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Ekseption - Ekseption's roots go back to the late fifties when they were formed as The Jokers in Haarlem in The Netherlands. The Jokers evolved into The Incrowd, with trumpeter Rein van der Broek being the only original remaining member. It was van der Broek who spotted van der Linden playing in a jazz club and he asked him to join The Incrowd. It was at this stage that they discovered that another Dutch group already had the name The Incrowd, so they changed it to Ekseption. Other members of Ekseption were Cor Dekker on bass, Peter de Leeuwe on drums, Rob Kruisman ( later replaced by Dick Remelinck) on woodwinds and Huib van Kampen on guitar. Ekseption's initial repertoire consisted entirely of cover versions, but after seeing a concert of Keith Emerson and The Nice, van der Linden wanted to combine his love of jazz and classical with a rock feel. They won a "battle of the bands" contest at the famous Loosdrecht Jazz Festival in 1968, and their prize was a contract with Philips Records, for whom they would go on to release most of their nineteen or so albums during their career. Problems were developing with the other members of Ekseption in that press coverage of the band was now concentrating on van der Linden as band leader due to his composer/orchestrator role, and he was asked to leave the band after the release of "Trinity". His replacement was Hans Jensen, and the subsequent album, "New Formula", although very good, was more jazzy as opposed to classically influenced, as had become Ekseption's trademark. Further albums, such as 1975's "Mind Mirror", are amongst the finest the band ever recorded. Van der Linden returned to Ekseption when Trace split in the late seventies. Unfortunately, as far as we know, not too many Ekseption albums have been released on CD, baring the odd classical compilation, although a really good double CD, featuring some of their more progressive/jazz/rock tracks, did surface a few years ago.
Ekseption
Ekseption - Pick up the Pieces, from "Mindmirror" in 1975, their 9th album. Dutch outfit Ekseption were formed in the late sixties by keyboard player Rick van der Linden, together with trumpet player Rein van den Broek, sax player/vocalist Rob Kruisman, Huib van Kampen on guitar and sax, Cor Dekker on bass and Peter de Leeuwe on drums and vocals. Their self-titled debut album, released in 1969 on Philips Records, featured the band performing a number of famous classical pieces destined to become their trademark. Later albums saw the inclusion of drummer Dennis Whitbread, Dick Remelink on saxes and flute, and Michael van Dijk on vocals (who appeared on the band's second album, "Beggar Julia's Time Trip", recently released on CD). Van der Linde left the band in 1973 (to form Trace), and was replaced by Hans Jensen, who, together with Van den Broek, Dekker, sax player Jan Vennik and drummer Pieter Voogt, appeared on the band's "New Formula - Bingo!" album in 1974. The funkier/jazzier direction hinted at by the band on their excellent "Trinity" album in 1973, had set the precedent for later albums, and "Bingo" was a very good example of mid-seventies Blood, Sweat & Tears-style brass rock. Our featured album, with it's great cover of The Average White Band classic, was equally as good, but it seemed to signal the end of the band, for a few years at least. Van der Linden returned in 1978 and they released "Ekseption ' 78" that year, with "La Cinquieme" and "Dance Macabre" following a few years later. Although a number of "best of" albums have been released during the past few years, for some strange reason, not too many of Ekseption's studio albums have seen the light of day on CD. Hopefully this'll change in due course, preferably with "Trinity" following hot on the heels of "Beggar Julia's Time Trip"!
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Biography by Bruce Eder
In their eight year existence,
Ekseption came as close as any
group from the European
continent ever did to stealing
the thunder of early
classical-rock outfits such as
the Nice and rivaling the early
work of Emerson, Lake & Palmer.
In Holland they charted singles
based on classical compositions
and released successful concept
albums, and were — along with
Focus — the top progressive rock
band in the Dutch-speaking
world. The group's roots
actually go back to 1958 and a
Haarlem-based band called the
Jokers, formed by Hans Alta
(bass), Tim Griek (drums), Rein
van den Broek (trumpet), and
Huib van Kampen (guitar,
saxophone), who specialized in
covers of American rock 'n'
roll. They changed their name in
1966 to the Incrowd, playing a
mix of rock 'n' roll and r&b
with a heavy jazz influence, and
underwent some membership shifts
around this time — Rob Kruisman
joined as a singer who also
doubled on guitar, flute, and
saxophone, but much more telling
was the group's sharing a bill
with the Occasional Swing Combo;
Rick van der Broek was impressed
with the playing of that group's
keyboardman, Rick van der
Linden, a conservatory-trained
musician who also composed
music. After playing together in
an informal jam session, van der
Broek invited van der Linden
into the band.
After a year of working as the
Incrowd, the band was notified
that another Dutch group had a
