Tim Renwick
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tim Renwick (born August 7, 1949 in Cambridgeshire, England) is an English guitarist.
Renwick started playing guitar in the 1960s. He played in many bands, including Little Women, Wages of Sin, Junior's Eyes, The Hype, Quiver (later Sutherland Brothers & Quiver), Al Stewart and Lazy Racer. He also worked as a session musician for Elton John, Procol Harum, David Bowie, Mike Oldfield, Gary Brooker, Roger Waters, Eric Clapton and, most notably, Pink Floyd. Working with Elton John, he was also credited as the co-composer with him of the song "Dreamboat" (released on the "I'm Still Standing" single, but most likely recorded in the late 1970s).
In 1984, Renwick toured with Roger Waters during his The Pros and Cons of Hitchhiking tour. In 1987, David Gilmour invited Renwick to tour with Pink Floyd as a session musician, and recordings from the August 1988 shows were released in the double live album Delicate Sound of Thunder. This makes him, along with Michael Kamen and Jon Carin, one of the few musicians who performed with both Waters and the band after their split. After the tour, Renwick joined the Tex Maniacs (1988) and Mike and the Mechanics (1989). Renwick would play again with Pink Floyd on their 1989 European tour, on the 1994 studio album The Division Bell, and on the Division Bell tour, which again resulted in a double live album, P*U*L*S*E. He also made a live appearance with the Alan Parsons band in the 1998 Michael Jackson Gala (replacing the original guitarist Ian Bairnson). In 2005 he appeared once more with Pink Floyd, as the backing guitarist for their Live 8 reunion.
Renwick has recorded one eponymously-titled solo album, released in 1980.