Peter Banks: Difference between revisions
GTAGamer245 (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary Tags: Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
|||
(426 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{short description|British musician}} |
|||
:''For the keyboard player Peter Banks, see the entry for the band [[After the Fire]].'' |
|||
{{For|the keyboard player|After the Fire}} |
|||
{{Unreferenced|date=June 2008}} |
|||
{{More citations needed|date=May 2022}}{{Use British English|date=August 2010}} |
|||
{{POV|date=June 2008}} |
|||
{{ |
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2023}} |
||
{{Infobox musical artist <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject Musicians --> |
|||
| name = Peter Banks |
|||
| image = {{CSS image crop |Image=Mabel Greer's Toyshop 1968.jpg|bSize=680 |cWidth=200 |cHeight=250 |oTop=240 |oLeft=290|Location=center}} |
|||
| caption = Banks in 1968 |
|||
| landscape = yes |
|||
| background = person |
|||
| birth_name = Peter William Brockbanks |
|||
| alias = |
|||
| birth_date = {{Birth date |df=yes|1947|07|15|}} |
|||
| birth_place = [[Chipping Barnet]], [[Hertfordshire]], England |
|||
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2013|03|07|1947|07|15|df=y}} |
|||
| death_place = Chipping Barnet, London, England |
|||
| instrument = {{flatlist| |
|||
* Guitar |
|||
* vocals |
|||
}} |
|||
| genre = {{flatlist| |
|||
* [[Progressive rock]] |
|||
* rock |
|||
* improvisation |
|||
}} |
|||
| occupation = {{flatlist| |
|||
* Guitarist |
|||
* songwriter |
|||
}} |
|||
| years_active = 1966–2013 |
|||
| label = |
|||
| past_member_of = {{flat list| |
|||
* The Nighthawks |
|||
* The Devil's Disciples |
|||
* [[The Syndicats]] |
|||
* [[The Syn]] |
|||
* [[Mabel Greer's Toyshop]] |
|||
* Neat Change |
|||
* [[Yes (band)|Yes]] |
|||
* [[Blodwyn Pig]] |
|||
* [[Flash (band)|Flash]] |
|||
* Empire |
|||
* Harmony in Diversity |
|||
}} |
|||
| website = {{URL|peterbanks.net}} |
|||
}} |
|||
'''Peter William Brockbanks''' (15 July 1947 – 7 March 2013), known professionally as '''Peter Banks''', was a British guitarist, vocalist, songwriter and producer. He was the original guitarist in the rock bands [[Yes (band)|Yes]], [[Flash (band)|Flash]], and Empire; he was also a guitarist for [[The Syn]]. Banks has been described as "the architect of progressive music".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-21771444|title=Peter Banks: Original Yes guitarist dies aged 65|publisher=BBC|date=13 March 2013}}</ref> |
|||
==Early life== |
|||
[[Image:Peter_Banks.jpg|thumb|Peter Banks (2006)]] |
|||
Peter William Brockbanks was born in [[Chipping Barnet]] in north London, on 15 July 1947, and raised in 37 Alston Road.<ref name=BarnetToday13/><ref name=CR2014>{{cite web|url=https://www.loudersound.com/features/peter-banks-life-death|title="We would go out and he really never wanted anybody to know that he was a musician": The troubled life and lonely death of Peter Banks, the man once called "the architect of prog"|first=Paul|last=Woods|date=23 January 2024|publisher=Loudersound|access-date=29 January 2024}}</ref> His father William was an optical mechanic and his mother Ellen a cleaner. He attended Barnet Secondary School, followed by [[Barnet College|Barnet College of Further Education]].<ref name=Independent>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/peter-banks-original-guitarist-with-yes-giants-of-progressive-rock-8535209.html|title=Peter Banks: Original guitarist with Yes, giants of progressive rock|work=The Independent|access-date=16 March 2013|date=14 March 2013}}</ref><ref name=Adelman>{{cite web|url=http://www.bondegezou.co.uk/iv/mainterview.htm |title=Martyn Adelman interview|website=Bondegezou.co.uk |year=2013 |access-date=16 March 2013}}</ref> [[Lonnie Donegan]] was Banks' first major musical influence and inspired him to take up the guitar at around 8 years of age.{{sfn|Morse|1996|p=3}} His parents bought him his records to listen to as well as his first guitar, an acoustic model which he later said "was practically unplayable".<ref name=Independent/> His first electric guitar was a Gretsch Tennessean. Banks studied art and once had an ambition of becoming a zookeeper, but decided against it when he learned the job had unfavourable hours, and pursued music.<ref name=Independent/> Banks also cited guitarist [[David O'List]] and [[Pete Townshend]] as an influence in his early period.{{sfn|Morse|1996|p=6}} |
|||
==Career== |
|||
'''Peter Banks''' is the [[stage name]] of '''Peter William Brockbanks''' (born [[July 15]] [[1947]]), an English guitarist. He was the original [[guitar]]ist of the [[progressive rock]] band [[Yes (band)|Yes]]. |
|||
===Early career and Yes=== |
|||
Banks started as rhythm guitarist in the Nighthawks, a local group, in 1963. His first gig took place at the New Barnet Pop Festival. In the following year he left to join the Devil's Disciples with John Tite on vocals, Ray Alford on bass, and Malcolm "Pinnie" Raye on drums.<ref>{{cite book|title=Close to the Edge – The Story of Yes|author=Chris Welch|publisher=[[Omnibus Press]]|date=1 September 2008|isbn=978-1847721327}}</ref> They recorded two covers on an acetate, Arthur Alexander's "[[You Better Move On (song)|You Better Move On]]" and [[Graham Gouldman]]'s "[[For Your Love]]", which became a hit record for [[the Yardbirds]] one year later. It was Banks' first visit in a recording studio, during which he wore headphones and experienced stereo sound for the first time. He found the experience "totally terrifying", and was so traumatised that he started having doubts if he could carry on playing the guitar and work in another studio again.<ref name=CIPYSNotes>Banks, Peter. ''Can I Play You Something?'' liner notes.</ref> In 1965 Banks joined [[the Syndicats]], replacing guitarist [[Ray Fenwick]]. |
|||
[[File:Mabel Greer's Toyshop 1968.jpg|thumb|Banks (bottom) in Mabel Greer's Toyshop, 1968]] |
|||
==Early career== |
|||
After leaving the Syndicats, Banks joined [[the Syn]] which at the time included [[Chris Squire]] on bass, [[Andrew Pryce Jackman]] on keyboards, [[Steve Nardelli]] on vocals, and Gunnar Hákonarson on drums. They recorded two singles, "Created by Clive"/"Grounded" and "Flowerman"/"14 Hour Technicolour Dream", both in 1967, before they split. Later that year, Banks and Squire joined [[Mabel Greer's Toyshop]] with Clive Bayley on rhythm guitar and vocals and Bob Hagger on drums. In the spring of 1968 Banks left the band to join Neat Change, with whom he recorded one single, "I Lied to Aunty May". He was fired from the band after his bandmates wanted to adopt a [[skinhead]] look, and Banks refused to cut his hair.<ref name=Story2010>Powell, Mark. ''The Peter Banks Story'' on YouTube. Cheery Red TV, 2010.</ref> Meanwhile, [[Jon Anderson]] had joined Mabel Greer's Toyshop as lead vocalist, and Hagger was replaced by drummer [[Bill Bruford]]. The four entered a period of rehearsals in London, during which Banks replaced a departing Bayley and keyboardist [[Tony Kaye (musician)|Tony Kaye]] was brought in to round out the group.<ref name="AMG">{{cite web |url={{AllMusic|class=artist|id=p3627/biography|pure_url=yes}} |title=Biography by Gary Hill |publisher=AllMusic |access-date=10 October 2009}}</ref> |
|||
Banks was born at [[Barnet]], [[North London]]. |
|||
