Tony Carey

Tony Carey
Born (1953-10-16) October 16, 1953
Watsonville, CA, USA
Origin Turlock, California, United States
Genres Instrumental, rock, space rock, progressive rock, hard rock, heavy metal
Instruments Keyboards, piano, guitar, bass, vocals
Years active 1972–present
Labels ABC, Rocshire, MCA, X-Records, Geffen, Metronome, Teldec, East West, BMG Ariola, Happy Street, Babyboomer, Progrock Records, Renaissance, T-Toone
Associated acts Blessings, Rainbow, Planet P Project, Evil Masquerade, Zed Yago, Over the Rainbow, E.B.C. ROXX, Peter Maffay
Website Official site
Tony Carey live 2016 at Logo Hamburg

Anthony Lawrence Carey (born October 16, 1953, Watsonville, California) is an American-born, European-based musician, composer, producer, and singer/songwriter. One of his earliest musical experiences was in a band called Blessings, in which he played until 1975 when Ritchie Blackmore hired him as keyboardist for Rainbow. He played with Rainbow on two world tours, until 1977. After his departure from Rainbow, he began a solo career, releasing albums under his own name as well under the pseudonym Planet P Project, and producing for and performing with other artists.[1]

Early history

Carey had been playing his church's piano during off hours since he was very young, and he was permitted to play the pipe organ as well. He was fascinated by the sound. His family acquired a piano when he was seven, and he "lived at that piano" until, at age eleven, he got his first acoustic guitar and formed his first group, which played music by The Mamas and the Papas and others. His father gave him a Lowrey organ for his 14th birthday, and he started a rock band with other neighborhood kids, playing music by The Doors. He also played contrabass in his school's orchestra.

At age 17, Carey moved to New Hampshire to start a new band called Blessings with a singer he knew, and soon the band had a major recording contract with ABC Dunhill.[2] Unfortunately, after two years of working on the project, the band was unable to complete its first album. In a 2013 interview, Carey listed his own involvement with girls, the producer's drug use, and "too much bullshit" from Dunhill as the reasons the album was never completed.[3]

Career

Rainbow

While Carey and his band Blessings were in S. I. R. Rehearsal Studios in Hollywood working on material for their unfinished album, guitarist Ritchie Blackmore of Deep Purple was in another room, with bassist Jimmy Bain, auditioning musicians for his new band Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow. Carey said Blackmore liked what he was hearing in the other room and asked Bain to invite Carey to audition. Out of frustration with his own band's inability to complete their first album, Carey accepted the position with Rainbow when it was offered.[3] He recorded one studio album with Rainbow, the highly acclaimed Rising (1976, #48 on The Billboard 200). Carey's more notable work on the album included the keyboard introduction to "Tarot Woman", the first track on the Rainbow Rising album and the keyboard solo on "A Light in the Black", the last cut on the album. During Carey's two world tours with Rainbow, live material was recorded and subsequently released as two double LPs, On Stage (1977, #65 on The Billboard 200) and Live in Germany (1994). In addition to the two double LPs, a six-disc CD box set containing music from those tours, Deutschland Tournee 1976, was released in 2006.

1977–1983: Early solo years

Carey left Rainbow in 1977 and moved to Germany in 1978, where he began work on his solo career. This was a period in his life when, according to Carey himself, he had health problems due to drug use and spent many 20-hour days in a recording studio (which he co-owned) with his friend and recording engineer Nigel Jopson.[4] He recorded a great deal of instrumental music in many different styles, learning how to engineer and perform well in the recording studio. The studio's other co-owner, producer Peter Hauke, allowed Carey free use of the studio all night for several years, which gave him ample time and opportunity.[3] His first solo album to be released was In the Absence of the Cat, in 1982, on the indie label X-Records.[5]

Carey released his second solo album, I Won't Be Home Tonight, on the short-lived but nationally recognized Rocshire label in 1982, along with the single (and music video) "West Coast Summer Nights". The album peaked at #167 on the Billboard 200, and the single peaked at #64 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. The title track was also released as a single, peaking at #79 on the Hot 100 and #8 on Billboard's Top Rock Tracks chart. Rocshire fell under hard times following the death of its promoter, Stacy Davis (who had appeared in the "West Coast Summer Nights" video), and was closed down a year later by federal agents following an investigation resulting in the imprisonment for embezzlement of the label's co-owners and seizure of the label's assets.[6] The album rights and masters for I Won't Be Home Tonight were seized by federal authorities, and they remain the property of the US Internal Revenue Service.[7] Carey needed a new label.

