Everything about Bob Catley totally explained
Bob Catley is a
British musician, perhaps best known as the lead singer of the
rock band Magnum. He is also an accomplished solo artist.
Biography
Early years (1947–1972)
Born in
Aldershot on
11 September 1947 Catley's family moved to the Tile Cross area of
Birmingham when he was young. He went on to attend the nearby
Central Grammar School and left to start an apprenticeship at the
GPO before deciding on a musical career shortly after meeting similarly minded individuals at college.
During this time he joined several bands, such as The Smokestacks (who also included drummer
Kex Gorin, Life and Clearwater. His first professional band was when he joined local outfit The Capitol Systems. The line up was Bob Catley (vocals) Paul Sargent (guitar) Charlie Harrison (bass) (replaced later by Dave Morgan), Dave Bailey (keyboards) and John 'Pank' Panteny (drums). Shortly afterwards they changed their name to Paradox, inspired by a science-fiction novel. A one off deal was arranged with Mercury after Paradox had come to the attention of
Francis Rossi and
Rick Parfitt - the tracks chosen were "Ever Since I Can Remember", backed with "Goodbye Mary". In addition they recorded "Mary Colinto" and "Somebody Save Me". All of these songs were written by Dave Morgan.
Paradox went on to play festivals in Holland and Italy before splitting up on their return to the Uk in 1970. Bob remained determined to follow a career in music.
Magnum (1972–1995)
Formed in 1972, Magnum have undergone several changes in personnel over the years, however the core of vocalist
Bob Catley and
guitarist/
songwriter Tony Clarkin remain today.
Magnum began as the
house band at
Birmingham’s famous
Rum Runner night club (later the home of
Duran Duran). They began to develop their own style by playing Clarkin's songs at a residency at The Railway Inn, in Birmingham's Curzon Street, in
1976. Joining Clarkin and Catley were drummer
Kex Gorin and bassist
Dave Morgan (later a member of
ELO). Their most notable success during these early years was the
Jeff Glixman produced
Chase The Dragon (1982) which reached #17 in the UK, and included several songs that would be mainstays of the bands live set, notably "Soldier Of The Line", "Sacred Hour" and "The Spirit".
Their breakthrough album came in 1985 with
On A Storyteller's Night which featured the single "Just Like An Arrow". This success continued in the following years with the
Roger Taylor produced
Vigilante in 1986, the top 5 album
Wings Of Heaven in 1988, and the
Keith Olsen produced
Goodnight L.A. reaching #9 in the UK album charts in 1990.
In the summer of 1995 Tony Clarkin announced the band were to split following a farewell tour of the UK and Europe.
Hard Rain (1995–2001)
After Magnum split, a spin off group featuring Catley and Clarkin was formed called
Hard Rain, and they released the albums
Hard Rain and
When The Good Times Come. It was around this time that Catley launched a solo career using various songwriters, including
Gary Hughes of the band
Ten. However, Hard Rain found gigs and booking hard to come by, and there were discussions about renaming the band as Magnum. Also, at this time, Catley was becoming increasingly focused on his solo career, and he quit Hard Rain, marking the end of a working relationship with Clarkin that dated back to 1972. After a quiet period Clarkin announced the end of Hard Rain.
Magnum reunion (2001–present)
Eventually,
Tony Clarkin and Catley re-launched Magnum with the album
Breath Of Life in 2002 on
SPV. They were again joined by Stanway, with former Hard Rain bassist
Al Barrow and former-
Thunder drummer
Harry James. This was subsequently followed by
Brand New Morning in 2004.
Magnum completed work on a new studio album,
Princess Alice And The Broken Arrow released on 26th March 2007, that also marked the return of cover artwork by
Rodney Matthews. The album entered the UK Album Charts at #70, the first time Magnum have charted in the UK since 1994. It also reached #4 on the BBC Rock Album Charts and #60 in Germany, the bands biggest market outside of the UK along with Scandinavia.
