Wilfred Gibson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article is about Wilfred Gibson the violinist. For Wilfrid Gibson the poet see Wilfrid Wilson Gibson.
| Wilfred Gibson | |
|---|---|
Performing live 1973
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| Background information | |
| Birth name | Wilfred Gibson |
| Born | 28 February 1945 |
| Origin | |
| Genre(s) | Rock music Classical music |
| Occupation(s) | Musician |
| Instrument(s) | Violin |
| Label(s) | Harvest Records, Zah Zah Records |
| Associated acts | Electric Light Orchestra Berkeley Square Society Band |
| Website | Musical career |
Wilfred Gibson is a violinist who played in the band Electric Light Orchestra and has performed as a session musician. He replaced original violinist Steve Woolam in 1972 and performed on their first live appearance, He later made contributions to the ELO II album and performed on the hit singles Showdown and Ma-Ma-Ma Belle playing alongside cellists Colin Walker and Mike Edwards. He was replaced in 1973 by Mik Kaminski allegedly due to a payment dispute. His work as a session musician has seen Gibson playing on numerous hits throughout the years sometimes uncredited[1]
In 1989 he was the violinist in the BBC Radio 3 musical drama Notes from Janàcek's Diary.
He also contributed to the Hothouse Flowers album Home (1990), and to The Beloved's Happiness (1995) as well as appearing on the Oasis hit "Whatever".
He was one of the ten members of Alan Gout's Berkeley Square Society Band, which plays 1920s and 1930s music, and released an album Gershwin In London Town on the Zah Zah record label in 1998.
In 1999 he played the music for the film The Last September.
[edit] References
- Wilf Gibson interview with Martin Kinch
- 'Home', Hothouse Flowers official website Retrieved May 20, 2005
- Gout, Alan. 'The Berkeley Square Society Band', Zah Zah Retrieved May 20, 2005
- Steer, Mike. 'Notes from Janàcek's Diary', Maxwell Steer Retrieved May 20, 2005
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