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The
Ray Gillen Story
A personal
recounting of the musical career of Ray Gillen by Mark
Fevre
This was sent in private email from Mark to Joe Siegler.

From Joe: I was going back and forth with Mark
Fevre about Ray Gillen and Black Sabbath, as Mark said he was a friend of Ray's. He
started writing this "Story of Ray Gillen" for me to use on the web site, but he
never finished it, and dropped out of sight. :( Mark, if you're out
there and read this, please get back to me!
:)
From: "Marc
Fevre" <marcf@z-code.ncd.com>
Date sent: Thu, 7 Mar 1996 16:37:27 -0800
To: siegler@black-sabbath.com
Subject: The Ray Gillen Story (Pt. 1)
Joe,
Here's part of the story I promised. I've elaborated a bit on a few of the details I
mentioned briefly in my original telling, but I imagine that you'll find it more
interesting this way. Anyway, I only have so much time for this kind of thing while I'm
here at the office, so I'll be writing this piece in installments. Hope you don't mind.
As I'm sure you'll recall my mentioning, the real story on Ray Gillen goes back a little
bit further than his first gig with Black Sabbath.
A native of Cliffside Park, NJ, vocalist Ray Gillen actually started singing during his
senior year in high school; not publicly, mind you, but in private, at home, after school.
Up until then Ray had been something more of a high-school jock type, not a particularly
focused student or musician, perhaps, but a gifted athlete to be certain. If I remember
correctly, he was quite good in track and field - for what it's worth now - and it was, as
I've said, somewhere over the course of his senior year that Ray found himself coming
home, putting on a Beatles album or something, and singing along.
Anyway, after a couple of years of this, Ray started to like the way he sounded, and while
he was too embarrased to sample his voice at that time for his parents, he somehow
mustered up the courage to contact vocal trainer Robert Fitzgerald to see if Fitzgerald
thought he had a legitimate talent.
As Ray liked to tell the story, Fitzgerald's response was somewhere along the lines of
"Where the hell have you been all of my life?!", and with Fitzgerald's
encouragement Ray quickly decided to pursue his vocal studies in earnest.
It was at this time, then, that Ray began began performing in public, singing - over the
course of the next few years - in a string of local bands, building a name and reputation
for himself on the Club circuit that ran between New Jersey and New York.
Perhaps Ray's most successful stint during those days was as the vocalist in a local band
called Harlot. They were quite good, really, performing a small set of original material
sandwiched in between credible renditions of numbers by bands like Deep Purple, Led
Zeppelin, Van Halen, and the like; but it wasn't really until 1985, when he joined former
Rainbow drummer Bobby Rondinelli's outfit, "Rondinelli," that Ray's career began
to take real shape.
The band, which at the time featured Bobby Rondinelli on drums, his brother Teddy on
guitars, and James Lomenzo on bass and keyboards, found an excellent singer in Ray, and
with Ray behind the mike it wasn't long before Rondinelli found themselves billed as one
of the top acts on the North-Eastern club circuit, "touring" extensively as a
result.
With all of their energy and exposure, it wasn't too long after this that the band
attracted the attention of a record company, (I believe it was Atlantic,) and shortly
thereafter Rondinelli began to work on a series of demo recordings in the hopes of
interesting the label enough to merit a contract.
Not long after the band finished recording, however, a line-up change was effected,
bassist Tommy Henriksen (now Hendrix) stepping in to replace the departing Lomenzo, and
the band, with its new bassist on board, prepared for a new series of shows as they
awaited the label's decision.
Things looked good; the demo's had actually been aired on a radio station out of New York
a few weeks earlier, and the audience response had been excellent. Moreover, Henriksen was
fitting in beautifully, and as the new line-up tightened its sound, Ray - who had
continued to work with Fitzgerald as his vocal coach as all of this was occuring - was
singing better and better with each new performance. Success seemed right around the
corner.
And then it happened; Ray got the offer he couldn't refuse, and Rondinelli was finished
almost before it ever had ever had a chance to get started.
Ray Gillen was now the lead singer for Black Sabbath, and with his departure, Rondinelli's
fortunes quickly dried up. The label deal fell through, the band dissipated, (Henriksen
departing almost immediately to hook up with the band Warlock, where he would be joined a
short time later by drummer Bobby Rondinelli,) and that was it. End of story.
But while one story was coming to a close, another was just beginning...
(End of Part One)
From: "Marc
Fevre" <marcf@z-code.ncd.com>
Date sent: Fri, 8 Mar 1996 11:43:10 -0800
To: siegler@black-sabbath.com
Subject: The Ray Gillen Story (Part Two) - Glenn Hughes Forced Out
of Sabbath
Ray Gillen joined Black Sabbath in 1986, stepping in in mid-tour to replace the legendary
British bassist and vocalist, Glenn Hughes, after Hughes himself had done but a handful of
shows as Sabbath's new frontman.