While rehearsing with the new line-up, the band exchanged ideas for a name. Anderson suggested Life and Squire proposed World, but all agreed on Banks' suggestion of Yes, which he had thought of some time before.{{sfn|Morse|1996|p=8}}<ref name=Story2010/> Following their debut in August 1968 Banks devised the band's first logo, a design featuring the group's name inside a [[speech bubble]]. Banks performed on the first two Yes albums, ''[[Yes (Yes album)|Yes]]'' (1969) and ''[[Time and a Word]]'' (1970). The latter features orchestral arrangements which Banks disagreed with, and he often clashed with producer Tony Colton.<ref name=Independent/> On 18 April 1970, Banks was fired from Yes after their gig at the Luton College of Technology, and was replaced by former Syndicats guitarist [[Steve Howe (guitarist)|Steve Howe]].<ref name="AMG"/> In his autobiography, Howe wrote that Banks "was an interesting guitarist to have to follow. He, too, adopted different guitar styles and had already set a scene I could relate to. He was a sweet guy and came to many of our early gigs. I can't think of many other ex-band members doing that – I mean, right after they've left the band."<ref>Howe, Steve. ''All My Yesterdays''. New York: Omnibus Press, 2020, 67.</ref> |
|||
When he was a young boy, his father bought him a [[steel-string acoustic guitar|acoustic guitar]], and Banks showed unexpected devotion and ability with the instrument. As a teenager, he also learned how to play the [[banjo]]. |
|||
===Post-Yes career=== |
|||
Peter Banks and [[Chris Squire]] first met when Banks joined [[The Syn]], also including [[Andrew Jackman]] ([[Keyboard instrument|keyboards]]), who in later years became an orchestral arranger for some Yes and [[Chris Squire]] records. The Syn only lasted until 1967, but the group released two [[single (music)|singles]]. |
|||
====1970s==== |
|||
Banks joined [[Blodwyn Pig]] for around six months in 1970, following the departure of original guitarist [[Mick Abrahams]].<ref name=Independent/> He tried to incorporate more arrangements into their simple blues-oriented music, which he later realised did not fit and found his style incompatible. In later years, however, Banks looked back on this period as a particularly happy one and enjoyed working with his bandmates.<ref name=Story2010/> After the band ran its course, Banks was unsure of his next move and later admitted that he was still "shell-shocked" by his departure from Yes, and turned to alcohol and drugs.<ref name=Story2010/> He earned some money as a session musician, but found the work restrictive in a creative sense. At one point he was close to bankruptcy, and had to sell some of his equipment. Attempts to form a new band fell through, partly due to his disinterest in being a leader.<ref name=MM1971/> |
|||
Banks' fortunes changed when music reporter [[Chris Welch]] wrote an article about him in ''[[Melody Maker]]'' in June 1971.<ref name=MM1971>{{cite web|url=http://forgotten-yesterdays.com/_graphics/memorabilia/_the_strange_case_of_an_ex_yes_man_peter_banks_interview_chris_welch_melody_maker_1971_06_19_33515.jpg|title=The Strange Case of an Ex-Yes Man|first=Chris|last=Welch|work=Melody Maker|date=19 June 1971|access-date=30 January 2024}}</ref> The article was spotted by vocalist Colin Carter, who contacted Banks and invited him to form a band. Following the addition of bassist Ray Bennett and drummer Mike Hough, the four named themselves [[Flash (band)|Flash]] and began touring in 1972.<ref name="AMG"/> In the same year they released two albums, ''[[Flash (Flash album)|Flash]]'' and ''In the Can'', to a warm reception. The group disbanded in 1973 towards the end of a US tour to promote their third album, ''Out of Our Hands''.<ref name="AMG"/> Banks felt the group lacked the right management, and got angry at Carter and Bennett for often playing with their backs to the audience. By this time Banks was a heavy drinker, addicted to [[valium]], and unbeknownst to him until years later, was suffering from his first [[nervous breakdown]].<ref name=Story2010/> |
|||
In 1968 Banks played briefly with the band [[Neat Change]], recording one single. |
|||
In 1973 Banks recorded his debut solo album, ''[[Two Sides of Peter Banks]]''.<ref name=Independent/> It was recorded at the same time as ''Out of Our Hands'', with Banks working with Flash during the day and travelling to a different studio to work on his own at night.<ref name=Story2010/> The album features guest appearances from [[Jan Akkerman]] of [[Focus (band)|Focus]], drummer [[Phil Collins]] and guitarist [[Steve Hackett]] of [[Genesis (band)|Genesis]], and [[John Wetton]] of [[King Crimson]].<ref name="AMG"/> In the summer of 1973, Banks played in a short-lived band with Collins, guitarist [[Ronnie Caryl]], violinist Mike Poggott, and bassist John Howitt named Zox and the Radar Boys. |
|||
Squire joined friends Clive Bailey (rhythm guitar) and Bob Hagger (drums) in Mabel Greer's Toy Shop, and Banks came to join the band too for a time. Banks left the band, which was subsequently joined by singer [[Jon Anderson]] and then drummer [[Bill Bruford]] replaced Bob Hagger. With the loss of Bailey, addition of keyboardist [[Tony Kaye (musician)|Tony Kaye]] and Banks' return, the band took on a new name. |
|||
While touring the US with Flash, Banks met his first wife Sidonie Jordan (known as Sidney Foxx). In 1974, they formed Empire and recorded three albums with various musicians until 1979, which remained unreleased until the 1990s.<ref name="AMG"/> Amongst the musicians involved were Collins, [[Preston Heyman]], bassist [[John Giblin]], and keyboardist [[Jakob Magnusson]]. Ray Bennett of Flash was in the group for a period, but he and Banks did not get along and Banks caught Jordan having an affair with him.<ref name=Story2010/> Empire disbanded in 1980, having only performed showcase gigs for record executives.<ref name=Story2010/><ref name=Gonzo2015>{{cite web|url=https://gonzo-multimedia.blogspot.com/2015/02/sidonie-jordan-interview-edited.html|title=Sidonie Jordan Interview (Edited)|date=11 February 2015|publisher=Gonzo Multimedia|access-date=30 January 2024}}</ref> |
|||
==Career with Yes== |
|||
The members searched for an appropriate name. It was then that Peter suggested they called the group [[Yes (band)|Yes]], a very short and positive word. All parts agreed that the name was not meant to be permanent, but just a temporary solution. Four decades later, the name remains Yes. |
|||
====1980s–1990s==== |
|||
[[Atlantic Records]] took notice of the band and, in 1969, signed the band and rushed them into a studio to record their first album, named simply ''Yes''. This included the song "Beyond and Before", a Mabel Greer song co-written by Bailey. The next year another album was in progress (''[[Time and a Word]]'') but Anderson and Squire decided they wanted an orchestra backing the five musicians. The idea was not well received by Banks, and things got only worse when the orchestral arrangements left the guitarist, as well as keyboardist [[Tony Kaye (musician)|Tony Kaye]], with little to do (strings replaced almost note-for-note the guitar licks and parts Pete elaborated in the rehearsals). Once the album was released, a tour ensued; Banks was asked to leave the group, playing his last gig with Yes on April 18, 1970 at The Luton College of Technology. Some sources say that it was Anderson who, tired of Banks's reservations about the orchestra, accused the guitar player of being "indulgent" in the last recording sessions and shows. Another (coincidental) motive for Banks's departure was that Squire, Anderson and Bruford were not happy enough with their manager, Roy Flynn, a man who trusted the group and helped it to gain a record contract - something the band arguably seemed to take for granted. Kaye kept a shy defense of Flynn, but Banks felt that releasing their manager was an act of betrayal and announced his disapproval. Flynn and Banks kept a long and collaborative friendship since then. |
