| Jack Bruce |
| Background
information |
| Birth name |
John Symon Asher Bruce |
| Born |
May 14, 1943 (1943-05-14) (age 64)
Bishopbriggs,
East Dunbartonshire, Scotland |
| Genre(s) |
Blues-Rock
Psychedelic Rock
Jazz
Fusion |
| Years active |
1962 – present |
| Label(s) |
EMI |
Associated
acts |
Cream
John Mayall's
Bluesbreakers
The Graham Bond Organisation
BBM
Alexis
Korner's Blues Incorporated
Manfred
Mann
West, Bruce and Laing
Ringo Starr All-Starr Band |
John Symon Asher "Jack" Bruce (born May 14, 1943) is a Scottish-born
musician, composer and singer. He is
best-known as an electric bassist, harmonicist
and pianist,
and was most famous as the vocalist and bassist for the 1960s rock band
Cream.
He lives in Suffolk,
England.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Early
career
- 1.2 With
Cream
- 1.3 Post-Cream
- 2 Solo
discography
- 3 Trivia
- 4 References
and notes
- 5 Literature
- 6 External
links
|
Biography
Jack Bruce was born in May 1943 in Bishopbriggs,
East Dunbartonshire, Scotland
to musical parents who moved around a lot, resulting in the young Bruce
attending 14 different schools, ending up at Bellahouston Academy. He
won a scholarship studying cello and composition at the Royal
Scottish Academy of Music and Drama; however, he left at the age of 17
claiming he knew more than the teachers.
Early career
While still at college Jack Bruce played with orchestras in
Glasgow music halls.
After leaving college he toured Italy playing double bass with the
Murray Campbell Big Band.
In 1962, Jack Bruce became a member of the London-based band Alexis
Korner's Blues Incorporated,
in which he played the double bass. The band also included organist
Graham
Bond, saxophonist Dick Heckstall Smith and drummer Ginger
Baker. In 1963, the group broke up and these musicians,
including Bruce, went on to form the Graham Bond Organisation, which
played a wide range of music genres, including, bebop, blues and rhythm
and blues. At this time, Bruce switched from double
bass to electric bass. The group released two
studio albums and several singles, but were not commercially
successful. They did, however, influence a number of other musicians,
such as Keith Emerson, Jon
Lord, Bill Bruford and John
Bonham.
During the time Bruce and Baker played with the Graham Bond
Organisation, they were known for their hostility towards each other.
There were numerous stories of the two sabotaging each other's
equipment and fighting on stage. Eventually Baker fired Bruce from the
group in 1965.
With Cream
After he left the Graham Bond Organisation, Bruce then joined
the John
Mayall Bluesbreakers group, which featured Eric
Clapton, but later had his first commercial success with Manfred
Mann in 1966. In July 1966 he moved on to his most famous role as bass
player, main songwriter and lead vocalist with Ginger Baker and Eric
Clapton in the power trio Cream,
considered the first supergroup. While with Cream, Bruce
changed his electric bass for a Gibson EB-3.
He wrote most of Cream's original material, with lyricist Pete
Brown, including, "Sunshine
of Your Love", which they co-wrote with Clapton, "White
Room", "Politician",
and "I
Feel Free". Bruce also wrote a number of compositions by himself,
including "N.S.U." and "We're
Going Wrong".
By 1968, Cream were successful; they grossed more than the
next top six live acts of the day added together (including Jimi
Hendrix and The
Doors). They topped album charts all over the world, and received the
first platinum discs for record sales, but the old enmity of Bruce and
Baker resurfaced in 1968, and after a final tour, Cream broke up.
Post-Cream
Before Cream split, Bruce recorded an acoustic
free
jazz album with Dick Heckstall Smith and Jon
Hiseman, and released it in 1971 as Things We Like.
This album was a precursor to the jazz fusion boom in the early 1970s, and
more recently, it has been sampled by many hip hop artists.
Bruce continued to work on many other collaborations with
other musicians. The first of these, Songs for a Tailor,
was released in 1969, featuring both Heckstall Smith and Hiseman. It
was a worldwide hit, but, after a brief supporting tour with Larry
Coryell and Mitch Mitchell in his band,
he left to join the jazz fusion band Lifetime.
With drummer Tony Williams, guitarist John McLaughlin and
organist Larry
Young, the group recorded two albums. However, they did not get much
critical and commercial acclaim, and Lifetime broke up in 1970. Bruce
then recorded another solo album Harmony Row, but
this was not commercially successful.
In 1972, Bruce formed a blues rock power trio, West,
Bruce and Laing. Besides Bruce, the group consisted of Leslie
West and Corky
Laing, formerly of the hard rock band Mountain.
They produced two studio albums, Why Don't'cha
and Whatever Turns You On,
and one live album, Live 'N' Kickin.
