| Tymon Dogg |
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Stephen Murray |
| Also known as |
Timon, Step
Murray |
| Born |
1950 Liverpool, England |
| Origin |
London, England |
| Genre(s) |
Folk, Punk, Rock, World |
| Instrument(s) |
Violin, Guitar, Piano, Harmonium |
| Years active |
1967–present |
Associated
acts |
The Mescaleros |
| Website |
TymonDogg.com |
Tymon Dogg (born Stephen John Murray) is an
English
violinist, guitarist, keyboardist and singer who is best known for his
work with Joe Strummer of The
Clash. He started his career in the late 60's, under the
original pseudonym of 'Timon', and was quickly spotted by influential
people such as the Beatles and the Moody Blues.
|
Contents
- 1 Timon
- The Early Years
- 2 Tymon
Dogg - 1971 to 2000
- 3 2000
- 2007
- 3.1 Discography
- 3.1.1 Solo recordings
- 3.1.2 Guest appearances
- 3.2 References
- 3.3 External
links
|
Timon - The Early Years
Stephen Murray's musical career began at the age of 14,
playing Bob
Dylan and Donovan
covers on harmonica and guitar reguraly at the Peppermint Lounge in Liverpool,
and occasionally at the famous Cavern Club. While still at school, he
came up with the pseudonym of ‘Timon’ as a stage name in order to
separate the fact he was both a performing musician and schoolboy.
Spencer Leigh (now a DJ on BBC
Radio Merseyside) met Timon in 1965 and helped encouraging the young
musician’s song-writing and also become his local promoter-of-sorts,
helping him get gigs and sending off demo tapes to various record
companies.
One day in 1968, while working as a screen printer in
Southport, Timon received a phone call from Leigh, asking Timon if he
could get the day off work to travel to London with him to visit Pye Records. Cyril
Stapleton, band leader and part of Pye’s management, was interested in
signing Timon to the label. Pye gave Timon an advance that was the
equivalent of a year's wages in the hope of securing a hit single from
him, though the big commercial pressure to produce a hit was ultimately
too overwhelming for the young musician.
Timon soon left his home of Liverpool and moved to London
where he began recording songs with arranger and producer Jerry Martin.
Martin was a Canadian
pop singer who was trying to make it as a producer in England. Timon
released his first single "The Bitter Thoughts of Little Jane" in
January 1968. The track also features furture Led
Zeppelin members John Paul Jones on bass and Jimmy
Page on lead guitar. Martin was sacked just before the record
was released and the record was given meagre promotion by Pye.
It was around this time that Peter
Asher (ex-Peter and Gordon) took interest in
Timon’s music. Asher was acting as a talent scout for the first Apple
Records label, and after signing American singer-songwriter James
Taylor to the label, he was on the lookout for other new and
interesting talent. Paul McCartney heard
Timon’s "The Bitter Thoughts of Little Jane" and wanted a go at
producing a new version of the song, to which Timon declined, assuring
McCartney that it would better if he stuck to recording his own
material instead. After disagreemtnets on both sides with regard to the
direction the music was taking, everyone just sort of fell out and the
sessions were shelved. Timon then decided to wander off to go busk in
Europe for a while.
When he got back to England, BBC-DJ Dave Symonds introduced him
to the Moody
Blues who had heard his songs and wanted to sign him to their own new
record label, Threshold Records. The first
signings to this label in October 1969 were both Timon and the British
rock band Trapeze.
Two months later in December ‘69, both Timon and Trapeze supported the
Moody Blues on their December 1969 tour. Timon and Moody Blues released
one single “And Now She Says She's Young”.
Tymon Dogg - 1971 to 2000
In 1971, Timon became friends with John
Graham Mellor (Joe Strummer). They both
ended up sharing a flat that year with a few other people at 18 Ash
Grove aka “Vomit Heights” in Palmers Green, London. In September of
‘71, the ‘Vomit Heights’ crowd and assorted others moved into a flat at
34 Ridley Road, Harlesden,
London.
In early spring of ‘72, Timon and Mellor (who had returned to
London in May after dropping out of Newport College of Art) took to
busking in the The London Underground during
the late evenings. Together, the 22-year old Tymon and 20-year old
Mellor also busked in London’s Green Park tube station and around
various parts of Europe. Throughout this period also, Tymon was an
important influence on Mellor in many ways. He taught him to play
chords on an old ukulele by using his right-hand to strum the chords
instead of with his natural left-hand ability, this resulting in the
unique strumming style later evidenced in The Clash’s music.
After being evicted from the 34 Ridley Road flat in April
1972, Tymon then moved into a flat in Miles Buildings in London. The
Ridley Road collective also moved in for awhile, though most soon left
for a farm outside Blandford Forum in Dorset in the
summer of ’72.
In 1973 Tymon ever played the violin on stage for the first
time. It was also around this time that Timon changed his name to Tymon
Dogg. In 1974, he was living at a ‘short-life’ house at 23 Chippenham
Road, Maida
Hill, London with various others. John Mellor also took up residence at
this address after leaving Newport Art School.
In 1975 and 1976, Tymon began playing support gigs with
Mellor’s (now Joe Strummer) new pub-rock band ‘the
101ers’; Tymon was a regular at the Charlie Pig Dog Club,
which was a weekly residence at a local dive that the 101’ers
organized. He would occasionally join the band for a jam on his violin.
Strummer eventually left the 101ers in 1976 and went on to join iconic
punk band The
Clash.