|||
Banks made a steady living in the 1980s and 1990s as a session musician in Los Angeles, which he enjoyed over time.<ref name=CR2014/><ref name=Story2010/> He played on various albums including those by [[Lonnie Donegan]] and [[Jakob Frímann Magnússon]],<ref name=Independent/> and appeared on ''Romeo Unchained'' (1986) by [[Tonio K]]. He also worked with [[Ian Wallace (drummer)|Ian Wallace]] in The Teabags with [[Jackie Lomax]], [[Kim Gardner]], [[David Mansfield]], and [[Mel Collins]]. No recordings came out of that. |
|||
In May 1991, Kaye invited Banks to play with Yes on stage during the encore at their show at the [[Great Western Forum]], California. Banks accepted and went to the show, but Kaye informed him that Howe did not want Banks to play. An angered Banks proceeded to drink at the arena bar with comedian [[Billy Connolly]].<ref name=Independent/><ref>''[[Classic Artists: Yes]]'', 2007</ref> In 1994 and 1998, Banks was a featured guest at the Yes fan convention Yestival. He co-ordinated the release of the 1997 live compilation ''[[Something's Coming: The BBC Recordings 1969–1970]]'', and wrote about his days with the band in the liner notes. Around this time, Banks and [[Geoff Downes]] played some sessions and the possibility of Banks joining [[Asia (band)|Asia]] was mooted, but came to nothing. Banks was featured in the 2006 Yes documentary ''[[Classic Artists: Yes]]'' and the 2009 DVDs ''[[The Lost Broadcasts]]'' and ''[[Rock of the '70s]]''. |
|||
==Work with other bands== |
|||
After leaving [[Yes (band)|Yes]], and while looking for some musical project to come his way, Banks supported the band [[Blodwyn Pig]] for a brief period in late 1970 and guested as session musician in an album by Chris Harwood. In 1971 he formed [[Flash (band)|Flash]] and sessions began for a first album, with [[Tony Kaye (musician)|Tony Kaye]] guesting on keyboards. The record appeared in 1972 (called simply ''[[Flash (Flash album)|Flash]]'') and had a warm reception. Subsequent to Kaye's involvement, Banks took the dual role of guitarist and keyboardist. [[Flash (band)|Flash]] recorded and released its second album (''In the Can'') in November that same year; and the third (''Out of Our Hands'') in 1973. |
|||
After returning to London in the mid-1990s, Banks continued as a session musician and released archive material. He released three solo albums: the all-instrumental ''Instinct'' (1993), ''Self Contained'' (1995), which features Gerald Goff on keyboards, and ''Reduction'' (1997).<ref name="AMG"/> Another archival release was ''Psychosync'', a live Flash recording made in 1973 for the [[King Biscuit Flower Hour]] and finally released in 1998.<ref name="AMG"/> |
|||
Parallel to that, Banks and guitarist [[Jan Akkerman]] (of [[Focus (band)|Focus]] fame) became friends and started to play and record together, privately, since 1972, for a joint album. Banks also played on an album by [[Roger Ruskin Spear]] in that time. In 1973, not long after the third and final [[Flash (band)|Flash]] release, Banks edited ''Two Sides of Peter Banks'' (a clever reference to both personality and vinyl records), with an impressive array of guest musicians: Akkerman, bassist [[John Wetton]], drummer [[Phil Collins]], guitarist [[Steve Hackett]] and fellow Flash members Ray Bennett and Mike Hough. |
|||
====2000s–2010s==== |
|||
Around the Summer of 1973, Peter Banks played with the jazz-rock band called Zox & the Radar Boys, including [[Phil Collins]] (drums), [[Mike Piggott]] (violin), [[Ronnie Caryl]] (guitar) and John Howitt (bass). |
|||
In 2000, Banks put out a collection of his oldest recordings, many previously unreleased, called ''Can I Play You Something?''.<ref name="AMG"/> It features early recordings by The Syn, Mabel Greer's Toyshop and Yes. |
|||
In 2001, Banks published a book with co-author Billy James, entitled ''Beyond and Before: The Formative Years of Yes''. In 2006, he expressed a desire to write a second book.<ref name=GRTR2006/> |
|||
In 1974, while trying to form a "Flash Mark II", Banks recruited musicians and fell in love with singer Sydney Foxx (real name Sidonie Jordan), who would soon became his wife. As Empire, Banks, Foxx and various other band members recorded three albums until 1980, none of which saw the light of day until the mid-1990s. Banks and Foxx divorced, although Empire remained together as a band for some time after their marital separation. |
|||
He was initially involved in a reunion of The Syn in 2003 and 2004, and recorded material with Steve Nardelli, Martyn Adleman, and Gerard Johnson. After several clashes over the recording, production and mixing, Banks was let go from the project, although he claimed he was never officially told. In a statement posted online, Banks called the behaviour of the three members "mystifying" and refuse to discuss the matter with him.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.peterbanks.net |title=Peter Banks – Guitarist |publisher=Peterbanks.net |access-date=28 February 2012}}</ref> Later in 2004 Banks entered talks with former Flash bandmates Colin Carter and Ray Bennett about a reunion, but he fell out with them and was excluded. |
|||
== Later work == |
|||
The only released work of Peter Banks in the second half of the 1970s were a number of sparse session appearances in albums by the likes of [[Lonnie Donegan]] (in his 1977 comeback record) and Jakob Magnússon (1979). In 1981, another recording by Empire appeared, but it is possibly what some call "a semi-official bootleg". Banks made a surprise brief appearance some time later on ''Romeo Unchained'', a 1986 album by Tonio K. He also worked with [[Ian Wallace (drummer)|Ian Wallace]] in The Teabags. |
|||
In 2004, Banks formed Harmony in Diversity, an improvisational trio with [[Andrew Booker (musician)|Andrew Booker]] and Nick Cottam of the music duo Pulse Engine.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pulse-engine.com |title=A Patented New Engine Platform | Grand Rapids Michigan |publisher=The Pulse Engine |access-date=28 February 2012}}</ref><ref name=Story2010/> They released one album, ''Trying''. Booker left and was replaced by David Speight. Banks formed a second version of the group named Harmony in Diversity II, featuring himself and keyboardist [[Gonzalo Carrera]]. The pair worked together in a jazz fusion project named Self-Contained.<ref name=GRTR2006>{{cite web|url=https://www.getreadytorock.com/rock_stars/peter_banks.htm|title=Interview: Peter Banks|first=Joe|last=Geesin|date=November 2006|publisher=Get Ready to Rock|access-date=9 March 2024}}</ref> |
|||
In 1993, Banks released ''Instinct'', a solo album of instrumental tracks with him playing all the parts. Only a keyboard player joined him for his next album, ''Self Contained'' (1995), which confirmed Peter Banks as a true solo musician. In 1997, Peter was mainly responsible for the release of a double-live [[Yes (band)|Yes]] set called ''Something's Coming'' (in the UK, being renamed ''Beyond and Before'' in the US), a collection of appearances at the [[BBC]] during 1969 and 1970, featuring the original lineup in all tracks and with a booklet containing the guitarist's account of those early days. |
|||
