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Stretch Tickets, Tour Dates and %{concertOrShowText}
Stretch Tickets, Tour Dates and %{concertOrShowText}

StretchVerified

5,982 Followers
Never miss another Stretch concert. Get alerts about tour announcements, concert tickets, and shows near you with a free Bandsintown account.
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No upcoming shows
Send a request to Stretch to play in your city
Request a Show

concerts and tour dates

Past

JUL
03
2021
Austin, TX
Empire Control Room & Garage
I Was There
NOV
08
2020
Hunters Hill, Australia
Tuning Fork
I Was There
OCT
05
2018
Brooklyn, NY
Output
I Was There
MAY
28
2017
St Paul, MN
Minnesota State Fairgrounds
I Was There
MAY
04
2017
Fitzroy, Australia
Glamorama
I Was There
APR
29
2017
Queenstown, New Zealand
Sherwood
I Was There
APR
28
2017
Dunedin, New Zealand
Dog With Two Tails
I Was There
APR
16
2017
Ascot, United Kingdom
Jagz
I Was There
APR
15
2017
Hastings, New Zealand
Common Room
I Was There
APR
07
2017
Wellington, New Zealand
The Third Eye
I Was There
APR
01
2017
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
MAR
31
2017
New Plymouth, New Zealand
Govett-Brewster Art Gallery
I Was There
MAR
25
2017
Leigh, New Zealand
Leigh Sawmill Cafe
I Was There
MAR
24
2017
Auckland, New Zealand
The Wine Cellar
I Was There
FEB
25
2017
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
JAN
28
2017
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
DEC
09
2016
Toledo, OH
Headliners
I Was There
OCT
15
2016
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
MAY
06
2016
Gisborne, New Zealand
Dome Cinema
I Was There
APR
24
2016
Chicago, IL
Lincoln Hall
I Was There
APR
23
2016
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
MAR
26
2016
Las Vegas, NV
OMD Theater
I Was There
MAR
20
2016
Toronto, Canada
Rivoli
I Was There
NOV
28
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
NOV
05
2015
Toronto, Canada
Royal Cinema
I Was There
OCT
23
2015
Rotterdam, Netherlands
Bird
I Was There
SEP
04
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
AUG
21
2015
Bowling Green, OH
Blondies formerly known as Checkers Pub
I Was There
AUG
15
2015
Salt Lake City, UT
The Urban Lounge
I Was There
JUL
26
2015
Toledo, OH
Iggy's
I Was There
JUL
18
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
JUL
10
2015
Adelaide, Australia
HQ Complex
I Was There
JUN
26
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
MAY
29
2015
Toledo, OH
Iggy's
I Was There
MAY
14
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
APR
29
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
APR
25
2015
London, United Kingdom
Space Nw10
I Was There
FEB
27
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
JAN
23
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
DEC
26
2014
London, United Kingdom
Brixton Jamm
I Was There
DEC
13
2014
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
OCT
24
2014
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
AUG
23
2014
Maidstone, United Kingdom
The Source
I Was There
AUG
01
2014
Manchester, United Kingdom
Twenty Twenty Two
I Was There
JUL
12
2014
Salt Lake City, UT
The Loading Dock
I Was There
JUL
04
2014
Toledo, OH
Bar EDM
I Was There
AUG
24
2013
Hythe, United Kingdom
Heane Wood
I Was There
AUG
03
2013
Surfers Paradise, Australia
Elsewhere
I Was There
MAY
04
2013
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Various Clubs
I Was There
Show More Dates

About Stretch

They were wild days, back in the mid-Seventies, when bands were tough, hard rocking and determined to carve out a piece of the action. Those were the days when record companies were falling over themselves in the rush to sign new outfits they hoped would compete with mega-successful outfits, like Free, Bad Company, and Deep Purple. There was plenty of money around, and loads of clubs, festivals and tours, enough to support scores of musicians who could expect to make a reasonable living, plying their trade. Throughout Germany, Britain and America, there was a rich variety of hard rock bands who relied on the power of screaming vocalists, wailing guitarists and super charged drummers to kick ass. Night after night on the road they got the fans up on their feet, cheering and waving their blazing cigarette lighters in support. There was no need to worry about the horrors to come - punk rock, disco, rap and dance music. Rock bands were kings of the road, and even the least famous could live out dreams of stardom. Among those hard working dreamers was a band called Stretch, a British outfit who recorded for the Anchor label. Their first LP was in fact "Elastique", produced by Martin Rushent, and now re-issued by Repertoire, enabling whole new generations to rediscover the power of a band once hailed as one of the hottest new names of 1975.

