Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Pete Wingfield

 
Artist: Pete Wingfield

Similar Artists:

Austin Roberts, Johnny Wakelin, Jigsaw, David Geddes

Worked With:

Frank Ricotti, Chris Mercer, Dave Mattacks, Barry Hammond, Steve Gregory, Mel Collins, Mike Vernon, Bryn Haworth

Formal Connection With:

Bob Tench
See Pete Wingfield Lyrics
  • Born: May 07, 1948, England
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Piano, Vocals, Keyboards
  • Representative Albums: "Breakfast Special," "Eighteen with a Bullet: The Island Recordings"

Biography

English keyboardist Pete Wingfield has done session work with numerous rock, blues, and R&B acts, among them Freddie King, Jimmy Witherspoon, the Hollies, and Van Morrison, as well as being a member of the Olympic Runners. A fixture within the music industry -- especially in England -- from the early to mid-'70s, his fame before the public has derived from his fine single "Eighteen with a Bullet" for Island in 1975. While it only reached number 15 on both the pop and R&B charts the week of November 11, 1975, "Eighteen with a Bullet" was actually number 18 with a bullet on the pop chart. It was also a charming, expertly bit sung of falsetto soul.

Wingfield was born in Liphook, Hampshire, England in 1948. He was a devotee of American R&B and soul music, and learned the piano as a boy. His interest in soul music was sufficient to lead him to an early career as a music journalist while still in his teens, founding one fanzine devoted to soul music and publishing articles on the subject in other, established magazines. He also led a group called Pete's Disciples and attended Sussex University, where he and fellow students Paul Butler (guitar) and John Best (bass) later teamed up with local teacher Chris Waters (drums) to form the blues band Jellybread. In addition to playing all of the keyboards in the band, Wingfield handled most of the signing, and they had enough confidence in the worth of their work to record an album for their own Liphook label, which became, in effect, their demo for the Blue Horizon label, which signed them in 1970. Despite good reviews, the group didn't enjoy enough success to justify a continued effort, and Wingfield left in 1971 -- by that time, he'd played sessions with ex-Yardbirds guitarist Top Topham, and one-time blues bandleader Graham Bond, and he ended up playing on B.B. King's In London album, as well as on recordings by Lightnin' Slim, Memphis Slim, and Nazareth.

He played with Keef Hartley's band for a short time, and was also a member of Colin Blunstone's band, as well as playing with Van Morrison. Initially with help from his association with Blue Horizon and its founder, Mike Vernon, Wingfield appeared on dozens of albums in the early and mid-'70s, including those by the Hollies, and also served as a member of the Blue Horizon-spawned group the Olympic Runners, which included DeLisle Harper (bass) and Glen LeFleur (drums), both of whom played on Wingfield's first solo album, Breakfast Special (1975), which included "Eighteen with a Bullet." That proved to be his only charting single, but the lack of any follow-up success hardly seemed to matter, in a career that had him playing dozens upon dozens of sessions and live shows every year, with everyone from Freddie King to Al Stewart to Maggie Bell. Among his more prominent appearances in the mid-'70s was on the concert album Hollies Live (aka Live Hits), which became a major underground hit -- at around the same time, he also worked on records by Edwin Starr, Lindisfarne, Richard & Linda Thompson, Bonnie Tyler, Billy Fury, and Lonnie Donegan. Meanwhile, as a songwriter, he contributed the title track to the Olivia Newton-John album Making a Good Thing Better (1977), and as a producer, he helmed the 1980 debut album by Dexy's Midnight Runners. He had previously worked with Phil Everly, and in the early '80s, he became a member of the Everly Brothers' backing band, starting with their reunion of that era and continuing on subsequent tours and recordings. In 1999, he played with Paul McCartney on Run Devil Run. In 2008, Wingfield's solo recordings for the Island label were assembled on an anthology by Cherry Red Records. As with any session musician who has been as busy as Wingfield, his multiple overlapping credits often seem to converge and collide with current work, amid reissues and new projects. ~ Bruce Eder & Ron Wynn, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Pete Wingfield
Top

Pete Wingfield (born 7 May 1948[1], Liphook, Hampshire, England[2]) is an English record producer, keyboard player, songwriter, singer and music journalist.

Contents

Career

As a specialist in soul music, in the 1990s Wingfield contributed regular articles and reviews to the monthly journal Let It Rock, and the weekly Melody Maker magazine among others. As a performer, he played with the British soul band, The Olympic Runners, and Albert Lee & Hogan's Heroes.

In 1971, Wingfield played the piano on the B. B. King in London album, and in the following year received similar credits for Seventy-Second Brave, the Keef Hartley Band album.

By 1974, Wingfield played keyboards on Bryn Haworth's album, Let the Days Go By, and Haworth's 1975 follow-up collection Sunny Side of the Street. Wingfield also had a Top 10 solo (one-hit wonder) hit in 1975 on the UK Singles Chart, with "Eighteen With a Bullet". That song would also reach the Top 20 on the Billboard R&B chart. Coincidentally, "Eighteen With a Bullet" was actually #18 with a bullet on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.[1] The song was taken from his album, Breakfast Special which was also released on the Island Records label.

Pete played piano for the Alan Parsons rhythm section at Abbey Road Studios with Pete Moss on bass for Dexys Midnight Runners and Paul McCartney.

He produced the first album by Dexys Midnight Runners - Searching for the Young Soul Rebels; and has played on sessions for The Housemartins, The Beautiful South, Van Morrison, Interview, Jimmy Witherspoon and Freddie King; plus Paul McCartney on his Run Devil Run album.

In 1977, his song "Making a Good Thing Better" appeared on Olivia Newton-John's album of the same name. Between 1975 and 1981, Wingfield played keyboards with The Hollies. In the 1980s, Wingfield teamed up with the film producer, Mel Brooks, and co-wrote the song, "It's Good To Be the King". In 1985 he produced the Kane Gang's debut album Bad and Lowdown World of the Kane Gang.[3] Three years later his production credits appeared on The Proclaimers UK Top 20 hit, "I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)", and their album Sunshine on Leith.

The Pasadenas 1988 song "Tribute (Right On)" was written by Wingfield.

Wingfield played with Van Morrison at the 1974 Montreux Jazz Festival, which was one of the two shows featured on Morrison's 2006 first ever issued DVD. Several years later, Wingfield also did a summer tour of Europe with Morrison's band, featuring the songs from the latter's 1979 album, Into the Music. Beginning with their 1983 reunion shows, Wingfield spent eighteen years handling keyboard duties for The Everly Brothers.[1] In 1983, Wingfield played keyboards on Bryn Haworth's album Pass It On,

His track, "Eighteen With a Bullet" featured on the soundtrack to the 1998 film, Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels.

See also

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pete Wingfield" Read more

 

Mentioned in