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Bobby Graham

 
Artist: Bobby Graham
  • Active: '60s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Drums Representative Album: "Crazy Drums/Crazy Drummer"

Biography

Bobby Graham may not be as well-known as Ringo Starr, or as familiar a name among session men as, say, Jimmy Page or Big Jim Sullivan -- but between 1960 and 1965, he was one of the busiest session drummers in England, was on a lot of records with Page and Sullivan, and could have had the spot that Ringo eventually filled in the Beatles. Graham was born in Edmonton, North London, in 1940, and well before he was in his teens he had manifested a fascination with rhythm and beat. Unlike most boys, he never got interested in sports; instead, he begun hanging out at music stores that catered to drummers, and started taking lessons with Ronnie Verrell, a veteran drummer with Ted Heath's band. His formal education ended at 15 -- he loved jazz, but skiffle was what was happening in England in 1955 and 1956, and he played with various amateur and semi-professional bands, getting back to jazz when he had the chance.

He was ultimately unable to resist the chance to join a rock & roll band in 1960, when an invitation came from a former school friend to become a member of Billy Grey & the Stormers for a summer of work at the renowned holiday camp, Butlins. The Stormers ultimately became the Outlaws, the backing band for vocalist Mike Berry, a new discovery of producer Joe Meek -- they played on most of Berry's early records, including the classic "Tribute to Buddy Holly." Graham quickly tired of Meek's disorganized, hurry-up-and-wait approach to recording, however, and came to resent the producer's tendency to sign every composition with his name, whether he'd written it or not. He moved on to another top British backing band, the Bruvvers, who supported Cockney rock & roll singer/guitarist Joe Brown. At the time, Brown was one of the more popular rock & rollers in England, and was perhaps the only home-grown talent who had mastered the rockabilly sound, and the Bruvvers were a highly respected band within the rock & roll community -- among the records he played on was Brown's most enduring hit, "A Picture of You."

According to an article by Kieron Tyler, in June of 1962 following a performance in Liverpool, Graham was asked by Brian Epstein if he might consider taking over Pete Best's spot in the Beatles -- at the time, so he told Tyler, it didn't seem to make sense, giving up a steady, well-paying spot in the Bruvvers to join a band that was totally unknown outside of Liverpool. He quit the Bruvvers early the following year and joined one of the later incarnations of Marty Wilde's backing band, the Wild Cats -- although Wilde's hitmaking days were behind him, he was still recording and performing regularly, and Graham was a mainstay of his backing group for much of 1963. He had already begun following a very different path in music. Graham had played his first gig as a session drummer in 1962, with guitar virtuoso Davy Graham for the album The Guitar Player. Soon after leaving the Wild Cats, he was recruited into the John Barry Seven and also began working as a session drummer at Ember Records, where Barry was the resident music director.

It was also at Ember that Graham managed his first recording sessions, learning the essentials of being a producer. By the time the smoke cleared in 1963, he'd decided to give up playing as a bandmember in favor of session work, which was coming his way with such frequency that he needn't be on the road ever again. Over the next couple of years, he played hundreds of sessions, with everything from full orchestras to dance bands to the hottest rock & roll acts of the time. Graham played alongside the likes ofBig Jim Sullivan, Jimmy Page, Arthur Greenslade, Vic Flick, and John Paul Jones -- his playing appeared on records by the Kinks ("You Really Got Me," "Long Tall Sally," "All Day and All of the Night"), Petula Clark, Dave Berry ("The Crying Game"), the Nashville Teens ("Tobacco Road"), Tom Jones, Brenda Lee ("Is It True"), Françoise Hardy, Eddy Mitchell, and Dusty Springfield ("I Only Want to Be with You"). His most visible job, in terms of exposure, was also one of his most well-hidden of his career -- as was suspected for years, and revealed formally in 2004, Graham played the drums on most (if not all) of the hits of the Dave Clark Five, in place of Clark himself. He was also periodically allowed to record his own singles, but none of these were remotely as successful as the best of the sides on which he played for others.

