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Gary Duncan

 
Artist: Gary Duncan

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Quicksilver

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  • Born: September 04, 1946, San Diego, CA
  • Active: '60s, '70s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Guitar

Biography

There aren't many, if any, medals or awards given for the positions of best second lead guitar players in rock history. If there were, though, Gary Duncan would be right up there for his work in Quicksilver Messenger Service. Quicksilver is most-remembered for John Cippolina's striking, shimmering leads. Yet part of what made them a solid band, rather than just a pretext for guitar solo grandstanding, was Duncan's sympathetic second guitar, which could play (often in the same song) both rhythm and accomplished lead lines on its own, with a more traditional tone than Cippolina's.

Quicksilver Messenger Service, like many of the '60s San Francisco psychedelic bands, were assembled from disparate parts that few would have guessed would have been compatible. In Quicksilver, Duncan and drummer Greg Elmore emerged from the teen garage rock scene. Both had been in the Brogues, though Duncan (born Gary Grubb), wasn't in the band when they did their first single in 1965. Under the name Gary Cole, he joined the Brogues in the summer of 1965 and was in the band when they recorded their second and last single, which paired a fine sullen version of "I Ain't No Miracle Worker" (better known as done by the Chocolate Watch Band) and "Don't Shoot Me Down" (in the style of one of Duncan's favorite bands, the Pretty Things). In late 1965, the Brogues broke up and Elmore and Duncan moved from Merced to San Francisco to join Quicksilver Messenger Service.

On Quicksilver's first two albums, Duncan also contributed some vocals and co-wrote standout songs like "Light Your Windows," "Gold and Silver," and "The Fool." However, Duncan left at the end of 1968, frustrated by what he felt was the band's lack of motivation to expand their repertoire and write new songs. In 1969, he tried to form bands with his good friend Dino Valenti, who had been planning to be in the group that became Quicksilver Messenger Service before getting busted, before Duncan was involved in the project (and before Duncan had even met Valenti). At the end of 1969, though, Duncan ended up rejoining Quicksilver and Valenti got in the band as well. The band radically changed in character as Valenti took a heavy role in the singing and songwriting, and Cippolina and David Freiberg left over the course of their early '70s albums, which were less impressive than those of the previous decade. Valenti and Duncan kept the band going through much of the '70s, but by the end of the decade, Duncan left music for a while to work as a longshoreman for a few years.

Duncan was the sole remaining member of the vintage Quicksilver -- as their name had now been shortened to -- when Peace by Piece came out in 1986. He has remained active in the music since, sometimes as the principal in Quicksilver. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Gary Duncan
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Gary Duncan

Gary Duncan performing with Quicksilver Messenger Service (Holmfirth Picturedrome, UK, 2008).
Background information
Birth name Gary Grubb
Born September 4, 1946 (1946-09-04) (age 63)
San Diego, California
Instruments Guitar
Years active 1964 - Present
Associated acts The Brogues
Quicksilver Messenger Service
Website Quicksilver Messenger Service Official Site

Gary Duncan (born Gary Grubb, September 4, 1946, San Diego, California) is an American musician, once guitarist with The Brogues, then most notably with Quicksilver Messenger Service, where the complex interplay between himself and fellow-guitarist John Cipollina did much to define the unique sound of that San Francisco based band.[citation needed]

Contents

Early life and musical career

While still attending school Duncan was a part of the San Francisco garage rock scene that was emerging in the early 1960s. It was in 1964 when he joined The Brogues and met future Quicksilver Messenger Service drummer Greg Elmore. It was with The Brogues that he adopted the stage name Gary Duncan. He stayed with them until they broke up in 1965.

Quicksilver Messenger Service

In late 1965 Duncan received a call from John Cippolina offering an audition for himself and fellow Brogues member Greg Elmore to join Quicksilver Messenger Service. The group played its first gig in December 1965 at The Matrix. The complex guitar interplay between Duncan and John Cippolina had a big influence on the sound of psychedelic rock.[citation needed] In early 1969, after recording two albums, Duncan left Quicksilver and as he describes it, "I left for a year and rode motorcycles and lived in New York and Los Angeles and just kind of went crazy for about a year."[citation needed]

By the beginning of 1970 Duncan rejoined Quicksilver Messenger Service along with singer/guitarist Dino Valenti which pushed the group toward a more folk rock sound.[citation needed] By 1971 the original group had splintered with Cippolina, David Freiberg and Nicky Hopkins all leaving Duncan, Elmore and Valenti to perform as Quicksilver Messenger Service until the end of the 1970s.

After Quicksilver

In the mid-1980s Duncan revived the Quicksilver name and began touring with his own band even releasing an album, Peace by Piece. He released a few more albums into the 1990s with the Quicksilver name but he is the only original member in the group (except David Freiberg who guested on some tracks). He began touring with a four piece band up until 2001 when the World Trade Center was attacked. After that Duncan recalls there were no more shows to play and he tore down his home studio for financial reasons. He says: "I tore the Studio apart by myself... no help from any of my friends... in fact not even a word... they all came and got the stuff they had stored and left the stuff they didn’t want so I could haul it away and they just never spoke to me again..."[citation needed]

Duncan walked away from the music industry for the next few years until 2004, when he began releasing music from his Quicksilver band in the 1980s and 1990s. In 2006 Duncan reunited with Freiberg and began touring again as the Quicksilver Messenger Service. They still perform today.

Discography

with Quicksilver Messenger Service

with Gary Duncan's Quicksilver

  • Peace by Piece (1986)
  • Shape Shifter (1996)
  • Live at Field Stone (1997)

References

Aol.com/artist/Gary Duncan Quicksilver Messenger Service Official Site


 
 
Learn More
Peace by Piece (1986 Album by Quicksilver)
Solid Silver (1975 Album by Quicksilver Messenger Service)
Just for Love (1970 Album by Quicksilver Messenger Service)

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