Denny Laine: Difference between revisions
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In 1971, Laine joined Paul McCartney to form [[Wings (band)|Wings]],<ref name="allmusic.com"/> and stayed with the group for 10 years until it disbanded in 1981. Laine provided lead and rhythm guitars, lead and backing vocals, keyboards, bass guitar and woodwinds, as well as writing or co-writing some of the group's material. Together with Paul and his wife, [[Linda McCartney|Linda]], they formed the nucleus of the band, being called that "strange, three-winged beast". It was with Wings that Laine enjoyed the biggest commercial and critical successes of his career, including co-writing the hit "[[Mull of Kintyre (song)|Mull of Kintyre]]". He also co-wrote and sang lead vocal on "[[Deliver Your Children]]," which was released as a Wings B-side but charted in the Netherlands. |
In 1971, Laine joined Paul McCartney to form [[Wings (band)|Wings]],<ref name="allmusic.com"/> and stayed with the group for 10 years until it disbanded in 1981. Laine provided lead and rhythm guitars, lead and backing vocals, keyboards, bass guitar and woodwinds, as well as writing or co-writing some of the group's material. Together with Paul and his wife, [[Linda McCartney|Linda]], they formed the nucleus of the band, being called that "strange, three-winged beast". It was with Wings that Laine enjoyed the biggest commercial and critical successes of his career, including co-writing the hit "[[Mull of Kintyre (song)|Mull of Kintyre]]". He also co-wrote and sang lead vocal on "[[Deliver Your Children]]," which was released as a Wings B-side but charted in the Netherlands. |
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In January 1980, McCartney was arrested for possession of [[marijuana]] upon arrival at an airport for a tour in [[Japan]]. The tour was canceled and the band members, except Linda, returned to England. After returning to England, McCartney decided to release his solo album "McCartney II" and plans for an autumn U.S. tour were dropped. Meanwhile, Laine released the single "Japanese Tears" and formed the short-lived Denny Laine Band with [[Steve Holley]] and released a solo album ''[[Japanese Tears]]'' that December. On April 27, 1981, Laine announced he was leaving Wings due to McCartney's reluctance to tour in the wake of John Lennon's murder.<ref>(AP) "[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=r4ZVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=jT8NAAAAIBAJ&pg=2362,4599828&dq=denny+laine+wings+mccartney&hl=en Wings clipped]". ''The Leader-Post'' 30 April 1981: D2</ref> |
In January 1980, McCartney was arrested for possession of [[marijuana]] upon arrival at an airport for a tour in [[Japan]]. The tour was canceled and the band members, except Linda, returned to England. After returning to England, McCartney decided to release his solo album "McCartney II" and plans for an autumn U.S. tour were dropped. Meanwhile, Laine released the single "Japanese Tears" and formed the short-lived Denny Laine Band with [[Steve Holley]] and released a solo album ''[[Japanese Tears]]'' that December. On April 27, 1981, Laine announced he was leaving Wings due to McCartney's reluctance to tour in the wake of [[Death of John Lennon|John Lennon's murder]].<ref>(AP) "[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=r4ZVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=jT8NAAAAIBAJ&pg=2362,4599828&dq=denny+laine+wings+mccartney&hl=en Wings clipped]". ''The Leader-Post'' 30 April 1981: D2</ref> |
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[[File:Denny Laine at The Cavern.jpg|thumb|Denny Laine performing at the Cavern Club in 2008]] |
[[File:Denny Laine at The Cavern.jpg|thumb|Denny Laine performing at the Cavern Club in 2008]] |
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==Life after Wings== |
==Life after Wings== |
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He signed with Scratch records and began working on a new album, ''Anyone Can Fly.'' He then went on to record other solo albums such as ''Hometown Girls,'' ''Wings on Your Feet'' and ''Lonely Road'' before returning to Scratch to do his ''Wings at the Sound of Denny Laine.'' He has also had three fanzine publications, ''Ahh Laine,'' wrote the musical ''Arctic Song'' and released two more albums, ''Master Suite'' and ''Reborn''. |