1983–1985: Planet P Project, Geffen, and MCA

Following the release of I Won't Be Home Tonight, Carey was signed to Geffen Records for his third solo album (later to be released as Some Tough City), but he had a great deal of music written that didn't fit the style of that album. He was able to sign a second record deal with Geffen to record and release that material under the Planet P Project pseudonym, which he would use throughout his career for his more progressive and experimental music. He released his first album under the name Planet P Project in 1983, called Planet P Project (originally titled Planet P), which peaked at #42 on the Billboard 200.[8] On the week ending March 19, 1983, both Planet P Project and Carey's earlier album I Won't Be Home Tonight were climbing Billboard's Rock Albums chart simultaneously, with Planet P Project then at #30 and I Won't Be Home Tonight reaching its peak at #8. (The following week Planet P Project had made it up to #15, though I Won't Be Home Tonight had slipped to the #10 position). Planet P Project received modest reviews (e.g., ref[9] and[10]), despite being listed for two weeks by Billboard as a Top Add. The album, however, contained the more highly acclaimed song "Why Me", which was released as Planet P Project's first popular single, reaching #64 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart and #4 in the magazine's Top Rock Tracks chart. According to Carey, the video for "Why Me" made a "slight impact on early MTV."[4] A follow-up single was released from Planet P Project, "Static", which reached #24 on Billboard's Top Rock Tracks.

In 1983 and 1984, Carey recorded his third solo album, the more successful Some Tough City, and his second Planet P Project album, Pink World. A dispute with the label arose when Geffen's representative was not satisfied with the lyrics to "A Fine, Fine Day" and "The First Day of Summer". Then the finished Pink World album was not at all well received by the label. Carey said, "Long story short, I got traded like a baseball player to MCA Records, which went ahead and released both of these records."[4]

In early 1984, MCA released Some Tough City, with the single "A Fine, Fine Day" reaching #22 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart[11] and also #1 on the Top Rock Tracks chart. A follow-up single, "The First Day of Summer", reached #33 on the Hot 100 in July 1984 and appeared in the 1985 film Secret Admirer. The album itself, Some Tough City, peaked at #60 on the Billboard 200 album chart. Carey opened for Night Ranger on many dates of their 1984 tour in support of this album.

In late 1984. MCA released Planet P Project's double LP rock opera, Pink World (#121 on The Billboard 200), for which Carey wrote the lyrics and music, sang all vocals, and played most of the instruments. Session performers on lead guitar, saxophone, synthesizer (and synth programming), and drums on some tracks made up the rest of the project. The single "What I See" reached #25 on Billboard's Top Rock Tracks. Both the double LP and the single were released on pink vinyl.[12][13] A single music video for two songs on Pink World, "What I See" and "Behind the Barrier", remained in power rotation or active rotation for ten weeks on the MTV network.[14]

Carey's 1985 follow-up solo album, Blue Highway, did not score a hit on radio. Carey has stated the album suffered problems unrelated to him but "VERY related to 'the producer.'" (Emphasis and quotation marks in original.)[15]

1985–1989: Music producer, composer, film soundtracks

Carey began producing and guesting on many major groups from the US and Europe in the mid 1980s. Notables of the many included Jennifer Rush in 1985, John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers – Chicago Line in 1988, keyboards and producer. In 1992 with Joe Cocker – Now That You're Gone, Forest McDonald's Color Blind, Chris Norman, Peter Maffay, Milva, and in 2006 from Dire Straits, David Knopfler – Songs For The Siren. In a November 12, 2011 interview on Lkcb 128.4 Internet Radio Carey said 'Ive written over a thousand songs, for myself. other artists, and film and TV productions.'. (Leonard k Collins Verify)

After his 1987 release Bedtime Story (soundtrack for the German film The Joker with Peter Maffay) he recorded a second soundtrack album, called Wilder Western Inclusive, which featured the hit single "Room With A View" (#3 on the German Charts, 1989), which stayed 18 weeks on the charts and received gold. A third soundtrack followed in 1999, 'Gefangen in Jemen', accompanying Maffay's second film.

1989–2009: Later releases and the return of Planet P Project

Carey continued recording and releasing numerous solo albums during this time and producing music for other artists. In 1989, Carey released his album For You, which featured the singles "I Feel Good" (#35 on the German Charts) and "No Man's Land" (feat. Eric Burdon and Anne Haigis). Then he released his albums Storyville (1990), The Long Road (1992) and Cold War Kids (1994). Other releases in the early 2000s included 'Island and Deserts' and several live recordings. Planet P Project returned in 2003–2009 with a trilogy of albums collectively called Go Out Dancing (G.O.D.). The albums were 1931 (2003), Levittown (2008), and Out In The Rain (2009). 'Christmas Hymns' and two cd's of cover songs, 'Stanislaus County Kid I & II' followed in 2009/10. In 2014, a box set of the three Planet P Project Go Out Dancing CDs was released, the G.O.D.B.O.X., which included an earlier bootleg of promotional recordings for the project.

