Neil Innes
Neil James Innes (9 December 1944 – 29 December 2019) was an English musician, comedian, and songwriter renowned for blending satire with eclectic musical styles.[1][2] He co-founded the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band in the 1960s, a group that fused music hall traditions, jazz, and psychedelia into comedic performances, achieving a UK hit with his composition "I'm the Urban Spaceman" in 1968, produced under the pseudonym Apollo C. Vermouth by Paul McCartney.[2][3] Innes frequently collaborated with the Monty Python team, contributing original songs such as "The Philosopher's Song" and appearing in their film Monty Python and the Holy Grail as a minstrel, while also starring in Eric Idle's sketch show Rutland Weekend Television.[4] His most celebrated work was co-creating the Rutles with Idle, a pastiche band parodying the Beatles, for which Innes wrote and performed songs mimicking their style as "Ron Nasty," earning acclaim for its musical precision and humor.[5][6] Later, he hosted the surreal television series The Innes Book of Records in the 1970s and 1980s, showcasing his talents in songwriting and performance without notable controversies, dying of a heart attack in France at age 75.[7][6]Early Life and Education
Birth and Family Background
Neil James Innes was born on 9 December 1944 in Danbury, Essex, England.[8][9][2] His father, Edward Charles Innes, was of Scottish descent and served as a warrant officer in the British Army.[10][2] Innes's mother was Rita Mabel Hudson.[10] He had one brother, Iain Edward Charles Innes.[10] Due to his father's military posting, the family relocated to Bad Harzburg in West Germany when Innes was around five or six years old, where they resided from approximately 1950 to 1960.[10][8][9] This peripatetic early life in an army family environment influenced Innes's adaptability, though specific details on family dynamics beyond these relocations remain limited in available records.[11]Schooling and Early Musical Influences
Innes was born on 9 December 1944 in Danbury, Essex, to parents Rita Mabel Hudson and Edward Charles Innes, a Royal Artillery warrant officer who encouraged his son's artistic pursuits.[10][12] The family relocated to Bad Harzburg, Germany, around 1950 due to Edward's posting with the British Army of the Rhine occupation forces, where Innes attended Goslar Primary School under the British Forces Education Service until their return to England in 1955.[10] After passing the 11-plus examination via interview, he enrolled in the second year at Thorpe Grammar School, a co-educational institution in Norwich, where he achieved five O-levels and one A-level in art.[10][2] He then pursued art studies at Norwich School of Art starting in 1960, followed by admission to Goldsmiths College School of Art in London in 1962, from which he graduated with a BA in Fine Arts in 1966.[10][13][12] As a child, Innes received classical piano training, studying works by composers such as Chopin and Liszt, which positioned him as a promising young pianist but ultimately fueled his adolescent rebellion against formal musical discipline, as he questioned the purpose of practicing for others rather than personal fulfillment.[12] During his art school years, his interests shifted toward eclectic, humorous influences including 1920s and 1930s jazz, drawing inspiration from novelty groups like the Temperance Seven and the Alberts; he collected vintage 78 rpm records featuring absurd song titles from flea markets for informal pub performances.[14] This period marked the beginnings of his engagement with music as satire, evolving from traditional jazz renditions played for comedic effect in student settings to broader experimentation, including early songwriting influenced by art school readings such as Jean-Paul Sartre's Nausea, which informed pieces like "Equestrian Statue."[14] By 1963, while at Goldsmiths, Innes began performing in canteen gigs with precursors to the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, a student ensemble rooted in '20s and '30s jazz traditions but oriented toward parody and conceptual art.[10][14]Professional Career
Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band Era (1960s)
