Best-known for his tenure with long-running heavy metal act
Uriah Heep, singer/multi-instrumentalist
Ken Hensley was born in Hertforshire, England, on August 24, 1945. During the mid-'60s, he formed the psychedelic blues combo the
Gods with
Greg Lake (subsequently of
Emerson, Lake & Palmer) and future
Rolling Stone Mick Taylor, although only
Hensley remained from the original lineup by the 1968 release of their debut album
Genesis. Upon issuing
To Samuel a Son the following year, the band added
Cliff Bennett and rechristened themselves
Toe Fat. A pair of
John Peel-produced LPs followed before
Toe Fat split and in 1970,
Hensley signed on to play guitar and keyboards in Spice, soon renamed
Uriah Heep in honor of the
Charles Dickens character. Despite near-unanimous critical animosity,
Uriah Heep earned a loyal following in hard rock circles and in 1973,
Hensley recorded his solo debut,
Proud Words on a Dusty Shelf, with the aid of bandmates
Lee Kerslake and
Gary Thain.
Eager to Please followed two years later and after completing
Uriah Heep's 1980 album Conquest,
Hensley left the group to mount a full-time solo career, issuing
Free Spirit in 1981. The year following he joined the Florida hard rock outfit
Blackfoot, remaining with the group until they disbanded in 1984.
Hensley then settled into semi-retirement, collecting his unreleased material on the 1994 collection
From Time to Time.
–
Jason Ankeny, Rovi