Glenn had been the most recent addition to an ever-growing list of Sabbath singers, having
himself only joined the fold in the latter half of1985, when he lent his remarkable vocal
talents to what was then being billed as guitarist Tony Iommi's first solo album ever;
namely, "Seventh Star."
In truth, the album had originally been slated to include performances from a number of
different singers. David Coverdale, Robert Plant, and vocalist Rob Halford had all been
asked to participate as well, but on review of Glenn's preliminary contribtions, Iommi
quickly decided to ask his old friend if he'd be willing to sing on the entire album
instead of on the one or two songs he had originally been asked to do.
Iommi was aware at that time, of course, of some of Glenn's recent difficulties - Glenn
had been struggling for some time by now with an ever growing and increasingly dangerous
addiction to cocaine, an addiction that he'd first begun to develop during his days in the
seminal hard-rock band, Deep Purple, and which had plagued him ever since, marring each of
his efforts at a sustained come back - and it was Iommi's hope that by giving Glenn
another chance at getting his career in high gear again, he might be able to inspire his
friend to take a step closer to some sort of personal and professional recovery.
Hughes, eager to grasp this opportunity to re-establish himself, quickly agreed, pressing
on with his work on the "Seventh Star" album even after word had come down from
the label that the album would not be released without the Black Sabbath monicker attached
to it. A short while later, the album was released, and with largely favorable reviews in
place - despite the decidedly un-Black Sabbath like sound Hughes' presence had injected
into it - the band, which by now consisted of Iommi and Hughes, bassist Dave Spitz,
drummer Eric Singer, and perennial Sabbath-sideman, keyboardist Geoff Nicholls, began to
rehearse for the pending tour of North America and Europe.
It was at this time that it became increasingly clear that a new vocalist might be
required.
Never particularly comfortable with hard rock - Hughes' own musical tastes had always
leaned more towards soul and rhythm and blues than the proto-metal stylings that had come
to be identified with the band Black Sabbath - Glenn was having tremendous difficulty
grappling with performing Sabbath's material the way he felt Sabbath fans would want to
hear it. This factor, when combined with the fact that he was being asked to do something
he had never done before - that was, to perform live as a singer without the musical
crutch of playing bass as well - contributed to an increasingly growing sense of
nervousness regarding his role on the impeding tour. Sadly, Hughes was never able to
successfully get beyond his own reservations, and as the tour commenced his performances
were indeed quite shaky.
Moreover, the one thing that Glenn had always been able to depend on, his voice, was
beginning to fail him as well, this being the result of a fight he had gotten into on the
eve of the tour with the band's tour manager, whom Glenn had caught making a pass at his
girlfriend one evening. It seems that, in the course of the altercation, the man had hit
Glenn in the face so hard that he had splintered some bone in Glenn's eye socket, causing
internal bleeding in Glenn's sinuses that then leaked down and caked around his vocal
cords, requiring that Glenn visit a physician so that they could be scraped clean, a
procedure which did no end of immediate harm to Glenn's voice.
Clearly, then, Glenn was in no position to tour with the band. His nervousness and vocal
difficulties not withstanding, however, Glenn was desperate not to lose this chance to
prove himself again, but by the second or third night out it was plain to see that an
eleventh hour replacement was going to have to be made, as Glenn's performances were
growing increasingly labored, and there was genuine fear on the part of the band that in
the current situation, Glenn's cocaine abuse might rear its ugly head once more and catch
up with him.
The decision was made. Glenn had to be taken off of the tour.
Someone had to be brought in to replace him, though, and they had to be brought in fast.
It was at this point that Ray Gillen entered the picture.
(End of Part Two)
From: "Marc
Fevre" <marcf@z-code.ncd.com>
Date sent: Tue, 12 Mar 1996 15:07:33 -0800
To: siegler@black-sabbath.com
Subject: The Ray Gillen Story (Part 3)
Ray actually first came to hear about what was going on in the Sabbath camp when Dave
Spitz' girlfriend, herself a student of vocal coach Robert Fitgerald, gave him a call one
afternoon. She told Ray that it looked like there was going to be a change made in the
vocal department of the band's line up, and that he should consider auditioning for the
spot.
Ray didn't have to think about it for very long, and after a few quick phone calls, he
arranged, through Sabbath bassist Dave Spitz, to hook up with the band the next evening.
In the interim, however, there were a number of things to take care of. Rondinelli were
still readying themselves for another spate of shows, and Ray had also to get back to the
producers of "CATS", the Broadway Musical, who had only just a few days before
offered him the lead role in the production. Somehow, though, Ray managed to get through
the evening and the day that followed, his anticipation and excitement mounting as the
evening of his audition drew closer.
