It's one of the great ironies in
Alan White's career that he came to fame in the shadow of the drummer he replaced in
Yes,
Bill Bruford. In a way it was neither musician's fault --
Bruford was considered, after
Carl Palmer, the hottest drummer in England, while
White had, in the public's perception, played in a few highly visible bands and gigs without a lot of acclaim. In fact, at 23 years of age, he had a decade's experience as a professional musician.
White's father was an amateur pianist, and his own first instrument was the piano. He gravitated toward the drums, however, and at age 12 he got his own drum kit from his uncle, who was also a drummer. He quickly abandoned lessons in favor of developing his own style and approach. By 13, he was playing in a group called
the Downbeats and becoming the subject of local press articles because of his age. In his mid-teens,
White was playing gigs seven nights a week for a good part of the year, primarily doing covers of
Beatles and other British beat tunes of the early to mid-'60s.
White tried studying technical drawing, with the hope of eventually pursuing a career as an architect, but musical success intervened when his group, rechristened
the Blue Chips, got a contract with Polygram Records after winning a Melody Maker band contest in London. They cut a single in 1965, and sometime after that
White joined
Billy Fury's backing band, the Gamblers, spending three months playing with them in Germany during 1966.
White passed through the lineups of a lot of short-lived late-'60s outfits including Ginger Baker's Airforce (playing some keyboards there as well), where he was in the unfortunate position of working alongside legendary drummer
Phil Seaman, who managed to eclipse his younger colleague at every turn. From that group, he moved on to a brief tenure in Balls alongside
Denny Laine and
Trevor Burton, late of
the Moody Blues and
the Move, respectively, and
Graham Bond, and then played with
Joe Cocker. He also spent two years as a member of
Terry Reid's band. It was in 1969 that he got his highest exposure, however, as a member of
John Lennon's
Plastic Ono Band.
Lennon first pressed
White into service for the Toronto Rock 'n Roll Revival show that became the Live Peace In Toronto album, although at the time no LP was intended -- by sheer luck, the existence of a bootleg release resulted in an official Apple Records LP that sold millions of copies, and had
White's name placed on an equal footing in the band credits with
Lennon and
Eric Clapton. He also played on the single "Instant Karma" and on the
Imagine album, which were some of the hottest records of the era.
White played on albums by
George Harrison,
Doris Troy,
Gary Wright, and
Alan Price between 1969 and 1972. Additionally,
Price had worked as the producer with a band of
White's called
Griffin, which included
Graham Bell,
Ken Craddock,
Pete Kirtley, and
Colin Gibson, who had cut an LP in 1969. He was getting as much exposure as any British drummer of the era when his entry to
Yes took place. The group's original drummer,
Bill Bruford, had already carved out a name for himself in four years with the group that made him the idol of tens of thousands of aspiring drummers around the world. Known for his complex rhythms and a very jazz-influenced approach to playing,
Bruford had become both popular and respected as a member of
Yes. He had also grown unhappy, however, with some of the music that the group was generating on their fifth album,
Close to the Edge. By the spring of 1972, he was increasingly eager to move on to other vistas, and finally left officially on July 19, 1972. The fact that
White was a friend of
Eddie Offord,
Yes' producer, and of lead singer
Jon Anderson, helped smooth the way for his entry into the group, and
Bruford himself had welcomed him as his successor. In point of fact, he'd come into the studio in the months before
Bruford's exit, unofficially, listening and watching what was going on, and had tried playing the material from
Close to the Edge and handled it. Upon
Bruford's exit,
White learned the group's entire concert repertory in three days for an upcoming show.
White never looked back, from that summer 1972 tour right into the 21st century. Fans never minded either, once he established his reputation, which he did on that tour and the triple live LP
Yessongs that came from it.
Bruford was represented on a handful of tracks, but
White was the drummer on most of the material, including the all-important (and new)
Close to the Edge material. He was perfect for the spot he filled --
Bruford's jazz-influenced playing had added immeasurably to the band's first four albums, and he'd achieved extraordinary things in spite of his dislike of the music on
Close to the Edge, but
Yes was evolving into a bigger, arena rock band with a sound that required power as well as eloquence, and
White revealed that he had power to spare. Not everything that
White put his hand to worked, to be sure. He was perhaps less responsible than the credited composers for the excesses of
Tales From Topographic Oceans, but that didn't make
White's percussion interlude on that album's "The Ritual") any easier listening. For the most part, however,
White became the bedrock of the group's sound during the turbulent late-'70s era, when
Yes was struggling with membership changes and the end of the progressive rock boom, which reduced their sales and audience. He worked in one surprisingly engaging solo album during this period, called
Ramshackled, in tandem with similar efforts by the other members of the band, but his commitment was to the group. Indeed, it was
White's breaking his ankle (at a roller-disco, no less) in late 1979 that precipitated the momentary end of the band that year, amid a disastrous attempt at recording a new album. And
White, along with
Chris Squire, would become one of the carryover members of the group during the period in which
Trevor Horn and
Geoff Downes joined, as well as all subsequent
Yes recordings to the present day. No more fitting tribute to
Alan White's abilities exists than that paid him by
Bill Bruford, who applauds the sheer power of
White's playing and the fact that he has retained his inventiveness over any number of extended arena-to-arena tours. Coupled with his down-to-earth attitude, which has permitted him to work on records as different as
Tales From Topographic Oceans and Owner of a Lonely Heart, his steadiness and reliability have made
White a mainstay of the group for three decades. And thanks to cumulative sales of many tens of millions of LPs, CDs, and singles,
White remains one of the most well known and oft-heard drummers in rock music, rivaling
Ringo Starr,
Charlie Watts,
Ginger Baker,
Nick Mason,
Ian Paice, and
John Bonham.
–
Bruce Eder, Rovi