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Musician

John Lawton

born on 11/7/1946 in Halifax, West Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom

John Lawton (musician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

John Lawton (musician)
Born July 11 1946
Halifax, West Yorkshire, England
United Kingdom

John Lawton (born 11 July 1946 in Halifax, West Yorkshire, England) is a rock and roll and blues vocalist best known for his work with Lucifer's Friend, Uriah Heep and the Les Humphries Singers.

Biography

Lawton began his musical career in North Shields, UK, in the early '60s with The Deans, a bunch of kids who decided at random that he should be singer. He then moved on to West One and later Stonewall which included John Miles, Vic Malcolm (later of Geordie) and Paul Thompson (later of Roxy Music).

After Stonewall finished their stint at Top Ten Club in Hamburg in 1969, Lawton decided to stay in Germany, after having been offered the job as singer with legendary German rock cult band Lucifer's Friend (1969-1976 and 1979-1995) with whom he recorded nine studio albums. He also joined the Les Humphries Singers, in the early '70s (which included the Eurovision Song Contest in '76).

In 1976 Lawton joined Uriah Heep as their frontman, recording the albums Firefly, Innocent Victim, Fallen Angel[1] and Live in Europe '79, touring Europe and the U.S. until September 1979.

During his longstanding career Lawton has worked with some big names of rock, on various projects, including Roger Glover's "Butterfly Ball" live at the Royal Albert Hall in 1975, featuring David Coverdale, Glenn Hughes, Ian Gillan and Twiggy. He sang on Eddie Hardin's "Wizard's Convention II" with Chris Farlowe, Denny Lane, Paul Jones and Tony Ashton.

Lawton worked with some of the finest record producers, including Tony Clarke (Moody Blues), Jimmy Miller (Rolling Stones), and Harold Faltermayer (Pet Shop Boys), who produced the titles Lawton sang on the Lenny McDowell Project "Lost Paradise".

Lawton sang with German rock band Rebel, later known as Zar, on three albums, during the late '80s -'90s including their hit singles "Line of Fire" and "Eagles Flight", and moved on to Volker Barber's classical project "Excalibur". He also sang on several German commercials, including the "Colgate Gel" TV spots, the "Peter Stuyvesant Travel" spots, the Stuyvesant single "Come Together" and a stint for Harley Davidson Motorbikes.

Lawton formed GunHill, later known as JLB (John Lawton Band), in January 1994, touring the UK and Europe. In 1995 he briefly rejoined Uriah Heep for 2 weeks, to tour South Africa and Austria with Deep Purple, filling in for their singer Bernie Shaw, who was suffering from voice problems at the time.

Inspired by German top producer Robert Papst and his partner Reinhold Hoffman, Lawton re-recorded one of the Les Humphries Singers' favourites, the 1970s hit "Mama Loo", in January 1998. In August 2000, his solo album Still Paying My Dues To The Blues, produced by Robert Papst, was released in Europe, UK and Scandinavia, by Hypertension Music Hamburg and distributed through EDEL Germany. (The album has been re-released in 2010)

During the 4th Uriah Heep Annual Convention in London, May 2000, plans were made for a one-off concert by the so-called Hensley/Lawton Band. Lawton was joined by former Heep keyboardist Ken Hensley, for the first time 21 years after Lawton's departure from Uriah Heep in 1979. With them were Paul Newton (their original bassist), and 2 members of Lawton's band Reuben Kane on lead guitar and Justin Shefford on drums. They played a collection of old Heep classics and some of Hensley & Lawton's solo songs, and the concert was recorded for a CD release called The Return.

In 2001 Lawton teamed up with Ken Hensley to form the Hensley Lawton Band. After extensive touring, during Spring and Summer of 2001, culminating with a concert in Hamburg, Germany, featuring a full orchestra and a new rendition of Heep's old classic "Salisbury", both Ken and John returned to their respective solo careers. On December 7, 2001, both John Lawton and Ken Hensley appeared on stage with Uriah Heep during the annual Magician's Birthday Party at the Shepherd's Bush Empire in London. This concert was recorded and released as a CD/DVD.

