- Ritchie Pickett
Infobox musical artist 2
Name = Ritchie Pickett
Img_capt = Ritchie Pickett at the King's Arms, 2003.
Background = solo_singer
Birth_name = Ritchie Francis Pickett
Alias =
Born = birth date and age|1955|2|16
Died =
Origin = Morrinsville,New Zealand
Instrument = Vocals,Piano ,Guitar
Genre = Country
Occupation =Singer ,Songwriter
Years_active = 1970s-present
Label =
Associated_acts =
URL = http://www.glenmoffatt.com/ritchie_pickett.htm
Current_members =
Past_members =Ritchie Pickett is a New Zealand country music singer-songwriter who was born in Morrinsville, in the province of Waikato. Pickett has been described as one of New Zealand's "kings of country/rock". [Nick Batt, [http://www.nzmusician.co.nz/index.php/ps_pagename/album/pi_albumid/413 "Album Reviews"] , "New Zealand Musician Magazine", Dec/Jan
2005 ]He began playing in rock 'n' roll bands such as Graffiti, which toured New Zealand with singer Tom Sharplin in the mid-1970s, before joining heavy metal/prog rock band Think, with whom he recorded an album.
Think relocated to
Sydney ,Australia , where they broke up and Pickett formed his own band called Snuff. In 1981, Pickett was transported back to Waikato Hospital in New Zealand.In the early 1980s, he formed country music band Ritchie Pickett & the Inlaws which toured New Zealand relentlessly and released an acclaimed LP, but disbanded in 1985. He was also a regular performer on the high-rating primetime television show "That's Country".
Pickett fronted several Waikato bands through the late 1980s and early 1990s, including the Jones Boys, the Fat Band and the Disturbance, before working mainly under his own name.
In a newspaper article detailing Bay of Plenty music of the late 1980s it was reported, "Ruling the roost at the time – or at least Tauranga's most well-known performer thanks to a stint on TV and a major label album (LP of course) – was Ritchie Pickett, with his band the Jones Boys, featuring bassist/singer Chris Gunn." [Winston Watusi, [http://www.thesun.co.nz/The_Weekend_Sun/Issue_332_March_9_2007_IDL=5_IDT=372_ID=8948_.html "Never say never again"] , "The Weekend Sun",
9 March 2007 ]Pickett finally released his debut solo album in 1998. As New Zealand rock historian John Dix wrote of local country music of the time, "It wasn't all alt.rock, hip hop and hard rock in the '90s. Country rock survived with recording acts like the Coalrangers (from the wild West Coast), Glen Moffatt, Ritchie Pickett, the Renderers and the Waltons. The most successful were
the Warratahs , signed to Pagan." [John Dix, "Stranded in Paradise: New Zealand Rock and Roll, 1955 to the Modern Era", Penguin Books, 2005, ISBN 0-14-301953-8]In 2004, Pickett released a live album featuring his contributions from a New Zealand tour with fellow New Zealand songwriter
Glen Moffatt and Australian roots songwriter Bill Chambers, father ofKasey Chambers .Discography
References
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