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Henry McCullough |
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| Henry McCullough | |
|---|---|
| Born | 21 July 1943in Portstewart, Northern Ireland |
| Genre(s) | Rock |
| Affiliation(s) | Spooky Tooth The Grease Band Wings |
| Notable guitars | Gibson ES-335 |
| Years active | 1962 - present |
| Official site | Official Website |
Henry McCullough (born 21 July 1943) is a guitarist, who has played guitar in such bands as Spooky Tooth, Paul McCartney's Wings, and The Grease Band. Born in Portstewart, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland, Henry McCullough is a guitarist, vocalist and songwriter, and is the only Irishman to play the Woodstock Festival (backing Joe Cocker). He turns up in many different places as sideman or a performer in his own right.
He first came to prominence in the early 1960s as the teenage
lead guitarist with The Skyrockets showband
from Enniskillen.
In 1964,
with 3 other members of The Skyrockets, he left and formed a new
showband fronted by South African born vocalist Gene
Chetty, which they named Gene and The Gents. McCullough
then returned to his first love, rhythm
and blues, replacing Mike Cox in Portadown group The People. They built up
a huge following all over Ireland, and when they were signed in 1967 by (former
bassist with The Animals) Chas
Chandler’s management team, they changed the group’s name to
Éire Apparent. Under Chandler’s guidance, they toured Britain on the
same bill as groups such as Pink Floyd, The
Move and
Following a year in Ireland, returned to London to work
with Joe Cocker as a member of his backing group, The Grease Band (also
playing on their eponymous LP minus Cocker.) With Cocker he toured the USA
and performed at the Woodstock Festival. Paul McCartney asked
McCullough to join his new band, Wings, alongside Denny
Laine and Denny Sewell. His guitar solo on My Love
is regarded by many as one of rock music’s greatest solos. Musical
differences with McCartney, however, saw McCullough move on once again
within a year. McCullough also appeared as lead guitarist on the
original 1970
recording of
In 1975, McCullough released "Mind Your Own Business," his sole album on George Harrison's short-lived A&M Records' distributed Dark Horse label.
McCullough then did some session work, and played concerts with Roy Harper, Frankie Miller, Eric Burdon, Marianne Faithfull, Ronnie Lane (whose Kuschty Rye is a McCullough live favourite), and Donovan. He also spent some time with progressive band Spooky Tooth. While recovering from an injury to his hand while visiting his family in 1980, McCullough decided to stay in Ireland. He began to sit in with some old friends, The Fleadh Cowboys, at their Sunday afternoon residency in The Lower Deck in Dublin, and soon decided to move back to Portstewart and put a new band together. He was joined by Percy Robinson on pedal steel guitar, Roe Butcher on bass and Liam Bradley on drums.
In 1998 McCullough went to Poland, where he rehearsed with a band of Polish musicians for an upcoming tour. After the tour, they went into a recording studio and recorded a ‘live’ album which was released as Blue Sunset. This was followed by a further successful Polish tour. On returning home, McCullough recorded and released Failed Christian, a song that has since been covered by Nick Lowe on his album, Dig My Mood. In 1999, his beloved and invaluable cherry red 1963 Gibson ES335 guitar went missing during a flight from Warsaw to London. To date, it has never been recovered.
McCullough continues to record and perform and has released some solo material, including Belfast To Boston (2001) and Unfinished Business (2003). The latter contains his 1998 single Failed Christian, a powerful song best appreciated in live performance. Musically, he is bluesy and upbeat, with excursions into country and folk. McCullough gigs regularly in Northern Ireland and Scotland, playing with a solid backing band with obvious enthusiasm.
McCullogh's spoken words "I don't know; I was really drunk at
the time" can be heard on Pink Floyd's album
In 2007, Over the Rhine covered Failed Christian on their album Live from Nowhere, Vol. II.
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