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Drummer
Simon Kirke kept the beat for two of the '70s most popular bluesy hard rockers:
Free and
Bad Company. Born in London, England on July 28, 1949,
Kirke's family didn't include any musicians, but he developed an interest in music at a young age, when
Kirke sang in his school's choir. Shortly after becoming a teenager,
the Beatles awakened
Kirke's interest in rock music and he picked up the drums, leading to a gig with a local band called the Maniacs, with
Kirke supplying drums and lead vocals (a combination quite uncommon at the time).
Kirke worked out a deal with his parents after graduating high school, that if he couldn't make it as a drummer in a band within a two-year period, he would then start a college career. Just a few months before the self-imposed deadline,
Kirke landed a gig with a group called
the Black Cat Bones. The drummer befriended the group's talented guitarist,
Paul Kossoff, who in turn convinced
Kirke to leave the group with him and begin a new outfit with singer
Paul Rodgers. With ex-
John Mayall's Bluesbreakers bassist
Andy Fraser signed on as well,
Free was officially formed in 1968. Mixing blues with hard rock, the group would prove to be quite influential, especially on the strength of their classic 1970 release
Fire and Water, and its strutting, anthemic hit single "All Right Now." Although the band showed great promise, a dangerous drug habit began to hamper
Kossoff's playing, which led to tension within the group, and after several albums, they broke up in 1973 (sadly,
Kossoff would die just three years later). It didn't take
Kirke long to find another gig however, as he joined
Rodgers in a new band,
Bad Company, which was quite similar stylistically to
Free. Joined by ex-
King Crimson bassist
Boz Burrell and ex-
Mott the Hoople guitarist
Mick Ralphs,
Bad Company was one of the first groups signed to
Led Zeppelin's record label, Swan Song. Their resulting debut album, 1974's Bad Company, would go on to become one of hard rock's all-time classics, and birthed such long-standing rock radio standards as "Can't Get Enough," "Ready for Love," and the title track. While
Bad Company never managed to top their debut, the group went on to become one of the decade's top rock outfits before splitting up in 1982 (the group would reunite later in the decade without
Rodgers, with varying results, before
Rodgers rejoined during the late '90s). In addition to his work with
Free and
Bad Company,
Kirke has guested on a long list of recordings by other artists over the years, including albums by
Jim Capaldi,
Mick Jones,
Mick Ralphs,
Ringo Starr,
John Wetton, and
Ron Wood, among countless others. In 2003,
Kirke launched his very first solo tour, and participated in the fan-based Rock N' Roll Fantasy Camp alongside other classic rock musicians. He released his debut solo outing, Seven Rays of Hope, in 2005, with
Filling the Void in 2011 and
All Because of You in 2017, the latter of which included a ukulele version of the
Kirke-penned
Bad Company classic "Feel Like Making Love." ~ Greg Prato