Christopher North (Ambrosia)

Christopher North
Background information
Born (1951-01-26) 26 January 1951
San Francisco, California
Genres Rock, Blues, R&B, Prog, Funk
Instruments Keyboard
Years active 1964–present
Associated acts Ambrosia
Notable instruments
Hammond Organ

Christopher Reed North (born January 26, 1951), is the founding keyboardist for the American progressive rock band Ambrosia.

Career

North was born in San Francisco. He grew up in San Pedro, California, playing in various bands through junior high and high school. Some of the early bands he played with were The Proones, The Livin End, and Thee Exceptions. In 1968 he formed the psychedelic rock band Blue Toad Flax with Tom Trefethen playing organ and singing lead vocals.[1]

In 1970 he formed the progressive rock band Ambrosia with David Pack, Joe Puerta and Burleigh Drummond.[2] He is known for his very intense live performances.[3][4][5]

North and the other members of Ambrosia contributed to the album Tales of Mystery and Imagination by The Alan Parsons Project.[6]

He played organ and piano on the hit songs "Galilee" and "Rock 'N' Roll Preacher" from the debut album by Chuck Girard and also on Chuck's 1980 album The Stand. North played organ on the John Lennon tribute single "Johnny's Gone Away" written and produced by Tom Trefethen with Alan Parsons as executive producer.[7]

North with Ambrosia

North is listed three times on the All Time Hammond Pop Hits list for his Hammond organ solos on the Ambrosia songs "Holdin On To Yesterday", "Biggest Part of Me" and "You're the Only Woman".[8]

In 2014 North played on the song "The Soft Parade" from "Light My Fire: A Classic Rock Salute to The Doors".

Discography

Date Title Label Charted Country Catalog Number
as part of Ambrosia
1975 Ambrosia (album) 20th Century Fox 22 US
1976 Somewhere I've Never Travelled 20th Century Fox 79 US
1978 Life Beyond L.A. Warner Bros. 19 US
1980 One Eighty Warner Bros. 25 US
1982 Road Island Warner Bros. 115 US
1997 Anthology Warner Bros. US
2002 Essentials Warner Bros. US
2003 How Much I Feel and Other Hits Rhino Flashback US

References

  1. Tom Trefethen:Information from Answers.com
  2. Huey, Steve. "Ambrosia: Biography". Allmusic. Retrieved 22 March 2011.
  3. LA Times Ambrosia Concert review from the Santa Monica Civic 1977
  4. Crawdaddy Magazine Ambrosia Part 2 1978
  5. Ambrosia page on ProgArchives.com
  6. the Trades article Interview: Alan Parsons: The Artist and Scientist of Sound Recording
  7. Mostly Pink
  8. All Time Hammond Pop Hits

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.