Approximately two years after the breakup of Patto, Mike Patto and
Ollie Halsall reunited in 1975 to form Boxer along with Keith Ellis on
bass (Van Der Graaf Generator, Juicy Lucy, Spooky Tooth, et
al.) and Tony Newman on drums (May Blitz, Jeff Beck Group,
Kevin Ayers, et al.). Keith and Mike were in Spooky Tooth together. Mike
left that band after a year and began working as a promotions man for Good Ear
Records, owned by Mike's manager, Nigel Thomas. Nigel would also become Boxer's
manager and give them their name. Ollie and Tony were playing together touring
with Kevin Ayers, and when the touring stopped they got Mike to quit the record
biz and form a new band. This time the music Mike and Ollie brought to the table
was straight-ahead rock that reflected little of their Patto past, except for
possibly some of the songs on the unreleased Monkey's Bum album.
The band released it's first album, Below The Belt, in 1975. "All The
Time In The World" was released as a single with a great non-LP B-side titled
"Don't Wait". They recorded a great second album called Bloodletting that
would for some reason not be released until 1979.
Very little of the Boxer story seems to be documented, especially about the
breakup of the original lineup. Sometime in late 1976, Halsall is said to have
quit the band. But somehow Boxer's management ended up in possession of the
band's equipment, including Ollie's guitars (as late as 1981, Ollie still didn't
own an electric guitar of his own). This is just hearsay, but the story is that
the band was very deep in debt with Nigel Thomas, and he held on to all their
equipment. Then Nigel's company was liquidated, and Ollie's guitars were likely
auctioned off by the official receivers. Where is Ollie's white Gibson Custom SG
now?
Mike put together a new lineup of the band to record one more Boxer album in
1977 called Absolutely. The new lineup band consisted of Mike, Chris
Stainton on keyboards, Tim Bogert on bass/vocals, Adrian Fisher on guitar, and
Eddie Tuduri on drums. The album is not as raw and rocking as the first albums,
but there are some fine moments of musicianship and songwriting on this album.
The Randy Newman-esque song "Everybody's A Star" was released as a single. This
album would be Mike's final release before passing away in 1979 with lymphatic
leukemia (cancer of lymph glands).
They did some BBC sessions, and their tours, at least for the original lineup,
were critically acclaimed. Their first LP cover did get them some attention
through controversy. Many seem to remember their first album cover, even if they
never did heard the contents. But, as is typical of the Patto story, Boxer did
not achieve a great deal of attention or success.
(source: http://www.pattofan.com/Boxer/boxer.htm)