In Gibson Guitar's ''Lifestyle'' e-magazine o February 2009, Banks is listed as one of the "10 Great Prog Rock Guitarists". According to the article, "Before there was Steve Howe, there was Peter Banks. Artistic differences between Banks and singer Jon Anderson prompted Banks's departure from Yes in 1970, but in his little-known '70s band, Flash, Banks used an [[Gibson ES-335|ES-335]] to create several should-have-been prog rock classics. "Lifetime", from Flash's ''In the Can'' album, is his tour-de-force."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.gibson.com/en-us/Lifestyle/Features/10-great-prog-rock-guitarists/ |title=10 Great Prog Rock Guitarists |publisher=Gibson.com |date=24 June 2008 |access-date=28 February 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120309234055/http://www.gibson.com/en-us/Lifestyle/Features/10-great-prog-rock-guitarists/ |archive-date=9 March 2012 }}</ref> |
|||
Another archival release was ''Psychosync'', a live Flash recording made in 1973 for the [[King Biscuit Flower Hour]] and released 25 years later (in 1998). Also, between 1995 and 1997 all three Empire albums were released at last (one per year). Banks also collaborated in 1995's ''Tales From Yesterday'' Yes tribute album performing a version of the song "Astral Traveller" with [[Robert Berry]], appeared on the album ''Big Beats'' in 1997 and played on [[1999 in music|1999's]] ''Encores, Legends and Paradox'', an [[Emerson, Lake & Palmer]] tribute album. He also lent a (guitar) hand to 1999's ''Come Together People of Funk'' by [[Funky Monkey]] (including keyboardist [[Gerard Johnson (musician)|Gerard Johnson]] who helped on a number of Banks' projects in the 1990s). |
|||
In 2018, a documentary film on Banks' life and career written and directed by Heidi Hornbacher was in production, entitled ''Claiming Peter Banks''.<ref name=CR2014/> |
|||
Those collaborations filled the gap in his own recording career, until 1999, when the album ''Reduction'' appeared with similar style as his prior ones. In 2000, he put out a collection of his oldest recordings (many previously unreleased) called ''Can I Play You Something?''. The front sleeve of this last record showed an eight year-old Peter posing with his very first guitar. The track listing includes some early recordings by [[The Syn]], Mabel Greer's Toyshop, and [[Yes (band)|Yes]], including an early rendition of the song "Beyond and Before". |
|||
==Personal life and death== |
|||
A short track in the latter collection is called "Lima Loop". This is because [[Lima, Peru|Lima]], the capital of [[Peru]], became a special place for Pete in recent years. [[Cecilia Quino]],a Peruvian girl who was a Yes fan moved to the US many years before. Chatting on the [[Internet]], she contacted Peter, and they began a cyber-friendship that ultimately led to their wedding. They married in [[Lima]], where the bride's parents live, and Peter stayed in [[Peru]] for some months in 1999, being present when Yes played in [[Peru]] for the first (and only) time. The couple are currently living in [[England]]. |
|||
Banks' first marriage was to American singer and musician Sidonie Jordan (known as Sidney Foxx). They first met in 1974 and co-formed Empire, and divorced in 1985.<ref name=Gonzo2015/> Banks moved to Los Angeles, California in 1976.<ref name=Story2010/> In 1996, Banks left the US for his childhood home in Barnet, north London, to care for his ailing father.<ref name=BarnetToday13/> In 1999, he married Peruvian-born Cecilia Quino Rutte. Although Banks found married life "fantastic" at one point, his second marriage ended in a divorce by the early 2000s due to the effects of his medication to treat his depression, which his friends said made him difficult to live with.<ref name=Independent/><ref name=BarnetToday13>{{cite web|url=http://www.barnet-today.co.uk/News.cfm?id=8220&headline=%27Architect+of+prog+music%27+Peter+Banks+dies+at+home+in+High+Barnet|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131214101025/http://www.barnet-today.co.uk/News.cfm?id=8220&headline=%27Architect+of+prog+music%27+Peter+Banks+dies+at+home+in+High+Barnet|archive-date=14 December 2013|title='Architect of prog music' Peter Banks dies at home in High Barnet|date=13 March 2013|access-date=23 June 2018}}</ref> A longtime friend said he also went through seasonal "dark" periods around February and March.<ref name=CR2014/> |
|||
In 2011, Banks was hospitalised with a case of [[septicaemia]], likely caused from an infected tooth due to dental neglect. He also caught [[Legionnaires' disease]].<ref name=Independent/> During this time his doctors discovered a cancerous tumour.<ref name=CR2014/> Banks died on 7 March 2013 in his rented flat where he grew up in [[Chipping Barnet]], London, aged 65. He failed to turn up for a scheduled recording session, and a concerned friend had medical staff break into his home, where his body was discovered. The coroner declared that he died from [[heart failure]].<ref name=Independent/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/original-yes-guitarist-peter-banks-dead-at-65-20130312|title=Peter Banks, Original Yes Guitarist, Dead at 65|website=Rolling Stone|access-date=23 June 2018}}</ref> His former business partner and manager George Mizer, who he first met in the 1970s, organised Banks' posthumous business affairs, and discovered that Banks' body was unclaimed in the local mortuary. As Banks had no children or a will, Mizer reached out to Quino, who gave the required approval for the body to be released. There was no money to pay for a funeral or wake, so Mizer setup an online fund for fans to contribute. Banks was cremated, after which several friends and associates, including [[David Cross (musician)|David Cross]] of [[King Crimson]] and original Yes manager [[Roy Flynn]], met for a memorial drink in [[Denmark Street]]. Mizer kept the ashes, and sprinkled some in areas that meant something to Banks.<ref name=CR2014/> |
|||
==Most recent work== |
|||
Following an appearance by Peter Banks and [[Geoff Downes]] together at the 1998 edition of Yestival (a [[Yes (band)|Yes]] fan festival with many members or ex-members of the band attending), the pair played some sessions and the possibility of Banks joining [[Asia (band)|Asia]] was mooted. However, these sessions did not lead anywhere. |
|||
==Discography== |
|||
Banks has appeared in small concerts by new young local bands of his liking, including the Yes tribute band Fragile. Recent recorded appearances by Banks include ''Jabberwocky'' (2000) and ''Hound of the Baskervilles'' (2002), a pair of albums recorded by [[Oliver Wakeman]] ([[Rick Wakeman]]'s son) and [[Clive Nolan]]. He has also guested on [[Gerard Johnson (musician)|Gerard Johnson]]'s Funky Monkey project further. |
|||
===Solo=== |
|||
*''[[Two Sides of Peter Banks]]'' (1973) |
|||
*''Instinct'' (1994) |
|||
*''Self-Contained'' (1995) |
|||
*''Reduction'' (1997) |
|||
*''Can I Play You Something? (The Pre-Yes Years Recordings from 1964 to 1968)'' (1999, compilation) |
|||
*''The Self-Contained Trilogy'' (2018, compilation) |
|||
*''[[Be Well, Be Safe, Be Lucky... The Anthology]]'' (2018, compilation including previously unreleased material) |
|||
===As band member=== |
|||
Banks was initially involved in a reunion of The Syn in 2004, but left the band. [http://www.peterbanks.net] He also turned down an offer to be involved in a Flash reunion. |
|||
{{columns-list|colwidth=30em| |
|||
'''With the Devil's Disciples''' |
|||
*"You Better Move On"/"For Your Love" (1964, on acetate) |
|||
'''With the Syn''' |
|||
In late 2004, Banks formed a new improvising band, Harmony In Diversity, with [[Andrew Booker]] and Nick Cottam (who had been working together as duo Pulse Engine [http://www.pulse-engine.com]). They played a short UK tour in March 2006, and released an EP called "Trying". Booker left the band soon after. He was replaced by David Speight and the band continue to play live, while Banks is also planning a related project with keyboardist [[Gonzalo Carrera]]. Banks' Harmony in Diversity were supported by [[Yesterdays_(band)]] at MiniProg Festival in Budapest in Feb 2007. |