The start of the band had been quite controversal. In 1974 Fleetwood Mac manager Clifford Davis saw that group falling apart in the middle of an American tour with the departure of Bob Welch. Davis considered himself legal owner of name Fleetwood Mac. He named one of the other bands under his management Fleetwood Mac and sent them out to play the remaining shows of the tour. The result was unhappy fans, who paid to see another band and a lawsuit with the original Fleetwood Mac members that would stretch out for years. The fake Fleetwood Mac was renamed to Stretch and remained under the management of Clifford Davis. Needless to say that the reformed Fleetwood Mac, now with Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks as new bandmembers did not.

Stretch featured the fine vocal talents of one Elmer Gantry (who named himself in honour of the character in the Burt Lancaster movie Elmer Gantry). Elmer had previously led an outfit called Elmer Gantry's Velvet Opera, which released three singles in the late Sixties on the Direction label. They were "Flames", (1967), "Mary Jane", (1968), and "Volcano", (1969), all now collector's items. He also recorded a song called "Psychobabble", featured on an The Alan Parsons Project Album "Eye in the Sky". They all helped establish Elmer's reputation as a fine, expressive singer and imaginative composer. Stretch was a much more bluesy kind of band and featured a hot young guitarist, and songwriter simply known as "Kirby". Elmer was the lead vocalist and also played some guitar. They made a strong team, ably backed by Steve Emery (bass guitar), and Jim Russell (drums), who also played with rock'n'roll revival band The Wild Angels. Stretch was augmented on the album by horn players Mike Bailey and Ron Carthy, saxophonists Mick Eve and Chris Mercer, and keyboard player John Cook.

The band had made a promising start and enjoyed the thrill of a hit single, when "Why Did You Do It" (written by Kirby and featured on this CD) got to Number 16 in the U.K. in November 1975. It spent nine weeks in the charts and seemed to signal the start of a hugely successful career.

The band followed up "Elastique" with "You Can't Beat Your Brain for Entertainment" (1976), and "Life Blood" (1977), all on Anchor, by which time drummer Jeff Rich had joined the band. The blond-haired young sticksman was later to find job security with Status Quo. The final Stretch record, "Forget The Past" was released on the hot wax label in 1978. Alas, none of these last two quite matched up to the power of their debut album and they couldn't manage to find the panacea of another hit single.

By the time they released "Forget The Past" the band had virtually disintegrated. One music expert described the last album, rather cruelly as 'pure trash'. Only Kirby and Steve Emery remained, using session men like Nicko McBrain (drums), from the Pat Travers Band and Trust, who went on to fame with heavy metal gods Iron Maiden. The writing was on the wall for the kind of rock band Stretch typified. Soon they would be replaced by much heavier metal bands like Iron Maiden, or the combined forces of punk and New Wave. Soon, it would no longer be enough simply to get on the stage, yell 'Rock on!’ and play the blues all night. Bands needed an image, lots of special effects, dry ice and rings through their noses (not always in that order of course!). At their peak critics rated Stretch as 'the greatest British blues and boogie band of the era', and many spoke in whispered reverence of the crazed night in 1976, 'when they nearly blew Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow off stage'. With the miracle of the CD re-issue we can now once again enjoy the excitement of the band 'at full stretch', on their first album as they stomp through Elmer Gantry compositions like "Miss Jones", "Miss Daisy", "Snakes alive", "Write me a note", "Tomorrow's another day", and "Buzz Fly". Most of the rest of the material was written or co-written by Kirby, including "Why Did You Do It?", "Down home", and "Slip away". "Navy Blues" was contributed by another bass guitarist, Paul Martinez (later with Paice Ashton & Lord).

