A key figure in the history of the blues passed away on October 18, 2011. Bob Brunning, founder bassist with Fleetwood Mac and stalwart of Savoy Brown and his own DeLuxe Blues Band, died suddenly of a heart attack at the age of 68.
Bob Brunning is one of those figures who keeps turning up in the annals of British blues, without ever achieving the kind of mass recognition that a four-decade career would lead one to expect. Brunning was born and raised in Bournemouth, England, where he began his music career playing bass as a teenager in various local bands. He moved to London in 1964 and attended college, intending to become a teacher, while also joining the band Five's Company. The latter were reasonably promising, to the degree that they actually got to cut three 45s for the Pye label. He eventually left college and in 1967 fate took a hand when Peter Green left John Mayall's Bluesbreakers -- arguably the top pure blues band in England at the time -- to form his own group. His intention was to take his fellow Bluesbreakers drummer Mick Fleetwood and bassist John McVie with him, and his chosen name for the proposed band was Fleetwood Mac. But while Fleetwood was willing to join the band, McVie initially chose to stay on with Mayall's group -- meanwhile, slide guitarist Jeremy Spencer was recruited to fill out the guitar sound and Brunning was lucky enough to be selected as the band's bassist. Brunning was part of the group's early sessions, before McVie finally came on board, and one of his recordings, "Long Grey Mare," was on the group's self-titled debut album, which made the U.K. Top Five. His time with the band is also preserved on a handful of early live recordings from mid-1967 that have surfaced since.
He wasn’t simply a footnote in British musical history. He was a stand-alone chapter, and will be greatly missed by many. RIP, Bob Brunning
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