|||
*"Created by Clive"/"Grounded" (1967) |
|||
*"Flowerman"/"14 Hour Technicolour Dream" (1967) |
|||
*''Original Syn: Complete History of The Syn 1967-1969'' (2005, compilation) |
|||
'''With Neat Change''' |
|||
*"I Lied to Aunty May" (1968) |
|||
'''With Yes''' |
|||
*''[[Yes (Yes album)|Yes]]'' (1969) |
|||
*''[[Time and a Word]]'' (1970) |
|||
*''[[Yesterdays (Yes album)|Yesterdays]]'' (1975, compilation) |
|||
*''[[Yesyears]]'' (1991, compilation) |
|||
*''[[Something's Coming: The BBC Recordings 1969–1970]]'' (1997, compilation) |
|||
'''With Flash''' |
|||
*''[[Flash (Flash album)|Flash]]'' (1972) |
|||
*''In the Can'' (1972) |
|||
*''Out of Our Hands'' (1973) |
|||
*''Psychosync'' (1997, live) |
|||
*''In Public featuring Peter Banks'' (2013, live) |
|||
'''With Empire''' |
|||
*''Mark I'' (1995, recorded in 1974) |
|||
*''Mark II'' (1996, recorded in 1977) |
|||
*''Mark III'' (1996, recorded in 1978) |
|||
*''The Mars Tapes'' (2001 and 2014, recorded in 1979) |
|||
*''The Complete Recordings'' (2017)<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.cherryred.co.uk/product/empire-ft-peter-banks-and-sydney-foxx-complete-recordings/ |title=Empire ft. Peter Banks and Sydney Foxx – Complete Recordings – Cherry Red Records |access-date=21 September 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180624035046/https://www.cherryred.co.uk/product/empire-ft-peter-banks-and-sydney-foxx-complete-recordings/ |archive-date=24 June 2018 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
|||
*''The Best of Empire'' (2021) |
|||
'''With Harmony in Diversity''' |
|||
*''Trying'' (2006) |
|||
*''The Complete Recordings'' (2018) |
|||
'''With David Cross''' |
|||
*''[[Crossover (David Cross and Peter Banks album)|Crossover]]'' (2020, recorded in 2010) |
|||
}} |
|||
===Guest appearances=== |
|||
{{columns-list|colwidth=30em| |
|||
*Vivian Stanshall & Gargantuan Chums – "Suspicion"/"Blind Date" (1970, backing vocals) |
|||
*Chris Harwood – ''Nice to Meet Miss Christine'' (1970, guitar on "Mama" and "Crying to Be Heard") |
|||
*[[Roger Ruskin Spear]] – ''Electric Shocks'' (1971, guitar on "Blue Baboon" and "Doctor Rock") |
|||
*[[Pete Townshend]] – ''[[With Love (Pete Townshend album)|With Love]]'' (1976, on "All God's Mornings" and "Without Your Love") |
|||
*Various Artists – ''Guitar Workshop Volume Two'' (1976, "Dancing Angel" and "Warning: Rumble Strips")<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.discogs.com/Various-Guitar-Workshop-Volume-Two/release/4327283|title=Various – Guitar Workshop Volume Two|publisher=Discogs|access-date=23 June 2018}}</ref> |
|||
*Various Artists – ''Puttin' on the Style'' (1978, Lonnie Donegan tribute album. Guitar on "Ham'n Eggs") |
|||
*[[Lionel Richie]] – ''[[Can't Slow Down (Lionel Richie album)|Can't Slow Down]]'' (1983, uncredited guitar solo on "[[Hello (Lionel Richie song)|Hello]]") |
|||
*Keats – ''Keats'' (1984, guitar guitar on "Hollywood Heart") |
|||
*[[Grace Jones]] – ''[[Slave to the Rhythm (album)|Slave to the Rhythm]]'' (1985, guitar and the non-album track "Junkyard") |
|||
*Tonio K. – ''Romeo Unchained'' (1986, guitar on "Impressed" and "You Don't Belong Here") |
|||
*Charlie Sexton – "Impressed" (1986) |
|||
*Dig Hay Zoose – ''Struggle Fish'' (1991) |
|||
*Various Artists – ''Tales from Yesterday'' (1995, Yes tribute album. Guitar on "Astral Traveller") |
|||
*Funky Monkey – ''Come Together People of Funk'' (1997) |
|||
*Saint Etienne – "Sylvie" (1998) |
|||
*[[Clive Nolan]] and [[Oliver Wakeman]] – ''[[Jabberwocky (album)|Jabberwocky]]'' (1999) |
|||
*Various Artists – ''Encore, Legends, & Paradox'' (1999, Emerson, Lake & Palmer tribute album. Guitar on "The Sheriff" and "Toccata") |
|||
*Saint Etienne – ''Build on Sand'' (1999, guitar on "Tomorrow Never Dies") |
|||
*Michelle Young – ''Marked for Madness'' (2001) |
|||
*Ray Bennett – ''Angels & Ghosts'' (2001) |
|||
*Clive Nolan & Oliver Wakeman – ''The Hound of the Baskervilles'' (2002) |
|||
*Funky Monkey – ''Join Us in Tomorrow'' (2002) |
|||
*Various Artists – ''Return to the Dark Side of the Moon'' (2006, guitar on "Brain Damage"/"Eclipse") |
|||
*[[Ant-Bee]] – ''[[Electronic Church Muzik]]'' (2011, "The Guff" and "Endless Journey") |
|||
*dB-Infusion – ''Muso & Proud'' (2011) |
|||
*''The Prog Collective'' by [[Billy Sherwood|The Prog Collective]] – (2012, "Social Circles") |
|||
*Various Artists – ''Songs of the Century: An All-Star Tribute to Supertramp'' (2012, "Give a Little Bit") |
|||
*Various Artists – ''Who Are You – An All-Star Tribute to The Who'' (2012, "Magic Bus") |
|||
*Various Artists – ''Fly Like an Eagle – An All-Star Tribute to Steve Miller Band'' (2012, "Winter Time") |
|||
*[[Days Between Stations]] – ''[[In Extremis (Days Between Stations album)|In Extremis]]'' (2013) |
|||
*The Prog Collective – ''Epilogue'' (2013) |
|||
*Funky Monkey – ''Undercover'' (2018) |
|||
*Clint Bahr – ''Puzzlebox'' (2022, guitar solo on "Kicking the Wasp's Nest") |
|||
}} |
|||
==References== |
|||
{{Reflist|30em}} |
|||
'''Sources''' |
|||
*{{cite book|last=Morse|first=Tim|title=Yesstories: "Yes" in Their Own Words|year=1996|publisher=St. Martin's Press|isbn=978-0-312-14453-1}} |
|||
*{{cite book|last=Welch|first=Chris|author-link=Chris Welch|year=2008|title=Close to the Edge: The Story of Yes|publisher=Omnibus Press|isbn=978-1-84772-132-7}} |
|||
==External links== |
==External links== |
||
* [http://www.peterbanks.net Official website |
* [http://www.peterbanks.net Official website] |
||
* [ |
* [https://www.myspace.com/guitaristpeterbanks Official MySpace page] |
||
* [http://www.harmonyindiversity.com Harmony in Diversity] |
* [http://www.harmonyindiversity.com Harmony in Diversity] |
||
* [http://www.yescography.com/peterban.htm Yescography Peter Banks discography] |
* [http://www.yescography.com/peterban.htm Yescography Peter Banks discography] |
||
* [http://www.bondegezou.demon.co.uk/wnalum.htm#banks Where Are They Now? Peter Banks news] |
* [http://www.bondegezou.demon.co.uk/wnalum.htm#banks Where Are They Now? Peter Banks news] |
||
* [http://www.psychosync.info/members/banks.htm Psychosync Peter Banks section] |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060410150201/http://www.psychosync.info/members/banks.htm Psychosync Peter Banks section] |
||
* [http://www.themarqueeclub.net/interview-peter-banks-yes Peter Banks |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20071028232020/http://www.themarqueeclub.net/interview-peter-banks-yes Peter Banks – Interview on The Marquee Club] |
||
* [https://www.allmusic.com/artist/peter-banks-mn0000314288/biography Peter Banks biography, discography and album reviews, credits & releases] at [[AllMusic]] |
|||
* [https://www.discogs.com/artist/289366-Peter-Banks Peter Banks discography, album releases & credits] at [[Discogs]] |
|||
* [http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=1974 Peter Banks biography, discography, album credits & user reviews] at ProgArchives.com |
|||
* [https://open.spotify.com/artist/3pcBYlS4js6fFBbPw4XQ9q Peter Banks albums to be listened] as stream on [[Spotify]] |
|||
{{Ant-Bee}} |
|||
{{yesband}} |
{{yesband}} |
||
{{Authority control}} |
|||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Banks, Peter}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Banks, Peter}} |
||
[[Category:1947 births]] |
