Bob Weston | |
|---|---|
Weston in 2011 | |
| Background information | |
| Born | Robert Joseph Weston (1947-11-01)1 November 1947 Plymouth, Devon, England |
| Died | c. 3 January 2012(2012-01-03) (aged 64) Brent Cross, London, England |
| Genres | Blues, rock, pop |
| Occupation | Musician |
| Instrument | Guitar |
| Years active | 1967–2011 |
| Formerly of | Fleetwood Mac (1972–73) |
| Website | bobweston.com |
Robert Joseph Weston (1 November 1947 –c. 3 January 2012) was a Britishrock guitarist, who was a member ofFleetwood Mac in the early 1970s. He also recorded and performed with a number of other musicians, includingGraham Bond,Long John Baldry,Murray Head,Sandy Denny, andDanny Kirwan.
Weston was born inPlymouth in the county ofDevon on 1 November 1947 to aRoyal Navy service family.[1] In his childhood he learned to play the violin, switching to the guitar at the age of 12, being influenced by the music ofAmerican blues artists such asJohn Lee Hooker andMuddy Waters.[2]
Moving to London from Devon in themid-1960s (he retained a softWest Country burr to his voice for the rest of his life), in 1967 he became the lead-guitarist with amod-beat band called The Kinetic, which was based at the time inParis, playing as a support act toJimi Hendrix andChuck Berry gigs in France. The band signed to the French label Disques Vogue and released into the French market a long-player entitledLive Your Life (1967), with Weston being the band's principal songwriter,[3] and twoEP's,Live Your Life (1967),[4] andSuddenly Tomorrow (1967). TheSuddenly Tomorrow EP drew notices in the British music press to the act as having commercial potential, but no more recordings appeared, and it disbanded within a couple of years of its formation.[5][6]
After The Kinetic had broken up, having returned to London from Paris, in April 1968 Weston joined the British blues heavy rock bandBlack Cat Bones, replacingPaul Kossoff as its lead-guitarist, and played with it until quitting the act at the end of the year.[7] In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Weston worked as asession musician, performing and recording with a number of acts of the then in vogueBritish blues movement, includingGraham Bond andLong John Baldry, and touring in continental Europe and America.[1] In 1971 he was performing with theSouthern Rock act Ashman Reynolds as its lead guitarist[8] and songwriter on its long-player releaseStop Off (1972).[9]
In 1972, Weston was a resident inEaling in West London, when he joined the Britishblues rock bandFleetwood Mac as its co-lead guitarist alongsideBob Welch, as a replacement for the recently droppedDanny Kirwan. The band was aware of Weston's talent having seen him performing when Long John Baldry had regularly shared the same billing at venues with Fleetwood Mac, and when the guitar vacancy had arrived in Fleetwood Mac's line-up Weston was approached by the band with the offer of joining, which he agreed to in September.[10]
In January 1973, Fleetwood Mac recorded the albumPenguin. Weston playedslide guitar on the song "Remember Me" and itsharmonica andbanjo tracks on "The Derelict". He also sang a duet withChristine McVie on the song "Did You Ever Love Me" and wrote the instrumental that closed the album, titled "Caught in the Rain".[11] Later in 1973 the band recorded its next album titledMystery to Me. Weston contributed more distinctive guitar work, such as the slide intro on the song "Why" and co-wrote the song "Forever" with Welch andJohn McVie. In retrospect, Weston felt that his contribution to the band's work in this period did not receive the formal recognition that it deserved.[10]
During a tour of the United States in 1973 when the band were beginning to gel particularly well in its live performances,[12] it emerged that Weston had started a clandestine romantic relationship withMick Fleetwood's wife,Jenny Boyd.[1][11] Fleetwood had got on well with Weston before this and tried to carry on with the arranged live performance schedule due to the legal and financial penalties that would be incurred by the band for a cancelled tour, but after a gig atLincoln, Nebraska in October, he informed the band in Weston's absence that he was no longer willing to work with him. In consequence the band collectively agreed to drop Weston from the line-up, Weston being told about the decision by the act's tour manager, with the rest of the tour being abandoned by the remaining members.[10] (It was this situation which gave rise to the "Bogus Fleetwood Mac" saga in which its managerClifford Davis hired a new group of musicians, passed them off as Fleetwood Mac and sent them out to complete the tour).[11]
