Coghlan joined Status Quo, then called the Paladins (later the Spectres), in early 1962 after a meeting with bassist
Alan Lancaster, guitarist
Francis Rossi and keyboard player Jess Jaworski. "The three of them were playing away through a single
Vox AC30 amplifier," he recalled. "But it sounded amazing and that was the start of it all." In August 1967, they officially became "the Status Quo". Their break through as the Status Quo came in 1968 with the song "
Pictures of Matchstick Men". The song went to number seven in the UK, and number 12 in the US. Coghlan played on the first fourteen Quo albums, including their first and most successful live album,
Live! in 1977. Quo's hit singles from the band in the 1970s/1980s, with peak UK chart position and year, include: "
Paper Plane" (No. 8 in 1972), "
Caroline" (No. 5 in 1973), "
Break The Rules" (No. 8 in 1974), "
Down Down" (No. 1 in 1975), "
Roll Over Lay Down" (No. 10 in 1975), "
Rain" (No. 7 in 1976), "
Mystery Song" (No. 11 in 1976), "
Wild Side of Life" (No. 9 in 1976), "
Rockin' All Over the World" (No. 3 in 1977), "
Again and Again" (No. 13 in 1978), "
Whatever You Want" (No. 4 in 1979), "
Living on an Island" (No. 16 in 1979), "
What You're Proposing" (No. 2 in 1980), the
double A-side "
Lies" and "
Don't Drive My Car" (No. 11 in 1980), "
Somethin' 'Bout You Baby I Like" (No. 9 in 1981) and "
Rock 'n' Roll" (No. 8 in 1981). "Down Down" topped the
UK singles chart in January 1975, becoming their only
UK No. 1 single to date. While Quo were recording what became their
1+9+8+2 album, Coghlan unexpectedly quit after almost twenty years of being in the line-up. According to
Francis Rossi and
Rick Parfitt, Coghlan went into the studio, sat behind his kit, "tapped around" on it, "then he got up, kicked the whole kit apart, walked out and that was that." "It had been creeping up on me," the drummer explained. "I always felt that we never got enough rest; there were parties every night… Also, things weren't happy for me at home in those days, and nobody in the band was too interested in anybody else's problems… It was such a shame, because the original band were shit-hot and we allowed it to fall apart… Alan
[Lancaster] told everybody when I left the room that I'd be back the next day. In fact, I was on a plane, going home." Coghlan was replaced by
Pete Kircher, formerly of the 1960s band
Honeybus. == Post-Status Quo ==