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London, England's Stray yielded a prolific career yet managed to elude the fame enjoyed by contemporaries like <a href="spotify:artist:74oJ4qxwOZvX6oSsu1DGnw">Cream</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:6biWAmrHyiMkX49LkycGqQ">Thin Lizzy</a>, or even <a href="spotify:artist:7LCp4MN0SOIVWlssid9KyE">Mountain</a>. Formed in 1966, the hard rock, prog, and R&B outfit comprised of vocalist/guitarist <a href="spotify:artist:6e6Gk9fJ2dQUjIqqomwhYj">Del Bromham</a>, vocalist/guitarist Steve Gadd, bass player Gary Giles, and drummer Ritchie Cole signed to Transatlantic Records and released its debut, self-titled album in 1970. The group flirted with success throughout the '70s, releasing nine more records and even recruiting Charlie Kray -- the brother of the notorious Kray twins -- as their manager. In 1975, just prior to the release of Houdini, Gadd was replaced by Peter Dyer, who injected some much-needed life into the band, though the end was near for the financially strapped rockers. They released their last record, the ambitious Hearts of Fire, in 1976 on the Pye label, and proceeded to splinter off into various solo projects. <a href="spotify:artist:6e6Gk9fJ2dQUjIqqomwhYj">Bromham</a> re-formed the group in 1997 as a three-piece with newcomers Dusty Miller and Phil McKee, renaming the band Del Bromham's Stray, and released a live record called Alive and Giggin' on Mystic Records. In 2003, Castle put out the sprawling 35-track Anthology: 1970-1977. The majority of Stray's back catalog remains out of print. ~ James Christopher Monger, Rovi

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