| Ric Grech |
| Background
information |
| Birth name |
Richard Roman Grechko |
| Also known as |
Rick Grech |
| Born |
November 1, 1946 |
| Origin |
Bordeaux, France of Ukrainian origin |
| Died |
March 17, 1990 (aged 43) |
| Genre(s) |
Rock |
| Instrument(s) |
Bass
guitar, Violin |
| Years active |
1965 - 1977 |
Associated
acts |
Family
Blind
Faith
Ginger Baker's Air Force
Traffic
KGB
Gram
Parsons |
Richard Roman Grech, (November
1, 1946 – March 17, 1990) was an English
musician.
Born in Bordeaux, France in 1946, Grech was a versatile,
accomplished, and sought after British rock musician. He
originally gained fame in the United Kingdom as the bass
player for the progressive rock group Family.
Grech joined the band when it was a largely blues-based live
act in Leicester
known as the Farinas; he became their bassist in 1965, replacing Tim
Kirchin. Family released their first single, "Scene Through The Eye of
a Lens," in September 1967 on the Liberty label in the UK, which got
the band signed to Reprise Records. The group's 1968
debut album Music in a Doll's House
was an underground hit that highlighted the songwriting talents of Roger
Chapman and John
"Charlie" Whitney as well as Chapman's piercing voice, but Grech also
stood out with his rhythmic, thundering bass work on songs such as "Old
Songs New Songs" and "See Through Windows," along with his adeptness on
cello and violin.
Released in February 1969, Family Entertainment,
the group's second album, was a major turning point for Grech
personally. In addition to playing excellent bass and violin lines on
Family's signature song "The Weaver's Answer", he wrote
three of the album's other songs: "How-Hi-The-Li," "Face In the Cloud,"
and the exciting rocker "Second Generation Woman," which was first
released as a single in Britain in November 1968. This song featured
Grech on lead vocals, leading Family through a cheeky lyric about a
woman who "looks good to handle from a personal angle," with an
arrangement that recalled the Beatles's "Paperback Writer" and owed an
obvious debt to Chuck Berry. Tellingly, however, all of
Grech's songs contained obvious drug references - "How Hi-The-Li"
wondered aloud if Chinese premier Chou En-Lai "gets high with all the tea
in China" - and drugs would eventually plague Grech throughout his
career.
In the spring of 1969, former Cream
guitarist Eric Clapton and former Traffic
frontman Steve Winwood formed the
supergroup Blind Faith; in need of a
bassist, they immediately recruited Grech, whom they'd both jammed with
when Clapton was in John Mayall's
Bluesbreakers and Winwood was in the Spencer
Davis Group. Unfortunately, Grech failed to give Chapman and Whitney
adequate notice, and Family was due to start a U.S. tour with Ten
Years After. Grech agreed to go on the tour until Family
could replace him, but he proved to be unreliable when Family played
their first American show on April 8, 1969 at the Fillmore
East in New York. Though that show is remembered for Roger Chapman
throwing a microphone stand at Bill Graham, Grech
contributed an indignity of his own; he was so disoriented he could
barely play.
Returning to England, Grech recorded the first Blind Faith
album with Clapton, Winwood, and drummer Ginger
Baker, a former bandmate of Clapton's in Cream. Their
self-titled debut album was regarded as a disappointment by critics,
but Cream and Traffic fans in America enjoyed it, and the quartet
toured the U.S. to support it. Clapton was disappointed with the
quality of the music and the performances, and Blind Faith called it
quits. Grech and Winwood stayed with Baker to form Ginger Baker's Air Force, a
marvellously unwieldy supergroup which also included Denny
Laine (ex-Moody Blues) on guitar, Chris Wood (ex-Traffic) on sax
and flute, and several other musicians; when that group collapsed under
its own weight, Winwood reformed Traffic with original members Wood and
Jim
Capaldi, and Grech soon joined as their bassist.
In October 1969, between Blind Faith and Traffic, Grech
recorded two tracks for a failed solo project, "Spending All My Days"
(which he sang) and "Exchange And Mart" (instrumental). Among the
participants in the session was George
Harrison.
These tracks were released as bonus tracks on a 1986 CD reissue of the
Blind Faith album, and incorrectly credited to the band.
Grech remained a vibrant musician as a member of Traffic. As
in Family, he lasted two albums with the band, Welcome To the
Canteen and The Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys.
Grech's bass playing on the title song of the latter album was
stirringly moody. Along with drummer Jim Gordon, Grech co-wrote the minor hit
"Rock N Roll Stew." Drugs, however, remained a problem, and Winwood and
his bandmates eventually decided they had no alternative but to dismiss
him.
Grech remained active in session work, playing with Rod
Stewart, Ronnie Lane, and Muddy
Waters. He also worked with Rosetta Hightower, the Crickets and Gram
Parsons. In January 1973, he performed in Eric Clapton's
Rainbow Concert, and he even reunited with Roger Chapman and Charlie
Whitney when the duo recorded an album in 1974 after Family's breakup.
Grech was one of many special guests on that record, which led Chapman
and Whitney to form the group Streetwalkers. Grech,
however, was not in that band.
Grech made at least two reported attempts to start a new rock
group in the seventies; he hoped to start a new band with fellow Family
alumnus John "Poli" Palmer in 1973, but
that plan fell apart. He also planned to start a new group with former Jimi
Hendrix drummer Mitch Mitchell around Joe Jammer, a guitarist they'd both
discovered. That group was in fact never formed, and Jammer went on to
form his own band, the Olympic Runners.
In 1974 Grech finally hooked up with another supergroup, KGB. Consisting of Grech
on bass, Michael Bloomfield (ex-Paul Butterfield Blues
Band and Electric Flag) on guitar, Carmine
Appice (ex-Vanilla Fudge, Cactus and Beck,
Bogert & Appice) on drums, Barry
Goldberg on keyboards, and Ray Kennedy (co-writer of "Sail On,
Sailor") on vocals, the group released its homonymous debut that year.
Grech and Bloomfield immediately quit after its release, stating they
never had faith in the project. The album was not critically well
received.
Eventually Grech grew tired of the rock scene and retired in
1977, returning to Leicester to sell carpet. He eventually developed a
drinking problem, and in 1990 he died of liver and kidney failure at
the age of 43.
External links
References
| v • d • e Family |
| Roger Chapman
| John
"Charlie" Whitney | Jim King
| Ric Grech
| Rob Townsend |
| Harry Ovenall | John Weider | John "Poli" Palmer | John
Wetton | Jim Cregan | Tony
Ashton |
| Discography |
| Studio albums: Music in a Doll's House
| Family
Entertainment | A
Song for Me | Anyway
| Fearless
| Bandstand
| It's Only a Movie |