He signed with Scratch records and began working on a new album, ''Anyone Can Fly.'' He then went on to record other solo albums such as ''Hometown Girls,'' ''Wings on Your Feet'' and ''Lonely Road'' before returning to Scratch to do his ''Wings at the Sound of Denny Laine.'' He has also had three fanzine publications, ''Ahh Laine,'' wrote the musical ''Arctic Song'' and released two more albums, ''Master Suite'' and ''Reborn''. |
Revision as of 22:24, 13 August 2015
Denny Laine | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Brian Frederick Hines |
Also known as | Denny Laine |
Born | 29 October 1944 |
Origin | Birmingham, West Midlands, England |
Genres | Rock and roll, blues-rock, R&B, jazz fusion |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter, musician |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, guitar, bass guitar, keyboards, flute, harmonica, violin |
Years active | 1957–present |
Labels | Decca, Wizard, Reprise, EMI, Arista, Takoma, Scratch, President, Griffin, Global |
Website | www.dennylaine.com |
Denny Laine (born Brian Frederick Hines, 29 October 1944, in Birmingham, England), is an English musician, singer, songwriter and guitarist. He was an original member of the Moody Blues, singing the band's first hit "Go Now" in 1964, and was a member of Wings with Paul McCartney from 1971 to 1981.
Biography
Early years
Laine was educated at Yardley Grammar School in Birmingham, and took up the guitar as a boy under the influence of gypsy jazz (jazz manouche) legend Django Reinhardt; he had his first solo performance as a musician at the age of 12 and began his career as a professional musician fronting Denny Laine & the Diplomats, which also included future Move and Electric Light Orchestra drummer Bev Bevan.
Experience in famous bands
The Moody Blues
In 1964, Laine left the Diplomats to join Mike Pinder in the Moody Blues[1] and sang the group's first big hit, "Go Now"; other early highlights included I Don't Want To Go on Without You, another UK hit, plus two minor UK chart hits "From The Bottom of My Heart ( I Love You)", Everyday (both written by Laine and Pinder), "Can't Nobody Love You" and the harmonica-ripping "Bye Bye Bird" (a big hit in France). A self-titled EP and 'The Magnificent Moodies' LP on Decca followed. Laine and Pinder wrote most of The Moody Blues 'B' sides during the 1965-66 period, such as You Don't (All the Time), And My Baby's Gone and This Is My House. However, Laine's tenure with the MB's was relatively short-lived and, after a number of comparative chart failures,[citation needed] Laine quit the band in October 1966. The last record issued by the Moody Blues that featured Laine was "Life's Not Life"/"He Can Win" in January 1967, just after Justin Hayward had replaced him in the band.
Electric String Band and Balls
After leaving the Moody Blues, he formed the Electric String Band in December 1966, which featured himself on guitar and vocals, Trevor Burton (of the Move) on guitar, Viv Prince on drums and electrified strings in a format not dissimilar to what Electric Light Orchestra would later attempt. Laine made two singles, "Say You Don't Mind"/"Ask The People" (April 1967, Deram) and "Too Much in Love"/"Catherine's Wheel" (January 1968, Deram); and, in June 1967, the band shared a bill with the Jimi Hendrix Experience and Procol Harum at the Saville Theatre in London. However, it did not achieve national attention, and the pioneering Electric String Band broke up. (There was apparently a third single recorded called "Why Did You Come?". Why it was never released is unknown, but there have been rumors that the finished track - and probably the B side as well - was mailed to Decca and was lost.) [citation needed] Laine and Burton then went on to the band Balls from February 1969 until the band's breakup in 1971, with both also taking time to play in Ginger Baker's Air Force in 1970.[2]
Only one single was issued by Balls: "Fight for My Country"/"Janie, Slow Down" on UK Wizard Records.[2] The top side was re-edited and reissued on UK Wizard and issued in the UK on Wizard and in the United States on Epic under the name of Trevor Burton; Laine and Burton shared lead vocals on the B side. The single was reissued again as B.L.W. as "Live in the Mountains" for a small Pye-distributed label, "Paladin". Twelve tracks were recorded for a Balls album, but it has never been released.[2] Laine's 1967 song "Say You Don't Mind" was a hit when recorded in 1972 by ex-Zombie, Colin Blunstone.
