New Colony Six


New Colony Six is an American soft rock band whose height of popularity was from the mid-1960s to the early 1970s. From Chicago, the group placed ten singles on the Hot 100 between 1966 and 1971. Original members were Ray Graffia, who was born March 28, 1946, Chick James, Pat McBride, Craig Kemp, Wally Kemp, and Gerry Van Kollenburg, who was born June 26, 1946. Ronnie Rice replaced Craig Kemp in 1966. There were numerous changes in the lineup over the years. The band's two biggest hits, which peaked on the Chicago-area radio station WLS months before they peaked nationally, were Rice's "I Will Always Think About You" and "Things I'd Like to Say" . In Canada they also hit the charts with an earlier song "Love You So Much" and the later "I Could Never Lie To You" .
Formed in 1965, New Colony Six scored their first major local hit in Chicago with "I Confess", featured on their debut album, Breakthrough. Their sound was characterized by Richie Unterberger as "a poppier American Them with their prominent organ, wobbly Lesley-fied guitar amplifications, and rave-up tempos", later devolving into "a cabaret-ish band with minor national hits to their credit by the end of the 1960s." Like Paul Revere & the Raiders, they wore colonial outfits on stage.x
Ellery Temple briefly joined in 1967, replacing Wally Kemp, and was replaced by Les Kummel. Billy Herman replaced James in 1969. Graffia left in 1969 and Bruce Gordon and Chuck Jobes joined the band. Skip Griparis was playing guitar and singing lead vocals in 1972 until the band's demise at the end of 1974.
In 1988, the band played a reunion show at Chicago's Park West. As of 2010, the band continued to perform with founding member Graffia and Bruce Mattey in the lineup. New Colony Six was inducted into the Iowa Rock n' Roll Music Association Hall of Fame in 2002.

Discography

Albums