The band soon broke up, and, not long after, Bruce released another
solo album, Out Of The Storm. A tour was lined up
with former Rolling Stones guitarist Mick
Taylor and jazz keyboard player Carla
Bley, with whom he had collaborated with in 1971 on Escalator
Over the Hill. The tour, documented on Live at the
Manchester Free Trade Hall, ended with Taylor leaving, and no
studio recordings were made.
In 1974, Bruce is credited with bass guitar in the title song
on Frank Zappa's sucessful "Apostrophe" album.
In 1977, Bruce formed a new band with drummer Simon
Phillips and keyboardist Tony Hymas. The group recorded an album,
called How's Tricks. A world tour followed, but the
album was a commercial failure. The follow-up album Jet Set
Jewel was put on hold when as Bruce was dropped by his record
label. In 1978, Bruce toured with the Mahavishnu
Orchestra, reuniting him with John McLaughlin.
By 1979, Bruce's drug habit had reached such a level that he
had lost a lot of his money; in that year he married his second wife,
Margrit Seyffer. She organised his career from a business standpoint,
and Bruce played a lot of sessions with Cozy
Powell, Gary Moore and Jon
Anderson to get some money. By 1980 his career was back on track with
his new band, consisting of drummer Billy Cobham, guitarist Clem Clemson, and keyboardist David
Sancious. They toured widely to support their album, I've
Always Wanted to do This, but it was not commercial success
and the band split. During the early 80s, he also joined up to play
with mates from the old days in Rocket
88, the back-to-the-roots fun band that Ian "Stu" Stewart had put
together, and appears on their only album, recorded live in Germany in
1981.
In 1982, Bruce collaborated with guitarist Robin
Trower and released two albums, BLT and Truth,
the first of which was a minor hit in the United States. In 1983, Bruce
released another solo album, Automatic, which was
only released in Germany. In the mid-1980s, Bruce began working with
the music producer Kip Hanrahan, and released the albums Desire
Develops an Edge, "Vertical's Currency" and Exotica,
all of which were critically successful. In 1987, Bruce recorded his
solo album Somethin' Els in Germany, but this was
delayed until 1992 and received belated widespread critical acclaim.
His German TV concerts of his 1980s period have been collected on a
two-DVD set, Live at Rock Palast.
In 1989, Bruce began recording material with Ginger Baker and
released another solo album, A Question of Time.
Baker and Bruce toured the US at this time. In 1993, Bruce was again
reunited with Baker for his 50th birthday concert, along with guitarist
Gary
Moore. These recordings were released on the live double album Cities
of the Heart. In 1994 this lineup became the band BBM, and their
subsequent album was a top ten hit in the UK. However, the band broke
up shortly afterwards.
A low-key solo piano album, Monkjack,
followed in 1995, featuring Bruce and organist Bernie Worrel. Bruce then began work
producing and arranging the soundtrack to the independently produced
Scottish film The Slab Boys with Lulu,
Edwyn
Collins, Eddie Reader and The
Proclaimers. The soundtrack album appeared in 1997. In 2000
he returned to touring as a member of Ringo
Starr All Starr Band which also featured Peter
Frampton on guitar. At the gig in Denver, Colorado the band
was joined on stage by Ginger Baker, and Bruce, Baker and Frampton
played a short set of Cream Classics.
In 2001 Bruce reappeared with his most successful band of
recent times featuring Bernie Worrel, Vernon Reid of Living
Colour on guitar and Kip Hanrahan's three-piece Latin rhythm section.
Hanrahan also produced the accompanying album Shadows in the
Air, which included a reunion with Eric Clapton on a new
version of Sunshine of Your Love. The band released
another studio album, More Jack than God, in 2003,
and a live DVD, Live at Canterbury Fayre.
Bruce had suffered a period of declining health, and in the
summer of 2003 was diagnosed with liver cancer. In September 2003, he
underwent a liver transplant, which was almost
fatal, as his body initially rejected the new organ.
He has since recovered, and in May, 2005, he reunited with former Cream
bandmates Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker for a series of well-received
concerts at London's Royal Albert Hall,
released as the album Royal
Albert Hall London May 2-3-5-6 2005, and New
York's Madison Square Garden. A
biography of Bruce, entitled Jack
— The Biography of Jack Bruce was written by Steven Myatt and published in 2005.
In 2006, Bruce returned to the live arena with a concert of
Cream and solo classics performed with the German HR Big Band.
