Vitesse (band)

Vitesse

Singer/drummer Herman van Boeyen
Background information
Genres Rock
Years active 1975 - 1994
Website http://www.hermanvanboeyen.nl/
Past members Herman van Boeyen (1975 -1994)
Herman Brood (1975 - 1976)
Rob ten Bokum (1975 - 1976)
Peter Smid (1975 - ?)
Ferdi Karmelk (1975 - ?)
Paul Bagmeyer (1975 - ?)
Rob van Donselaar (1975 - ?)
Jan-Piet den Tex (1976 - ?)
Gerrit Veen (1976)
Ross Recardi (1976)
Jaap van Eik (1976 - ?)
Jan van der Meij(1977 - 1980)
Wilco Toerroe Leerdam (1977 - 1979)
Rudy de Queljoe (1977 - 1979)
Peter van Straten (1979 - 1980)
Mark Boon (1980 - ?)
Freddie Cavalli (1980 - ?)
Peter Langerak (1981 - 1982)
André Versluijs (1981 - 1982)
Otto Cooymans (1982 - 1983)
Ruud Englebert (1982 - 1983)
Carl Carlton (1982 - 1983)
Danny Lademacher (1983 - ?)
Michel Legrand (1983 - ?)
Kai Kalastikow (1990? - ?)
Mario Timme (1990? - ?)
Guido Ludwig (1990? - ?)
Marcus Wienstroer (1991 - ?)

Vitesse was a Dutch rock group founded by drummer and singer Herman van Boeyen, assisted by an assortment of other musicians including Herman Brood. The band was active from 1975 to 1994 and had a number of hit singles in the early 1980s. It built a reputation as a good live act.[1]

History

Vitesse was founded in 1975 in Amsterdam by Herman van Boeyen, with Herman Brood (vocals and guitar), Rob ten Bokum (guitar), and Peter Smid (bass). They signed with Reprise that same year and released an untitled debut album. At that time the band consisted of Van Boeyen, Brood, Jan-Piet den Tex, Gerrit Veen, and Ross Recardi; Brood left the band shortly thereafter and took Veen with him.

A second album, Rendez Vous (Negram, 1977), was commercially unsuccessful, as was the third, Out in the Country (Negram, 1978), though it received positive reviews. Rock Invader (Negram, 1979) was more successful, with two charting singles: "Rock & Roll Band" and "Whole lot of Travellin'". The band was more successful in Germany. (These three Negram albums were re-released by EMI in 2007.)

After Herman Brood's Wild Romance dissolved, Van Boeyen tried again to collaborate with Brood, but this was not a success; this time Brood took bass player Peter van Straten with him when he left, though Van Straten returned a few days later. in 1980 the band released the album Live as a trio: Van Boeyen, Van Straten, and Jan van der Meij. The latter two left soon and founded Powerplay.

Vitesse finally began scoring hits in 1982, with a line-up that included Otto Cooymans, Ruud Englebert, and Carl Carlton. The singles "Rosalyn" and "Good lookin'" received significant attention, and the albums Live in Germany and Incomplete Works & Other Hits reached #19 and #15 on the album charts. The single "Julia" was #30 in 1983, but after a dispute with Van Boeyen Cooymans left the band, and took Englebert and Carlton with him. The next album, Vanity Island, and the single of the same name were flops and after another failed album the band lost its record contract (with Philips).

In subsequent years Van Boeyen kept trying, but without avail. He had moved to Germany, playing mostly with German musicians. The 1990 single "Ever since I met you" was a moderate success in Germany, but not in the Netherlands. In 1994, after the single "All of the time" was a flop, Van Boeyen dissolved the band.

Discography

Albums

Album(s) with charts in the Dutch
Album Top 20/50/75/100
Date of
release
Date of entry
 Highest 
position
 Number of 
weeks
 Comments 
Vitesse1975-
Rendez-vous1977-
Herman Brood in Vitesse1978- Reissue of the first album
Out in the country1978-
Rock invader197910-11-1979296
Live1980- Live album
Good news1981-
Live in Germany198211-09-19821914 Live album
Incomplete works and other hits (You always never knew you would like to know already about with)198218-12-19821510 Anthology
Vanity islands1984-
Het beste van1985- Anthology
Keepin' me alive1985-
The best1988- Anthology
Back on earth1992-
Best of Vitesse1997- Anthology
Good lookin1999- Antholoty

Singles

Single(s) Charts with
in the Dutch Top 40
Date of appearanceDate of entry
 Highest 
position
 Number of 
weeks
 Comments 
"April wind"1976-
"Do you wanna dance"1976-
"You can't beat me"197721-05-1977tip16-
"Out in the country"1978-
"We'll do the music tonight"1978-
"Rock and roll band"197906-10-1979294 No. 36 in the Single Top 100
"On the run"197915-12-1979tip18-
"Running and hiding"1979-
"Goin' up"1980-
"Whole lot of travellin"'198023-02-1980tip17-
"Can't keep a promise"1981-
"Desire"1981-
"Generator of love"1981-
"Rosalyn"198221-08-198297 No. 16 in the Single Top 100
"Good lookin"'198213-11-198249 No. 4 in the Single Top 100
"All my heart"1983-
"Julia"198314-05-1983303 No. 30 in the Single Top 100
"Transit lover"1983-
"Highway love"1984-
"Keep up"1984-
"Vanity islands"198407-07-1984tip11-
"Keepin' me alive"1985-
"Lights in the air"1985-
"Spanish heat"1985-
"You turn me on"1985-
"A dirty mind is a joy forever"1986-
"I don't lose a friend"1987-
"Room to move"1987-
"The risin' yen"1988-
"Dancin"'1989-
"Ever since I met you"1990-
"Happy"1992-
"What kind of man"1993- No. 88 in the Single Top 100
"Mrs. Everlast"1993-
"All of the time"1994-

References

  1. "Eenmalig eerbetoon aan Herman van Boeyen -" (in Dutch). Slagwerkkrant.nl. 10 October 2007. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.