Drumming was his main function, but in 1964, opportunity beckoned when Graham chanced to be at Fontana Records on a day when a scheduled session for what was supposed to be the debut album by the Pretty Things broke down in acrimony, with their original producer, Jack Baverstock, leaving the session in disgust over the group's sound and (in one member's case, at least) state of inebriation. Graham stepped in and showed that he had the necessary experience with rock & roll musicians to tolerate and work around the band's rather raw, disorganized approach to recording. In the end, their work together yielded a classic debut album that did very well for the label and the group. That success seemed to herald a major shift in Graham's career -- his salvaging of the Pretty Things' session, coupled with his prior experience, led to Graham's being hired by the French Barclay label to run their English operation. Although that project didn't yield any successful signings, Graham was able to move on to a producer's berth at EMI's Dutch label.

Graham eventually left music after a successful decade in the producer's spot. A veteran drinker with a lessening sense of control as the years wore on, the problem ultimately got the best of him. He recovered from his alcoholism and went into a new field, shooting and producing professional videos for corporations and private clients. Music was long behind him as a profession until 1998, when an invitation from Ray Davies put him back behind the drum kit -- Graham played on a new recording of "You Really Got Me" and "Storyteller," on the Davies album of that title. During this same period, audiophile-quality CD reissues of sides he'd recorded with Petula Clark, the Kinks, the Pretty Things, Joe Brown, John Leyton, Mike Berry, and Brenda Lee, among others, began appearing. In 2000, Rollercoaster Records released Crazy Drums/Crazy Drummer, a compilation of Bobby Graham solo sides along with tracks by the Outlaws and others featuring his playing in a prominent way. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Bobby Graham
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For the ex-footballer, see Bobby Graham (footballer)
Bobby Graham
Birth name Robert Francis Neate
Born 11 March 1940(1940-03-11)
Edmonton, North London, England
Died 14 September 2009 (aged 69)
Occupations Session musician, drummer
Instruments Drums
Years active 1960s-2009
Website Bobbygraham.co.uk

Bobby Graham (11 March 1940 – 14 September 2009) was an English session drummer, composer, arranger and record producer. Shel Talmy, who produced The Kinks, David Bowie and The Who, described Graham as "the greatest drummer the UK has ever produced."[1]

Contents

Biography

Born Robert Francis Neate at North Middlesex Hospital, Edmonton, North London, England, Graham became a member of The Outlaws and worked with Joe Meek.[2] He left to join work with Joe Brown in 1961.[2] Graham insisted that he was approached by Brian Epstein when it was decided to remove Pete Best from The Beatles. Graham claimed that he turned Epstein down as he was then the drummer for a much more successful band, Joe Brown and The Bruvvers, and so Epstein instead chose Ringo Starr.[3]

Graham was noted for having drummed on many group's sessions that produced hit songs out of England in the early to mid 1960s, such as The Kinks. He also claimed to have drummed on many of The Dave Clark Five hits,[4] a claim supported by music insiders such as orchestra leader/musical director/songwriter Les Reed OBE,[5] though Clark is on record as having denied this.[6]

Graham is said to have played on number one singles by The Kinks, Tom Jones and Dusty Springfield, and he himself claimed that he appeared on a total of 40 UK top five hits.[7]

Graham also toured the UK as drummer in his own jazz band.

He died of stomach cancer in September 2009.[1]

Recording credits

Graham played on over 15,000 titles,[8] including:

Literature

  • Patrick Harrington: The Session Man (Broom House Publishing Ltd., 12 Nov 2004) - ISBN 0-9549142-0-1

References

  1. ^ a b Express.co.uk
  2. ^ a b Bobby Graham career, bobbygraham.co.uk
  3. ^ Herrington and Graham, The Session Man: The story of Bobby Graham, the UK's greatest session drummer, Broom House Publishing Limited, Monmouthshire, 2004 p 84-86
  4. ^ Retrosellers.com
  5. ^ Tributes, bobbygraham.co.uk
  6. ^ Weinberg, Max, foreword by Bruce Springsteen, The Big Beat: Conversations with Rock's Great Drummers, Billboard Books, NY, 1984/1991 p. 139
  7. ^ BBC news story
  8. ^ Herrington and Graham, The Session Man: The story of Bobby Graham, the UK's greatest session drummer, Broom House Publishing Limited, Monmouthshire, 2004 p 9

External links


 
 
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