Billy Conway (drummer)

Billy Conway is an American drummer best known for his work with Treat Her Right and Morphine. Since 2013, he has toured as a duo with Jeffrey Foucault. In recent years, he has also backed Chris Smither. A stripped-down approach has characterized his bands, equipment, and playing.

Billy Conway
BornOwatonna, Minnesota
InstrumentsDrums
Associated actsTreat Her Right and Morphine

Background

Conway is a native of Owatonna, Minnesota, south of Minneapolis. In the 1970s, he went to Yale University, where he became friends and bandmates with harmonica player Jim Fitting, who would also become part of Treat Her Right. Conway earned a degree in psychology.[1] A member of the Class of 1979, he was also captain of Yale's ice hockey team as a senior in the 1978-79 season. He was invited to try out for the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team, which performed the "Miracle on Ice", but could not after tearing a knee ligament.[2]

Treat Her Right

After graduation, Conway and Fitting both moved to Boston, Massachusetts, where Conway taught at a school for emotionally disturbed adolescents. In 1985, they were introduced to the other two principals in Treat Her Right, Mark Sandman and David Champagne.[1]

One of the notable features of Treat Her Right was the cocktail drum that Conway used. This band was noted for its spare, spacious sound, and the cocktail drum was an integral part of that.

Morphine

When Mark Sandman formed Morphine, the original drummer was Jerome Deupree, but Conway served in the band for much of its existence. He played a fuller drum kit, yet still often stripped down.[3] His cocktail drum appeared on some album cuts. The Rough Guide to Rock described him as playing jazz-influenced, very tight drums, but that he crucially left plenty of spaces for Sandman and the other member of the band, saxophonist Dana Colley, to make their noises.[4]

Subsequent bands

After Sandman suffered his fatal heart attack in 1999, Colley and Conway proceeded to form Orchestra Morphine, a group of Sandman's friends and colleagues who toured to celebrate the music of the band and to raise funds for the Mark Sandman Music Education Fund.

Colley and Conway also formed Twinemen with singer Laurie Sargent. Conway and Sargent are long-term partners.

Conway worked with Jeffrey Foucault and poet Lisa Olstein on the eponymous first album by Cold Satellite (2011) and the follow-up Cavalcade (2013). Previously, he had performed on albums by Kris Delmhorst, who became Foucault's wife.

Another part of this circle of artists is Caitlin Canty, whose 2015 album Reckless Skyline was produced by Foucault and employed Conway as drummer.

Foucault has cited a shared desire to give weight to space and silence, which is a constant in Conway's career.[5] For their live gigs as a duo, they play only what they can carry into a club alone in one trip. Conway's minimal "suitcase drum" setup harks back to his use of the cocktail drum.[6]

Conway occasionally joins Vapors of Morphine, which honors the legacy of Morphine, for some big shows.[7]

He also continues to perform as a guest on albums and live dates by other artists. In particular, Chris Smither cited Conway's feel and intuition.[8]

Conway was drummer on Early Riser, the ninth album by John Statz, recorded in 2019 and released in 2020.[9]

In 2019, Conway, Fitting, and Champagne got together and recorded an album. A live date was announced for January 19, 2020 at Club Passim in Cambridge -- which was to be their first appearance together on stage since all were members of Treat Her Right. Unfortunately, it was announced that week that Conway would not be able to perform at the event because of health issues and that Jerome Deupree and Larry Dersch would fill in.[10] At the event Fitting told the audience Conway had restarted cancer treatment. He was originally diagnosed in 2014.

Solo album

Yet despite his health challenges, and in part because of them, Conway released his first solo album, Outside Inside, in 2020. It was accompanied by a new album from Sargent.[11]

As producer

Conway has served as a producer and engineer. This arose in his prior capacity as a founder of Hi-n-Dry, but he also oversaw two of Kris Delmhorst's albums, Five Stories and Songs for a Hurricane.

gollark: Maybe not. How apioform.
gollark: Most microcontrollers will have some sort of debugger capability which lets you use some extra hardware to program them even if you beeize the bootloader or something.
gollark: In the worst case you can probably just something something JTAG if you have a thing for that.
gollark: I have no idea.
gollark: According to science.

References

  1. Graff, Gary (May 9, 1988). "Treat Her Right shows you can be a Yale grad and still sing the blues". Detroit Free Press.
  2. Fleschner, Daniel K. (2003). Bulldogs on Ice: Yale University Men's Ice Hockey. Arcadia Publishing. p. 81. ISBN 9780738513287.
  3. Marshall, Barry and Suzanne Cope (2004). Music (chapter in the book New England). Greenwood Publishing. p. 352. ISBN 9780313327537.
  4. Buckley, Peter and Jonathan (editors) (2003). The Rough Guide to Rock. Rough Guides. pp. 693. ISBN 9781858284576.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  5. Cholset, Rachel (June 2018). "Album Premiere: Jeffrey Foucault's 'Blood Brothers' Is the Album We Need". Wide Open Country.
  6. Jeffrey Foucault's website
  7. Vapors of Morphine bio
  8. Bye, Brandon (September 26, 2014). "Guitars, Influence, Going Solo, and Playing in the Band". Current.
  9. Solomon, Jon (April 10, 2020). "Hear It: John Statz on Recording With Morphine Drummer Billy Conway". Westword.
  10. Club Passim website
  11. Sullivan, James (September 26, 2014). "Making music or weathering misfortune, Billy Conway and Laurie Sargent are in this together". Boston Globe.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.