As the drummer for
the Pretty Things,
Viv Prince was one of British rock's first wildmen, playing with an uninhibited drumming style which influenced the young
Keith Moon, who would watch
Prince with
the Pretty Things in his early
Who days. That unpredictable, sprawling energy would also come across in the drumming on many of
the Pretty Things' mid-'60s recordings, which were among the most frenetic British R&B/rock of the era. It eventually emerged that
Prince did not actually play on all of the band's 1964-65 releases. According to Alan Lakey's
Pretty Things biography Growing Old Disgracefully, session drummer
Bobby Graham played on their debut single "Rosalyn"/"Big Boss Man," recorded just prior to
Prince joining the band. It's also been reported that
Graham and
Twink (later to join the band for real for a while in the late 1960s) played on a few other
Prince-era tracks. Regardless of who played on exactly what, however,
Prince definitely made a strong contribution to the early
Pretty Things, both musically and image-wise, as he was perhaps the rowdiest member of one of the rowdiest bands of the 1960s in their rowdiest phase.
Prior to joining
the Pretty Things,
Prince had been drumming professionally for years. Shortly before joining the group, he'd played with
Carter-Lewis & the Southerners, featuring the
John Carter-
Ken Lewis songwriting team responsible for such hits as
Herman's Hermits' "Can't You Hear My Heartbeat," and the
Music Explosion's "Little Bit o' Soul." (
Jimmy Page also briefly played with
Carter-Lewis and a photo of the group with both
Prince and
Page in the lineup can be seen on the CD compilation
The Carter-Lewis Story.)
Prince was actually not the original
Pretty Things' drummer, having been preceded by
Viv Andrews, but was brought in as a replacement at the suggestion of co-manager
Jimmy Duncan.
Although
Prince's professional experience far outweighed those of the other bandmembers, he eventually turned out to be the least professional of the bunch, getting thrown out of a band that prided itself on outrageousness. His increasing unreliability came to a head on a legendary summer 1965 tour of New Zealand, culminating in his getting thrown off the plane returning the group to England shortly before takeoff. Whatever his exact behavior during the tour, he did his share or more for earning the group a lifetime ban from the country. (It's also been reported that he was the first British rock star busted for drug possession, though details are elusive.) He continued to play with the group, and exasperate them with some missed gigs and unruly conduct, before he left for good in November 1965.
This, however, was not
Prince's farewell to the music scene by any means, though he'd never again have a high profile. Appropriately enough, he briefly deputized for
Keith Moon in
the Who in December 1965 when
Moon missed a few shows due to illness. He also did a strange 1966 instrumental flop solo single, "Light of the Charge Brigade," that spotlighted his drumming, and wasn't as interesting as its title might suggest. This track, co-produced by his old colleague
John Carter, appears on the compilation
Measure for Measure: The John Carter Anthology 1961-1977. In 1966 he also formed a group,
the Bunch of Fives, which did one decent, though not incredibly memorable single, "Go Home Baby"/"At the Station," in a British Invasion-R&B style considerably milder than that employed by
the Pretty Things.
In early 1967,
Prince played a few rehearsals with an embryonic version of the
Jeff Beck Group, but that lineup never performed. He later played in the
Denny Laine String Band, led by original
Moody Blues lead singer (and future
Wings guitarist)
Laine, who put out a couple of singles in the late 1960s. After that he did a short stint with
Vamp, who did a couple of singles for Atlantic in 1968-1969, including the quite nice psychedelic track "Floatin'." Yet later in the late '60s, he was in
Kate, who did a few singles for CBS. None of his post-
Pretty Things musical projects, however, proved either durable or commercially successful. His greatest post-1960s notoriety is for, according to legend, having somehow managed to get kicked out of the Hell's Angels in the early 1970s for unseemly behavior. Eventually he bred Alsatians in Portugal, living in an orange grove.
The Pretty Things paid tribute to their long-departed drummer on "Vivian Prince," a track from their 1999 album
Rage. . . Before Beauty.
–
Richie Unterberger, Rovi