
Magic Hour, which boasted more refined songwriting, arrived two years later 2001's Beetroot became the group's final album. The band's second album, Mother Nature Calls, was released in the spring of 1997. The single entered the British charts at number four. In the fall, Cast released the single "Flying," their first new recording since their debut. Over the course of 1996, Cast's audience continued to grow, as All Change worked its way toward platinum status, and the band toured America several times, gaining a cult audience. All Change, the band's debut, was released in October of 1995, debuting in the British Top Ten. "Finetime," Cast's debut single, reached number 17 on the pop charts in the spring, followed by another hit single, "Alright," in the summer. By the end of 1994, Cast had signed a record contract with Polydor Records, and began recording with John Leckie ( XTC, Stone Roses). Power left the band, forming Cast with guitarist Liam Tyson, bassist Peter Wilkinson, and drummer Keith O'Neill early in 1994.Ĭast received their first big break when Elvis Costello had the group open for him on his summer 1994 U.K. Following the supporting tour for the record, the La's were scheduled to record a second album, yet it soon became clear that Mavers was not only not going to write a batch of new songs any time soon, but he wasn't going to allow Power to contribute his own material.

John Power was the bassist in the La's from their inception in the mid-'80s to the early '90s, when the band had a major British hit with its eponymous debut album. The roots of Cast lay in the La's, the seminal late-'80s British guitar pop combo led by Lee Mavers. What really made Cast into a success was Power's gift for simple, classic pop hooks, as demonstrated on the hit singles "Fine Time," "Alright," and "Walkaway." Led by vocalist/guitarist John Power, Cast carved out a sound that was heavily indebted to the British Invasion of the early '60s, yet it was infused with a mystical, pseudo-hippie lyrical sensibility, which Power expanded upon in all of his interviews. But the criticism didn't prevent Cast from becoming a very, very popular band within Britain following the success of Oasis and Blur.

As one of the most traditional guitar bands to emerge during the Brit-pop era of the mid-'90s, Cast have weathered negative criticism from certain quarters of the media, who labeled them mere revivalists.
