In 1972 and 1973, Rainbow was involved in a band called Hopestreet – along with Scottish pianist and composer Callum Kenmuir – recording two singles,
Iron Sky / Never Mind and
Wait Until Tomorrow / Ladies (At The Bottom Of A Garden). Following this, he recorded the singles
Give Me What I Cry For and
Solid State Brain in 1974, and
Mr. Man and
Gimme Just A Little Beat Of Your Heart in 1975 (as Christopher Rainbow). Slightly shortening his name to Chris Rainbow, he later released three solo albums;
Home of the Brave in 1975,
Looking Over My Shoulder in 1977, and
White Trails in 1979. Tracks from these albums are collected on
The Best Of Chris Rainbow released in 1994,
The Best of Chris Rainbow, 1972–1980, released in 2000, and
The Chris Rainbow Anthology 1974-1981 released in 2001, which also includes radio spots and other rare material. Rainbow also did music for
EMI's project Body Music, which included three of his songs along with
Brian Aris's photography. Rainbow would tour with
Jon Anderson in 1980 and do vocal work on
Song of Seven in 1980 and
Animation in 1983. In the early 1980s, Rainbow joined
Camel, appearing on the albums
The Single Factor and
Stationary Traveller, and performing with them on their 1982 and 1984 tours, recordings of which were released as the album
Pressure Points. Rainbow would do vocal work on
Heart Of The Universe, a solo album by
Ton Scherpenzeel who was the keyboardist of Camel in 1984. Rainbow would contribute vocal work on a large variety of albums throughout his career, including
Blonde on Blonde's
And How! in 1978,
Max Middleton and Robert Ahwai's
Another Sleeper in 1979, Killdozer's self-titled album
Killdozer in 1980,
Trevor Herion's
Beauty Life in 1983,
Elaine Page's self-titled album
Elaine in 1983,
Culture Club's
Waking Up with the House on Fire in 1984,
Toyah Willcox's
Desire in 1987,
Lenny Zakatek's
Small But Hard in 1989, and
Tomoyasu Hotei's
King & Queen in 1996 and
Fetish in 2000. ==Production==