For Immediate Release
Keyboard Legend Rick Wakeman's Emporium Now
Open!
Signed special items available from official
online store!
Rick Wakeman
is pleased to announce a new partnership with Music Glue as the new home of his
online store, The Rick Wakeman Emporium.! Featuring Signed Special Items, Signed CDs, DVDs and LPs, Signed
Memorabilia & Artwork, CDs, DVDs and LPs, T-Shirts, Mugs and Tote
Bags!
Visit
Rick Wakeman's Emporium: https://www.musicglue.com/rick-wakeman-emporium
Born in
Perivale, Middlesex, England, Rick Wakeman's interest in music manifested itself
very early, and from the age of seven on he studied classical piano. At the age
of 14, he joined a local band, Atlantic Blues, the same year he left school to
enroll in the Royal College of Music. He had his eye on a career as a concert
pianist, but Wakeman was dismissed from the college after it became clear that
he preferred playing in clubs to studying technique.
By his late
teens, he was an established session man, playing on records by such diverse
acts as Black Sabbath, Brotherhood of Man, and Edison Lighthouse. At the end of
the '60s, his name also began appearing on the credits of albums by such artists
as Al Stewart and David Bowie, and one set of sessions with a folk-rock band
called the Strawbs led to his joining the group in 1970. After two albums with
the Strawbs, Wakeman joined Yes, a post-psychedelic hard rock band that had
attracted considerable attention with their first three albums. Wakeman played a
key role in the final shape of the group's fourth record, Fragile, creating a
fierce, swirling sound on an array of electric and acoustic pianos,
synthesizers, and Mellotrons. Fragile was a hit, driven by the chart
success of the single "Roundabout," and Wakeman was suddenly elevated to star
status.
Yes' next
album, Close to the Edge, expanded his audience and his appeal, for his
instruments were heard almost continually on the record. During the making of
Close to the Edge in 1972, Wakeman also recorded his first solo album, an
instrumental work entitled The Six Wives of Henry VIII, which consisted
of his musical interpretations of the lives and personalities of the said six
royal spouses. Released early in 1973 on A&M Records, it performed
respectably on the charts. Public reception of Yes' 1974 album, Tales From
Topographic Oceans, was mixed, and the critics were merciless in their
attacks upon the record. Wakeman exited the group before the album's supporting
tour. His new solo album, Journey to the Centre of the Earth, adapted
from the writings of Jules Verne and featuring a rock band, narrator (David
Hemmings), and full orchestral and choral accompaniment, was released to
tremendous public response in both America and England, where it topped the
charts. In 1975, his next album, The Myths and Legends of King Arthur and the
Knights of the Round Table, was given a grand-scale premiere at Wembley's
Empire Pool, although it also cost Wakeman a fortune to stage the event on ice.
During this same period, Wakeman began working on film scores with the music for
Ken Russell's Lisztomania, which was a modest hit.
In 1977,
Wakeman returned to Yes, with which he has continued recording and touring. His
solo career continued on A&M into the end of the '70s, with Criminal
Record and Rhapsodies, which were modestly successful. Wakeman's
biggest media splash during this period, however, came through his alleged role
in getting the Sex Pistols dropped by A&M Records soon after being signed.
None of this bothered his fans, which rapidly expanded to encompass those he
picked up through his work with lyricist Tim Rice on a musical adaptation of
George Orwell's 1984, and his burgeoning film work, which included the
music to movies about the 1976 Winter Olympics and the 1982 soccer World Cup
competition. Additionally, he became a regular on Britain's Channel 4. Wakeman's
audience and reputation survived the 1980s better than almost any progressive
rock star of his era, as he continued releasing albums on his own label. He also
remained associated with Yes into the '90s.
In January
2016, Trevor Rabin announced he plans to perform with Wakeman and Jon Anderson
as Anderson, Rabin and Wakeman (ARW), later in the year. Anderson revealed the
three wrote "some unique songs together". Also in January, following requests
from fans, Wakeman recorded piano versions of "Life on Mars?", "Space Oddity",
and "Always Together" as a tribute to David Bowie following his death with
proceeds from the songs donated to Macmillan Cancer Support.
Rick
Wakeman's official website: https://www.rwcc.com/
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