David Coverdale

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David Coverdale
Born September 22 1951 (1951-09-22) (age 58)
Origin Saltburn-by-the-Sea, Yorkshire, England
Genre(s) Hard rock
Blues-rock
Heavy metal
Glam metal
Years active 1973 - present
Associated
acts
Whitesnake
Deep Purple
Coverdale-Page
Website Official Whitesnake Website

David Coverdale (born September 22 1951 in Saltburn-by-the-Sea, Yorkshire, England) is an English rock vocalist most famous for his work with the English hard rock band Deep Purple, and his later band Whitesnake.

Contents

[edit] Career

Coverdale, briefly a student at Middlesbrough Art College in Yorkshire, was largely unknown until he was selected to replace Deep Purple vocalist Ian Gillan(who had resigned) in September 1973. He was living in Marske-by-the-Sea and working in a clothes shop in Redcar, Yorkshire fronting a local group called Government which had supported Deep Purple and he had impressed Jon Lord four years before. With Deep Purple advertising for a vocalist, he sent them a demo tape of his vocals. Impressed by his deep blues timbre, Coverdale was recruited to the band, sharing vocal duties with bassist/vocalist Glenn Hughes. It was dream story for an unknown to be instantly elevated into the biggest selling band in the world and adjusting to the unmatched musical virtuosity of Deep Purple. Coverdale immediately became a international rock superstar and recognized as one of the best singers ever with the million selling albums titled Burn, Stormbringer, Made In Europe, and Come Taste The Band. The lineup is known as Mark 3. In April 1974, he sang to over 200,000 in his first trip to America at the California Jam. He also sang on Jon Lord's Windows and Roger Glover's The Butterfly Ball. His three year tenure ended in March 1976 when Deep Purple finally split up.

Moving to Germany, he laid down a vocal track on a multi-artist project organized by Eddie Hardin, released by RCA Records as Wizard's Convention which also featured Deep Purple musicians.

Unable to perform in England for contractual reasons, Coverdale then recorded vocals for both his solo albums in Germany while the backing tracks were laid down in London. The backing musicians who played on these albums were retained for touring purposes, and effectively became the original line-up of Whitesnake, Coverdale's personal group.

Image:David Coverdale-Into the Light.jpg
David Coverdale on the cover of his 2000 solo album Into the Light

With ex-Deep Purple founders Jon Lord followed by Ian Paice joining in 1979, Whitesnake became international superstars.

According to British heavy metal magazine Kerrang!, in 1982, with Whitesnake's lineup and career in flux with Jon Lord leaving for the Deep Purple reunion, Coverdale was considered for the vocalist position with Black Sabbath following the departure of Ronnie James Dio. Coverdale declined, and Sabbath hired Coverdale's predecessor in Deep Purple, Ian Gillan. Rainbow's late drummer Cozy Powell joined Coverdale for Whitesnake's 1984 album Slide It In and tour. There are two versions of this album: the European one having Colin Hodgkinson on bass with long-time Whitesnake member Micky Moody and relative newcomer Mel Galley (joined 1982) on guitar, and the U.S. version having Neil Murray on bass and John Sykes, formerly of NWOBHM band Tygers Of Pan Tang and Thin Lizzy's guitarist added his parts to Moody and Galley's original ones.

Whitesnake recorded a series of blues influenced hard rock records in the late seventies and early eighties, gaining popularity in the UK,Europe, Asia, and Africa. North American success remained elusive though, until the multi-platinum 1987 self-titled Whitesnake, co-written for the most part with John Sykes, hit the racks. Before "1987" (the name it has become popularly known as) hit the shelves, Sykes and the rest of the recording band had parted company with Whitesnake. With "1987" North America was finally won; the album has sold 8 times platinum since its release, propelled by hit singles such as "Here I Go Again." Through the late 80's and early 90's, caught in the "hair-band" craze era, Coverdale kept Whitesnake going with great success and with changing lineups until the end of 1991. It is no secret that Coverdale wanted out of the business at that point. He'd grown uncomfortable with the corporate, image-driven entity he felt Whitesnake had become. In a candid period interview, Coverdale sums it up in one sentence:
"It got louder and louder, and so did I, to the point now where I have to get dressed up as a "girly man" and tease ones questionable pants or hair and it's all getting a bit ... boring."

In 1994 Whitesnake was put on the road again in support of a Greatest Hits compilation. Citing weak sales figures for this compilation, Geffen Records elected not to renew Whitesnake's recording contract, and Whitesnake was again put on ice.

Image:David Coverdale.jpg
David Coverdale in 2006
Inevitably, you might say, another Whitesnake re-formation was around the corner, though it was not intended as such to begin with. Coverdale's intention was to do a solo album under his own name, but record company executives wanted a Whitesnake album, so Whitesnake it was yet again. Whitesnake's 1997 "comeback" album Restless Heart represented somewhat of a return to Coverdale's R&B heritage. As he told the press on its release, he had tired of the more cartoonish elements of Whitesnake's image:
"I've had enough of the Tarzan impressions. I wanna sing. Less strain on the old Calvins."
This direction, but to a greater extent, was also pursued on Coverdale's third solo album, Into the Light; although there was also the occasional lapse into hard rock mode. Now settled in Lake Tahoe, Nevada, Coverdale looks set to remain a fixture in rock's middle-aged hierarchy.

