Henry McCullough was one of the busier guitarists in England during the 1970s, playing alongside such stars and superstars as
Joe Cocker and
Paul McCartney. Born in Portstewart, Northern Ireland in 1943, he took up the guitar as a boy and was playing in the Irish show band the Skyrockets in the mid-'60s. After a few years of playing dancehalls, he decided to move his career to the next phase -- he'd met three other players, Ernie Graham (guitar/vocals),
Chris Stewart (bass), and Dave Lutton (drums), from a show band called Gene & the Gents, and together they formed the People, later renamed
Eire Apparent. Their sound was a mix of blues, pop, and psychedelia, with a commercial and virtuoso edge to the playing and singing. They jumped into the big time after a move to London and being signed by
Chas Chandler and Mike Jeffery, the managers of
Jimi Hendrix -- from obscurity, they were suddenly thrust into
Hendrix's orbit, touring England and then America in support of the legendary guitarist.
The band had one single under its belt and was on a successful tour of North America when
McCullough was suddenly forced to leave, due to problems he encountered when he tried to enter Canada with the group for a scheduled show. Some accounts say it was a problem with his visa, while others indicate that controlled substances were involved -- whatever the details, he was forced to return to Ireland and was replaced by
Mick Cox, who took his spot permanently.
McCullough returned to London, where he helped found the band
Sweeney's Men; he then jumped to the
Grease Band, playing behind
Joe Cocker during the latter's international breakthrough, on
With a Little Help from My Friends and the tour that followed (including a performance at the Woodstock Festival), before going off on their own.
In 1972,
McCullough passed an audition for
Paul McCartney's new band,
Wings, joining the bare-bones lineup of
Denny Seiwell and
Denny Laine (who were already aboard for the album
Wild Life) in the first fully functional incarnation of the group. That version of
Wings did play a few gigs and cut the album
Red Rose Speedway, which restored
McCartney (whose career had faltered somewhat with the previous album) to full critical and commercial success. Its sales were driven by the soaring romantic ballad "My Love," a hit single that gave
McCullough his most visible moment on record to date, with a guitar solo that was all over AM radio in the months following its release. During the recording of the album at EMI,
McCullough made an unintended contribution to another top-seller of the period when he took a break -- he ended up in the adjacent studio, joining a
Pink Floyd session where he made a spoken word contribution that got him onto
Dark Side of the Moon.
He left
Wings after the one album and later turned to session work, playing on records by
Marianne Faithfull,
Roy Harper,
Ronnie Lane,
Frankie Miller,
Eric Burdon, and
Spooky Tooth, joining the latter on their fourth album. A hand injury in the early '80s left him sidelined for an extended period, and it wasn't until 1988 that
McCullough re-emerged fully, leading his own band in Ireland. For the next decade, he confined his work exclusively to Ireland, but in the late '90s he cut a series of sessions for an album in Poland and toured the country. He also turned to songwriting and generated "Failed Christian," which was later recorded by
Nick Lowe.
McCullough had a serious heart attack in November 2012 and was left incapacitated; he died in June 2016 after an extended illness at 72 years of age. ~ Bruce Eder