Mickey Gee

Michael Richard 'Mickey' Gee (3 July 1944 – 21 January 2009)[1] was a rock and roll guitarist who played alongside some of the most prominent Welsh musicians of the last forty years.

Mickey Gee
Born4 July 1944
Cardiff, Wales, UK
Died21 January 2009 (aged 64)
Cardiff, Wales, UK
GenresRock and roll, rockabilly
InstrumentsGuitar
Years active1960s–2008
Associated actsTom Jones, Dave Edmunds, Shakin' Stevens

He died on 21 January 2009 in Cardiff from emphysema.[2]

Career

Born at 13 Garth Street, Cardiff, Gee's early influences were Scotty Moore and Chet Atkins and, aged 18, he went to Nashville and Memphis, but failed to meet his heroes. He worked in New York, on a working visa, but quickly left when he received draft papers for the US Army.[3] Early in his career Gee was the musical director of The Senators, Tom Jones' backing band when he was still known as Tommy Scott. Gee left and joined Joe Cocker's Grease Band.[3]

Later in the 1960s, he played alongside Dave Edmunds and close friend, bassist John David Williams, in the band Human Beans. His relationship with Edmunds continued for many years playing on several of his records, most notably on his multi-million selling number one single "I Hear You Knocking" in 1970.

Mickey also teamed up with drummer Rob (Congo) Jones and bassist/vocalist Eddie Williams to form the band Arthur Mellow in the 1960s. This trio produced some outstanding music and were highly thought of by fellow musicians. Congo went on to work with Dave Edmunds in Love Sculpture, spent time with Sassafras and toured with Budgie.

During the 1980s, Gee became a member of Shakin' Stevens' backing band adding lead guitar to the number one singles This Ole House, Green Door and Oh Julie (a relationship that dated back to a brief stint in Shaky's earlier backing band The Sunsets in 1971).

Gee's distinctive playing style was much in demand during the 1980s. Gee's band Memphis Bend regularly supported Carl Perkins on Uk tours which led to Gee becoming part of Carl Perkins' star studded backing band in 1985,[1] which, along with Edmunds, also included George Harrison, Ringo Starr and Eric Clapton for his Blue Suede Shoes: A Rockabilly Session. During the same year, Gee was involved in Bill Wyman's Willie and the Poor Boys project which also featured Charlie Watts and Jimmy Page.

Gee provided the soundtrack of the 1997 film Twin Town,[3] and was still regularly performing until shortly before his death from emphysema at Cardiff's University Hospital of Wales in January 2009.

Selected discography

gollark: This is the optimal derivative, actually.
gollark: - there is no way to be generic over the heads of expressions- there is also no way to be generic over arity
gollark: I can implement *specific cases* of the chain rule, but not a general thing, for *two* separate reasons!
gollark: * it can do basically nothing because I literally cannot implement the chain rule, I'm pretty sure
gollark: osmarkscalculator™ has derivatives too!

References

  1. Ankeny, Jason. "Biography of Mickey Gee". Allmusic. Retrieved 20 December 2010.
  2. Dermody, Nick (22 January 2009). "Tributes to veteran guitarist Gee". BBC News.
  3. Leonard, Deke (2012). The Twang Dynasty. Bordon, Hants: Northdown Publishing. pp. 332–337. ISBN 9781900711180.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.