[[Category:1947 births]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:2013 deaths]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:British rock guitarists]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:Musicians from the London Borough of Barnet]] |
||
[[Category:People from Chipping Barnet]] |
|||
[[Category:Yes (band) members]] |
[[Category:Yes (band) members]] |
||
[[Category:Musicians from Hertfordshire]] |
|||
[[Category:British lead guitarists]] |
|||
[[de:Peter Banks]] |
|||
[[Category:British male singers]] |
|||
[[es:Peter Banks]] |
|||
[[Category:British male songwriters]] |
|||
[[fr:Peter Banks]] |
|||
[[Category:British male guitarists]] |
|||
[[id:Peter Banks]] |
|||
[[Category:The Syn members]] |
|||
[[it:Peter Banks]] |
|||
[[hu:Peter Banks]] |
|||
[[ja:ピーター・バンクス]] |
|||
[[no:Peter Banks]] |
|||
[[pl:Peter Banks]] |
|||
[[pt:Peter Banks]] |
|||
[[ru:Бэнкс, Питер]] |
Latest revision as of 05:46, 19 November 2024
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2022) |
Peter Banks | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Peter William Brockbanks |
Born | Chipping Barnet, Hertfordshire, England | 15 July 1947
Died | 7 March 2013 Chipping Barnet, London, England | (aged 65)
Genres |
|
Occupations |
|
Instruments |
|
Years active | 1966–2013 |
Formerly of |
|
Website | peterbanks |
Peter William Brockbanks (15 July 1947 – 7 March 2013), known professionally as Peter Banks, was a British guitarist, vocalist, songwriter and producer. He was the original guitarist in the rock bands Yes, Flash, and Empire; he was also a guitarist for The Syn. Banks has been described as "the architect of progressive music".[1]
Early life
[edit]Peter William Brockbanks was born in Chipping Barnet in north London, on 15 July 1947, and raised in 37 Alston Road.[2][3] His father William was an optical mechanic and his mother Ellen a cleaner. He attended Barnet Secondary School, followed by Barnet College of Further Education.[4][5] Lonnie Donegan was Banks' first major musical influence and inspired him to take up the guitar at around 8 years of age.[6] His parents bought him his records to listen to as well as his first guitar, an acoustic model which he later said "was practically unplayable".[4] His first electric guitar was a Gretsch Tennessean. Banks studied art and once had an ambition of becoming a zookeeper, but decided against it when he learned the job had unfavourable hours, and pursued music.[4] Banks also cited guitarist David O'List and Pete Townshend as an influence in his early period.[7]
Career
[edit]Early career and Yes
[edit]Banks started as rhythm guitarist in the Nighthawks, a local group, in 1963. His first gig took place at the New Barnet Pop Festival. In the following year he left to join the Devil's Disciples with John Tite on vocals, Ray Alford on bass, and Malcolm "Pinnie" Raye on drums.[8] They recorded two covers on an acetate, Arthur Alexander's "You Better Move On" and Graham Gouldman's "For Your Love", which became a hit record for the Yardbirds one year later. It was Banks' first visit in a recording studio, during which he wore headphones and experienced stereo sound for the first time. He found the experience "totally terrifying", and was so traumatised that he started having doubts if he could carry on playing the guitar and work in another studio again.[9] In 1965 Banks joined the Syndicats, replacing guitarist Ray Fenwick.
After leaving the Syndicats, Banks joined the Syn which at the time included Chris Squire on bass, Andrew Pryce Jackman on keyboards, Steve Nardelli on vocals, and Gunnar Hákonarson on drums. They recorded two singles, "Created by Clive"/"Grounded" and "Flowerman"/"14 Hour Technicolour Dream", both in 1967, before they split. Later that year, Banks and Squire joined Mabel Greer's Toyshop with Clive Bayley on rhythm guitar and vocals and Bob Hagger on drums. In the spring of 1968 Banks left the band to join Neat Change, with whom he recorded one single, "I Lied to Aunty May". He was fired from the band after his bandmates wanted to adopt a skinhead look, and Banks refused to cut his hair.[10] Meanwhile, Jon Anderson had joined Mabel Greer's Toyshop as lead vocalist, and Hagger was replaced by drummer Bill Bruford. The four entered a period of rehearsals in London, during which Banks replaced a departing Bayley and keyboardist Tony Kaye was brought in to round out the group.[11]
While rehearsing with the new line-up, the band exchanged ideas for a name. Anderson suggested Life and Squire proposed World, but all agreed on Banks' suggestion of Yes, which he had thought of some time before.[12][10] Following their debut in August 1968 Banks devised the band's first logo, a design featuring the group's name inside a speech bubble. Banks performed on the first two Yes albums, Yes (1969) and Time and a Word (1970). The latter features orchestral arrangements which Banks disagreed with, and he often clashed with producer Tony Colton.[4] On 18 April 1970, Banks was fired from Yes after their gig at the Luton College of Technology, and was replaced by former Syndicats guitarist Steve Howe.[11] In his autobiography, Howe wrote that Banks "was an interesting guitarist to have to follow. He, too, adopted different guitar styles and had already set a scene I could relate to. He was a sweet guy and came to many of our early gigs. I can't think of many other ex-band members doing that – I mean, right after they've left the band."[13]
Post-Yes career
[edit]1970s
[edit]Banks joined Blodwyn Pig for around six months in 1970, following the departure of original guitarist Mick Abrahams.[4] He tried to incorporate more arrangements into their simple blues-oriented music, which he later realised did not fit and found his style incompatible. In later years, however, Banks looked back on this period as a particularly happy one and enjoyed working with his bandmates.[10] After the band ran its course, Banks was unsure of his next move and later admitted that he was still "shell-shocked" by his departure from Yes, and turned to alcohol and drugs.[10] He earned some money as a session musician, but found the work restrictive in a creative sense. At one point he was close to bankruptcy, and had to sell some of his equipment. Attempts to form a new band fell through, partly due to his disinterest in being a leader.[14]
Banks' fortunes changed when music reporter Chris Welch wrote an article about him in Melody Maker in June 1971.[14] The article was spotted by vocalist Colin Carter, who contacted Banks and invited him to form a band. Following the addition of bassist Ray Bennett and drummer Mike Hough, the four named themselves Flash and began touring in 1972.[11] In the same year they released two albums, Flash and In the Can, to a warm reception. The group disbanded in 1973 towards the end of a US tour to promote their third album, Out of Our Hands.[11] Banks felt the group lacked the right management, and got angry at Carter and Bennett for often playing with their backs to the audience. By this time Banks was a heavy drinker, addicted to valium, and unbeknownst to him until years later, was suffering from his first nervous breakdown.[10]
In 1973 Banks recorded his debut solo album, Two Sides of Peter Banks.[4] It was recorded at the same time as Out of Our Hands, with Banks working with Flash during the day and travelling to a different studio to work on his own at night.[10] The album features guest appearances from Jan Akkerman of Focus, drummer Phil Collins and guitarist Steve Hackett of Genesis, and John Wetton of King Crimson.[11] In the summer of 1973, Banks played in a short-lived band with Collins, guitarist Ronnie Caryl, violinist Mike Poggott, and bassist John Howitt named Zox and the Radar Boys.
