After their initial inception as a schoolboy band named The Scorpions in
1962, and following a number of band name and personnel changes, Status
Quo eventually hit the charts in 1968 with the massive hit single
'Pictures of Matchstick Men'. However, it wasn't until they ditched
their psychedelic duds and took on the denim, accompanied by a radical
gear-shift from teenage-friendly pop to out-and-out electric boogie that
they came into their own, defining the rock music genre for many
throughout the 1970s. A raft of hugely successful albums followed that
are still held in awe by an army of loyal fans; the release of
Piledriver in 1972 heralded a purple patch in which twelve consecutive
long-players charted in the UK top 10. The classic 'Frantic Four' lineup
of Rossi, Parfitt, Lancaster and Coghlan started to disintegrate in 1981
and eventually imploded after Live Aid in 1985. Although Quo have gone
on to post over sixty UK chart hits in no less than six separate
decades, this publication focuses on those days of glory, song by song
from their earliest recordings until the demise of the classic lineup.