The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band originated in the early 1960s among British art school students experimenting with surreal humor and eclectic music, initially named the Bonzo Dog Dada Band in homage to the Dada art movement and the cartoon character Bonzo the dog.[9] Neil Innes joined the group in 1963, contributing as a multi-instrumentalist on piano, guitar, and keyboards, alongside vocals and songwriting that infused modern pop sensibilities into the band's music hall and trad jazz foundations.[3] [15] The ensemble's performances blended vaudeville parody, psychedelia, and absurdity, gaining traction through live gigs in London clubs and early television spots.[16] Innes played a central role in shaping the band's sound, providing musical parody and compositional structure that complemented frontman Vivian Stanshall's theatrical antics and saxophonist Rodney Slater's contributions.[16] Their debut album, Gorilla, released in October 1967 by Liberty Records, captured this hybrid style with tracks like "Cool Britannia" and "The Equestrian Statue," establishing their reputation for witty, genre-defying recordings.[17] The follow-up, The Doughnut in Granny's Greenhouse (May 1968), marked a shift toward more psychedelic and rock-oriented elements, with Innes' songwriting prominent in numbers such as "My Brother Makes the Noises for the Guinness Ad," reflecting the band's evolving studio experimentation.[16] The band's sole chart hit, "I'm the Urban Spaceman," released in October 1968, reached number 5 on the UK Singles Chart; written by Innes and produced under the pseudonym Apollo C. Vermouth (Paul McCartney), it earned Innes an Ivor Novello Award for songwriting.[18] This period also saw Tadpoles (1969), a compilation drawing from television performances on shows like Do Not Adjust Your Set, highlighting Innes' versatility in adapting material for broadcast.[19] By the late 1960s, internal dynamics and commercial pressures began straining the group, though their output during this decade laid groundwork for Innes' later satirical endeavors.[20]GRIMMS, The World, and Initial Monty Python Ties (1970s)
Following the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band's disbandment in January 1970, Innes formed the short-lived group The World with bassist Dennis Cowan (a former Bonzo member) and drummer Ian Wallace.[21] The band released the album Lucky Planet in December 1970 on Liberty Records, featuring Beatles-influenced pop rock tracks such as "Not the First Time," which Innes co-wrote and produced alongside his lead vocals and guitar work.[22] This project marked Innes's initial foray into more straightforward pop-oriented songwriting post-Bonzoa, though it achieved limited commercial success.[23] Innes then co-founded GRIMMS in 1970, an experimental collective blending poetry recitation, comedy sketches, and rock music, drawing from Liverpool poets (Roger McGough, Brian Patten, Adrian Henri), comedian Mike Harding, and fellow Scaffold member John Gorman, with additional musicians like Andy Roberts and Dave Richards providing instrumental support.[10] The group's name derived from an acronym of key members' surnames, reflecting its collaborative, countercultural ethos rooted in 1960s performance art and folk traditions.[24] GRIMMS debuted with the self-titled album in 1972 on Island Records, followed by Rocking Duck (1973) and Sleepers (1975), albums that integrated Innes's whimsical songs with spoken-word pieces and satirical humor, though they remained niche within the progressive and avant-garde scenes.[25] Innes frequently backed his solo debut How Sweet to Be an Idiot (1973) with GRIMMS members, using the group as a platform for eclectic live performances that toured the UK club circuit through the mid-1970s.[26] Parallel to these endeavors, Innes's ties to Monty Python deepened in the early 1970s, building on prior overlaps from the Bonzos' appearances on Do Not Adjust Your Set.[27] Eric Idle contacted Innes around 1970 to contribute original songs, leading to his role in Python's live stage shows where he performed as a musical accompanist and warm-up act by 1974.[19] His most prominent early contribution came in 1975 with Monty Python and the Holy Grail, portraying the taunting minstrel in the "Brave Sir Robin" sequence and composing its ditty mocking the knight's cowardice.[6] These collaborations highlighted Innes's skill in crafting tuneful, absurd lyrics that complemented Python's surrealism, establishing him as an unofficial musical affiliate without formal troupe membership.[28]Rutles Creation and Television Satire (Late 1970s–1980s)