In 1976, Tymon released his first full-length solo album
“Tymon Dogg” aka “Outlaw Number One”. Only 500 copies were pressed. He
provides all the instrumentation including Piano, Violin, Guitar,
Viola, Cello, Mandolin, Harmonica, Glockenspiel, Harmonium, Shaum, and
Cymbal. Later in 1977, he formed a folk-punk trio called ‘The Fools’
with drummer Richard Dudanski and bassist Ron Harvey.
The Clash released their fourth LP "Sandinista!"
in 1980. Tymon wrote, sang, and play violin on the track “Lose This
Skin,” as well as adding violin overdubs to “Lightning Strikes” while
in Electric Lady. At the time of recording “Sandinista!,” Mick Jones was
helping Ellen
Foley record her second album “Spirit of St. Louis.” Three songs
written by Tymon would feature on the LP.
During the tail-end of the Sandinista! sessions back in Wessex, England,
Tymon and Joe Strummer had acquired a new squat in a large Georgian
house in Gilbert Place, Bloomsbury, London. They lived there for
awhile with Tymon's future musical partner Helen Cherry.
The years 1981 and 1982 saw Tymon play violin on Ian Hunter’s “Short
Back ‘N’ Sides” record, and released his second full-length solo LP
“Battle of Wills” in 1982. He also played piano on The Clash's "Combat
Rock” 1982 album. A third LP was in the works in 1983 with production
by Joe Strummer and Glyn Johns, but it was never released. In
1984, Tymon appeared on the The Poison Girls’ “The Price of
Grain and the Price of Blood” EP playing violin. He then went on to
form a duo with Hele Cherry called Frugivores and released one album
"New Ages Songs" and a single in 1987. Another new solo LP “Relentless”
was released in 1989.
2000 - 2007
It was 11 years later in 2000 when Tymon again hooked up with
old friend Joe Strummer. Strummer had formed new band The
Mescaleros, which Tymon became a fully-fledged member of in November of
that year. Over the course of roughly two years he ended up playing
over 70 live shows with group. He co-wrote most of the songs on the
group's 2nd full-length album “Global A Go-Go”, and played violin,
mandolin, Spanish guitar, acoustic & electric guitar on
assorted tracks. The welcome addition of Tymon to the original line-up
resulted in the band having a further world music vibe to their music.
Joe Strummer died on December 22nd, 2002. A tribute show was
held in Granada, Spain on August 20th, 2003. Tymon appeared on stage
with Mick Jones, Richard Dudanski, Jem Finer, Tom Lardner, and Julian
Hernandez, as The Amigos.
As of March 2006, Tymon has been performing various gigs
around England with new band The Quikening. A single "Guantanamo" was
released on 12” vinyl in September, with the CD released on March the
1st 2007. Along with debuting the new group, he has also patented a
harp-like stringed instrument he calls the “The New World Harp” or
“Pyramid Harp. The band continute to play live and are set to perform
at the Strummercamp 2007 Festival on May 27th, 2007.
After forty-odd years in and out of the music industry, Tymon
has ended up working with a vast array of musical talent both in the
studio and on stage The list includes: Joe Strummer, The Clash, Paul
McCartney, Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones, James Taylor, Justin
Hayward, The Mescaleros, Richard
Strange, Ian Hunter, Ellen Foley, The Poison Girls, Glyn
Johns, Peter Asher, Liam Genockey, Pandit Ramesh Misra, Salah Dawson
Miller, Richard Dudanski, Roy Harper, The
Cramps, Trapeze, Neville Staples, The
Fall, Stone the Crows, Rory
McLeod, Charles Hayward, Lol Coxhill, DM Bob & Jem Finer,
Orphy
Robinson, Hugh Hopper, Robb
Johnson, and Claire Hamill, among others. He
remains a very enthusiastic performer on stage, and is known to damage
his violins due to the manic passion in which he performs his sets. His
genuine respect and appreciation for his audience remains to this day.
Discography
Solo recordings
| Year |
Album |
| 1976 |
Tymon
Dogg |
| 1982 |
Battle
of Wills |
| 1987 |
Frugivores
- New Age Songs |
| 1989 |
Relentless |
Guest appearances
| Year |
Album |
Artist |
Credit |
| 1980 |
Sandinista! |
The Clash |
Vocals, violin
on "Lose This Skin", “Lightning Strikes (Not Once But Twice)” and
“Junco Partner” |
| 1981 |
Short
Back 'n' Sides |
Ian Hunter |
Violin |
| 1981 |
Spirit
of St. Louis |
Ellen Foley |
Violin, wrote
three tunes: "Beautiful Waste of Time,” "Game of a Man” and
"Indestructible” |
| 1982 |
Combat
Rock |
The Clash |
Piano on "Death
Is A Star" and "Overpowered By Funk" |
| 1985 |
The
Price of Grain |
Poison
Girls |
Violin on "The
Price of Grain and the Price of Blood" and "Stonehenge 1985" |
| 1998 |
De
Granada a la Luna |
Various artists |
Violin and
guest vocals on "Casida Del Herido Por El Agua" with Lagartija Nick |
| 2000 |
Once
Bitten Twice Shy |
Ian Hunter |
Violin |
| 2001 |
Global
a Go-Go |
Joe Strummer
and The Mescaleros |
Violin,
mandolin, Spanish guitar, acoustic & electric guitar |
| 2002 |
Give
'Em the Boot III |
Various artists |
Violin, Spanish
guitar |
| 2003 |
Streetcore |
Joe Strummer
and The Mescaleros |
Violin |
| 2004 |
Give
'Em the Boot IV |
Various artists |
Fiddle, guitar |
| 2007 |
Screamin' |
El Doghouse |
Violin |
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