The “Golden Hits Of The 70s”
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PILOT
“MAGIC”
(David Paton, Bill Lyall)
EMI 3992
No. 5 July 12, 1975
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In the early ’70s, vocalist/keyboardist/sometime flutist Billy Lyall (b. Mar. 26, 1953, Edinburgh, Scotland)
was the head engineer at Edinburgh’s Craighall Recording Studio. It was there that he met again with
bassist Dave Paton (b. Oct. 29, 1951, Edinburgh) and drummer Stuart Tosh (b. Sept. 26, 1951, Aberdeen),
two frequent session players. Billy and Dave had for a moment been involved in an initial formation of
what would become the Bay City Rollers, then a mere Beatles cover band. In 1973, the three decided to
form a rock’n’roll group, and derived the units name from the initial letters of each surname (Paton, Lyall,
Tosh). No one noticed at the time that there was already a recording act named Pilot. No matter–that
BLUE CHEER spinoff crashed after a lone album.
Early in 1974, the threesome created some demos and took them around in search of a record deal.
Attracted by their Hollies-like harmonies and Sgt. Pep per styling, EMI took a bite and ushered the guys
into the Abbey Road studios in London. Alan Parsons, the studios long-time engineer, was given the task
of producing Pilot’s first product. The Beatle-esque “Magic” and the follow-up, “Just a Smile” (#90,
1975), were both pulled from the band’s self-titled LP. These disks charted extremely well in the U.K., as
did two other 45s. Overall, the group seemed to fare better in England than in the States: “January,” their
third U.S. single, was number one over there but only reached number 87 (in 1976) over here.