Finally, the time came, and after a very brief, somewhat clandestine meeting with the
members of the band before that night's concert - minus, of course, Glenn Hughes - Ray was
told that they would talk more after the evening's performance, which Ray was then invited
to stick around for.
The performance was a rough one, and upon watching Glenn - whom Ray admitted to having
been a big fan of - Ray could easily see that Glenn was having tremendous difficulty with
his voice that night. Indeed, as the show progressed, Glenn's voice seemed ready to give
out entirely.
After the concert, the members of the band - again, minus Glenn Hughes - reconvened on one
of the tour busses that had been rented out for the tour. Ray was asked to submit a demo
tape for consideration, but as he didn't have one Ray volunteered to audition live, saying
that tapes could lie anyway.
So that was how it happened, Ray sang a capella, and Iommi told him he was in.
Still, in the best tradition of the troubled luck that seemed to be plaguing the band, it
was discovered that Ray's knowledge of the band's back-catalog was nearly non-existent. In
other words, the band had found themselves a singer who was wholly unfamiliar with their
material, and in the face of another two shows to go- one the following evening, and
another the night after - before the band's next day off, it was clear that they'd have to
go it with Glenn in place for a little while longer.
In the meantime,Ray holed up with some borrowed cassettes of some of the band's albums,
listening to the material over and over as he hung out with the band, (Ray was introduced
to Glenn as a friend of Dave Spitz's,) watching the concerts they gave over the course of
the next two evenings in an attempt to learn some of the songs before Sabbath went into
rehearsals with its soon-to-be new singer.
There was still the unpleasant task of letting Glenn Hughes go to be dealt with, however,
and Iommi waited a bit longer than he should have to do this, as Glenn found out what was
going on before anyone from the band let him know.
"It was in Massachusetts," Glenn remembers, "at a party that was being held
for us, and some guy came up to me, not realising who I was, and he said, `So, did you
hear that Sabbath has a new singer?'"
Suddenly, everything clicked, Glenn immediately understood who Ray was, and why he'd been
hanging around the last couple of days, and he set off right away to confront Iommi about
the situation. As the decision was already made however, there was little Glenn could do.
The exchange between Hughes and Iommi was unpleasant, and Hughes left.
But in the weeks that followed, Glenn found that he was relieved that it was over. All the
stress and pressure could be set aside, and he could take the time to rest himself up, to
rest his voice, and then move on to a project more to his liking. His departure from
Sabbath seemed more and more a blessing in disguise.
As Glenn set off on his own path, however, the band were busily gearing up for the rest of
the tour with Ray in place. Ray informed his former bandmates in Rondinelli that he was
leaving the band, and he also called the "CATS" people too, letting them know
that he wouldn't be taking their offer - though he would have earned a considerably higher
wage with the production company than he did in Sabbath - of the lead role in the
company's musical.
Arrangements were made for the band to rent out a small theater in New York City, and for
the next day they rehearsed non-stop, putting Ray through his paces as they prepared for
the following night's gig.
As the hours ticked by, Ray's moment of truth came closer and closer. Ray slept hardly at
all the night before the show, and the following evening, after having performed a small
rehearsal set during sound checks that afternoon, Black Sabbath hit the stage with their
new singer in place.
The show went smoothly enough, though Ray sung a number of the songs from cue cards that
had been created for him as he worked his way through the as yet unfamiliar back catalog
of the band's music.
As the tour progressed, the performances improved, though the audience confusion failed to
abate much in spite of the wave of publicity the band had instigated in an attempt to
introduce their new singer to the public. Photo spots and interviews were hastily arranged
with most of the industry's top magazines and press organizations, but some audiences
seemed to have a hard time figuring out what was going on, though the reviews of the
band's strengthening performances with their excellent new singer were, by and large
pretty good.
At least in America at any rate.
In England, punters everywhere were confused and upset not only by the presence of the
young, unknown, AMERICAN INDIAN who was now fronting one of Britain's most beloved bands,
but by the relative strangeness of the new material as well, which was most un-Sabbath
like. The tour was not so well received, though Ray did win many fans over, and after an
abbreviated series of shows, Iommi decided to take the band into the studio and begin work
on Sabbath's next album, figuring that the best thing he could do would be to put the
whole tumultuos "Seventh Star" affair behind him, and return with an album that
was closer to the classic Sabbath sound of days gone by.
As with everything else that seemed to involve Sabbath, this too would not prove to be
easy.
________________
(End of Part 3)
Unfortunately, I lost contact with Marc, and he
never sent me any more parts to this story.. :(
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