It was all vibrant, pulsating stuff. Now if only they'd got another hit.
Show More
Genres:
Hiphop, Rock, Pop, Soul, Hip-hop, Rnb-soul, Hip Hop, R&b/soul, Funk, R&b
Band Members:
Kevin Palmer - Guitar, Hunter Elmore - Drums, Kyal Randolph - Vocals
Hometown:
Toledo, Ohio

No upcoming shows
Send a request to Stretch to play in your city
Request a Show

concerts and tour dates

Past

JUL
03
2021
Austin, TX
Empire Control Room & Garage
I Was There
NOV
08
2020
Hunters Hill, Australia
Tuning Fork
I Was There
OCT
05
2018
Brooklyn, NY
Output
I Was There
MAY
28
2017
St Paul, MN
Minnesota State Fairgrounds
I Was There
MAY
04
2017
Fitzroy, Australia
Glamorama
I Was There
APR
29
2017
Queenstown, New Zealand
Sherwood
I Was There
APR
28
2017
Dunedin, New Zealand
Dog With Two Tails
I Was There
APR
16
2017
Ascot, United Kingdom
Jagz
I Was There
APR
15
2017
Hastings, New Zealand
Common Room
I Was There
APR
07
2017
Wellington, New Zealand
The Third Eye
I Was There
APR
01
2017
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
MAR
31
2017
New Plymouth, New Zealand
Govett-Brewster Art Gallery
I Was There
MAR
25
2017
Leigh, New Zealand
Leigh Sawmill Cafe
I Was There
MAR
24
2017
Auckland, New Zealand
The Wine Cellar
I Was There
FEB
25
2017
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
JAN
28
2017
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
DEC
09
2016
Toledo, OH
Headliners
I Was There
OCT
15
2016
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
MAY
06
2016
Gisborne, New Zealand
Dome Cinema
I Was There
APR
24
2016
Chicago, IL
Lincoln Hall
I Was There
APR
23
2016
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
MAR
26
2016
Las Vegas, NV
OMD Theater
I Was There
MAR
20
2016
Toronto, Canada
Rivoli
I Was There
NOV
28
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
NOV
05
2015
Toronto, Canada
Royal Cinema
I Was There
OCT
23
2015
Rotterdam, Netherlands
Bird
I Was There
SEP
04
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
AUG
21
2015
Bowling Green, OH
Blondies formerly known as Checkers Pub
I Was There
AUG
15
2015
Salt Lake City, UT
The Urban Lounge
I Was There
JUL
26
2015
Toledo, OH
Iggy's
I Was There
JUL
18
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
JUL
10
2015
Adelaide, Australia
HQ Complex
I Was There
JUN
26
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
MAY
29
2015
Toledo, OH
Iggy's
I Was There
MAY
14
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
APR
29
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
APR
25
2015
London, United Kingdom
Space Nw10
I Was There
FEB
27
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
JAN
23
2015
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
DEC
26
2014
London, United Kingdom
Brixton Jamm
I Was There
DEC
13
2014
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
OCT
24
2014
Toledo, OH
Frankies
I Was There
AUG
23
2014
Maidstone, United Kingdom
The Source
I Was There
AUG
01
2014
Manchester, United Kingdom
Twenty Twenty Two
I Was There
JUL
12
2014
Salt Lake City, UT
The Loading Dock
I Was There
JUL
04
2014
Toledo, OH
Bar EDM
I Was There
AUG
24
2013
Hythe, United Kingdom
Heane Wood
I Was There
AUG
03
2013
Surfers Paradise, Australia
Elsewhere
I Was There
MAY
04
2013
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Various Clubs
I Was There
Show More Dates

About Stretch

They were wild days, back in the mid-Seventies, when bands were tough, hard rocking and determined to carve out a piece of the action. Those were the days when record companies were falling over themselves in the rush to sign new outfits they hoped would compete with mega-successful outfits, like Free, Bad Company, and Deep Purple. There was plenty of money around, and loads of clubs, festivals and tours, enough to support scores of musicians who could expect to make a reasonable living, plying their trade. Throughout Germany, Britain and America, there was a rich variety of hard rock bands who relied on the power of screaming vocalists, wailing guitarists and super charged drummers to kick ass. Night after night on the road they got the fans up on their feet, cheering and waving their blazing cigarette lighters in support. There was no need to worry about the horrors to come - punk rock, disco, rap and dance music. Rock bands were kings of the road, and even the least famous could live out dreams of stardom. Among those hard working dreamers was a band called Stretch, a British outfit who recorded for the Anchor label. Their first LP was in fact "Elastique", produced by Martin Rushent, and now re-issued by Repertoire, enabling whole new generations to rediscover the power of a band once hailed as one of the hottest new names of 1975.