In 1975, Neil Innes collaborated with Eric Idle to create the Rutles as a Beatles parody sketch for Idle's BBC series Rutland Weekend Television, featuring Innes performing songs that mimicked the Beatles' early Merseybeat style.[29][30] The concept originated from Idle's satirical take on the UK's smallest county, Rutland, but quickly focused on pastiching the Beatles' formation, Hamburg residencies, and breakthrough to fame, with Innes composing original tunes like "I Must Be in Love" to evoke tracks such as "I Want to Hold Your Hand."[31][30] The sketch gained traction when Idle, hosting Saturday Night Live in 1976, incorporated Rutles clips into a recurring gag about reuniting the Beatles, prompting Lorne Michaels to expand it into a full mockumentary special titled All You Need Is Cash.[32] Produced for NBC and aired on March 22, 1978, in the United States—followed by BBC2 on March 27, 1978, in the UK—the 52-minute film traced the fictional band's career arc, from gritty origins to commercial excess and dissolution, using fabricated interviews, archival-style footage, and Innes's compositions that closely replicated Beatles harmonies and arrangements.[33][34] Guest appearances by George Harrison, who commented dryly on the "Prefab Four," and Mick Jagger added layers of authenticity to the satire of rock mythology and media hype.[33] Innes portrayed Ron Nasty, the Lennon-inspired frontman, and wrote eight key songs for the special, including "Hold My Hand," parodying "I Want to Hold Your Hand," and "Cheese and Onions," echoing the psychedelic experimentation of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, performed by a live band featuring Innes on guitar and vocals alongside musicians like John Halsey on drums.[30][29] The television format satirized documentary tropes of the era, such as The Beatles Anthology precursors, by exaggerating managerial greed (e.g., the band's svengali Leggy Mountbatten, parodying Brian Epstein), internal tensions, and post-breakup solo ventures, while underscoring the commodification of rock stardom without overt malice toward the originals.[33][32] Into the early 1980s, the Rutles concept influenced Innes's broader television work, including The Innes Book of Records (BBC, 1979–1981), where he continued musical satire through original songs mimicking various artists, though rooted in the affectionate parody style honed with the Rutles.[35] The 1978 special's enduring appeal lay in its musical fidelity—Innes's tracks were so convincing that some were misattributed to the Beatles on bootlegs—highlighting his skill in blending homage with critique of fame's absurdities.[30][29]Solo Recordings and Broader Collaborations (1980s–2000s)
In the early 1980s, Innes pursued solo endeavors following his television work, releasing the double album Off the Record in 1982 on MMC Records, which compiled original compositions including tracks like "Mr. Eurovision" and "Rock of Ages," some derived from his prior BBC series.[36] He supported singles from the album, such as "Humanoid Boogie" in 1984 on PRT, blending his signature whimsical pop with satirical elements.[36] Broader collaborations included performances at Amnesty International's The Secret Policeman's Ball events in 1980 and 1981, where he contributed pieces like "Spontaneous" and "Song in a French Accent" alongside artists such as Sting and Rowan Atkinson.[36] These appearances underscored his versatility in charity-driven musical comedy, distinct from his band affiliations. By the mid-1980s, Innes shifted toward composition for media, providing original music for children's television series including Puddle Lane (series starting 1985) and The Raggy Dolls (series 1 in 1986), emphasizing simple, melodic themes suited to educational programming.[10] In 1989, he composed the score for Terry Jones' film Erik the Viking, releasing the soundtrack album on Sonet Records, featuring orchestral arrangements that complemented the film's Norse mythology parody with lighthearted, folk-inflected tunes.[36][10] Concurrently, he issued singles like "Dear Father Christmas" in 1985 on Making Waves, targeting holiday audiences with festive originals.[36] The 1990s saw Innes release Re-cycled Vinyl Blues in 1994 as a CD of reinterpreted or archival material, reflecting his ongoing experimentation with recycled themes from his catalog.[10] In 1996, he produced Haunted Halloween for the Children’s Book of the Month Club, a thematic collection of spooky songs for young listeners, alongside the Rutles' second album Archaeology, a collaborative parody of the Beatles' Anthology series produced with Eric Idle and featuring new tracks mimicking Fab Four styles.[36][10] Entering the 2000s, Innes focused on archival and demo releases, issuing Recollections 1 on May 14, 2000, followed by Recollections 2 in February 2001 and Recollections 3 in 2002, each compiling unreleased recordings from his solo career spanning decades.[10] Works in Progress appeared in 2005 on his own Neil Innes Music label, presenting raw demo versions of songs to showcase his compositional process.[36][10] That year, he toured as "Neil Innes and Friends" in the UK and New York City, collaborating with musicians like Phill Jupitus on projects including the 2005 album Dogman by John Dowie.[10][36] In 2007, Pour L’Amour Des Chiens emerged as a solo effort dedicated to canine themes, while 2008 brought a Rutles reunion tour for the 30th anniversary of Rutlemania, performing satirical Beatles homages with surviving band members.[10] These efforts highlighted Innes' persistence in blending personal artistry with selective group revivals.[10]Reunions, Live Performances, and Final Projects (2000s–2010s)