Solo discography
- Songs For A Tailor (September 1969)
- Things We Like (Recorded August 1968,
released January 1971)
- Harmony Row (September 1971)
- Out of the Storm (November 1974)
- Live at Manchester Free Trade Hall 75
(released 2003)
- How's Tricks (March 1977)
- Jet Set Jewel (recorded 1978, released 2003)
- I've Always Wanted To Do This (December 1980)
- Automatic (January 1983)
- A Question of Time (December 1989)
- Something Els (Recorded 1987 released March 1993)
- Cities Of The Heart (1993)
- Monkjack (September 1995)
- Shadows In The Air (July 2001)
- More Jack Than God (September 2003)
Trivia
- He and Cream bandmates Ginger Baker and Eric
Clapton have all played with each other in different groups. Bruce and
Baker played together in the Graham Bond Organisation, BBM and Blues
Incorporated, Clapton and Bruce played together near the end of
Clapton's tenure with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, and Baker and
Clapton played together in the short-lived supergroup
Blind
Faith shortly after Cream's breakup.
- Bruce plays harmonica on the Cream songs
"Rollin' & Tumblin'," "Traintime," "Take It Back," "Four Until
Late," and the studio version of "Spoonful" and "Sitting on top of the world"
of 2005 concert.
- He once owned Sanda
Island in Scotland.
- When deciding on the set list for the Cream
reunion in London, Bruce wanted to include I Feel
Free, but was considered too complex. It was
not included in the Royal Albert Hall shows, and it wasn't played at
the Madison Square Garden shows.
- His first Cream
composition was N.S.U. According to the Clapton
biography Crossroads:
The Life and Music of Eric Clapton, the
initials stand for Non-Specific Urethritis, a
sexual dysfunction in men.
- Bruce says in Chris
Welch's book, Cream:
The Legendary Sixties Supergroup, that he "has
no regrets that [he] didn't join Led
Zeppelin when they asked [him]". While this may suggest that
Bruce was the original choice of Zeppelin founder and guitarist Jimmy
Page's for bassist/lead singer, in fact (as mentioned in
Stephen Myatt's Book Jack), Page asked him to join
as a second bass player, in the mid seventies. (John Paul Jones
would eventually join Page's band as bassist and Robert
Plant joined as lead vocalist.)
- Bruce wrote the Cream song We're
Going Wrong after having a fight with his wife, Janet
Godfrey.
- Bruce played bass on the song "Apostrophe" on
the 1974 Frank
Zappa album of the same name.
- He uses a custom Warwick fretless thumb bass.
- Bruce guested with his old friend Dick
Morrissey on the last Soft Machine album Land
of Cockayne (1981).
- After the death of John
Entwistle in the summer of 2002, Bruce replaced Entwistle in
the Todd
Rundgren-organised all-star band tribute to the Beatles in the A Walk
Down Abbey Road tour.
References and notes
-
Jazz - All About Jazz. Interview
with Jack. Retrieved on December 14, 2006.
-
http://www.nndb.com/people/276/000044144/
-
http://www.firstfoot.com/good%20scottish%20pop/jackbruce.htm
-
http://www.cream2005.com/theband_jackbruce.lasso
-
Chris Welch, Cream: The Legendary Sixties Supergroup
-
http://www.firstfoot.com/good%20scottish%20pop/jackbruce.htm
-
http://www.bassplayer.com/story.asp?storycode=11837
-
http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/jackbruce/articles/story/5936929/jack_bruce_on_the_mend
-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4506185.stm
-
Sanda Island. Visitor's
Guide to Sanda Island. Retrieved on January
26, 2007.
Literature
- Brigitte Tast, Hans-Jürgen Tast „be bop - Die
Wilhelmshöhe rockt. Disco und Konzerte in der Hölle" Verlag Gebrüder
Gerstenberg GmbH & Co. KG, Hildesheim, ISBN
978-3-8067-8589-0.
External links
| v • d • e Cream |
Ginger
Baker - Jack Bruce
- Eric Clapton
Pete Brown - Felix
Pappalardi - Martin Sharp
Gail Collins - Janet
Godfrey - George Harrison - Mike Taylor
|
| Discography |
Fresh
Cream - Disraeli
Gears - Wheels
of Fire - Goodbye
Live Cream - Live
Cream Volume II - BBC Sessions
- Royal
Albert Hall 2005
Heavy Cream - Strange Brew
- The Very Best of Cream
- Those Were the Days
- 20th
Century Masters - Cream Gold
|
| Songwriters
covered by Cream |
William
Bell - James Bracken - Howlin'
Wolf - Tony Colton - Willie
Dixon - Skip
James
Robert Johnson - Booker
T. Jones - Blind Joe Reynolds - Ray Smith
- T-Bone
Walker - Muddy Waters |
| Related
bands |
|
The G.B.O.
(Baker/Bruce) |
The Bluesbreakers
(Bruce/Clapton) |
The Powerhouse
(Bruce/Clapton) |
Blind
Faith
(Baker/Clapton) |
|