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Craig MacGregor
Biography
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Roger Earl is the man with the beat. Pounding
his drums for over 40 years, this British rock
‘n’roller is partial to rock & blues (always has
been).
Born in England on May 16, 1946 Roger grew up in
Hounslow (West London). Music was always
encouraged in the Earl household. Small living
room with a BIG piano. In the mid fifties, Dad
introduced Roger to ‘Great Balls of Fire’ by
Jerry Lee Lewis and the house was never the
same. "Dad played piano somewhat in the style of
Fats Waller but a bit heavier handed (wonder
where I got it from???)." He later took Roger &
brother Colin to see Jerry Lee around 1960 and
it all began. Roger wanted to play Piano, but as
it was usually occupied by Dad or Colin he
started taking drum lessons at 13, for about 2
years. He bought his first Premier (Black Pearl)
drum kit at 15 by saving money from after school
part-time jobs.
After discovering Jerry Lee, there was Little
Richard (what a great band!...the drummer was
particularly impressive) and Chuck Berry, who
was always on the turntable. He then discovered
Muddy Waters and bought his record "Live at
Newport". Muddy’s drummer Francis Clay was his
first major influence . While hanging out at
music stores in London he discovered blues
greats like John Lee Hooker and...the list goes
on.... Around this time he also heard Buddy Rich
on a ‘Jazz at the Philharmonic’ recording and he
said..."it took my breath away".
At 17 Roger joined his first band, a Blues R & B
Band called the TRAMPS, made up of school
friends Dave Hutchins, Ray Dorset and Dick Howe.
They were together in various forms for about
three years. They became the backup band for
Jackie Edwards, who was signed to Island Records
and had written numerous hit records including
'Keep on Running' by SPENCER DAVIS. He was a
great guy to play with. Ray Dorset eventually
formed a hugely successful band with Colin Earl
called MUNGO JERRY.
Roger left school at 16 to pursue a career in
commercial art in London. to support his ‘drum &
cymbal habit’. He did this for about 4 years
(quite successfully) until he joined SAVOY BROWN
at the age of 20 ("I didn’t receive payment for
the first 6 weeks from SAVOY but at least I was
‘semi-pro’. I continued auditioning for other
bands during lunch hours and after work during
this time because I still wasn’t sure I had the
job") He auditioned for people like The Crazy
World of Arthur Brown and Jimi Hendrix, among
others.
His five albums with SAVOY BROWN (one of the
hippest blues-rock acts on either side of the
Atlantic) between 1968 and 1970, were ‘Getting
to the Point’, ‘A Step Further’, ‘Raw Sienna’
(which became a British Blues Classic), "Blue
Matter’ and ‘Looking In’.
During a couple of lunchtime sessions, Roger,
Dave Peverett, Colin Earl, Bob Hall (Savoy’s
Pianist) and others, cut a rockabilly album
called "Warren Phillips and the Rockets. He also
played drums on Chris Jagger’s first album and
Mungo Jerry’s debut album in 1970.
SAVOY BROWN did their first U.S. tour in 1968
with greats like B.B. King, Albert King, Paul
Butterfield Blues Band, Charlie Musselwhite, the
J.Geils Band and saw great artists like Bobby
Blue Band and Buddy Guy. After touring the U.S.
he knew he ‘was home’.
In December of 1970, Roger and Dave Peverett
left SAVOY BROWN to form FOGHAT. They hooked up
with Rod Price and released their first record
in 1972 on the Bearsville Label (a subsidiary of
Warner Brothers) and followed with their first
U.S. tour. They became an immediate success,
following up the gold debut with lots of other
gold albums....Rock n’ Roll, Energized, Rock n’
Roll Outlaws. 1975’s Fool for the City, which
included ‘Slow Ride’, made them superstars. They
continued the gold with Night Shift, their 1977
‘Foghat Live’ (which went Double Platinum) and
Stone Blue. These were followed with Boogie
Motel in 1979, Tight Shoes, In the Mood for
Something Rude, Girls to Chat and Boys to Bounce
and Zig Zag Walk.
By the early 80's, Punk was in and musical
tastes were going through a transition period.
Rod Price had left the band (replaced by Erik
Cartwright) and Lonesome Dave had returned to
England. Settled comfortably on Long Island, New
York, Earl admittedly ‘didn’t know how to
relax’. He played with the New England Jam Band
on weekends for awhile with people like James
Montgomery, the Uptown Horns John Butcher,
Charlie Farran, Fran Sheehan, Elliott Randall
and Mark Rivera. But soon the remaining three
members, Roger, Craig and Erik began touring
again as Foghat.
In 1993, the four original members of Foghat
reunited at the request of producer Rick Rubin.
Although the project with Rubin never
materialized, they recorded ‘Return of the
Boogie Men’ and were on the road again. The
road, as it always had been for this ‘most
traveled’ hard rock blues band, proved still
kind to them. Three generations of fans were
still boogie-ing to their music. By 1999, Rod
had left the band again (replaced by Lonesome
Dave's great friend Bryan Bassett) and Lonesome
Dave became seriously ill. He passed away on
February 7, 2000. After several months of not
knowing what to do, and a great deal of pressure
to keep the band alive, Roger contacted Charlie
Huhn and asked him to join the band. The rest is
history in the making. Now, 7 years later with a
studio CD (Family Joules), a new DVD (The
Official Bootleg Vol.!) and a new Double Live CD
'LIVE II' the band is doing better than ever!
"Music is sound and emotion," says this most
philosophical of drummers. "My heroes came from
places like Mississippi and Chicago and sang
about stuff I couldn’t quite understand when I
was 15. But I knew I loved it. I belonged to a
record club and I remember the first time I saw
Howlin’ Wolf’s name on a big list of records I
could buy. ‘Howlin’ Wolf?’ I thought, ‘He HAS to
be great with a name like that.’ And I wasn’t
disappointed. Roger has never forgotten his
early influences and says that "the one thing
you can’t ever forget is how to be a fan."
Roger uses white marine pearl DW Drums with
Black Hardware....(two 24" bass drums, 3" x 14"
Bronze snare drum, two rack toms - 12" & 14",
floor toms - 15", 16" & 18"), PAISTE Cymbals (Sig
Series), and PRO-MARK "Roger Earl" drum sticks.
The man admits with his typically British wry
storytelling sense, that there were times that
he may have had "too much fun". And he’s learned
from it well. But now, with daughters of 20, 25
and 38 and an eleven year old granddaughter,
he’s achieved an inner philosophical sense which
lets him expound on his wild times with wit and
candor. "The one thing I don’t regret in my
life," he says wistfully, "is having children.
They’re the absolute joy and pleasure of my
life. They’re the best. We’re very close."
Roger has always, and still loves to fish. He
goes fishing every chance he gets. He is also
very active, rides his bike, hikes and tries to
stay as healthy as possible. He currently lives
on Long Island on a houseboat on the harbor
where he can keep an eye on the fish and watch
the birds.
When asked what made him emigrate from London,
England to Long Island, New York (of all places)
he simply says...’when we got off the boat, it
was the first place there."
Roger Earl is still hammering away....still a
noisy sod. And this rock’n’roll, road-warrior
wouldn’t have it any other way. He says, in the
immortal words of Lonesome Dave Peverett, "I'm
gonna roll til' I'm old, gonna rock til' I drop!
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