In 2006, Innes reunited with surviving members of the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band for a 40th anniversary concert at the London Astoria on January 28, followed by a UK tour featuring guest performers including Stephen Fry, Ade Edmondson, and Phill Jupitus.[10][37] The performances emphasized the band's original comedic and musical style, with Innes serving as a central figure in the lineup.[38] Earlier that year, he conducted a reunion tour with Fatso, a short-lived 1970s project involving GRIMMS collaborators.[10] Throughout the 2000s and 2010s, Innes maintained an active schedule of live performances, often under the banner "Neil Innes and Friends," including US road tours in 2004, 2005, and 2006, as well as UK and international dates.[10] He revived the Rutles for anniversary events, such as the 2008 Rutlemania 30th Anniversary tour in the US, and subsequent UK mini-tours in 2013, full UK and Japan tours in 2014, and additional outings in 2015, 2016, 2018, and March 2019.[10] In late 2010, Innes co-founded the Idiot Bastard Band, a loose collective of comic song performers including Adrian Edmondson, Phill Jupitus, and Rowland Rivron, which toured the UK in 2012 and performed sporadically thereafter.[10][39] Innes's final projects included solo albums Innes Own World in 2010, The Wheat Album in 2018, and Nearly Really in 2019, alongside live releases like Live & Raw (2014) and Farewell Posterity Tour (2014).[36] His last recording session occurred on November 17, 2019, at RAK Studios in London.[40] Innes continued touring into late 2019, culminating in a major orchestral tour with the Bootleg Beatles.[10] These efforts showcased his enduring commitment to musical satire and performance until his death on December 29, 2019.[2]Personal Life
Relationships and Family
Innes met Yvonne Catherine Hilton while studying at Goldsmiths College, London, in the mid-1960s, and the couple married in March 1966 at Greenwich Register Office.[24][2] Their marriage lasted 53 years until Innes's death in 2019, during which time they resided primarily in Suffolk, England, and navigated the challenges of his touring career alongside family life.[41] Yvonne Innes later documented their shared experiences in the 2024 memoir Dip My Brain in Joy: A Life with Neil Innes, highlighting periods of financial strain, mutual support amid his professional demands, and occasional personal tensions, while emphasizing his commitment to family.[42] The couple had three sons: Miles, Luke, and Barney.[2][5] At the time of Innes's death, he was also survived by three grandchildren: Max, Issy, and Zac.[2][43] No public records or accounts indicate additional children or prior significant relationships.[2]Health Issues and Death
Neil Innes died on 29 December 2019 at his home near Toulouse, France, at the age of 75.[6][5] His family stated that he passed away from natural causes quickly, without warning, and likely without pain.[6][44] Multiple reports specified the cause as a heart attack, describing the event as sudden and unexpected.[5][9][45] A family spokesperson confirmed that Innes had not been suffering from any known illness prior to his death.[6] His agent, Nigel Morton, similarly noted the absence of prolonged health complications.[46] No public records or contemporary accounts indicate chronic health issues affecting his later years or professional activities.[2]Controversies and Disputes
Rutles Copyright Lawsuit with ABKCO
Following the release of the 1978 Rutles album, ATV Music, the entity controlling the publishing rights to many Lennon-McCartney compositions via Northern Songs, initiated legal action against Neil Innes, alleging copyright infringement due to melodic and structural similarities between several Rutles tracks and Beatles originals, such as "Cheese and Onions" evoking "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" and "Goose-Step Mama" resembling "Come Together."[29] Innes maintained that the compositions were original parodies created consciously to satirize Beatles-style songwriting, not subconscious copies, and he engaged a musicologist to analyze and affirm their distinctiveness under oath during proceedings.[45] Despite arguments that parody constitutes fair use and does not infringe underlying copyrights, Innes settled the dispute out of court to avoid prolonged litigation, agreeing to credit Lennon and McCartney as co-writers on the affected songs and to allocate 50% of royalties from those tracks to ATV Music.[47] This outcome effectively diminished Innes's control over the initial Rutles material, channeling half the publishing income to the Beatles' rights holders, though it preserved the satirical intent and public availability of the recordings.[48] Innes later reflected that the suit stemmed from ATV's threat to his publishers rather than direct Beatles involvement, underscoring the commercial motivations of music publishers in protecting catalogues amid parody's rise.[47]PledgeMusic Platform Collapse and Financial Impact
