Andy Scott (guitarist) explained

Andy Scott
Birth Name:Andrew David Scott
Birth Date:30 June 1949
Birth Place:Wrexham, Wales
Instrument:Guitar, bass, vocals
Genre:Hard rock, glam rock
Occupation:Musician, songwriter, producer
Years Active:1963–present
Associated Acts:Sweet
The Silverstones
The Elastic Band
Mayfield's Mule

Andrew David Scott (born 30 June 1949) is a Welsh musician and songwriter. He is best known for being the lead guitarist and a backing vocalist in the glam rock band Sweet.[1] Following bassist Steve Priest's death in June 2020, Scott is the last surviving member of the band's classic lineup.

Career

Early career

Scott started out playing bass guitar. His first gig was at St Peters Hall in Wrexham with The Rasjaks in November 1963 and then with other bands in Wales such as Guitars Incorporated and 3Ds.[2]

He then progressed to guitar and played with other bands including The Saints, The ForeWinds, and The Missing Links. In 1966 he joined The Silverstone Set (later shortened to The Silverstones), who won the TV show Opportunity Knocks five weeks running, and appeared in the all-winners show for Christmas 1966, losing to Freddie Starr. One of their further highlights was to support Jimi Hendrix in Manchester in January 1967.

When The Silverstones split, Scott went on to form The Elastic Band, who recorded an album called Expansions of Life. Lead singer Ted Yeadon left to join Love Affair, however, before the album's release, the band folded. During this time they also recorded the album Pop Sounds, under the name The Cool.

Scott then played in the backing band for The Scaffold, which also included Mike McGear on bass and saxophone. He went on to join Mayfield's Mule, who recorded three singles, "Drinking My Moonshine", "I See a River" and "We Go Rollin'". An album was also released in Uruguay called Mayfields Mule with the song titles translated on the sleeve into Spanish.[3]

Auditioning for Sweet

In the late summer of 1970, Scott replaced Mick Stewart in The Sweet after an audition in front of Brian Connolly, Steve Priest and Mick Tucker, as well as group managers Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman. He was one of the last guitarists to audition. According to Steve Priest's autobiography Are You Ready Steve?, Scott turned up looking pretty untidy, with very long hair and scruffy clothes. He plugged his guitar in and immediately the amplifier to feedback. He eventually performed his piece and the members of the band thought he should join The Sweet.

Solo career

Scott's first single release in 1975 was a reworked version of the Desolation Boulevard track "Lady Starlight" backed by "Where D'Ya Go?". Both songs, recorded during the Give Us a Wink sessions, were written and produced by Scott and Mick Tucker and featured Scott playing all instruments except the drums (Tucker). Scott made a promotional video for the track and also appeared on Mike Mansfield's British TV Show "Supersonic".

Scott released his second solo single, "Gotta See Jane", in 1983 under the name Ladders. It was a cover of the R. Dean Taylor Motown hit and was produced by him and Louis Austin, who had worked with Sweet as their engineer on past ventures. The B-side "Krugerrands", co-written with Chris Bradford,[4] [5] was subsequently released as the follow-up single (as Andy Scott this time), but like its predecessor, failed to chart, except in Australia where it peaked at number 89[6] and South Africa where it was a top 10 hit.[7] In 1984, Scott released two more solo singles, "Let Her Dance" and "Invisible". A compilation of all his solo projects, including demos, was released by Repertoire Records in 1993, under the title 30 Years.

Paddy Goes to Holyhead and record production

He produced a couple of demos for Weapon, which was then fronted by Danny Hynes who went on to form Paddy Goes to Holyhead[8] and Scott played with them now and again. Scott then produced, played on and appeared in the video for their single "Green Green Grass of Home" and then joined the band on a regular basis until reforming Sweet.

Scott produced the Suzi Quatro album, Back to the Drive, released in February 2006.[9]

Andy Scott's Sweet

See main article: Sweet (band). In 1985 Scott and Tucker re-formed Sweet with new members Paul Day (ex-Iron Maiden) on lead vocals, Phil Lanzon (ex-Grand Prix now with Uriah Heep) on keyboards, and Mal McNulty (ex-Weapon) on bass. This band became "Andy Scott's Sweet" following Tucker's departure in 1991.

Other work

In July 2010, Scott appeared in UK television adverts for the insurance company VanCompare.com. Three adverts were in circulation featuring "Fox on the Run", "Love Is Like Oxygen", and "Action".[10]

Scott was a main organiser of the first charity Rock Against Cancer concert in All Cannings, Wiltshire, in May 2012, which was headlined by Brian May, The Boomtown Rats, and Midge Ure. Concerts are still ongoing, in which Scott still plays an active role.[11] [12]

Since the death of Steve Priest in June 2020, Andy is the last surviving original member of the Sweet.

Personal life

Scott lives in a converted barn at All Cannings, in the Vale of Pewsey, Wiltshire.[13] His wife Maddy left him in 2004 after his absence on a long tour of Australia.[14]

In September 2009, Scott was diagnosed with prostate cancer; following treatment, he was in remission.[15]

Discography

With Sweet

See main article: Sweet discography.

As Andy Scott

Albums

Singles

12" singles

With Ladders

Singles

With Andy Scott's Sweet

Starting at the year of 2000 only as "Sweet" again

Singles

Albums

Studio
Live

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{Allmusic|class=artist|id=p5574/biography|pure_url=yes}} Biography: Sweet]. Erlewine. Stephen Thomas . Allmusic. 15 April 2010.
  2. Web site: North Wales: Sa – Sn link2wales.co.uk. link2wales.co.uk. 15 May 2008 . 26 December 2015.
  3. Web site: Mayfields Mule* - Mayfields Mule. Discogs. 26 December 2015.
  4. Web site: Krugerrands. Andy Scott Webspace. 27 April 2014.
  5. Web site: Andy Scott Solo CD. The Sweet Web. 27 April 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140427233124/http://www.thesweetweb.com/news/item/scottsolo. 27 April 2014. dead.
  6. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 266.
  7. Web site: Andy Scott – "Krugerrands" . https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/T6bOR3NP20A . 21 December 2021 . live. YouTube . 18 June 2006 . 11 April 2014.
  8. Web site: Michael Damkvist . Paddy goes to Holyhead . Paddy goes to Holyhead . 11 April 2014.
  9. Web site: Back to the Drive – Suzi Quatro | Credits . AllMusic . 14 March 2006 . 11 April 2014.
  10. Web site: Andy Scott joins VanCompare.com to offer "foxy" van insurance quotes . 11 July 2010 . Vancompare.com . 11 April 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120128213135/http://www.vancompare.com/Van-Compare-and-Andy-Scott-team-up-in-TV-advert . 28 January 2012 . dead .
  11. Web site: Concert at the Kings – Official Facebook Page. 4 October 2015. .
  12. Web site: Concert at the Kings – charity concerts in All Cannings, Wiltshire . Concert at the Kings . 21 March 2014 . 11 April 2014.
  13. Web site: Sweet guitarist adds glam to fence shop opening. The Wiltshire Gazette and Herald. 11 January 2016 . 28 March 2018.
  14. News: Glam rocker has a barn home blitz. . en. 21 February 2021. 0140-0460.
  15. Web site: Glam rock bottom: why did it go so sour for Sweet?. David. Cavanagh. 23 September 2010. The Guardian. 28 March 2018.