The John Lawton Band - "JLB" was taken on by Classick Rock Productions in 2001 to record the acoustic CD Steppin' It Up, which features John & Steve Dunning. One More Night Live at the Mean Fiddler, CD & DVD, was recorded in 2002, which was followed in 2003 by JLB's Sting In The Tale CD, an original studio rock album. Later that year followed another Live CD & DVD Shakin' The Tale. JLB had been touring extensively with their last gig in Hamburg, Sept. 2004, when Lawton decided to take an indefinite break.

In May 2006 Lawton joined forces with Dutch guitarist Jan Dumée (ex-Focus) to form the On The Rocks project. On The Rocks - "OTR" featured Brazilian musicians Ney Conceição on bass, Xande Figueiredo on drums, and Marvio Ciribelli on keyboards. Lawton and Dumée wrote and recorded the tracks for the debut album Mamonama, released in October 2008.

In September 2008 John Lawton appeared on stage at the Heepvention 2008 in Spain, with former Uriah Heep members Ken Hensley, Lee Kerslake and Paul Newton, together with Jan Dumee from the OTR project on guitar.

In December 2008 John entered the world of television by presenting the Bulgarian travel documentary series "John Lawton presents" which also includes music from the Mamonama album. Made by the Bulgarian TV company "Skat", the films feature interesting historical landmarks of Bulgarian towns and cities, traditional festivities and interviews with the city mayors and local people. Filming and editing of 11 documentaries John Lawton Presents are now completed, including the towns of Karnobat, Sozopol, Tsarevo, Primorsko, Bourgas, Smolyan, Pamporovo, Varna, Malko Tarnovo, Velingrad and Shumen.

In March 2010, John was scheduled to make his acting debut in the motion picture Love.net, filmed and produced by Bulgarian film company Miramar Film. Part of John's scenes were shot at Liscombe Park, UK, featuring a guest appearance by Uriah Heep guitarist Mick Box, with the remainder filmed in Sofia. The film is now expected to be premiered in Sofia on March 26, 2011.

Discography

With Asterix

(pre-Lucifer's Friend)

  • Asterix - 1970

With Lucifer's Friend

  • Lucifer's Friend - 1970
  • Where the Groupies Killed the Blues - 1972
  • I'm Just a Rock & Roll Singer - 1973
  • Banquet - 1974
  • Mind Exploding - 1975
  • Mean Machine - 1981
  • Sumo Grip - 1994

With the Les Humphries Singers

  • We Are Goin' Down Jordan - 1971
  • Singing Detonation - 1971
  • Old Man Moses - 1971
  • Mexico - 1972
  • Sound '73 - 1973
  • Mama Loo (= La Onu Cantante) - 1973
  • Live in Europe - 1973
  • Carnival - 1973
  • Sound '73/II - 1973
  • The World Of - 1973
  • Kansas City - 1974
  • Sound '74 - 1974
  • One of These Days - 1974
  • Rock 'n Roll Party - 1974
  • Amazing Grace & Gospeltrain - 1975
  • Party on the Rocks - 1975

With Uriah Heep

  • Firefly - 1977
  • Innocent Victim - 1977
  • Fallen Angel - 1978
  • Live in Europe 79 - (recorded 1979, released 1986)
  • The Magician's Birthday Party - (live - recorded 2001, released 2002)

Solo albums

  • Heartbeat (also released as "HardBeat") - 1980
  • Still Paying My Dues to the Blues - 2000

With Rebel

  • Stargazer - 1982

With Zar

  • Live Your Life Forever - 1990

With Gunhill

  • One Over the Eight - 1995
  • Night Heat - 1997
  • Live in Germany '99 - 1999

With the Hensley Lawton Band

  • The Return (Live at Heepvention 2000) - 2000

With the Lawton Dunning Project

  • Steppin' It Up - 2002
  • One More Night (Live) - 2002

With the John Lawton Band

  • Sting in the Tale - 2003
  • Shakin' the Tale (Live) - 2004

With OTR - On The Rocks

  • Mamonama - 2008

References

  1. Strong, Martin C. (2002). The Great Rock Discography, pp. 109-110. Edinburgh: Canongate Books Ltd.

External links

This page was last modified 15.09.2011 07:39:28

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