Mike Kellie

Mike Kellie

Kellie dressed in a suit, looking to the camera

Kellie in 2015
Background information
Birth name Michael Alexander Kellie
Born (1947-03-24) 24 March 1947
Birmingham, England, United Kingdom
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • record producer
Instruments
  • Drums
  • percussion
  • organ
  • bass guitar
  • acoustic guitar
  • vocals
Years active 1960s–present
Associated acts
Website www.mikekellie.com

Michael Alexander "Mike" Kellie (born 24 March 1947) is an English multi-instrumentalist, and record producer. In a career spanning more than 40 years, Kellie has been a member of the rock bands the V.I.P.s, Spooky Tooth and the Only Ones. He also played with Traffic, on one song Rainmaker on the Low spark of high heeled boys album in 1971.

Early career

Mike Kellie was born in Birmingham, England, into a non-musical family. As a child, he showed an early interest in rhythm, practicing on a coal shuttle with hearth brushes to simulate a snare drum. In his teen years, he joined St. Michaels Youth Club band as a drummer. He later played at "The Track" at Tudor Grange Sports Centre in Solihull. On the basis of this work, he was invited by Brian "Monk" Ffinch to play with Wayne and the Beachcombers in Birmingham, which started his career as a professional musician.[1]

In 1966, Kellie played in Birmingham in a band called The Locomotive with Chris Wood of Traffic, and later with the The V.I.P.'s (later Art) in Carlisle. Manager Chris Blackwell found a singer and organist from The New York Times band named Gary Wright, added him to the line-up of Art and launched the band Spooky Tooth with Kellie, Greg Ridley, Jimmy Henshaw, Keith Emerson, Luther Grosvenor and Mike Harrison.[2]

After the initial decline of Spooky Tooth, Kellie joined Johnny Hallyday's band for a summer tour of France in 1974, before forming The Only Ones in 1976 with Peter Perrett, Alan Mair and John Perry.[3] The Only Ones – possibly best known for the single "Another Girl, Another Planet" – recorded three albums for CBS, although over time, their catalogue has contained many compilations and other releases, which now outnumber their studio albums.

In February 1978, Johnny Thunders moved to London with his family, and began playing with a loose revue dubbed The Living Dead.[4] Kellie became part of this floating line-up (that also included Perrett along with various Sex Pistols including Steve Jones and Paul Cook) and recorded Thunders’ So Alone album together with his signature song "You Can't Put Your Arms Around a Memory".

Following the Only Ones' farewell in 1981 at London's Lyceum, Kellie moved to the countryside north of Toronto, Canada, where he spent four years away from performing.[1] He used this time to learn the piano and write songs.

Break from music and later career

Returning to Britain in 1985, Kellie spent several years hill farming in North Wales and Scotland where he became a shepherd. In 2004, Kellie reunited with Mike Harrison and Gary Wright to play dates in Germany as a new incarnation of Spooky Tooth. The band later released the DVD Nomad Poets with live performances from Worpswede and Hamburg, Germany.[5] In 2007, the Only Ones re-formed, touring the UK, Europe and Japan[6] as well as performing on BBC TV's Later... with Jools Holland.

In 2010, with the Only Ones undergoing another sabbatical, Kellie began recording his own collection of music which become his first solo album. Entitled Music from The Hidden, the album was produced by Kellie who also played drums, organ, bass and acoustic guitars, percussion and sang lead vocals. There are also contributions from Gordon Jackson (acoustic guitar), Finley Barker and Tony Kelsey (guitars), Steve Winwood (organ, mandolin and bass), Bill Hunt, Levi French and Tony Arris (pianos), Rob Harrison (bass) Steve Gibbons (backing vocals) and Greg Platt Lake (guitar and vocals).[1]

Credits

In addition to his touring credits, Kellie is a well-known session drummer who features on recordings by the Who (Ken Russell's film soundtrack of Tommy) and artists and groups such as Joe Cocker; Traffic; George Harrison; Jerry Lee Lewis; Peter Frampton; Maurice Gibb; Luther Grosvenor; Paul Kossoff; Neil Innes; Andy Roberts; Sean Tyla; Nick Kent & The Subterraneans; Jim Capaldi; Heavy Jelly; Pat Travers and Andy Fraser.[7]

Kellie was prominent among the musicians featured on the six-CD Jess Roden Anthology,[8] presented by Hidden Masters. He contributed to the 2011 sessions for The Distractions re-union album, The End of the Pier,[9] which was released on Occultation Records in 2012.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Exclusive interview with Mike Kellie, The Village Times, 10 June 2013, retrieved 25 August 2015
  2. V.I.P.'s, The, Discogs, retrieved 25 August 2015
  3. Perry, Kevin (1 May 2007), The Only Ones, retrieved 25 August 2015
  4. Living Dead, retrieved 25 August 2015
  5. Nomad Poets, retrieved 25 August 2015
  6. "Peter Perrett's Only Ones Set For Reunion Tour", Uncut, 4 November 2011, retrieved 25 August 2015
  7. Mike Kellie, Allmusic, retrieved 25 August 2015
  8. "Uncut magazine reviews Jess Roden's Anthology", Uncut, retrieved 25 August 2015
  9. "Distractions: End of the Pier", Record Collector, retrieved 25 August 2015
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