The start of the band had been quite controversal. In 1974 Fleetwood Mac manager Clifford Davis saw that group falling apart in the middle of an American tour with the departure of Bob Welch. Davis considered himself legal owner of name Fleetwood Mac. He named one of the other bands under his management Fleetwood Mac and sent them out to play the remaining shows of the tour. The result was unhappy fans, who paid to see another band and a lawsuit with the original Fleetwood Mac members that would stretch out for years. The fake Fleetwood Mac was renamed to Stretch and remained under the management of Clifford Davis. Needless to say that the reformed Fleetwood Mac, now with Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks as new bandmembers did not.

Stretch featured the fine vocal talents of one Elmer Gantry (who named himself in honour of the character in the Burt Lancaster movie Elmer Gantry). Elmer had previously led an outfit called Elmer Gantry's Velvet Opera, which released three singles in the late Sixties on the Direction label. They were "Flames", (1967), "Mary Jane", (1968), and "Volcano", (1969), all now collector's items. He also recorded a song called "Psychobabble", featured on an The Alan Parsons Project Album "Eye in the Sky". They all helped establish Elmer's reputation as a fine, expressive singer and imaginative composer. Stretch was a much more bluesy kind of band and featured a hot young guitarist, and songwriter simply known as "Kirby". Elmer was the lead vocalist and also played some guitar. They made a strong team, ably backed by Steve Emery (bass guitar), and Jim Russell (drums), who also played with rock'n'roll revival band The Wild Angels. Stretch was augmented on the album by horn players Mike Bailey and Ron Carthy, saxophonists Mick Eve and Chris Mercer, and keyboard player John Cook.

The band had made a promising start and enjoyed the thrill of a hit single, when "Why Did You Do It" (written by Kirby and featured on this CD) got to Number 16 in the U.K. in November 1975. It spent nine weeks in the charts and seemed to signal the start of a hugely successful career.

The band followed up "Elastique" with "You Can't Beat Your Brain for Entertainment" (1976), and "Life Blood" (1977), all on Anchor, by which time drummer Jeff Rich had joined the band. The blond-haired young sticksman was later to find job security with Status Quo. The final Stretch record, "Forget The Past" was released on the hot wax label in 1978. Alas, none of these last two quite matched up to the power of their debut album and they couldn't manage to find the panacea of another hit single.

By the time they released "Forget The Past" the band had virtually disintegrated. One music expert described the last album, rather cruelly as 'pure trash'. Only Kirby and Steve Emery remained, using session men like Nicko McBrain (drums), from the Pat Travers Band and Trust, who went on to fame with heavy metal gods Iron Maiden. The writing was on the wall for the kind of rock band Stretch typified. Soon they would be replaced by much heavier metal bands like Iron Maiden, or the combined forces of punk and New Wave. Soon, it would no longer be enough simply to get on the stage, yell 'Rock on!’ and play the blues all night. Bands needed an image, lots of special effects, dry ice and rings through their noses (not always in that order of course!). At their peak critics rated Stretch as 'the greatest British blues and boogie band of the era', and many spoke in whispered reverence of the crazed night in 1976, 'when they nearly blew Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow off stage'. With the miracle of the CD re-issue we can now once again enjoy the excitement of the band 'at full stretch', on their first album as they stomp through Elmer Gantry compositions like "Miss Jones", "Miss Daisy", "Snakes alive", "Write me a note", "Tomorrow's another day", and "Buzz Fly". Most of the rest of the material was written or co-written by Kirby, including "Why Did You Do It?", "Down home", and "Slip away". "Navy Blues" was contributed by another bass guitarist, Paul Martinez (later with Paice Ashton & Lord).

It was all vibrant, pulsating stuff. Now if only they'd got another hit.
Show More
Genres:
Hiphop, Rock, Pop, Soul, Hip-hop, Rnb-soul, Hip Hop, R&b/soul, Funk, R&b
Band Members:
Kevin Palmer - Guitar, Hunter Elmore - Drums, Kyal Randolph - Vocals
Hometown:
Toledo, Ohio

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