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Bachman Turner Overdrive
Following his 1970 departure from the Guess Who, guitarist Randy
Bachman recorded a solo album (Axe) and planned a project with
ex-Nice keyboardist Keith Emerson (later cancelled due to illness)
before forming Bachman-Turner Overdrive in 1972. Originally called
Brave Belt, the metal group was comprised of singer/guitarist
Bachman, fellow Guess Who alum Chad Allan, bassist C.F. "Fred"
Turner and Randy's brother, drummer Robbie; after a pair of LPs
(Brave Belt I and Brave Belt II), Allan was replaced by another
Bachman brother, guitarist Tim, and in homage to the trucker's
magazine Overdrive, the unit became BTO. While their self-titled
1973 debut caused little impact in the U.S. or the band's native
Canada, Bachman-Turner Overdrive II was a smash, netting a hit
single with the anthemic "Taking Care of Business." Prior to the
release of 1974's Not Fragile, Tim Bachman exited the group to
begin a career in production, and was replaced by Blair Thornton;
the album was a chart-topping success, and notched a Number One
single with "You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet." After two more albums --
Four Wheel Drive and Head On, both issued in 1975 -- Randy Bachman
left the group for a solo career, releasing the LP Survivor before
forming another group, Ironhorse. Bachman-Turner Overdrive
continued on in his absence with replacement Jim Clench for three
more albums, Freeways (1977), Street Action and Rock 'n' Roll
Nights (both 1978), eventually changing their name to simply BTO.
At the tail end of the decade, the band dissolved, but in the
1980s they regrouped to tour as both Bachman-Turner Overdrive (led
by Randy) and BTO (led by Robbie); the ensuing confusion the name
game triggered ultimately resulted in Randy Bachman filing suit
against his onetime bandmates for rights to the group's logo.
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