

Flamborough Head has existed since the beginning of the nineties. Keyboard player Edo Spanninga felt it was time to start a band which would make progressive rock music, a musical flow which was nearest to his heart but in which he had never been active before. Frans Wolf (keyboards & drumcomputing) and Wiebe Wolf (guitars), both former members of Saga oriented progband Made in Holland, were interested in writing and recording. Along with Siebe Rein Schaaf (vocals) they went on as a quartet. After some time they felt that working with sequencers and drum computers limited their possibilities and so they asked Koen Roozen (drums) and Marcel Derix (bass) to complete the band. Quite soon it appeared, that for all sorts of reasons, this line up was not effective and Frans and Wiebe decided to leave the band, which at that time did not have a name yet. Koen and Marcel shared a long musical past and from the period that they both played in Stiffener they knew André Cents who was willing to become Wiebe’s successor. At the same time Siebe Rein took over some keyboard playing from Frans.
In this line up, they worked on new material and they decided to record this material in their rehearsal room in Bakkeveen, on their own recording equipment for a cassette-demo.This demo was released in 1994 under the name of Flamborough Head. Background Magazine wrote: “The balance between keyboards and energetic guitar licks is excellent. The songs are about six to seven minutes long, with the right changes in mood and spheres. This is the kind of true progressive rock I think BM readers would like to hear”. After listening to this demo, Malcolm Parker of the English prog label Cyclops decided to offer Flamborough Head a record contract.
As
a result of this development, the band recorded their debut-album “Unspoken
Whisper”,
After
that, the band gained a steady growing following, showing
The
Classic Rock Society (Rotherham, UK) also became aware of Flamborough Head and

Fueled
with lots of motivation Flamborough Head then went on to write and produce the
His
replacement was guitar player Eddie Mulder who, within a few weeks, performed
with the
Then
Siebe Rein Schaaf also decided to move on.
In
the meantime Cyclops Records had decided to release Flamborough Head’s
original demo because there was a considerable demand for it.
In
the new line up, Flamborough Head released the album “One
for the Crow” in
2002 which
Still
growing and developing, the band produced the next album in 2005, called “Tales
of Imperfection”,
their best so far,
