| Dave Greenfield |
| Background information |
| Birth name |
David Paul Greenfield |
| Born |
29 March 1949 (1949-03-29) (age 58)
Brighton,
England |
| Genre(s) |
Rock music |
| Instrument(s) |
Keyboards |
| Years active |
Late 1960s - present |
Associated
acts |
The
Stranglers, Rusty Butler |
Dave Greenfield (born David Paul
Greenfield, 29
March 1949, Brighton, England) is the keyboard
player with English
rock
band, The Stranglers. He is noted
for his trademark style of playing rapid arpeggios, and
his style has sometimes been compared to Ray
Manzarek of The
Doors.
He also frequently contributes harmony backing
vocals to the band's songs,
and sang the lead vocals on several of their tracks,
including:
- "Dead Ringer" and "Peasant in the Big Shitty" from their album No More Heroes
- "Do You Wanna?" from Black and
White
- "Genetix" on the album The Raven
- "Four Horsemen" on the album The Gospel
According to the Meninblack.
- "Aural Sculpture" free single with early issues of the
album Feline -
spoken part.
On the albums The Raven, Gospel
According to the Meninblack and Aural
Sculpture, Greenfield also used a Korg VC-10 vocoder. Notable
instances of this include in "Genetix" when it accompanies his own
vocal and during the "Gene Regulation" section underneath Hugh
Cornwell's monologue, on "Baroque Bordello" towards the end of the
song, and in the song "North Winds".
Greenfield and fellow-Strangler Jean-Jacques Burnel
released a joint album in 1983, Fire
& Water, used as the soundtrack
for the film "Ecoutez vos murs" directed
by Vincent Coudanne.
It was a piece of music written by Greenfield during recording
for The Meninblack, which was discarded by other
members of The Stranglers, that Hugh
Cornwell later adapted into their biggest hit "Golden Brown".
Although the band themselves did not initially see this as a potential single,
let alone an Ivor Novello award winning,
Number 2 hit.
In addition to his duties with The Stranglers, Greenfield also
takes part in mediaeval battle re-enactments.
Until 2003, he ran a pub called The Windmill, in Cambridge.
He is also known for his cross-handed technique on the keyboard and
"downing" pints
in the keyboard solo of "No More Heroes", also
affectionatly known amongst some fans as the 'Gottle-a-Gear'.
Album
- Fire & Water
- 1983 - with Jean-Jacques Burnel