| Mick Avory |
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Michael Charles Avory |
| Born |
15 February 1944 (1944-02-15) (age 63) |
| Origin |
East Molesey, Surrey, England |
| Genre(s) |
Rock and Roll/British
Invasion |
| Occupation(s) |
Drummer, percussionist |
| Instrument(s) |
drums |
| Years active |
1962 - present |
| Label(s) |
Pye
RCA
Arista Records |
Associated
acts |
Rolling Stones (1962); The
Kinks (1964-1984); The Kast Off Kinks
(1996-present); The Class of 64 (2004-present) |
| Website |
Mick Avory at Drummerworld |
Michael Charles Avory (born 15
February 1944
in East
Molesey, Surrey,
England)
is an English musician, best known as the longtime drummer and
percussionist for The Kinks from their formation
in 1964 to 1984.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Before
the Kinks (1962-1963)
- 1.2 Work
with the band (1964-1984)
- 1.3 Leaving
(1984)
- 1.4 Current
work (1985-present)
- 2 References
- 3 External
links
|
Biography
Before the Kinks (1962-1963)
In 1962,
before he joined The Kinks, he briefly played drums for The Rolling Stones. He
played their first show at The Marquee Club, but his tenure did not
last long. He was subsequently replaced by their current drummer Charlie
Watts.
Work with the band (1964-1984)
-
Avory was hired by the Kinks (who had just changed their name
at that time from the Ravens) in January 1964, after their management
saw an advertisement he had placed in the trade magazine Melody
Maker. Despite his ability, early Kinks' recordings
(including hits such as You Really Got Me) commonly did
not feature Avory on drums; producer Shel Talmy hired more seasoned session
drummers (most notably Clem Cattini and Bobby
Graham) for studio work well into 1965, with Avory commonly
providing supporting percussion. After the summer of 1965, Mick played
drums on virtually the majority of Kinks recordings. The first album to
feature his drumming was Kinda Kinks,
though his most brilliant moments would come on the albums Village
Green Preservation Society and Arthur
. His last recorded performance was on Word of Mouth,
where he was featured on three tracks, although he had not been an
official member of the band for some time. Avory is also the third
member behind the Davies brothers, who had played with all the
bandmembers, who have been in the different incarnations of the band.
Avory was always considered the quietest and most easy-going
member of the Kinks lineup and was Ray Davies's best friend. However,
his turbulent working relationship with guitarist Dave
Davies resulted in many legendary onstage fights. In the most
notorious (and widely mis-reported) incident, at The Capitol Theatre,
Cardiff, S.Wales in 1965, Avory hit Davies with his drum pedal (not the
cymbal stand, which, according to later interviews with Avory "would
have decapitated him"), in reprisal for Davies kicking over his drumkit
as revenge for a drunken fight the previous night in Taunton,
apparently won by Mick. He then fled into hiding for days to avoid
arrest for Grievous Bodily Harm. Other times, fuming, he would hurl his
drumsticks at Dave.
Ultimately, the relationship between Mick and the younger
Davies brother would degrade to the point where Avory would leave the
band. Later on, it would seem that Davies and Avory settled their
differences, as Avory subsequently played the drums on "Rock 'N' Roll
Cities", a track on the Think Visual
album written by Dave Davies. Mick was asked to rejoin by Ray, but he
declined as he wanted to rest of the non-stop touring, working and
performing schedule for 2 decades.
Leaving (1984)
By agreement with Ray Davies, he left performing and recording
with the band in 1984, after his working relationship with Dave
Davies had become unsustainable.
Ray explained the situation: "The saddest day for me was when
Mick left. Dave and Mick just couldn't get along. There were terrible
fights, and I got to the point where I couldn't cope with it any more.
Push came to shove, and to avoid an argument I couldn't face....we were
doing a track called "Good Day" and I couldn't face having Mick and
Dave in the studio, so I did it with a drum machine. Dave said he
wanted to replace Mick, and Mick had an important sound. Mick wasn't a
great drummer, but he was a jazz drummer - same school, same era as
Charlie Watts. I took Mick out, and we got very, very drunk. We were in
Guildford, and after about five pints of this wonderful scrumpy, Mick
said if any other band offered him a tour, he wouldn't take it, because
he didn't want to tour. And I remember him getting the train back -
because he was banned from driving; it was a very bad year for Mick -
and he walked to the station and disappeared into the mist." Avory was
subsequently replaced by Bob Henrit, former drummer with
Unit
4 + 2 and Argent.
Current work (1985-present)
He has continued since 1984 in a management role with the
Kinks and their Konk Studio in London. However he still performed on
some tracks of their second albums like Think Visual
and Word of Mouth. After the band stopped working
in 1996, he started playing with The Kast Off Kinks,
along with John Dalton, Dave
Clarke (no relation to the Dave Clark of "The Dave Clark Five"),
and John
Gosling. He has performed with them ever since. He has managed to patch
up his relationship with Dave Davies, and now is friends with both
Davies brothers. He keeps in regular contact and continues to manage
Konk studios in London. He was inducted into both the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame in 1990 and the UK Music Hall of Fame in 2005,
with original bassist Pete Quaife and the Davies
brothers.
By April
2004 by request of The Animals, who were about to
do their 40th anniversary tour, Chip Hawkes (formerly of The
Tremeloes) was asked to form a band to tour along with them.
This he did and brought together a true beat-era
supergroup. The band features former original members of British
60's-era groups, including Avory, Eric
Haydock (The Hollies) and Hawkes, who have now
combined to perform as The Class of 64
(referring to the actual year the British
Invasion took America by storm), also featuring guitarists 'Telecaster
Ted' Tomlin and Graham Pollock. The band have toured around the world,
and have recorded an album of their former band's hits, as well as a
new single.
Mick Avory made a special guest appearance onstage at Ray
Davies' Royal Albert Hall performance on
10 May, 2007. He played tambourine. Also guesting was Ian
Gibbons, former Kinks keyboard player.
References
External links
| The Kinks |
| Ray
Davies – Dave Davies – Mick Avory |
| Pete
Quaife – John Gosling – John Dalton – Ian
Gibbons – Jim Rodford – Bob
Henrit – Andy Pyle – Gordon Edwards |
| Discography |
| Albums:
The Kinks
(1964) - Kinda Kinks
(1965) - The Kink Kontroversy
(1965) - Face to Face
(1966) - Something Else by the
Kinks (1967) - The
Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society
(1968) - Arthur
(Or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire)
(1969) - Lola
versus Powerman and the Moneygoround, Part One
(1970) - Muswell Hillbillies
(1971) - Everybody's in Show-Biz
(1972) - Preservation: Act 1
(1973) - Preservation: Act 2
(1974) - Soap Opera
(1975) - Schoolboys in Disgrace
(1976) - Sleepwalker
(1977) - Misfits
(1978) - Low Budget
(1979) - Give the People What
They Want (1981) - State
of Confusion (1983) - Word of Mouth
(1984) - Think Visual
(1986) - UK
Jive (1989) - Phobia
(1993) |
| Songs:
"You Really Got Me" – "Waterloo
Sunset" – "Sunny Afternoon" – "Lola" – "Dedicated Follower of
Fashion" – "All Day and All of the
Night" – "Celluloid Heroes" |
|
| Related:
British Invasion - Argent |