Mike Pinder

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Michael Thomas 'Mike' Pinder (born 27 December 1941 to Bert and Gladys Pinder in Erdington, Birmingham, England) established himself as an important rock musician in his work with the Moody Blues during the height of their success. However, his greatest contributions to music may have been technological.

[edit] Background

As a young adult Pinder played in El Riot and the Rebels, a rock band that achieved some regional success. Bandmates in El Riot included future Moody Blues members Ray Thomas and John Lodge. Later, Pinder and Thomas played together in a band called the Krew Cats or Crew Cats; the band wound up in Germany playing at some of the cellars where The Beatles had polished their musicianship; however the Krew Cats' fortunes were not so bright--Pinder and Thomas, completely broke, wound up walking across northern Europe to get back home to England.

Around this time, Pinder wound up employed by Streetly Electronics, a firm that manufactured the mellotron. The mellotron was a keyboard instrument that produced sound when each key pressed a magnetic tape head onto a short strip of magnetic tape. The tapes could be recorded with any desired sound, so a mellotron could be configured to sound like a symphony orchestra, a full choir, or any other instrument or ensemble. In essence, the mellotron was the first "sampling" synthesizer. The instrument was limited in many ways: the length of the tape meant that no note could be sustained for more than eight seconds, after which the tape had to rewind; the sound was inevitably tinny and had a characteristic attack (which, while not a natural sound, could be used to give the instrument a unique character); the complex mechanism made the instrument prone to mechanical failure.

[edit] The Moody Blues

Pinder, Thomas, and members of other successful Birmingham bands formed The Moody Blues. After their chart hit "Go Now" in 1965, Pinder obtained a mellotron from Streetly and used it on numerous Moody Blues recordings, beginning with the single Love and Beauty.

Pinder was one of the first notable musicians to use the mellotron in live performance, relying on the mechanical skills garnered from his time with Streetly to keep the balky instrument in working order. Typical of his travails was the Moodies' first American performance; when the band struck its first harmony, the back of the mellotron fell open and all of the tape strips cascaded out. Pinder grabbed his tool box and got the instrument back into working order in 20 minutes, while the light crew entertained the audience by projecting Bugs Bunny cartoons.

The Moody Blues split up in 1974 and Pinder relocated to California, releasing a solo album The Promise in 1976 through the Moodies' Threshold label. In 1977 the band decided to re-form, and Pinder collaborated on the 1978 release Octave. In 1979 he made his final departure from the band that bought him fame.

[edit] Later life

Pinder took employment as a consultant to the Atari computer corporation (primarily working on music synthesis), remarried, and started a family in Grass Valley, California. He remained out of the public eye until the mid-1990s, when he began to grant interviews and to work on new recording projects. 1994 saw the release of his second solo album, Among the Stars, on his own One Step label, to limited success. Another One Step release, A Planet With One Mind (1995), capitalized on Pinder's experience as chief reciter of Graeme Edge's poetry on the seminal Moody Blues albums; in this recording, Pinder reads seven children's stories from different world cultures, accompanied by appropriate world music. As his first spoken word album, it was well received among its contemporaries in the genre--it was a finalist for the Benjamin Franklin Award for Excellence in Audio as an outstanding children's recording.

While he has not returned to the level of activity or ambition that marked his youth, Pinder since has continued to work in the studio on his own and others' projects, and to make himself available to his fans through interviews and web sites such as www.mikepinder.com

All three of Mike Pinder’s sons are musicians. Two of Mike's sons, Matt and Michael Lee, have thrown their hats into the rock arena as The Pinder Brothers. Their new CD Jupiter Falls has been described as a blend of classic '60s pop, the post punk, heady sound of the MTV '80s and the retro pop resurgence of the '90s. Several songs from their Jupiter Falls can be heard on their website http://www.pinderbrothers.com and their myspace page http://www.myspace.com/thepinderbrothers. Pinder Sr is also playing his trademark mellotron on a few of the songs. Mike’s eldest son Daniel Pinder is a music film editor, with many credits, including Pirates of the Caribbean. Daniel recently completed editing the music for The Da Vinci Code.

The Moody Blues
Justin Hayward | John Lodge | Graeme Edge
Former members: Ray Thomas | Mike Pinder | Patrick Moraz | Denny Laine | Clint Warwick
Discography
Studio Albums: The Magnificent Moodies | Days of Future Passed | In Search of the Lost Chord | On the Threshold of a Dream | To Our Children's Children's Children | A Question of Balance | Every Good Boy Deserves Favour | Seventh Sojourn | Octave | Long Distance Voyager | The Present | The Other Side of Life | Sur La Mer | Keys of the Kingdom | Strange Times | December
Live: Caught Live + 5 | A Night at Red Rocks with the Colorado Symphony Orchestra | Hall Of Fame: Live at the Royal Albert Hall | Lovely To See You
Compilations: This is The Moody Blues | Greatest Hits | Prelude | Time Traveller (Box Set) | An Introduction to The Moody Blues
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