If You Could Hear Me Now is a compilation album by the American pop group The Walker Brothers.
The Walker Brothers, a British-based American pop music trio popular in the 1960s and 1970s
Brothers Grimm | Walker, Texas Ranger | Walker Art Center | Lehman Brothers | Christian Brothers | The Everly Brothers | Marx Brothers | Alice Walker | The Chemical Brothers | Congregation of Christian Brothers | Wright brothers | The Doobie Brothers | The Allman Brothers Band | The Blues Brothers | Jerry Jeff Walker | Marist Brothers | Coen brothers | Lever Brothers | Brooks Brothers | Seven Brides for Seven Brothers | Walker | Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools | The Bellamy Brothers | Johnnie Walker | Band of Brothers (TV miniseries) | Band of Brothers | Walker Art Gallery | The Righteous Brothers | The Neville Brothers | Scott Walker |
The band released six albums, "The Dakotas", "The Beat Goes On", "Don't Look Back", "Everlasting", "Strong" and "Evolution" and were a regular fixture on the successful "Solid Silver 60s" tours (six to date), where they also backed acts such as Peter Noone of Herman's Hermits, Wayne Fontana, John Walker of The Walker Brothers and others.
Notable users of the Epiphone Rivoli in the 1960s include Chip Hawkes (The Tremeloes), Chas Chandler (The Animals, John Entwistle (The Who), Tony Jackson (The Searchers), Karl Green (Herman's Hermits), Paul Samwell-Smith and Jimmy Page (The Yardbirds), Peter Birrell (Freddie and the Dreamers), and Scott Walker (The Walker Brothers).
Apart from composing the soundtrack to the film Pola X, the album was Walker's first studio album in eleven years and only his third studio album since the final disbanding of The Walker Brothers in 1978.
In the 1900s, the Walker brothers became active in the Back-to-Africa movement.