While touring the US with Flash, Banks met his first wife Sidonie Jordan (known as Sidney Foxx). In 1974, they formed Empire and recorded three albums with various musicians until 1979, which remained unreleased until the 1990s.[11] Amongst the musicians involved were Collins, Preston Heyman, bassist John Giblin, and keyboardist Jakob Magnusson. Ray Bennett of Flash was in the group for a period, but he and Banks did not get along and Banks caught Jordan having an affair with him.[10] Empire disbanded in 1980, having only performed showcase gigs for record executives.[10][15]
1980s–1990s
[edit]Banks made a steady living in the 1980s and 1990s as a session musician in Los Angeles, which he enjoyed over time.[3][10] He played on various albums including those by Lonnie Donegan and Jakob Frímann Magnússon,[4] and appeared on Romeo Unchained (1986) by Tonio K. He also worked with Ian Wallace in The Teabags with Jackie Lomax, Kim Gardner, David Mansfield, and Mel Collins. No recordings came out of that.
In May 1991, Kaye invited Banks to play with Yes on stage during the encore at their show at the Great Western Forum, California. Banks accepted and went to the show, but Kaye informed him that Howe did not want Banks to play. An angered Banks proceeded to drink at the arena bar with comedian Billy Connolly.[4][16] In 1994 and 1998, Banks was a featured guest at the Yes fan convention Yestival. He co-ordinated the release of the 1997 live compilation Something's Coming: The BBC Recordings 1969–1970, and wrote about his days with the band in the liner notes. Around this time, Banks and Geoff Downes played some sessions and the possibility of Banks joining Asia was mooted, but came to nothing. Banks was featured in the 2006 Yes documentary Classic Artists: Yes and the 2009 DVDs The Lost Broadcasts and Rock of the '70s.
After returning to London in the mid-1990s, Banks continued as a session musician and released archive material. He released three solo albums: the all-instrumental Instinct (1993), Self Contained (1995), which features Gerald Goff on keyboards, and Reduction (1997).[11] Another archival release was Psychosync, a live Flash recording made in 1973 for the King Biscuit Flower Hour and finally released in 1998.[11]
2000s–2010s
[edit]In 2000, Banks put out a collection of his oldest recordings, many previously unreleased, called Can I Play You Something?.[11] It features early recordings by The Syn, Mabel Greer's Toyshop and Yes.
In 2001, Banks published a book with co-author Billy James, entitled Beyond and Before: The Formative Years of Yes. In 2006, he expressed a desire to write a second book.[17]
He was initially involved in a reunion of The Syn in 2003 and 2004, and recorded material with Steve Nardelli, Martyn Adleman, and Gerard Johnson. After several clashes over the recording, production and mixing, Banks was let go from the project, although he claimed he was never officially told. In a statement posted online, Banks called the behaviour of the three members "mystifying" and refuse to discuss the matter with him.[18] Later in 2004 Banks entered talks with former Flash bandmates Colin Carter and Ray Bennett about a reunion, but he fell out with them and was excluded.
In 2004, Banks formed Harmony in Diversity, an improvisational trio with Andrew Booker and Nick Cottam of the music duo Pulse Engine.[19][10] They released one album, Trying. Booker left and was replaced by David Speight. Banks formed a second version of the group named Harmony in Diversity II, featuring himself and keyboardist Gonzalo Carrera. The pair worked together in a jazz fusion project named Self-Contained.[17]
In Gibson Guitar's Lifestyle e-magazine o February 2009, Banks is listed as one of the "10 Great Prog Rock Guitarists". According to the article, "Before there was Steve Howe, there was Peter Banks. Artistic differences between Banks and singer Jon Anderson prompted Banks's departure from Yes in 1970, but in his little-known '70s band, Flash, Banks used an ES-335 to create several should-have-been prog rock classics. "Lifetime", from Flash's In the Can album, is his tour-de-force."[20]
In 2018, a documentary film on Banks' life and career written and directed by Heidi Hornbacher was in production, entitled Claiming Peter Banks.[3]
Personal life and death
[edit]Banks' first marriage was to American singer and musician Sidonie Jordan (known as Sidney Foxx). They first met in 1974 and co-formed Empire, and divorced in 1985.[15] Banks moved to Los Angeles, California in 1976.[10] In 1996, Banks left the US for his childhood home in Barnet, north London, to care for his ailing father.[2] In 1999, he married Peruvian-born Cecilia Quino Rutte. Although Banks found married life "fantastic" at one point, his second marriage ended in a divorce by the early 2000s due to the effects of his medication to treat his depression, which his friends said made him difficult to live with.[4][2] A longtime friend said he also went through seasonal "dark" periods around February and March.[3]
In 2011, Banks was hospitalised with a case of septicaemia, likely caused from an infected tooth due to dental neglect. He also caught Legionnaires' disease.[4] During this time his doctors discovered a cancerous tumour.[3] Banks died on 7 March 2013 in his rented flat where he grew up in Chipping Barnet, London, aged 65. He failed to turn up for a scheduled recording session, and a concerned friend had medical staff break into his home, where his body was discovered. The coroner declared that he died from heart failure.[4][21] His former business partner and manager George Mizer, who he first met in the 1970s, organised Banks' posthumous business affairs, and discovered that Banks' body was unclaimed in the local mortuary. As Banks had no children or a will, Mizer reached out to Quino, who gave the required approval for the body to be released. There was no money to pay for a funeral or wake, so Mizer setup an online fund for fans to contribute. Banks was cremated, after which several friends and associates, including David Cross of King Crimson and original Yes manager Roy Flynn, met for a memorial drink in Denmark Street. Mizer kept the ashes, and sprinkled some in areas that meant something to Banks.[3]
Discography
[edit]Solo
[edit]- Two Sides of Peter Banks (1973)
- Instinct (1994)
- Self-Contained (1995)
- Reduction (1997)
- Can I Play You Something? (The Pre-Yes Years Recordings from 1964 to 1968) (1999, compilation)
- The Self-Contained Trilogy (2018, compilation)
- Be Well, Be Safe, Be Lucky... The Anthology (2018, compilation including previously unreleased material)
As band member
