Pete Dello

Pete Dello
Birth name Peter Blumsom
Born (1942-05-26) 26 May 1942
Origin Oxford, Oxfordshire, England
Genres Pop music
Occupation(s) musician, songwriter, session musician, record producer
Instruments Guitar, Keyboards
Years active early 1960s-early 1970s
Labels Decca, Deram, Penny Farthing
Associated acts Honeybus

Pete Dello (born Peter Blumsom, 26 May 1942, Oxford, England) is a 1960s and 1970s singer-songwriter and now music teacher.

Career

Dello started his career as a musician in the skiffle era of the 1950s and was a founding member of the rock and roll band Grant Tracy and The Sunsets, after which he joined Steve Darbyshire's backing group, The Yum Yum Band, in the mid-1960s. This led onto him forming Honeybus, with whom he scored the hit single "I Can't Let Maggie Go" in 1968.

He wrote songs with all his bands (and also for The Applejacks). The Dello-penned song "Do I Figure In Your Life?" has been covered by Dave Berry, Joe Cocker, Iain Matthews, Dave Stewart, Paul Carrack, Dana and Pierce Turner. His co-writer was Ray Cane. Dello was also a session musician, and he was hired for Unit 4 + 2, The Scaffold and The Roulettes.

Quickly leaving Honeybus rather than tour and promote the single, he next cut a solo album Into Your Ears in 1971, and also worked with John Killigrew. Ultimately he quit the music industry for other interests during the 1970s. Since then Into Your Ears has become a very collectable album, copies selling for over £1,200 in perfect condition . It has also be re-issued on compact disc in 2005, and again in 2009.

The song "I'm a Gambler" by Lace (1969) was reissued (the same recording) as a single by Red Herring (1973).

Dello's biggest success "I Can't Let Maggie Go" was given a second round of popularity when it was used for a 1970s Nimble bread TV commercial, which brought him much welcomed royalties which he successfully invested.

Discography

Singles

Sunsets

Grant Tracy & The Sunsets

Steve Darbyshire and the Yum Yum Band

Honeybus

Lace

Magic Valley

Leah

Albums

Notable compilations

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.