Wings
In 1971, Laine joined Paul McCartney to form Wings,[1] and stayed with the group for 10 years until it disbanded in 1981. Laine provided lead and rhythm guitars, lead and backing vocals, keyboards, bass guitar and woodwinds, as well as writing or co-writing some of the group's material. Together with Paul and his wife, Linda, they formed the nucleus of the band, being called that "strange, three-winged beast". It was with Wings that Laine enjoyed the biggest commercial and critical successes of his career, including co-writing the hit "Mull of Kintyre". He also co-wrote and sang lead vocal on "Deliver Your Children," which was released as a Wings B-side but charted in the Netherlands.
In January 1980, McCartney was arrested for possession of marijuana upon arrival at an airport for a tour in Japan. The tour was canceled and the band members, except Linda, returned to England. After returning to England, McCartney decided to release his solo album "McCartney II" and plans for an autumn U.S. tour were dropped. Meanwhile, Laine released the single "Japanese Tears" and formed the short-lived Denny Laine Band with Steve Holley and released a solo album Japanese Tears that December. On April 27, 1981, Laine announced he was leaving Wings due to McCartney's reluctance to tour in the wake of John Lennon's murder.[3]
Life after Wings
He signed with Scratch records and began working on a new album, Anyone Can Fly. He then went on to record other solo albums such as Hometown Girls, Wings on Your Feet and Lonely Road before returning to Scratch to do his Wings at the Sound of Denny Laine. He has also had three fanzine publications, Ahh Laine, wrote the musical Arctic Song and released two more albums, Master Suite and Reborn.
Personal life
Denny moved to the United States in the 1990s, where he continues to tour, originally with the classic rock band and later with the Cryers.
He was briefly married to Jo Jo Laine, with whom he had a son, Laine Hines, and a daughter, Heidi Hines.[4] He has three other children from other relationships: Lucianne Grant, Damian James and Ainsley Laine-Adams.
Discography
The Moody Blues
Year | Album |
---|---|
1965 | The Magnificent Moodies |
Moody Blues singles
A-side | B-side |
---|---|
"Steal Your Heart Away" | "Lose Your Money" |
"Go Now" | "It's Easy, Child" |
"I Don't Want To Go on Without You" | "Time on My Side" |
"From The Bottom of My Heart" | "And My Baby's Gone" |
"Everyday" | "You Don't (All The Time)" |
"Boulevard De La Madeleine" | "This Is My House (But Nobody Calls)" |
"People Gotta Go" (issued on a French EP only) | — |
"Life's Not Life" | "He Can Win" |
Solo
Year | A-side | B-side | Label |
---|---|---|---|
1967 | "Say You Don't Mind" | "Ask The People" | Deram DM 122 |
1968 | "Too Much in Love" | "Catherine's Wheel" | Deram DM 171 |
"Why Did You Come?" | — | — |
Balls reissued as by Trevor Burton
Year | A-side | B-side |
---|---|---|
1970 (Balls) | "Fight for My Country" | "Janie, Slow Down" |
1971 (Trevor Burton) | "Fight for My Country" (edited) | "Janie, Slow Down" |
1972 (B.L.G.) | "Live in the Mountains" (same as "Fight for My Country") (edited) | "Janie, Slow Down" |
Ginger Baker's Airforce
Year | Album |
---|---|
1970 | Ginger Baker's Air Force |
