Pete Quaife

Musician

Birthday December 31, 1943

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Tavistock, Devon, England

DEATH DATE 2010-6-23, Copenhagen, Denmark (66 years old)

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1943

Peter Alexander Greenlaw Quaife (born Kinnes; 31 December 1943 – 23 June 2010) was an English musician, artist and author.

1947

Kilby returned to London with her son, where she married Stanley Melville Quaife in 1947, who gave his surname to the young Peter.

Quaife attended Coldfall Primary School in Muswell Hill and later William Grimshaw School (now Fortismere School where a plaque has been erected to his memory by his brother David Quaife and Penny Toumazou).

1960

The group scored several major international hits throughout the 1960s.

Their early singles, including "You Really Got Me" and "All Day and All of the Night", have been cited as an early influence on the hard rock and heavy metal genres.

In the band's early days, Quaife, who was generally regarded as the best-looking member, was often their spokesman.

1962

After a brief period studying commercial art, Quaife formed the Kinks along with school friend Ray Davies in 1962 and subsequently asked Ray's brother Dave to join.

The band was originally called the Ravens and performed rhythm and blues at local venues such as the Hornsey Recreation Club at Crouch End Secondary School.

1963

He was a founding member and the original bassist for the Kinks, from 1963 until 1969.

He also sang backing vocals on some of their records.

Quaife founded a group known as the Ravens in 1963 with brothers Ray and Dave Davies.

In late 1963 or early 1964, they changed their name to the Kinks.

The 'Kinks' name came about only upon the signing of a recording contract in late 1963.

1964

The Kinks became a top chart act throughout the world beginning with their third single, 1964's "You Really Got Me".

Quaife was commonly the voice of the band in early press interviews.

1966

In June 1966, he was seriously injured in a car crash, which left him unable to perform.

He later said that he had enjoyed the time off from the band, as he was sick of the conflict which was constant.

John Dalton replaced him, as Quaife resigned from the band as a result of his hospitalisation, but Quaife reconsidered and returned in November 1966.

For the next two years Quaife played on albums such as Something Else by the Kinks and The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society, and helped rehearse some songs on the album Arthur (Or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire).

1969

He departed from the Kinks in 1969 and formed the band Mapleoak, which he left in April 1970.

Quaife left the Kinks permanently in April 1969, but the others did not at first believe him, and only realised his intention when they saw an article in a music paper revealing Quaife's new band.

Ray Davies asked him to change his mind and stay, but without success.

He was again replaced on bass, this time permanently, by Dalton.

After leaving the Kinks, Quaife founded a new band, the country/rock group Mapleoak.

The band's name derived from the heritage of its members: the 'Maple' represented the two Canadian members of the group, singer-songwriters Stan Endersby and Marty Fisher, while the 'Oak' represented British members Quaife and drummer Mick Cook.

Quaife had contacts in Denmark, so the group gigged heavily there and in the UK during most of 1969 and early 1970.

Cook left the band in June 1969, and was replaced by another Canadian: Gordon MacBain, who would write most of the group's original material.

1970

After retiring from the music business, Quaife resided in Denmark throughout the 1970s.

Mapleoak released their first single, "Son of a Gun", in April 1970 but it failed to chart.

Quaife then left both the band and the music industry.

1971

He subsequently moved to Denmark, and did not appear on Mapleoak's only album, which was released in 1971.

Quaife never fully returned to the music world as a professional performer.

1980

He relocated to Belleville, Ontario, in 1980, where he worked as a cartoonist and artist.

In 1980, he relocated to Belleville, Ontario, Canada to work as a graphic artist.

1981

In 1981, he made his only post 1960s concert appearance with the Kinks, playing bass in an encore number at a show in Toronto.

1990

Along with the original Kinks, Quaife was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990.

At the ceremony in New York City, Quaife jammed on stage with the other musicians being honoured that year.

1998

He was diagnosed with kidney failure in 1998 and moved back to Denmark in 2005.

2010

Quaife died on 23 June 2010 of kidney failure.

Quaife was born Peter Alexander Greenlaw Kinnes in Tavistock, Devon, to Joan Mary Kilby, who became pregnant during the war after an affair with an American serviceman.