[edit]- "You Better Move On"/"For Your Love" (1964, on acetate)
With the Syn
- "Created by Clive"/"Grounded" (1967)
- "Flowerman"/"14 Hour Technicolour Dream" (1967)
- Original Syn: Complete History of The Syn 1967-1969 (2005, compilation)
With Neat Change
- "I Lied to Aunty May" (1968)
With Yes
- Yes (1969)
- Time and a Word (1970)
- Yesterdays (1975, compilation)
- Yesyears (1991, compilation)
- Something's Coming: The BBC Recordings 1969–1970 (1997, compilation)
With Flash
- Flash (1972)
- In the Can (1972)
- Out of Our Hands (1973)
- Psychosync (1997, live)
- In Public featuring Peter Banks (2013, live)
With Empire
- Mark I (1995, recorded in 1974)
- Mark II (1996, recorded in 1977)
- Mark III (1996, recorded in 1978)
- The Mars Tapes (2001 and 2014, recorded in 1979)
- The Complete Recordings (2017)[22]
- The Best of Empire (2021)
With Harmony in Diversity
- Trying (2006)
- The Complete Recordings (2018)
With David Cross
- Crossover (2020, recorded in 2010)
Guest appearances
[edit]- Vivian Stanshall & Gargantuan Chums – "Suspicion"/"Blind Date" (1970, backing vocals)
- Chris Harwood – Nice to Meet Miss Christine (1970, guitar on "Mama" and "Crying to Be Heard")
- Roger Ruskin Spear – Electric Shocks (1971, guitar on "Blue Baboon" and "Doctor Rock")
- Pete Townshend – With Love (1976, on "All God's Mornings" and "Without Your Love")
- Various Artists – Guitar Workshop Volume Two (1976, "Dancing Angel" and "Warning: Rumble Strips")[23]
- Various Artists – Puttin' on the Style (1978, Lonnie Donegan tribute album. Guitar on "Ham'n Eggs")
- Lionel Richie – Can't Slow Down (1983, uncredited guitar solo on "Hello")
- Keats – Keats (1984, guitar guitar on "Hollywood Heart")
- Grace Jones – Slave to the Rhythm (1985, guitar and the non-album track "Junkyard")
- Tonio K. – Romeo Unchained (1986, guitar on "Impressed" and "You Don't Belong Here")
- Charlie Sexton – "Impressed" (1986)
- Dig Hay Zoose – Struggle Fish (1991)
- Various Artists – Tales from Yesterday (1995, Yes tribute album. Guitar on "Astral Traveller")
- Funky Monkey – Come Together People of Funk (1997)
- Saint Etienne – "Sylvie" (1998)
- Clive Nolan and Oliver Wakeman – Jabberwocky (1999)
- Various Artists – Encore, Legends, & Paradox (1999, Emerson, Lake & Palmer tribute album. Guitar on "The Sheriff" and "Toccata")
- Saint Etienne – Build on Sand (1999, guitar on "Tomorrow Never Dies")
- Michelle Young – Marked for Madness (2001)
- Ray Bennett – Angels & Ghosts (2001)
- Clive Nolan & Oliver Wakeman – The Hound of the Baskervilles (2002)
- Funky Monkey – Join Us in Tomorrow (2002)
- Various Artists – Return to the Dark Side of the Moon (2006, guitar on "Brain Damage"/"Eclipse")
- Ant-Bee – Electronic Church Muzik (2011, "The Guff" and "Endless Journey")
- dB-Infusion – Muso & Proud (2011)
- The Prog Collective by The Prog Collective – (2012, "Social Circles")
- Various Artists – Songs of the Century: An All-Star Tribute to Supertramp (2012, "Give a Little Bit")
- Various Artists – Who Are You – An All-Star Tribute to The Who (2012, "Magic Bus")
- Various Artists – Fly Like an Eagle – An All-Star Tribute to Steve Miller Band (2012, "Winter Time")
- Days Between Stations – In Extremis (2013)
- The Prog Collective – Epilogue (2013)
- Funky Monkey – Undercover (2018)
- Clint Bahr – Puzzlebox (2022, guitar solo on "Kicking the Wasp's Nest")
References
[edit]- ^ "Peter Banks: Original Yes guitarist dies aged 65". BBC. 13 March 2013.
- ^ a b c "'Architect of prog music' Peter Banks dies at home in High Barnet". 13 March 2013. Archived from the original on 14 December 2013. Retrieved 23 June 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f Woods, Paul (23 January 2024). ""We would go out and he really never wanted anybody to know that he was a musician": The troubled life and lonely death of Peter Banks, the man once called "the architect of prog"". Loudersound. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Peter Banks: Original guitarist with Yes, giants of progressive rock". The Independent. 14 March 2013. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
- ^ "Martyn Adelman interview". Bondegezou.co.uk. 2013. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
- ^ Morse 1996, p. 3.
- ^ Morse 1996, p. 6.
- ^ Chris Welch (1 September 2008). Close to the Edge – The Story of Yes. Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-1847721327.
- ^ Banks, Peter. Can I Play You Something? liner notes.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Powell, Mark. The Peter Banks Story on YouTube. Cheery Red TV, 2010.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Biography by Gary Hill". AllMusic. Retrieved 10 October 2009.
- ^ Morse 1996, p. 8.
- ^ Howe, Steve. All My Yesterdays. New York: Omnibus Press, 2020, 67.
- ^ a b Welch, Chris (19 June 1971). "The Strange Case of an Ex-Yes Man". Melody Maker. Retrieved 30 January 2024.
- ^ a b "Sidonie Jordan Interview (Edited)". Gonzo Multimedia. 11 February 2015. Retrieved 30 January 2024.
- ^ Classic Artists: Yes, 2007
- ^ a b Geesin, Joe (November 2006). "Interview: Peter Banks". Get Ready to Rock. Retrieved 9 March 2024.
- ^ "Peter Banks – Guitarist". Peterbanks.net. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
- ^ "A Patented New Engine Platform | Grand Rapids Michigan". The Pulse Engine. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
- ^ "10 Great Prog Rock Guitarists". Gibson.com. 24 June 2008. Archived from the original on 9 March 2012. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
- ^ "Peter Banks, Original Yes Guitarist, Dead at 65". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 23 June 2018.
- ^ "Empire ft. Peter Banks and Sydney Foxx – Complete Recordings – Cherry Red Records". Archived from the original on 24 June 2018. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
- ^ "Various – Guitar Workshop Volume Two". Discogs. Retrieved 23 June 2018.
Sources
- Morse, Tim (1996). Yesstories: "Yes" in Their Own Words. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-14453-1.
- Welch, Chris (2008). Close to the Edge: The Story of Yes. Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-1-84772-132-7.
External links
[edit]- Official website
- Official MySpace page
- Harmony in Diversity
- Yescography Peter Banks discography
- Where Are They Now? Peter Banks news
- Psychosync Peter Banks section
- Peter Banks – Interview on The Marquee Club
- Peter Banks biography, discography and album reviews, credits & releases at AllMusic
- Peter Banks discography, album releases & credits at Discogs
- Peter Banks biography, discography, album credits & user reviews at ProgArchives.com
- Peter Banks albums to be listened as stream on Spotify