Solo career (1998–present)
Despite a busy touring and recording schedule with
Magnum at this time, Bob Catley has found time to embark on a highly successful solo career. He was first approached by
Gary Hughes (frontman of Rock band
Ten) in 1998 to write a solo album. Bob teamed up with Gary who wrote all the songs on
The Tower (as well as producing and playing bass and keyboards).
The Tower was written with classic
Magnum very much in mind and harks back to
On A Storyteller's Night style pomp meeting
Wings Of Heaven style AOR with a very 90s melodic rock production.
The Tower was released in 1998 and was critically acclaimed.
Bob made his debut solo appearance at The Gods '98, performing a show stopping set featuring tracks from
The Tower as well as classic
Magnum songs. Such was the response to the show that Now & Then decided to release an "official bootleg" of the set.
Live At The Gods which was released in January 1999 and features the full set list performed on the day. Bob's backing band for the concert was made up of Canadian label mates Emerald Rain with
Vinny Burns (
Ten) on lead guitar and Paul Hodson (Hard Rain) on keyboards. Bob and Emerald Rain also undertook a successful UK tour.
During the summer of 1999 recording commenced on Bob's second solo album
Legends. Gary Hughes once again wrote and produced the album (as well as playing keyboards) with Ten's Vinny Burns and Steve McKenna and Dante Fox's John Cooksey providing the musical backing. The songs are based on various Legends, factual, fictional, historical and mythological.
Legends was launched at The Gods 99 where Bob headlined the Saturday night with Emerald Rain and Paul Hodson once again providing backing. Bob toured the UK extensively during 2000 with Paul Hodson and Native Cain providing his backing band. In the run up to Christmas 2000 Bob toured the UK again, and for one Spanish date, with special guest
Kip Winger.
2001 saw the release of Bob's third album
Middle Earth, which was based on
J. R. R. Tolkien's epic
The Lord of the Rings. The songs, once again penned by Gary Hughes, are based on various parts/incidents/characters from the book. Musicians on
Middle Earth include Gary's band mates
Ten plus a guest appearance by Landmarq vocalist Tracy Hitchings. Bob toured extensively in 2001 with
Kip Winger opening acoustically early in the year, and then spent a month co-headlining UK and European dates with Ten later in the year.
2003 saw a change in writing partners for Catley -
When Empires Burn was written and produced by Bob’s long time keyboard player Paul Hodson and features a much heavier sound, bordering on
heavy metal. The backing band included Vince O’Regan (Guitars), Al Barrow (Bass) and Jamie Little (Drums).
When Empires Burn was again backed by a full European tour, this time touring with the Yorkshire based band Lost Weekend.
Bob’s 2006 solo album
Spirit Of Man was written by Dave Thompson and Paul Uttley of Lost Weekend and Vince O’Regan of Pulse, and was recorded at KRT Studio’s in Wolverhampton. Bob and Vince have co-produced the album. This is the first time that Catley has had a role in the production of one of his albums, and continues the somewhat heavier approach seen in the previous album. The album was supported by a full UK and European tour, including an intimate date at London's famous Underworld club.
Discography
Magnum
Hard Rain
Solo
The Tower (1998)
Live At The Gods (1999)
Legends (1999)
Middle Earth (2001)
When Empires Burn (2003)
Spirit Of Man (2006)
The Immortal (2008)
Side projects
Jabberwocky (1999) — Clive Nolan and Oliver Wakeman
Hound Of The Baskervilles (2002) — Clive Nolan and Oliver Wakeman
The Metal Opera Part II (2002) — Avantasia project by Tobias Sammet of Edguy
Once and Future King Part I (2003) — Gary Hughes of Ten
Once and Future King Part II (2003) — Gary Hughes of Ten
The Scarecrow (2008) — Avantasia project by Tobias Sammet of Edguy
01011001 (2008) — Ayreon project by Arjen Anthony LucassenFurther Information
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