Kingdom Come (British band)
1970s British rock band / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kingdom Come were a British rock band fronted by Arthur Brown. The band was recognized for Brown's theatrical and operatic singing, and a sound that drew from psychedelic and progressive rock. This combination made the band a hit on Britain's festival circuit, but lack of record sales, indifference from music critics, and poor record label promotion (especially in the US) led to its eventual demise in 1974.
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Kingdom Come | |
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Also known as | Arthur Brown's Kingdom Come[1] |
Origin | United Kingdom |
Genres | |
Years active | 1970–1974 |
Past members | Arthur Brown Andy Dalby Martin Steer Phil Shutt Victor Peraino Julian Paul Brown Michael Harris Desmond Fisher |
The band was later marketed as Arthur Brown's Kingdom Come in North America due to name conflicts with an unrelated band with the same name. Despite their lack of commercial success, Kingdom Come's 1973 album Journey has received generally positive retrospective reviews from critics. Alan Holmes of Freq said that "Journey was so far ahead of its time that you have to keep checking the sleeve to make sure that it really does say 1973 and not 1983" and that the album was "not only Arthur Brown's masterpiece, but also one of the truly great albums of the seventies."[2]
The album was also "most noted in retrospect as one of the first rock records to use a drum machine, which was still quite a novelty back in 1973".[3]