- Hour World · 1968
- British Invasion Of Hits · 1970
- Hour World · 1969
- Funk for the People · 2018
- Solid Gold - Hits of the 60's · 1996
- The Very Best of the Casuals · 1996
- Hour World · 1969
- Land of 1000 Dances - Songs of the 60's · 2005
- The Very Best of the Casuals · 1996
- Jesamine - I've Got Something Too - Single · 1968
- Forever Love · 2010
- The Very Best of the Casuals · 1996
- The Big Show (70's Soul Music Live) - Volume 2 · 2012
Albums
- 2009
- 1969
Music Videos
- 2008
Compilations
About The Casuals
Three times winners on Opportunity Knocks, British television’s hugely popular talent show of the late 60s, the Casuals subsequently left the UK for Italy, where they became a leading attraction. Alan Taylor (b. Halifax, Yorkshire, England; guitar, bass), Johnny Tebb (b. 1 October 1945, Lincoln, England; organ), Howard Newcombe (b. Lincoln, England; guitar, trumpet) and Robert O’Brien (b. Bridge Of Allan, Central Scotland; drums) were based in Milan for several years before returning to Britain in 1968, when their single, ‘Jesamine’, entered the charts. The song was originally recorded by the Bystanders as ‘When Jesamine Goes’, but the Casuals’ inherently commercial reading coincided with a prevailing trend for emotional ballads. The single ultimately reached number 2, but later releases were less successful and ‘Toy’ (1968), which peaked at number 30, was their only other hit. The Casuals continued to record superior pop: Move leader Roy Wood wrote and produced the polished ‘Caroline’ (1969), but as the decade closed, so their style of music grew increasingly anachronistic.
- ORIGIN
- Lincoln, England
- FORMED
- 1961
- GENRE
- Pop