2009–2010: Over the Rainbow, cancer

In 2009, Tony Carey and three other ex-members of Rainbow, Joe Lynn Turner, Bobby Rondinelli and Greg Smith teamed up with Jürgen Blackmore, Ritchie Blackmore's son, to form "Over the Rainbow" to perform Rainbow songs in concerts in Russia and Eastern Europe. Due to illness, however, Tony Carey left Over the Rainbow in the spring of 2009, just prior to the band's live debut at the Sweden Rock Festival, where he was replaced by Paul Morris.

In March 2009 Carey was diagnosed with a virulent form of bladder cancer. At one point he was told his odds of survival were ten percent. After twelve weeks in the hospital and five surgeries, he made a full recovery. "I tried to get my 'bucket list' finished as quickly as I could; it wasn't a certainty that I'd be around much longer," notes Carey. "I'm missing some of my organs; you'll be relieved to hear that the Hammond isn't one of them."[16] Carey's former Rainbow bandmate Ronnie James Dio died of stomach cancer shortly after Carey's recovery. Carey said in a May 28, 2010 interview with Jason Saulnier, "I'm very sad about his passing, especially because we got essentially the same disease, and I beat it, and he didn't."[17]

2010: EBC ROXX

In 2010 it was announced that Tony Carey had formed a new musical racing project called EBC ROXX with (J.R.) Jürgen Blackmore & Ela. Their first single "Silver Arrows" was released in March 2010 and was written as the anthem to accompany the first race of Mercedes Formula 1 pilots Michael Schumacher and Nico Rosberg that season. The project released a full CD entitled Winners later that year.

2013: Second return of Planet P Project

After officially dismantling "Planet P Project" in 2009 with the third and final part to the "G. O. D."-trilogy - "Out In The Rain", Carey again revived the project with the release of "Steeltown" in 2013, this time merging his solo career name with the project's name ( "Tony Carey's Planet P Project"). Contributors on this disc include guitarist extraordinaire Ronnie Le Tekro (TNT), Jimmy Durand - guitars and drums, Jostein 'sarge' Svarstad - guitars and Russian guitarist Valery Lunichkin soloed on "On The Side Of The Angels", Karsten Kreppert drums on "The Lady Fair". "Steeltown" is based on Norway & its history, after Carey played and travelled there extensively, both as a solo artist, and with a band consisting of mostly Norwegian musicians. Influenced by the occupation years of World War II and the way Norway as a nation handled this, the work is also a statement about the eternal religious conflicts world wide. There are plans to tour with "Tony Carey's Planet P Project" in the near future.[18]

Carey is currently writing 'Lucky Us', a return to simpler people-based themes. "I wrote 6 political history lessons; I think I've said all I have to say about that for awhile... ". 'Lucky Us' is expected to be released when its finished..

Carey lives and works in Mainz, Germany. August 11, 2013 marked his 35th anniversary as a European resident.

Discography

Solo

Single Releases only

Instrumental

Compilations

Planet P Project

DVD

Extended discography

Selected other recordings

References

  1. Saulnier, Jason (1 June 2010). "Tony Carey Interview". Music Legends. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  2. Carey, Tony. "Tony Carey Biography". truebeliever.de. Retrieved July 24, 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 Rohman, Ashiqur. "Interview with former Rainbow keyboardist Tony Carey". http://indianmusicmug.com. Retrieved July 24, 2014. External link in |website= (help)
  4. 1 2 3 Carey, Tony. "CD Liner Notes, Pink World [Definitive Edition]". Retrieved July 17, 2014.
  5. Carey, Tony. "In the Absence of the Cat". truebeliever.de. Retrieved July 24, 2014.
  6. Miller, Chuck (27 October 2009). "The Rise and Fall of Rocshire Records and the loss of Stacy Davis". Times Union. Hearst Newspapers. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  7. Carey, Tony. "Planet P Project – 25 years on". truebeliever.de. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  8. "Planet P Project Planet P Project". AllMusic. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  9. "First Time Around". Billboard. 95 (13): 61. March 26, 1883.
  10. Demalon, Tom. "Planet P Project Planet P Project". AllMusic. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  11. Billboard.com http://www.billboard.com/artist/430197/tony+carey/chart Retrieved 29 Jul 2010
  12. Fiorani, Sam. "Records You Never Heard: Planet P". The High Fidelity Report. The High Fidelity Report, Dec 1, 2013. Retrieved July 20, 2014.
  13. "Planet P Project What I See". discogs.com. discogs.com. Retrieved July 22, 2014.
  14. "Billboard Magazine Archive". Billboard. 96(48) - 97(9). Retrieved July 19, 2014.
  15. Planet P Project (2008). Pink World [Definitive Edition]. Renaissance Records (catalog RMED-396). p. CD liner notes.
  16. "Tony Carey - Planet P Project's Information". imradio.com. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  17. "Tony Carey Interview | Rainbow Keyboardist talks Ronnie James Dio". musiclegends.ca. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  18. Rohman, Ashiqur (17 Aug 2013). "Interview with former Rainbow keyboardist Tony Carey". IndianMusicMug. Retrieved 17 Aug 2013.
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