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Birmingham teacher turned international rock star Spencer Davies to play the Symphony Hall

Birmingham teacher turned international rock star Spencer Davies is about to play Symphony Hall for the first time - at the age of 75. Graham Young meets the man who is still promising to Keep on Running.

Spencer Davis

Birmingham teacher turned international rock star Spencer Davies is about to play Symphony Hall for the first time – at the age of 75.

Most people remember 1966 as the year that England won the World Cup

But for a former teacher in Yardley, it was also the year his band The Spencer Davis Group knocked The Beatles’ single Day Tripper / We Can Work It Out clean off the top of the pop charts.

He might have been born in Swansea, but University of Birmingham languages graduate Spencer Davies and his band of Brummies – including Great Barr brothers Steve and Muff Winwood – were a match for the Fab Four that year.

With their own Keep On Running and Somebody Help Me topping the charts before the spring was out, it took The Beatles’ Paperback Writer in June and Yellow Submarine / Eleanor Rigby in August to catch up.

The Rolling Stones, meanwhile, spent just one week at No 1 that year with their May release Paint it Black.

For Spencer Davies – his real name ends with an ‘ies’, shortened to ‘is’ for marketing the band – they were heady times.

He was mixing with future legends, while on the road to a curious place in pop history for himself – and a lifetime of steady work sealed with a degree of anonymity which left Ringo Starr envious of his friend.