With their instrumental prowess and keyboardist
Ton Scherpenzeel's facility at writing lyrics in English, you might be forgiven for mistaking
Kayak for a bunch of clever proggers from London. But this Dutch band began in the city of Hilversum, where
Scherpenzeel and drummer Pim Koopman attended a music conservatory. After the addition of guitarist
Johan Slager, bassist
Cees van Leeuwen, and vocalist
Max Werner, the group solidified by 1972 and commenced recording. Stylistically, they featured the instrumentation and chops of progressive acts like
Yes and
Genesis, but the pop song structures of
Supertramp and
the Alan Parsons Project; as time passed, they increasingly favored the pop side of the equation.
Royal Bed Bouncer was their most evenly balanced set of pop and prog, and became a commercial and artistic high point for the band.
Kayak continued to meet with minor success throughout the '70s on a variety of record labels, and in 1974 toured in support of
Queen -- a move that influenced the flavor of their later work.
Like most progressive bands,
Kayak never had a terribly stable lineup; at one point they went through three bassists in as many years. With
Scherpenzeel as the sole constant,
Kayak's first lineup also proved to be their finest, but
Koopman's asthma forced him to retire in 1976, and
Werner was so tortured by stage fright and unfounded doubts over his singing ability that he demanded the vacated drum chair for himself, leaving the vocal duties to new member Edward Reekers.
Scherpenzeel's central role in the band eventually wore on the others, and
Kayak fell apart in 1982.
Scherpenzeel continued on to work with the English band
Camel and then composed primarily for the theater.
Koopman and Reekers worked in music production and performance;
Werner left the stage to become a postal worker; and
van Leeuwen became -- of all things -- a prominent lawyer. The band reunited in 1999, and released the comeback album Close to the Fire in 2000. Concert and studio recordings have appeared on a frequent basis, including Live 2019 and 2021's
Out of This World. ~ Paul Collins