Simon Dupree & The Big Sound
Biography
There's a rule of human nature that applies here: Just as when a letter arrives marked "important" or "urgent" all over it, chances are good that it's anything but, any group using the adjective "big" in its name is probably not going anywhere. Such was the case of Simon Dupree & the Big Sound, who neither had a "Simon Dupree" nor a very big following for much of their existence.
Not that they weren't good. But apart from Big Country and maybe the Big Bopper -- and he had help in achieving immortality from the plane crash in which he died -- not too many acts using the name "big" have gone very far before the public.
"Simon Dupree" was vocalist Derek Shulman, one of a trio of brothers (Ray and Phil being the other two) from Portsmouth, England, who started out in music as R&B fanatics and first formed a group in 1964. Their musical interests can be glimpsed by the choices that the Shulman brothers made between 1964 and 1965 in naming their bands, which included the Howling Wolves and the Road Runners. Those names aside, their repertory was focused a lot more on the songs of Wilson Pickett, Don Covay, and Otis Redding than on the Wolf or Bo Diddley.
Selected Discography
