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Greg Lake - Greg Lake is probably best known as the vocalist/bassist/guitarist with ELP, who helped form in the early seventies with keyboard player Keith Emerson and drummer Carl Palmer. Prior to forming ELP, Lake was also a member of sixties outfits such as Unit Four and The Shame, but his other major claim to fame was that he was also one of the founding members of the great King Crimson. ELP's success and contribution to progressive rock is legendary, but after their 1979 opus "Love Beach", the band was essentially finished. It was at this stage that Lake elected to embark on a solo career. Lake brought in guitarist Gary Moore, who was asked to head up Lake's first solo band. Our featured album, which also featured Toto's Steve Lukather, Dean Parks and Snuffy Walden on guitars, keyboard players Greg Matheson and Bill Cuomo, drummers Mike Giles, Jeff Porcaro and Jode Leigh, bassist Dave Hungate and sax player Clarence Clemmons, was released in 1981 and was well received. He released a second album, "Manoeuvres" in 1983 and a live "King Biscuit Flower Hour" album in 1981. In 1986, he featured in Emerson,Lake and Powell (as in drummer Cozy), and they released the one album that year. He was back with Emerson and Palmer when ELP reformed in the early nineties. An excellently compiled double album, "The Greg Lake Retrospective - From the Beginning", complete with extensive liner notes documenting the musical history of this immensely talented musician, was released on Castle Communications in 1997.
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Biography by Bruce Eder
As a singer and instrumentalist,
Greg Lake has had his greatest
success and influence in the
progressive rock outfit Emerson,
Lake & Palmer and, before that,
as a founding member of the
original King Crimson. He has
also been reasonably popular as
a solo artist working in more of
a hard-rock idiom.
As a boy, growing up in a
poverty stricken part of the
seaside resort town of
Bournemouth, he got his first
guitar for his twelfth birthday,
as a gift from his mother, and
began taking lessons from a
local teacher named Don Strike,
one of whose other students was
Robert Fripp, who became close
friends with Lake. Around the
time he was 12 years old, Lake
also wrote a folk-style song
that played a major part in his
future, entitled "Lucky Man."
Lake learned to read music and
also to play pieces by Paganini,
among other classical composers,
but his aspirations lay with
emulating the sound of his
favorite band of the era, Cliff
Richard & The Shadows, and their
lead guitarist, Hank B. Marvin.
Lake passed through a succession
of groups, including a local
quartet called Unit Four, in
which he played guitar and sang.
He and Unit Four guitarist David
Genes later formed the Time
Checks, and, still later—around
1967—with another Unit Four
member, John Dickinson, was a
member of a band called the
Shame, who cut a single in 1968.
He also sang on a record by a
band called the Shy Limbs.
In 1968, Lake succeeded Mick
Taylor as a member of an outfit
called the Gods, whose other
members included future Uriah
Heep founders Ken Hensley
(keyboards, vocals) and Lee
Kerslake (drums), and it was
there that his songwriting first
blossomed. He left the band just
before they began to record,
having been approached by his
boyhood friend Robert Fripp to
join the outfit that he was
putting together out of a failed
trio called Giles, Giles &
Fripp—Lake joined the quintet
(Fripp on lead guitar, Ian
McDonald on keyboards, saxes,
and flute, Michael Giles on
drums, and Peter Sinfield as
lyricist) as lead singer and
bassist.
King Crimson proceeded to carve
out a name for themselves unique
in the history of rock music as
the leading progressive rock
band of their era. Their first
album, In The Court of the
Crimson King, became the
standard for serious progressive
rock albums. Lake, along with
the others, was suddenly a star.
That first line-up of the band
only lasted a year—by December
of 1969, Giles and McDonald were
tired of touring and opted out,
and Lake refused to continue
working with the group, although
he stayed around long enough to
sing on their second album, In
the Wake of Poseidon (1970).
At the suggestion of Tony
Stratten-Smith, Lake was
approached by keyboard player
Keith Emerson, who was in the
process of putting together a
new group after three years with
his current band, the Nice. The
latter group's main fault was
its lack of a real lead singer,
and Emerson saw in Lake—whose
voice had dominated In The Court
of the Crimson King—the solution
to that problem. The two
eventually recruited drummer
Carl Palmer and formed
progressive rock's first
supergroup, Emerson, Lake &
Palmer, who were a success from
their self-titled first album,
released in 1970, which closed
with Lake's old song "Lucky
Man." The latter became one of
the group's few successful
singles, one of their rare
attempts to compete on AM
radio—it also turned Lake into
one of the most familiar voices
in progressive rock, rivaling
such figures as the Moody Blues'
Justin Hayward. Lake's
production experience as a
member of King Crimson (who had
produced their own debut album)
also served ELP in good stead,
and his songwriting became the
creative nucleus for the group's
first three studio albums.
ELP dominated the charts and the
field of progressive rock right
up until 1977, by which time the
entire genre of "art rock" was
beginning to lose popularity.
The stresses between the trio
caused them to split up after a
tour in 1979, and Lake embarked
on a solo career. Lake organized
a new band with ex-Thin Lizzy
guitarist Gary Moore on lead
guitar, Rory Gallagher alumnus
Ted McKenna on drums, and ex-Joe
Cocker/Gerry Rafferty keyboard
player Tommy Eyre, and recorded
Lake's first solo album, Greg
Lake (1981).
The sound on that record was
very different from ELP, as it
was dominated by guitars, rather
than keyboards, and featured
Lake singing in a harder, more
aggressive style. On tour he
covered material going back to
the King Crimson days, but he
also regaled audiences with
pumping versions of the new
songs. A second album,
Manoeuvers, followed in 1983,
but by that time the creative
and commercial bloom were both
off of the rose, and Lake took
his first break from music. He
appeared in 1985 as the lead
singer of Asia during that
group's tour, but he didn't
remain with the band.
In 1986, he reteamed with
Emerson and drummer Cozy Powell
as Emerson, Lake & Powell, and
recorded an album for Mercury
Records, which wass followed by
a world tour. After a stint with
ex-Asia member Geoff Downes and
King Crimson drummer Michael
Giles in a group called Ride The
Tiger, Lake reteamed with
Emerson and Palmer for a film
that was never finished, which
led to their first new album in
13 years, Black Moon (1992).
During the middle- and
late-1990's, Lake has continued
to work with Emerson and Palmer,
while pursuing his solo work as
well. The latter has included a
1994 tour of the United States.
He had also done a considerable
amount of charitable work on
behalf of missing children, and
his song "Daddy," written in
response to one such case, which
ended tragically, achieved
national exposure as a theme for
a television series devoted to
the plight of missing children.


John
Wetton
It Bites

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