Weston's involvement in the band had an effect beyond purely the musical, as his relationship with Boyd had contributed to Bob Welch's departure from its line-up in 1974.[citation needed] This led to a vacancy filled byLindsey Buckingham andStevie Nicks, who brought to the band a more mainstream rock sound, which would in the late 1970s-1980s lead to its greater popularity and commercial success.[11]
On his return to London in late 1973 from the aborted Fleetwood Mac tour, Weston was approached byGeorge Harrison about a possible collaboration,[13] but this did not develop into anything. Weston went on to record and tour in Europe and North America withMurray Head, playing on his second albumSay It Ain't So (1975), for which he co-wrote the song "Silence Is a Strong Reply". In July 1975 he joined a newly formed band called theSteve Marriott All Stars, but when Marriott opted to play lead guitar himself, Weston departed in December of the same year,[10] and for the remainder of his career worked primarily as a solo artist or as a session musician. In 1979 he played on Head's third albumBetween Us.
In 1979, Weston wrote and recorded a blues rock album titledNightlight, which was produced byAlan Callan atBasing Street Studios and atRoundhouse Studio in London, and commercially released the following year through the French record label AZ International. However, with popular taste in music having moved on from the early 1970s, and British blues rock having become a small uncommercial niche market the record failed to enter the charts.[14][15] A single, "Silver Arrow", was released, but also failed to sell well enough to chart.
In 1980, Weston recorded another blues rock album,Studio Picks, atEel Pie Studios, produced again by Callan, featuring his own material and a cover ofthe Everly Brothers' "When Will I Be Loved". Mick Fleetwood played drums on one track, "Ford 44", the first time that he and Weston had worked together since the acrimony of 1973. The record was again released by AZ International in 1981, but likeNightlight it failed to enter the United Kingdom albums chart, and Weston's contract with the label was subsequently terminated. Also in 1981, Weston appeared as one of several guitarists in the music video for the Lindsey Buckingham solo hit "Trouble." He is seen in a line up of musicians, along with Bob Welch and Mick Fleetwood, accompanying Buckingham.[16]
In 1985, Weston made a foray into mainstream pop music with a standalone single, "Desire", released by the French record company Underdog Records, but it also failed to chart and was his last solo commercial record.
With his career as a solo artist having failed to take off, Weston returned to working as a professionalsession musician in the 1980s, playing live on tour with a variety of acts, working in London studios, and intermittently in Europe and America. He played onDick Morrissey's 1986jazz albumSouliloquy, writing one of its songs, and also worked in television music production.[17][13] He was involved with the soundtrack for the French cinema filmDiesel (1985), and acted as the musical director for the production of the British television filmPalmer (1991).[10][18]
In the 1990s, Weston retired from professional music for several years,[10] returning to it at the end of the decade with a self-produced album calledThere's a Heaven (1999), which was engineered at Studio 125 inBurgess Hill and released independently.[19]
In January 2008, Weston announced that he had started working on recording some new material at Markant Studios in the Netherlands.[20] While working there he met Frank Baijens, a Dutch singer-songwriter who was recording his albumOdd Man Out at the studio at the same time, and Weston played on one of the album's songs, "Where the Heart Belongs".[21]
In his last years, Weston was resident in North West London, occasionally playing in impromptu sessions atThe Duke of Hamiltonpublic house and gigging with a local band called Mad Dog Bites.[22][23]
Weston, who lived alone in his final years, was found dead by police officers in his flat inBrent Cross in London on 3 January 2012. They had gained entry to the property after his friends had reported concerns over unexpectedly not hearing from him for several days.[24][25] He was reported to have died on an unknown date from the effects of agastrointestinal haemorrhage caused bycirrhosis.[26] He was 64 years old.[1][27]