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Ollie Halsall

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Birth name
  
Peter John Halsall

Labels
  
Also known as
  
Ollie

Name
  
Ollie Halsall


Instruments
  
Guitar, Vibraphone

Role
  
Musician

Years active
  
1966–1992

Genres
  
Pop music, Rock music

Ollie Halsall Forgotten Hero Ollie Halsall Premier Guitar

Born
  
14 March 1949Southport, England (
1949-03-14
)

Associated acts
  
Died
  
May 29, 1992, Madrid, Spain

Albums
  
Abbot's Langley, Patto, Caves, Roll 'em Smoke 'em Put Another Line Out, Bloodletting

Music groups
  
Patto (1970 – 1973), Tempest, Boxer

Similar People
  
Mike Patto, John Halsey, Jon Hiseman, Mark Clarke, Tony Newman

guitar 'duel' between Ollie Halsall and Andy Summers


Ollie Halsall best guitar solos


Peter John 'Ollie' Halsall (14 March 1949 – 29 May 1992) was an English guitarist and vibraphone player, and is best known for his role in The Rutles, the bands Timebox, Patto and Boxer, and for his contribution to the music of Kevin Ayers. He is also notable as one of the few players of the vibraphone in rock music. He was known as Ollie because of his distinctive way of pronouncing his surname with a dropped 'h'. The Ollie Halsall Archive was established in 1985, with the aim of documenting and promoting the work of a unique musician.

Contents

Ollie Halsall Forgotten Hero Ollie Halsall Premier Guitar

Career

Ollie Halsall Peter quotOlliequot Halsall Patto Western Springs

Ollie may not have been the best guitarist in the world, but he was certainly among the top two. John Halsey, 1997

Ollie Halsall httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Halsall (ex Pete and the Pawnees, The Gunslingers, The Music Students, all 1964, The Rhythm and Blues Incorporated, 1965), came to London in October 1966 to play vibraphone with the pop rock outfit Timebox (which included bassist Clive Griffiths and keyboardist 'Professor' Chris Holmes. Halsall took up guitar, they enlisted Mike Patto on vocals and drummer 'Admiral' John Halsey.

Ollie Halsall Welcome to The Ollie Halsall Archive

In 1970, following the departure of Holmes, Timebox evolved into the band Patto. They played a blend of progressive Jazz rock featuring Halsall's guitar work.

Ollie Halsall Welcome to The Ollie Halsall Archive

In 1973, Halsall left to join Jon Hiseman's Tempest. After less than a year, he quit and did numerous sessions, including a track for Kevin Ayers which led to a permanent position in Ayers' band The Soporifics. He was briefly considered as a possible replacement for Mick Taylor following his departure from the Rolling Stones.

Ollie Halsall Kevin Ayers Ollie Halsall InterviewI Dont Depend On You

His UK session work included concerts and recordings with The Scaffold, Grimms, Neil Innes, Andy Roberts, Michael d'Albuquerque, John Otway, John Cale and Vivian Stanshall.

Ollie Halsall Ollie Halsall Bio Facts Family Famous Birthdays

In 1975, Patto staged a brief reunion comprising just three benefit gigs. The reuniting of Halsall and Patto sparked the formation of Boxer during 1975. Boxer never reached its true potential, as Mike Patto died in 1979 during the mid term of their contractual obligations to the Virgin record label and are best remembered for their debut album Below The Belt and its controversial sleeve design.

Ollie Halsall The Strange Case of Ollie Halsall Rocks Forgotten Legend

Somewhat ironically – since he was never fully credited – Halsall's most commercially successful recording is his work on the album The Rutles (1978), which reached the top 20 in the UK, on which he plays many of the instruments and provides lead and backing vocals – most notably on the tracks "Doubleback Alley", "With a Girl Like You" and "Get Up and Go". Eric Idle was cast in his place in the accompanying film and Halsall only featured in a very minor cameo role as Leppo, the fifth Rutle who became lost in Hamburg.

During 1976 Halsall had rejoined Ayers with whom he stayed for the next sixteen years. For much of that time he frequented the town of Deia in the north of the Spanish island of Mallorca, commuting to Madrid on the mainland to produce and play for numerous Spanish artistes, including his final work with Radio Futura. In the 1980s he was, together with vocalist Zanna Gregmar, part of a Spanish synthpop band created by producer Julian Ruiz called Cinemaspop. They released two albums – 'Cinemaspop' (1983), just a collection of synthpop covers of classical movie tunes, and 'A Clockwork Orange' (1984) which included some compositions by Halsall, as well as a bizarre electronic version of The Troggs' Wild Thing. In 1989, he replaced the ill Enrique Sierra in Radio Futura, another Spanish rock band.

A finished solo album, produced by Robert Fripp, remains unreleased.

Halsall died from a drug-induced heart attack on 29 May 1992 at 43 Calle de la Amargura, Madrid, Spain.

Legacy

Halsall has been described as an influence by Alvin Lee, Bill Nelson, Allan Holdsworth and Cheap Trick's guitarist Rick Nielsen. XTC's Andy Partridge cites Halsall as one of his top three influences, saying "He made the guitar sound more like Albert Ayler or John Coltrane, more like a sort of fluid piano player."

Discography

Solo
  • 1972 "Ollie & The Blue Traffs" (unreleased – produced by Robert Fripp)
  • 1979 "Caves"
  • 1980 "Abbot's Langley"
  • with Mike Patto
  • 1967–69 The Deram Anthology (as Timebox – released 2000)
  • 1970 Patto (as Patto)
  • 1971 Hold Your Fire (as Patto)
  • 1972 Roll Em, Smoke Em, Put Another Line Out (as Patto)
  • 1973 Monkey's Bum (as Patto) (released 2017)
  • 1975 Below the Belt (as Boxer)
  • 1979 Bloodletting (as Boxer)
  • 2000 Warts and All (as Patto – recorded live 1971)
  • with Kevin Ayers
  • 1974 The Confessions of Dr. Dream and Other Stories
  • 1974 June 1, 1974 (with Nico, John Cale and Brian Eno)
  • 1975 Sweet Deceiver
  • 1976 Yes We Have No Mañanas (So Get Your Mañanas Today)
  • 1978 Rainbow Takeaway
  • 1980 That's What You Get Babe
  • 1983 Diamond Jack and the Queen of Pain
  • 1984 Deià...Vu
  • 1986 As Close As You Think
  • 1988 Falling Up
  • 1992 Still Life with Guitar
  • with Cinemaspop
  • 1983 Cinemaspop
  • 1984 A Clockwork Orange (La Naranja Mecánica)
  • Other Albums
  • 1973 Living in Fear (as Tempest)
  • 1978 The Rutles (with The Rutles)
  • 1996 The Rutles Archaeology (with The Rutles)
  • 2007 Under the Blossom (Tempest Anthology)
  • References

    Ollie Halsall Wikipedia