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John Weathers

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Welsh musician
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John "Pugwash" Weathers
John Weathers, 1974
John Weathers, 1974
Background information
Birth nameJohn Patrick Weathers
Born (1947-02-07)7 February 1947 (age 78)
Carmarthen,Carmarthenshire,Wales
GenresProgressive rock,psychedelic rock,rock,blues
OccupationMusician
Instrument(s)Drums, percussion, vocals, vibraphone, xylophone, guitar.
Years active1966–2006
Formerly ofPete Brown & Piblokto!,Wild Turkey,Gentle Giant,Man
Musical artist

John Patrick 'Pugwash' Weathers (born 7 February 1947) is a retired Welsh rock drummer, best known for playing with theprogressive rock bandGentle Giant.

Early life

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Born inCarmarthen,Carmarthenshire,Wales, he moved toSwansea until, aged 15, he went to live with his aunt in Liverpool, just as theMerseybeat scene exploded. Weathers had had a drum-kit as a child, so took up drumming again, playing in several local bands. Returning to Wales in 1964, his experience on the Mersey scene got him into several local bands, including The Vikings (1964) and The Brothers Grimm (1965).[1]

Eyes of Blue

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In 1966 Weathers joined a Neath band The Eyes of Blue, along withPhil Ryan (keyboards) andGary Pickford-Hopkins (vocals) from The Smokestacks. The band turned professional, and won the 1966Melody Maker Beat Contest. The prize was a one-year record contract, but they had to record songs chosen for them, rather than their own material and neither of their singles, "Heart Trouble" / "Up And Down" and "Supermarket Full of Cans" / "Don't Ask Me To Mend Your Broken Heart", sold well.

The Eyes of Blue changed label fromDecca toMercury Records and recorded their first albumCrossroads of Time in 1968. They then recorded an albumBuzzy, as the backing band for American singer-songwriterBuzzy Linhart, before recording their second albumIn Fields of Ardath in 1969.[2]

The band Strawberry Dust supported The Eyes, and impressed Weathers, who persuadedLou Reizner to commission an album, which Weathers produced and wrote/co-wrote 6 songs.Women & Children First was released in 1970, but Reizner renamed the band Ancient Grease, without telling them, and credited himself as co-producer.[3]

The Eyes of Blue's third album,Bluebell Wood, released under the pseudonym Big Sleep, was their last, as the band broke up shortly afterwards. Weathers briefly played with Strawberry Dust, until they also broke up, later reforming asRacing Cars. After this break up he played drums on the final appearance of the Swansea Soul band the John Smith Committee.

In 1970 Weathers and Phil Ryan joinedPete Brown & Piblokto! playing on one single, "Flying Hero Sandwich" / "My Last Band", before Piblokto also disbanded. Weathers then joined an embryonic Wild Turkey withGlenn Cornick (ex-Jethro Tull), Gary Pickford-Hopkins (ex Eyes of Blue) and Graham Williams (ex Strawberry Dust), but Weathers and Williams left to joinGraham Bond's Magick before Wild Turkey recorded any material.[4] He appeared on Graham Bond's 1971 album,We Put Our Magick on You, and later that year joinedThe Grease Band.

Gentle Giant

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(For details of Weathers' work in this period seeGentle Giant)

Weathers joined Gentle Giant in 1972, as a temporary stand in for their drummerMalcolm Mortimore, who had been injured in a motorcycle accident. He first played on Gentle Giant'sOctopus album, and his position soon became permanent, remaining with them until they broke up, after their last albumCivilian (1980). He was well liked by fans for his distinctive hard-bashing drum style, and also played vibes and xylophone, among other percussion instruments. He also added his vocals in both studio and live performances more and more frequently as time went on, even singing lead on the song "Friends", which he also composed.

Whilst with Gentle Giant, Weathers occasionally played with Phil Ryan's band The Neutrons, including their 1974 album,Black Hole Star.

Man and recent years

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After Gentle Giant disbanded in 1980, Weathers played a number of temporary positions, until he joined the psychedelic/progressive rock bandMan when they reformed in 1983. Apart from a short spell, when he was unwell and Rick Martinez temporarily took over, he stayed with Man until 1996, recording 2 studio albums and 3 live albums, and becoming their longest serving drummer, allegedly leaving because Gentle Giant were planning to reform.[5] He left Man shortly before Phil Ryan re-joined the band. Weathers was featured in the 1986 S4C TV programme Rocking with a Sikh, backing the Sikh Elvis impersonator Peter Singh, along with Martin Ace and Micky Jones.

Weathers was variously reported to have been suffering from RSI or arthritis, but according to him was actually "diagnosed with a condition calledSpinocerebellar ataxia, which is akin to M.S".[3] The unpublished memoirs of his time spent in Morriston Hospital – Two Weeks in Pain – Under the Knife, document the trials of an NHS in-patient in post-op recovery.

Weathers has appeared on several Welsh TV soundtracks, and in 2006 rejoined Wild Turkey, to record their albumYou & Me in the Jungle and tour Europe.[4]

Weathers is also a keenornithologist.

Discography

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with Eyes of Blue

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  • Crossroads of Time (1968)
  • In Fields of Ardath (1969)

with Buzzy Linhart

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  • Buzzy (1969)

with Big Sleep

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  • Bluebell Wood (1971)

with Graham Bond with Magick

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  • We Put Our Magick On You (1971)

with Gentle Giant

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with The Neutrons

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  • Black Hole Star (1974) (some tracks)

with Man

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with Peter Welch

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  • Just For The Crack (1986)

with Huw Chiswell

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  • Rhywbeth O'i Le (1986)
  • Rhywun Yn Gadael (1989)

with Wild Turkey

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  • You and Me in the Jungle (2006)

References

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  1. ^Man's Family Jungle Retrieved 10 October 2008
  2. ^The Tapestry of Delights, Vernon Joynson –ISBN 1-899855-15-7
  3. ^abSleevenote to reissue of "Women And Children First"
  4. ^ab"Wild Turkey Biography". Archived fromthe original on 19 January 2009. Retrieved23 September 2008.
  5. ^"Review of Call Down The Moon". Harvard GSD. Archived fromthe original on 11 January 2009. Retrieved10 October 2008.

External links

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Studio albums
Live albums
Studio albums
Live albums
Related articles
Authority control databases: ArtistsEdit this at Wikidata
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