Bob Weston

born on 1/11/1947

died on 3/1/2012 in London, England, United Kingdom

Bob Weston (guitarist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Bob Weston (guitarist)

See Bob Weston for the American bassist and recording engineer.

Robert Joseph "Bob" Weston (1 November 1947 3 January 2012) was a British musician best known for his brief role as guitarist and songwriter with the rock band Fleetwood Mac.

Early life and career

Weston was born in Plymouth on 1 November 1947[1] and moved to London in the mid-1960s. He joined a band called The Kinetic, and supported Jimi Hendrix and Chuck Berry at concerts in France.[1]

Fleetwood Mac

Weston was recruited into the Fleetwood Mac line-up in late 1972 as replacement for the recently sacked guitarist Danny Kirwan. Together with fellow new band member, vocalist Dave Walker, Fleetwood Mac recorded the Penguin album in January 1973. Weston's contribution to the album was mainly as a lead guitarist alongside Bob Welch, but he stood out thanks to his slide guitar, especially on "Remember Me", and his accomplished harmonica and banjo playing. He also sang with Christine McVie on the song "Did You Ever Love Me", and wrote the instrumental that closed the album, "Caught in the Rain".

Later in 1973 Dave Walker was asked to leave the band,[2] and the remaining members of Fleetwood Mac recorded their next album, Mystery to Me. Weston contributed more solid guitar work, for example his slide intro on "Why", a song for which he felt he did not receive the credit he deserved.[3] He also co-wrote one track, "Forever", with Welch and John McVie.

During a tour of the US in late 1973, when the band were beginning to gel particularly well onstage, it emerged that Weston had been having an affair with Mick Fleetwood's wife, Jenny Boyd.[1][2] Fleetwood tried to carry on regardless, but eventually after a gig in Nebraska, he had had enough. Weston was fired and the rest of the tour was cancelled, the band members each travelling to a different part of the world to gather their thoughts.[3] It was this situation which gave rise to the "Bogus Fleetwood Mac" affair in which manager Clifford Davis recruited a new group of musicians, passed them off as Fleetwood Mac, and sent them out to complete the tour.[2] Although the fake band were quickly rumbled by fans, the subsequent legal battle lasted years, preventing Fleetwood Mac from recording.

Arguably Bob Weston had a very big effect on the Fleetwood Mac story, perhaps greater than his musical legacy, since it was this turmoil which strongly contributed to Welch's disenchantment with life in Fleetwood Mac, and his departure in late 1974 paved the way for the arrival of Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, who would help the band on to superstar status.[2]

Solo

Weston went on to record with Murray Head, then briefly join, along with bassist Nick South and drummer Ian Wallace, Steve Marriott's newly formed All-Stars Band. When Marriott opted to play lead guitar himself, Weston went on to do a few solo albums, all of which are now quite hard to find.[3] Perhaps proving that there were no hard feelings, Mick Fleetwood contributed drums to one track on Weston's second solo album, Studio Picks.

In January 2008, Weston announced he started working on new recordings, which would be released later in the year and would be recorded at Markant Studios in the Netherlands.[4]

While Frank Baijens, a Dutch singer-songwriter, was recording his own album Odd Man Out, he accidentally met Weston who was doing the same thing, recording his. Frank asked Weston if he would care to play on one of the tracks "Where the Heart Belongs", which he did with an extraordinary result.[5]

Death

Weston, who lived alone in a flat in Brent Cross, London, was found dead on 3 January 2012. He is survived by his younger brother Peter.[6] His post-mortem showed he died of a gastrointestinal hemorrhage.[1][7]

Discography

With Fleetwood Mac

  • Penguin (Reprise 1973)
  • Mystery to Me (Reprise 1973)

Solo albums

  • Night Light (AZ International 1980)
  • Studio Picks (AZ International 1981)
  • There's a Heaven (Private pressing 1999)

Other releases featuring Bob Weston

  • The Kinetic Live Your Life (1967)
  • Ashkan In From the Cold (1969)
  • Chimera Chimera (1970 Released 2008(?))
  • Graham Bond Bond in America (1971)
  • Ashman Reynolds Stop Off (1972)
  • Long John Baldry Everything Stops for Tea (1972)
  • Dana Gillespie Ain't Gonna Play No Second Fiddle (1974)
  • Murray Head Say It Ain't So (1975)
  • Sandy Denny Rendezvous (1977)
  • Adrian Wagner Instincts (1977)
  • Mark Ashton Solo (1979)
  • Danny Kirwan Hello There Big Boy! (1979)
  • Murray Head Between Us (1979)
  • Robbie Patton Distant Shores (1981)
  • Dick Morrissey Souliloquy (1986)
  • Bob Welch and Friends Live at the Roxy (2004)
  • Frank Baijens Odd Man Out (2008)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Telegraph obituary
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Brunning, Bob (1990). Fleetwood Mac: Behind the Masks, London: New English Library.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 The Penguin Q&A with Bob Weston, December 619, 1999
  4. Bob Weston official website
  5. http://www.frankbaijens.nl/
  6. Fleetwood Mac star dies
  7. {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}

External links

Fleetwood Mac
Members
John McVie - Mick Fleetwood - Stevie Nicks - Lindsey Buckingham
Former members: Christine McVie - Peter Green - Jeremy Spencer - Bob Brunning - Danny Kirwan
Bob Welch - Bob Weston - Dave Walker - Billy Burnette - Rick Vito - Dave Mason - Bekka Bramlett
Discography

Studio albums: Fleetwood Mac (1968) - Mr. Wonderful - English Rose - The Pious Bird Of Good Omen - Then Play On - Fleetwood Mac In Chicago/Blues Jam In Chicago vols 1 & 2 - Kiln House - The Original Fleetwood Mac - Future Games - Greatest Hits - Bare Trees - Penguin - Mystery to Me - Heroes Are Hard to Find - Fleetwood Mac (1975) - Rumours - Tusk - Live - Mirage - Tango in the Night - Greatest Hits - Behind the Mask - 25 Years - The Chain - Time - The Dance - The Very Best of Fleetwood Mac - Say You Will

Live albums: Live in Boston

Related articles
Fleetwood Mac single chart positions
This page was last modified 09.05.2014 17:48:39

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