In December 2002, Coverdale re-reformed Whitesnake again for an American and European tour, with Tommy Aldridge on drums, Marco Mendoza (bass), Doug Aldrich (guitar), Reb Beach (guitar) and Timothy Drury (keyboards). In 2004-2005 saw Whitesnake embark on a tour of the U.S., South America and Europe. A live DVD, shot during the 2005 tour at the legendary Carling Apollo (better known as the Hammersmith Odeon) in London, was released in February 2006. In June 2006 David Coverdale signed a new record deal with Steamhammer/SPV. The first release under the new contract was the double live album Live: In The Shadow Of The Blues (released Nov. 27th 2006), the album also contained 4 brand new studio tracks signed Coverdale/Aldrich. Coverdale has recently (2006)had a song written about him by Australian Independent band, the Fauves. The song alludes to buying one of his albums at gas station and driving through the night listening to it.

Rumours have been flying hot and heavy with regard to a Deep Purple Mark 3 reunion. Fans can only hope.

[edit] Band history

David Coverdale has been in many different well known musical movements other than the one he is best known for (Whitesnake).

  • Deep Purple (1973-1976)
  • Solo (1976-1978)
  • Whitesnake (1978-1982)
  • Whitesnake (1984-1991)
  • Coverdale/Page (1991-1993)
  • Whitesnake (1994)
  • Whitesnake (1997-1998)
  • Solo (1999-2001)
  • Whitesnake (2002-present)

[edit] Personal life

Image:David Coverdale Kavarna mural.png
Mural depicting David Coverdale on the wall of an apartment block in Kavarna, "the rock capital of Bulgaria"

David Coverdale was first married in 1974 to Julia, and their daughter Jessica was born in 1978. Coverdale's second marriage was to actress Tawny Kitaen, from February 17 1989 until their divorce in April 1991. Kitaen was known for her "provocative" appearances in Whitesnake's music videos for "Here I Go Again" and "Is This Love." Currently he is married to Cindy Coverdale (they married in 1997), a renowned author of books (most recently The Food That Rocks) and have a son, Jasper (b. 1996). Coverdale is also a proud grandfather to daughter Jessica's two children. On March 1st 2007 David Coverdale became a U.S. citizen, in a ceremony in Reno, and now holds dual US/UK citizenship. Report on David Coverdale becoming a US Citizen

[edit] Guitarists

Over his 30 year career, Coverdale has worked with many of rock music's most accomplished guitar players.

  • Ritchie Blackmore (Deep Purple, Rainbow, Blackmore's Night) - in Deep Purple (1973-1975)
  • Tommy Bolin (The James Gang, Deep Purple) - in Deep Purple (1975-1976)
  • Micky Moody (Juicy Lucy, Whitesnake, Company of Snakes, M3) - in Whitesnake (1977-1982, 1984)
  • Bernie Marsden (UFO, Whitesnake, Bernie Marsden SOS, Company of Snakes, M3) - in Whitesnake (1977-1982)
  • Mel Galley (Trapeze, Whitesnake) - in Whitesnake (1982-1984)
  • John Sykes (Tygers Of Pan Tang, Badlands (UK), Thin Lizzy, Whitesnake, Blue Murder, Sykes) - in Whitesnake (1984-1987)
  • Vivian Campbell (Sweet Savage, Dio, Whitesnake, Riverdogs, Shadow King, Def Leppard) - in Whitesnake (1987-1988)
  • Steve Vai (Frank Zappa, Alcatrazz, David Lee Roth, Whitesnake) - in Whitesnake (1988-1991)
  • Adrian Vandenberg (Vandenberg, Whitesnake, Manic Eden) - in Whitesnake (1988-1991, 1994, 1997-1998)
  • Jimmy Page (Led Zeppelin, The Firm, Coverdale/Page, The Yardbirds) - in Coverdale/Page (1992-1993)
  • Warren DeMartini (Ratt) - in Whitesnake (1994)
  • Earl Slick (David Bowie, John Lennon, Phantom Rocker & Slick) - in David Coverdale solo work (2000)
  • Doug Aldrich (Lion, Hurricane, Bad Moon Rising, Burning Rain, Dio, Whitesnake) - in Whitesnake (2002-present)
  • Reb Beach (Winger, Dokken, Alice Cooper, The Mob) - in Whitesnake (2002-present)

[edit] Discography

[edit] With Deep Purple

[edit] Post-1976 Albums with Deep Purple

[edit] Solo

[edit] With Whitesnake

[edit] Others

[edit] See also

da:David Coverdale

de:David Coverdale es:David Coverdale fr:David Coverdale it:David Coverdale ka:დევიდ კოვერდეილი nl:David Coverdale ja:デヴィッド・カヴァーディル no:David Coverdale pl:David Coverdale pt:David Coverdale sr:Дејвид Кавердејл fi:David Coverdale sv:David Coverdale

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