prior claim on the name, and
they had to change their name
once again — they finally
settled on Ekseption. More
personnel changes took place —
with Tim Griek (who later
produced Brainbox's self-titled
debut album) and original Jokers
founder Hans Alta having been
replaced by drummer Peter de
Leeuwe and bassist Cor Dekker,
respectively. More than the
group's name or membership was
in transition at the time,
however; in 1968, Ekseption had
won first prize in a music
competition with a trio of
jazz-based numbers, two adapted
from the work of Dizzie
Gillespie and Art Blakey, and
the third a rendition of Aram
Khachaturian's "Sabre Dance",
which had been a staple of pop
adaptations from Woody Herman's
in the 1940's to Love
Sculpture's version in the
mid-1960's. Part of the prize
was a contract with Philips
Records, which the group used to
record a single comprised of
their rock-based renditions of a
pair of Bix Beiderbeck numbers.
Philips rejected the single as
too old fashioned, and it was
then that Rick van der Linden
stepped in to fill the void — he
had seen the Nice (featuring
Keith Emerson on keyboards)
perform in Rotterdam and was
astounded and delighted by their
mix of hard rock and classical
music, and suggested that
Ekseption cut a single of "The
Fifth", adapted from the first
movement of Beethoven's Symphony
No. 5, and their version of
"Sabre Dance". The band went
along, thinking that it was a
joke, until the record was
released in March of 1969. It
didn't do much at first, until
it was picked up by a radio
station, with help from the
spouse of their producer, Tony
Vos — it went on to become a hit
in Holland and was released
successfully in much of the rest
of Europe.
The group followed it up with a
pair of similar singles,
"Rhapsody In Blue" and "Air"
(adapted from Bach), which also
charted. Ironically, Ekseption
were doing considerably better
with their records in their own
country than the Nice were in
England, where they never
attracted more than a large cult
following. These successes, and
a debut album patterned along
the same lines with some jazz
elements added in — which earned
gold record awards in several
countries — led to a new shakeup
in the band's lineup, out of
which Rick van der Linden became
the group's new leader. Other
membership changes followed, as
guitarist and saxman Huib van
Kampen retired from performing
and Peter de Leeuwe left the
group temporarily -amid these
changes, the band's second LP, a
concept album called Beggar
Julia's Time Trip, was recorded.
Vocalists Michel van Dijk (who
was later a member of Brainbox)
and Steve Allet passed through
the group as well, though
Ekseption's focus remained
principally instrumental — by
the early 1970's, van der
Linden's original organ was
augmented by the presence of
synthesizers, Mellotrons, and
the usual array of advanced
electric keyboards that became
their dominant sound. In 1972,
the group's fifth album,
Ekseption 5, became their first
and only LP to be released in
America -their most accomplished
album, it moved from strength to
strength, even adapting a great
Nice original, "For Example",
into an even better, more
jazz-influenced piece of their
own design . The album never
found more than a tiny audience
but in astounded most of those
who heard it, and if Ekseption
could have continued making
music like this, they could
easily have competed
internationally.
Alas, that album and the tour
that followed marked Ekseption's
artistic peak. In 1973, saxman
Dick Remelink and drummer de
Leeuwe quit, to be replaced by
Jan Vennik and Pieter Voogt,
respectively. The group seemed
to lose momentum, however, and
their subsequent releases didn't
sell nearly as well as their
previous records. Van der
Linden, who was very much a star
in Holland, quit in 1974 to
pursue a solo career, and
Ekseption carried on with new
keyboard player Han Jansen,
whose arrival heralded a much
more jazz-oriented sound for the
group. This change seemed to
lose the group whatever audience
it had, and following the
release of Mindmirror (1976),
they broke up. Van den Broek,
Vennik, and Jansen co-founded
Spin, a jazz-rock fusion band
that recorded two LPs during the
mid-1970's. By the end of the
decade, Ekseption had reformed
for an album, Ekseption '78, and
in 1980 Rein van den Broek and
Rick van der Linden — who had
formed a group called Trace with
Focus drummer Pierre van der
Linden (who was no relation),
and also cut a pair of albums,
the second with Catalin Tircolea
— became a duo called Cum Laude
and cut an LP together, which
embraced a classical-rock sound
akin to their old band.
Ekseption had one more go-around
in 1989 with Ekseption '89
before calling it quits once and
for all. In the 1990's, their
music began surfacing on CD,
though the best of their
original albums, Ekseption 5,
has yet to show up on compact
disc as of 2002.

Rick van
der Linden
Peter DeLeeuwe
Cor Dekker
Hans Hansen
Hans Hollestelle
Hans Jensen
Rob Kruisman
Dick Remelinck
Rein VanDer Broek
Michael Van Dijk
Huib VanKampen
Jan Vennik
Pieter Voogt
Dennis Whitbread
Steve Allet

Richard
Odom
Frank Zappa & the Mothers
Indochine
Spiderbait
Tom Scholz
Joe Vitale
Carmen
Jadis

If you
have any contribution to make to
this band or something to add,
email me - Japie Marais.


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