Kingsize Taylor & the Dominoes

Kingsize Taylor & the Dominoes inevitably loom large in any serious history of Liverpool rock & roll -- a great irony considering that they had most of their success in Hamburg, and never made it outside of those two cities. They deserved better, based on the recorded evidence and the role they played in the city's musical history. Along with the Beatles and the Searchers, they were among the relative few Liverpool bands of the late '50s and early '60s to steadily build an audience, and maintain a consistently high quality of music and playing -- in contrast to the other successful bands of the period, however, their membership was anything but stable, more resembling a revolving door of talent coming and going. Guitarist-singer Edward "Ted" Taylor started out in music while still at school during 1956 with his bandmates Bobby Thompson (guitar, vocals) and George James, as members of the James Boys Skiffle Group, whose main inspiration was skiffle king Lonnie Donegan. Taylor and James had known each other since the age of five, and Thompson was a longtime school friend.

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