In 2018, Neil Innes launched a PledgeMusic crowdfunding campaign to fund his album Nearly Really, a collaborative project featuring new recordings with various artists.[49] The campaign successfully raised approximately £26,000 from fan pledges, intended to cover production, recording, and release costs.[50] [51] PledgeMusic, the platform facilitating these direct-to-fan transactions, faced mounting financial difficulties and abruptly ceased operations in February 2019, entering administration amid allegations of mismanagement and failure to remit full pledged funds to artists.[48] For Innes, only £3,000 of the raised amount was disbursed prior to the collapse, leaving him with a net loss of roughly £23,000 that had been collected on his behalf but withheld by the platform.[50] [51] In response, Innes publicly terminated his agreement with PledgeMusic in early 2019, expressing frustration over the handling of funds while avoiding escalation of the dispute.[52] The financial shortfall severely impacted Innes' ability to complete and release Nearly Really, as the lost pledges represented critical non-recoupable support for an independent artist in his later career with limited commercial backing.[53] To mitigate the damage, Innes and supporters turned to alternative fundraising, including re-donations from affected fans and a GoFundMe campaign, which enabled the album's eventual release in 2019 despite the setback.[53] [48] This episode exemplified broader vulnerabilities in crowdfunding models reliant on third-party platforms, where artists bore the risk of operational failures without escrow protections, contributing to Innes' strained resources in the final months before his death on December 29, 2019.[48]Legacy and Critical Reception
Influence on Parody and Musical Comedy
Neil Innes's contributions to parody and musical comedy, particularly through the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, established a foundational approach to satirical music by fusing trad-jazz covers with deliberately shambolic, absurd performances that mocked musical conventions.[54] The band's 1968 single "I'm the Urban Spaceman," produced by Apollo C. Vermouth (Paul McCartney's pseudonym), exemplified Innes's skill in crafting catchy pop tunes laced with irony, reaching number 5 on the UK Singles Chart.[26] This blend of technical proficiency and whimsy influenced later comedy rock acts by demonstrating how satire could enhance rather than undermine musical quality.[18] Innes's collaboration with Eric Idle on the Rutles in 1978 elevated musical parody to a sophisticated pastiche, recreating the Beatles' sonic evolution—from skiffle roots in "Hold My Hand" to psychedelic experimentation in "Cheese and Onions"—with such fidelity that the songs were often mistaken for genuine unreleased tracks.[24] The mockumentary All You Need Is Cash, featuring Innes as Ron Nasty, satirized the Beatles' mythology through fabricated history and interviews, setting a precedent for narrative-driven band parodies.[29] Creators of This Is Spinal Tap (1984) cited familiarity and admiration for the Rutles as influential, though they aimed to differentiate by focusing on heavy metal tropes rather than pop pastiche.[55] His songwriting for Monty Python, including the "Brave Sir Robin" ditty in Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975), integrated original compositions into comedic sketches, reinforcing the troupe's use of music as a satirical device and earning Innes the informal title of "the seventh Python."[8] Innes's technique of synthesizing entire musical catalogs into convincing spoofs, as seen across his oeuvre, provided a blueprint for parody artists seeking to critique genres through imitation rather than exaggeration alone.[56] This approach inspired broader recognition of musical comedy's potential to both honor and dissect cultural icons, evident in subsequent works like parody bands and mockumentaries.[24]Achievements, Limitations, and Posthumous Recognition