Ginger Baker's Air Force 2 |
Wings
Year | Album |
---|---|
1971 | Wild Life |
1973 | Red Rose Speedway |
Band on the Run | |
1975 | Venus and Mars |
1976 | Wings at the Speed of Sound |
Wings Over America (triple live album) | |
1978 | London Town |
1979 | Back to the Egg |
1981 | Concerts for the People of Kampuchea |
Solo albums
Year | Album | Label |
---|---|---|
1973 | Ahh...Laine | Wizard/Reprise (US) |
1976 | Holly Days | EMI/Capitol (US) |
1980 | Japanese Tears | Polydor/Scratch |
1982 | Anyone Can Fly | Polydor/Scratch |
1985 | Hometown Girls | President |
1986 | Wings on My Feet | President |
1988 | Lonely Road | President |
Master Suite | Magnum Force | |
1990 | All I Want Is Freedom | JAWS |
1996 | Reborn | Griffin/Scratch |
Wings at the Sound of Denny Laine | Scratch/Purple Pyramid (US) | |
1998 | Arctic Song | Ribble Records |
1999 | A Tribute to Paul McCartney and Wings | Cleopatra/Purple Pyramid |
Guest appearances
Year | Album |
---|---|
1974 | McGear |
1980 | The Reluctant Dog |
1981 | Somewhere in England |
1982 | Tug of War |
1983 | Pipes of Peace |
1985 | Wind in the Willows
|
1996 | Metal Christmas
|
1998 | Wide Prairie |
1999 | Old Friends in New Places
|
Bootlegs
Year | Album |
---|---|
1972 | Memory Laine |
1979 | Rock & Roll Jam Sessions (aka: Lympne Castle Sessions, aka: Wings: In A Jam) |
2 Buddies on Holly Days (excerpts from Holly Days and live performances during Buddy Holly Week) | |
1982 | Birmingham Boy |
1988 | Cold Cuts (Another Early Version) |
Compilation albums
Year | Album |
---|---|
1978 | Wings Greatest |
1984 | In Flight (tracks from "Japanese Tears") |
1985 | Weep For Love (tracks from "Japanese Tears") |
1994 | Blue Nights (tracks from 1980 to 1990) |
1995 | Rock Survivor (tracks from 1980 to 1990) |
Danger Zone (tracks from "Japanese Tears") | |
Go Now (tracks from "Japanese Tears") | |
1998 | The Masters (tracks from 1980 to 1996) |
2001 | Wingspan: Hits and History |
2002 | Spreading My Wings: The Ultimate Denny Laine Collection (tracks from 1980 to 1990) |
2003 | The Collection (2 compilations, 1 album) Blue Nights (tracks from 1980 to 1990) The Masters (tracks from 1980 to 1996) Reborn |
2004 | An Introduction to The Moody Blues (including previously unreleased "People Gotta Go") |
Send Me The Heart (tracks from "Japanese Tears") |
References
- ^ a b http://www.allmusic.com/artist/denny-laine-mn0000820686/biography
- ^ a b c Joynson, Vernon (1995). The Tapestry of Delights. London: Borderline Books.
- ^ (AP) "Wings clipped". The Leader-Post 30 April 1981: D2
- ^ Johnson, Angella, "'Mum was beautiful, wild... she was the ultimate rock groupie'", Mail on Sunday, 4 November 2006
"Wingspan: Hits and History" by Paul McCartney
External links
- 1944 births
- Living people
- British expatriates in the United States
- English guitarists
- English multi-instrumentalists
- English rock musicians
- English songwriters
- Ginger Baker's Air Force members
- People from Birmingham, West Midlands
- The Moody Blues members
- Wings (band) members
- Musicians from Birmingham, West Midlands
- British rhythm and blues boom musicians
- English rock guitarists
- English singer-songwriters
- Lead guitarists
- Rhythm guitarists
- British harmonica players