Andy Fairweather Low with his copies of
Blues
Matters! magazine
([1]) (Taken on November 4 2006)
Andrew 'Andy' Fairweather-Low (born 2 August 1946, Ystrad
Mynach, Hengoed,
Wales) is a
British
guitarist,
songwriter
and vocalist.
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Contents
- 1 Early
career
- 2 With
The Who and Pete Townshend
- 3 With
Roger Waters
- 4 With
Joe Satriani
- 5 Work
since 2000
- 6 Solo
album discography
- 7 References
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Early career
Fairweather-Low first found fame as a founder member of the pop group Amen
Corner in the late 1960s.
They had four successive Top 10 hits,
including the Number One "(If Paradise Is) Half
as Nice" in 1969. The band split in two in 1970,
with Fairweather-Low leading Dennis Byron (drums), Blue
Weaver (organ), Clive Taylor (bass)
and Neil Jones saxophone into a new band, Fair
Weather. The band scored a UK Singles Chart Number 6 hit with
"Natural Sinner" in July 1970, although the outfit's only album, Beginning
From An End, failed to chart. After twelve months
Fairweather-Low left to pursue a solo career, releasing five albums up
to 1980 on A&M. These spawned further
single chart success with "Reggae Tune" (1974), and "Wide Eyed and
Legless", a Number 6 Christmas time hit in 1975.
In the late 1970s
and 1980s
he worked for numerous artists, doing mainly session
work, generally as backing vocalist and/or guitarist
on albums by Roy Wood, Leo
Sayer, Albion Band, Gerry
Rafferty, Helen Watson and Richard and Linda
Thompson. In 1992 he started working for Eric
Clapton (having earlier appeared in his band in the 1983 ARMS
concerts for Ronnie Lane) and, whilst he
has continued to do session work for various people, including Dave
Edmunds, Fairweather-Low has spent most of his time since the
early 1990s
playing in Clapton's backing band, plus appearing on various albums and
tours, including the famous Clapton's MTV
Unplugged concert.
In 1992, he played guitar on George Harrison's Live
in Japan, along with the rest of Clapton's
band, and in 2002, he played several of the lead
guitar parts for the Harrison tribute The
Concert for George. He also played guitar and
bass on Roger Waters's "In The Flesh"
world tour from 1999-2002. In 2004 he appeared in the Stratpack
concert, celebrating 50 years of the Fender Stratocaster.
With The Who and Pete Townshend
In 1978, Fairweather-Low sang backing vocals on the Who
album Who Are You,
specifically on the tracks "New Song", "Had Enough", "Guitar and Pen",
"Love is Coming Down", and "Who Are You". After filling in on
guitar during rehearsal for the Who album It's Hard
(Pete
Townshend was in rehab), he ended up on the album itself,
playing rhythm guitar on the song "It's Your Turn".
Fairweather-Low later appeared on Townshend's 1993 album Psychoderelict
and the accompanying concert tour.
With Roger Waters
Andy Fairweather-Low with Roger Waters in Ottawa; 6 June 2007
Fairweather-Low has worked with Roger
Waters since Waters' The Pros and Cons
of Hitchhiking tour of America
in 1985. He contributed to two of Waters' albums – Radio KAOS
in 1987 and Amused to Death
in 1992. He also played guitar and bass on the 1999-2002 In the
Flesh world tour and he is playing on Waters'
current Dark Side of the Moon
Live tour.
With Joe Satriani
[2] In 1995, Fairweather-Low played
rhythm guitar on Joe Satriani's self-titled CD.
Along with Nathan East on bass, and Manu Katche on
drums, Satriani with the help of Fairweather-Low, ventured into
previous 'organic' territory with a new, stripped down approach, where
he would use minimal effects and just tackle the lead guitar parts,
where Fairweather-Low more than adequately backed him up.
Work since 2000
In 1999 and 2000 he played in Roger
Waters's In the Flesh tour. Whilst in
2001, Fairweather-Low accompanied Eric Clapton on his world tour and is
featured on the 2002 album One More Car, One More
Rider, which also features accompaniment by Billy
Preston, Steve
Gadd, Nathan
East, and David Sancious.
In 2002 Fairweather-Low featured on From Clarksdale
To Heaven - Remembering John Lee Hooker with, amongst others,
Jeff
Beck, Gary Brooker, Jack
Bruce and Peter Green.
By 2005 he toured extensively with Bill
Wyman's Rhythm Kings. Some of the concerts were recorded for UK
television,
as part of their "50 Years Of Rock 'n' Roll" tribute.
In 2006 Fairweather-Low (plus Graham
Broad) toured with both Roger Waters once more, this time for
the latter's The
Dark Side of the Moon tour, and with Bill Wyman's Rhythm Kings. In the
same year Fairweather-Low toured with Chris
Barber and the Big Chris Barber Band reprising many of his
earlier hits, including "Gin House Blues" and "Worried Man Blues". Some
of these performances form part of Barber's latest CD, Can't
Stop Now, featuring new arrangements by Barber's staff-arranger
and trombonist,
Bob Hunt.
In 2006 Fairweather-Low released Sweet
Soulful Music. It was his first solo album in
twenty six years. Plus in 2007 he continued touring with Roger Water's
Dark Side of the Moon Tour.
Solo album discography
- Spider Jiving
(1974)
- La Booga Rooga
(1975)
- Be Bop 'N' Holla
(1976)
- Andy Fairweather Low
(1976)
- Mega Shebang
(1980)
- Sweet Soulful Music
(2006)
References
This is a combination of two Wikipedia articles on
Fairweather-Low, one of which omitted the hyphen from his name.