit the Top 40 during 1960 and 1961, but the Ventures soon began capitalizing on what became a trademark: releasing LPs that featured songs very loosely arranged around a theme implied in the title. The group's fourth LP, The Colorful Ventures, included "Yellow Jacket," "Red Top," "Orange Fire" and no less than three tracks featuring the word "blue" in the title. The Ventures put their indelible stamp on each style of '60s music they covered, and they covered many -- twist, country, pop, spy music, psychedelic, swamp, garage, TV themes. (In the '70s, the band moved on to funk, disco, reggae, soft rock and Latin music.) The Ventures' lineup changed slightly during 1962. Howie Johnson left the band, to be replaced by session man Mel Taylor; also, Nokie Edwards took over lead guitar with Bob Bogle switching to bass.
One of the few LPs not arranged around a theme became their best-selling; 1963's The Ventures Play Telstar, The Lonely Bull featured a cover of the number one instrumental hit by the British studio band the Tornadoes and produced by Joe Meek. Though their cover of "Telstar" didn't even chart, the album hit the Top Ten and became the group's first of three gold records. A rewrite of their signature song -- entitled "Walk -- Don't Run '64" -- reached number eight that year. By the mid-'60s, however, the Ventures appeared to be losing their touch. Considering the volatility of popular music during the time, it was quite forgivable that the group would lose their heads-up knowledge of current trends in the music industry to forecast which songs should be covered. The television theme "Hawaii Five-O" hit number four in 1969, but the Ventures slipped off the American charts for good in 1972. Instead, the band began looking abroad for attention and -- in Japan especially -- they found it with gusto. After leaving Dolton/Liberty and founding their own Tridex Records label, the Ventures began recording albums specifically for the Japanese market. The group eventually sold over 40 million records in that country alone, becoming one of the biggest American influences on Japanese pop music ever.
Nokie Edwards left the Ventures in 1968 to pursue his interest in horse racing for a time, and was replaced by Gerry McGee; though he returned by 1972, Mel Taylor left the group that year for a solo career, to be replaced by Joe Barile. (Taylor also returned, in 1979.) By the early '80s, the Ventures' core quartet of Wilson, Bogle, Edwards, and Taylor could boast of playing together for over 20 years. Edwards left the band for good in 1984 (replaced again by Gerry McGee), and the following decades were marked by the deaths of several of the group's earliest members -- Mel Taylor died midway through a Japanese tour in 1996 (replaced by his son Leon), co-founder Bob Bogle died in 2009, and Nokie Edwards himself died in 2018 -- yet latter-day incarnations of the Ventures continued to pack venues around the world. Co-founder Don Wilson died on January 22, 2022, in Tacoma, Washington; he was 88 years old.
© John Bush /TiVo
-
100+ Original Recordings
The Ventures
Pop - Released by Play Digital on 29 Jan 2016
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Walk Don't Run (Stereo)
The Ventures
Rock - Released by Capitol Records (CAP) on 1 Nov 1960
This debut album by the Ventures is surprisingly good, considering that it was recorded in a huge rush during an era when all concerned couldn't help ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Hawaii Five-O
The Ventures
Pop - Released by Capitol Records on 1 Apr 1969
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Backup the Best of the Ventures
The Ventures
Rock - Released by BackUp Best Sounds on 29 Sep 2013
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Wild Things!
The Ventures
Rock - Released by Capitol Records (CAP) on 1 Jan 1966
Over the course of several '60s albums on the Liberty subsidiary, Dolton, the Ventures became the most popular instrumental combo in the U.S.; they wo ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
On Stage
The Ventures
Rock - Released by Capitol Records (CAP) on 1 Jan 1965
So just how live is On Stage? Coming from an era when a remarkable number of "in concert" albums were actually cut in the studio with crowd noises ove ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Ventures' Christmas Album
The Ventures
Christmas Music - Released by Capitol Records on 1 Nov 1965
Originally issued on Dolton, this instrumental classic was reissued briefly in 1990 on CD by EMI. The Ventures have a blast with unique covers of secu ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Ventures Greatest Hits
The Ventures
Rock - Released by TWA on 29 Sep 2017
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Very Best Of The Ventures
The Ventures
Pop - Released by EMI Gold on 1 Jan 2008
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Live In Japan '65 (Live)
The Ventures
Pop - Released by Parlophone Catalogue on 1 Jan 1995
Originally released in Japan as a double album, this live set was unavailable in the U.S. until 1995. So cleanly recorded (the drums are especially cr ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Knock Me Out!
The Ventures
Rock - Released by Capitol Records (CAP) on 1 Jan 1965
The most successful of all instrumental combos helped their cause in no small measure by cutting a slew of trendy albums like this one. As with many p ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Ultimate Collection
The Ventures
Pop - Released by Westmill on 20 Jul 2016
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
$1,000,000 Weekend
The Ventures
Rock - Released by Capitol Records (CAP) on 1 Jan 1967
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Flights Of Fantasy (Stereo)
The Ventures
Rock - Released by Capitol Records (CAP) on 1 Jan 1968
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Rock And Roll Forever
The Ventures
Rock - Released by Capitol Records (CAP) on 1 Jan 1972
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Guitar Freakout
The Ventures
Rock - Released by Capitol Records (CAP) on 1 Jan 1967
Continuing an artistically prosperous run, Guitar Freakout is another winner for the Ventures, following up the terrific Ventures Play the "Batman" Th ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Ventures Play The Carpenters
The Ventures
Rock - Released by Capitol Records (CAP) on 1 Jan 1974
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Ventures' Twist Party, Vol. 2
The Ventures
Rock - Released by Capitol Records (CAP) on 1 Jan 1962
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
My Best Hits
The Ventures
Rock - Released by My Best Hits on 16 Jun 2021
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
"Surfing"
The Ventures
Rock - Released by Capitol Records (CAP) on 1 Jan 1963
The Ventures were not a surf band. Well-established before surf music's brief heyday in the mid-'60s, they have nonetheless been easily lumped in with ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Ventures
The Ventures
Rock - Released by Capitol Records (CAP) on 1 Jan 1961
The Ventures' 1961 self-titled sophomore LP is a twangy, country-influenced album that builds upon the band's superb 1960 debut, Walk Don't Run. Most ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo