Biography
Dutch rock-band the Felines were popular through the past due ’60s and early ’70s, releasing a couple of English-language strikes and full-length albums in this top period. Founded within the middle-’60s in Volendam, holland, the music group was made up of Cees Veerman (vocals, electric guitar; born Oct 6, 1943), Piet Veerman (vocals, electric guitar; blessed March 1, 1943), Jaap Schilder (electric guitar, piano; blessed January 9, 1943), Arnold Muhren (bass; blessed January 28, 1944), and Theo Klouwer (drums; blessed June 30, 1947). The Felines made their record debut in 1967 with Felines as Felines Can, with least one brand-new album followed every year before swan song discharge The End from the Present (1980). A number of the band’s most widely used strikes include “Situations Had been When” (1968), “Lea” (1968), “Why” (1969), “Scarlet Ribbons” (1969), “Marian” (1969), “Magical Secret Morning hours” (1970), “Where Possess I Been Incorrect?” (1970), “A PROVEN WAY Breeze” (1971), “Let’s Dance” (1972), “THERE’S BEEN a period” (1972), “Let’s Move Jointly” (1973), “Maribaja” (1973), “Rock and roll ‘n’ Move” (1973), “End up being My Time” (1974), and “Arrive Weekend” (1974). The reputation of the Felines declined sharply through the middle-’70s, as well as the music group ultimately split up in 1979. Piet Veerman eventually embarked on a single career, launching the album Back (1980), but didn’t knowledge solo achievement until 1987, when he released the eponymous record Piet Veerman as well as the smash strike single “Sailin’ House.” Following band’s break up in 1980, the Felines reunited every once in awhile, and their biggest strikes were compiled again and again on more information on best-of collections.