Innes's primary achievements centered on his innovative songwriting and satirical musical contributions. With the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, he penned the 1968 single "I'm the Urban Spaceman," produced by Paul McCartney under the pseudonym Apollo C. Vermouth, which peaked at number 5 on the UK Singles Chart and secured an Ivor Novello Award for its whimsical lyricism and melodic craft.[2][26] His early track "Death Cab for Cutie" from the band's 1967 album Gorilla gained exposure via inclusion in the Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour film, highlighting his surreal style.[26] Innes also originated the phrase "Cool Britannia" in a 1967 Bonzos song, later co-opted by political campaigns.[2] Collaborations amplified his reach: he composed original songs for Monty Python's Holy Grail (1975) and Life of Brian (1979), blending humor with accessible tunes, and co-created the Rutles—a Beatles pastiche—with Eric Idle for the 1978 mockumentary All You Need Is Cash, where his compositions drew acclaim from George Harrison for their authenticity.[2][26] Solo efforts like the 1973 track "How Sweet to Be an Idiot" demonstrated melodic prowess, later vindicated in a plagiarism suit against Oasis, while Rutles sequels such as 1996's Archaeology extended his parody legacy.[26] Career limitations stemmed from interpersonal and structural hurdles. Internal tensions, particularly with bandmate Vivian Stanshall, contributed to the Bonzos' acrimonious 1970 dissolution despite creative abundance.[2] Innes eschewed rock stardom's demands, prioritizing family and artistic autonomy over aggressive promotion or management, settling into a modest Suffolk farmhouse life focused on local arts and selective projects like children's television scoring for The Raggy Dolls.[57][2] Persistent music industry legal entanglements further constrained broader commercial breakthroughs, confining his influence largely to niche satire despite versatile genre mastery.[2] Posthumously, following Innes's death on December 29, 2019, at age 75, peers recognized his understated genius. Monty Python alumni hailed him as the "Seventh Python," with Sir Michael Palin calling him "a great writer and the most lovely friend" and John Cleese noting he was "a very sweet man, much too nice for his own good."[6] A 2024 celebration concert at London's Indigo O2 featured tributes, including poet Roger McGough dubbing him the "urbane spaceman," underscoring enduring admiration for his humor-infused oeuvre.[58] His wife Yvonne Innes published Dip My Brain in Joy: A Life with Neil Innes in 2024, illuminating his personal and creative ethos amid tributes affirming his pivotal role in British musical comedy.[11]Creative Output
Discography
Innes released his debut solo album, How Sweet to Be an Idiot, in 1973 on United Artists Records, featuring original songs blending pop, rock, and satirical elements.[36] Subsequent solo studio albums include Taking Off (1977, Arista), The Innes Book of Records (1979, Polydor), and Off the Record (1982, MMC Records), the latter drawing from his BBC television series of the same name.[36] Later solo works encompass Re-Cycled Vinyl Blues (1994, Innes Right Music), Dogman (2005, Laughing Stock), Innes Own World (2010, self-released), and posthumous releases such as Nearly Really (2019, Neil Innes Music) and Innes Prime (2024, Neil Innes Music).[36] Collaborative and soundtrack albumsInnes co-released The Rutland Weekend Songbook with Eric Idle in 1976 on Charisma Records, compiling songs from the BBC series Rutland Weekend Television.[36] He contributed to soundtracks including Erik the Viking (1989, Sonet) and appeared on various compilations, such as Monty Python-related releases like Monty Python's Contractual Obligation Album (1976, Charisma), where he co-wrote and performed tracks.[36] With the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band
As a founding member and primary songwriter, Innes contributed to the band's core albums: Gorilla (1967, Liberty), The Doughnut in Granny's Greenhouse (1968, Liberty), Keynsham (1969, Liberty), Tadpoles (1969, Liberty), and The Bonzo Dog Band (1970, Liberty).[36] Notable singles include "I'm the Urban Spaceman" (1968, Liberty), which reached number 5 on the UK Singles Chart.[36] With Grimms
Innes was a key member of the comedy-poetry-rock troupe Grimms, appearing on their albums Grimms (1972, Island), Rockin' Duck (1973, Island), and Sleepers (1974, Island).[36] The group released singles such as "Backbreaker" (1976, DJM). With the Rutles
Innes created and fronted the Beatles parody band the Rutles, releasing Meet the Rutles (also known as The Rutles) in 1978 on Warner Bros. Records, featuring tracks like "Cheese and Onions."[36] Follow-up albums include Archaeology (1996, Virgin) and The Wheat Album (2018, self-released), with singles such as "I Must Be in Love" (1978, Warner Bros.).[36] Innes also issued singles under his own name, including "How Sweet to Be an Idiot" (1973, United Artists) and "Slush" (1972, United Artists), alongside numerous guest appearances on over 50 compilation and tribute albums spanning comedy rock and parody genres.[36]