Ernie Graham

Ernie Graham
Birth name Ernest Harold Graham
Born 14 June 1946(1946-06-14)
Belfast,
Northern Ireland
Died 27 April 2001(2001-04-27) (aged 54)
London, England
Genres Pub rock, Roots Music
Folk Music
Occupations Musician, songwriter
Instruments Guitar, vocals
Years active 1965–1981
Associated acts Eire Apparent, Help Yourself, Clancy

Ernie Graham (born Ernest Harold Graham, 14 June 1946 in Belfast, died 27 April 2001 in London) was a singer, guitarist and songwriter, active from the mid 1960s to the early 1980s

Contents

Early life

Ernie Graham was born in Belfast, and was training to be a mechanic, when he joined his first band Tony & the Telstars in 1965, as rhythm guitarist.[1] When the band split Graham and two other members moved to England, where Graham met Henry McCullough.[2] Graham and McCullough returned to Belfast and formed The People, with George O'Hara, Davey Lutton and Chris Stewart.[3]

Eire Apparent

In 1967 the band moved back to London where they came to the attention of Michael Jeffery and were signed by him and Chas Chandler. In 1968 they changed their name to Eire Apparent and toured with Soft Machine, Pink Floyd and Jimi Hendrix.

Eire Apparent only recorded one album Sunrise (1969), which was produced by Hendrix, who also played on the album. Shortly after McCullough left, to tour with The Grease Band, Eire Apparent disbanded. Graham moved in with McCullough and recorded four songs with The Grease Band, but these were never issued.[2]

Solo and Help Yourself

Graham was then signed to Liberty Records as a solo artist, by Andrew Lauder. Sharing management with Brinsley Schwarz and Help Yourself, they all toured together as "The Down Home Rhythm Kings" package and lived in the same commune in Northwood. Both bands also backed Graham on his eponymous solo album Ernie Graham (1971). The album was well received, described as "one of the most hauntingly beautiful" albums of the pub-rock scene,[4] and "one of the more distinctive and memorable solo albums of the period",[5] but sold poorly.

Graham and 'JoJo' Glemser then joined Help Yourself appearing with them at the Glastonbury Festival in 1971 and playing on their second album Strange Affair (1972), although Graham had left the band before the album was released.

Clancy

In 1973, Graham formed pub rock band Clancy, who were initially signed to Island Records, but issued two albums and a single on Warner Bros. Records. When Clancy broke up in 1976, Graham played with Nick Lowe [5] and tried to go solo, issuing Phil Lynott's "Romeo and the Lonely Girl" as a single in 1978, which was his last release.

Later life and death

In the early 1980s, he tried forming a band with Larry Pratt, who had briefly been a member of Clancy,[2] but when this failed, he gave up being a professional musician, worked on the railways, including as a guard on the Orient Express, and was training to become a counsellor,[2] but his "strong alcohol dependence" [1] caused his health to fail, and he died in April 2001.

Discography

With The People
(2 tracks - "I'm with You" and "Well...All Right.")
With Eire Apparent
Solo
(reissued on CD with single as bonus tracks Hux 32 (2002))
With Help Yourself
With Clancy
Various artists compilations

References

  1. ^ a b Allmusic biography of Ernie Graham by Bruce Eder & Steve Huey Retrieved 22 October 2009
  2. ^ a b c d Sleevenotes by Nigel Cross to CD re-release of Ernie Graham his eponymous 1971 album (Hux 032)
  3. ^ Allmusic Biography of The People by Richie Unterberger Retrieved 22 October 2009
  4. ^ Allmusic review of Ernie Graham by Bruce Eder Retrieved 22 October 2009
  5. ^ a b Joynson, Vernon (2006). The Tapestry of Delights Revisited - entry on Ernie Graham (1st ed.). Telford: Borderline productions. p. 350. ISBN 1-899855-15-7.