Dickie Peterson
Dickie Peterson | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Grand Forks, North Dakota, U.S. | September 12, 1946
Died | October 12, 2009 Erkelenz, Germany | (aged 63)
Genres | Blues rock, psychedelic rock, heavy metal |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter |
Instrument(s) | Bass, vocals, guitar |
Years active | 1966–2009 |
Richard Allan Peterson[1] (September 12, 1946 – October 12, 2009)[2] known as Dickie Peterson was an American musician, best known as the bassist and lead singer for Blue Cheer. He also recorded two solo albums: Child of the Darkness and Tramp.
Biography
Born in Grand Forks, North Dakota, Peterson played bass from the age of thirteen onward, and knew at the age of eight that he wanted to become a professional musician. He came from a musical family: his father played trombone, his mother played piano and his brother, Jerry Peterson, initially played flute. Drums were Peterson's first instrument.
Peterson spent much of his youth in East Grand Forks, Minnesota, the twin city to Grand Forks, North Dakota, where he was born.[3][4] He attended Grand Forks Central High School from grade 10 through grade 12.[5] His parents died when he was young, resulting in him living with his aunt and uncle on a farm in North Dakota, for part of his youth.[4]
Peterson cited Otis Redding as a significant influence.[6] He credited his brother, the late Jerry Peterson,[7] as being his lifelong musical influence.[8] Jerry was one of the lead guitarists in the initial lineup of Blue Cheer (the other being Leigh Stephens) and played with various formations of the band in later years.[9]
Peterson spent much of the past two decades preceding his death based in Germany, playing with Blue Cheer and other groups on occasion. In 1998 and 1999, he played various dates in Germany with the Hank Davison Band and as an acoustic duo with Hank Davison under the name "Dos Hombres."[10] He appeared on the album, Hank Davison and Friends - Real Live. In 2001 and 2002, Peterson played, principally in Germany, with Mother Ocean, a group he formed that included former Blue Cheer guitarist Tony Rainier, as well as brother Jerry Peterson.[11]
Throughout his life, Peterson's relationship to music had been all-consuming. Peterson provided the following self-description: "I've been married twice, I’ve had numerous girlfriends, and they’ll all tell you that if I’m not playing music I am an animal to live with. ...Music is a place where I get to deal with a lot of my emotion and displaced energy. I always only wanted to play music, and that’s all I still want to do."[8]
In his early life Peterson was a user of various drugs and was a heroin addict for a number of years. In 2007, Peterson said he believed LSD and other similar drugs can have positive effects, but that he and other members of Blue Cheer "took it over the top".[12] He had ceased much of his drug use by the mid-1970s, and stopped drinking ten years before his death.[13]
Blue Cheer has been considered a pioneering band in many genres. Peterson did not consider that the band belonged to any particular genre: "People keep trying to say that we’re heavy metal or grunge or punk, or we’re this or that. The reality is, we’re just a power trio, and we play ultra blues, and it’s rock ‘n roll. It’s really simple what we do."[8]
On October 12, 2009, Peterson died[2] in Erkelenz, Germany at the age of 63 from liver cancer, after prostate cancer spread throughout his body.[12][14] He was survived by his second wife,[15] his former wife,[16] a daughter from his first marriage,[17] and a six-year-old grandson.[1][14][18][19]
Peterson was cremated and his ashes given to his daughter, Corrina. Peterson wished his ashes to be spread in the Rhine River in Germany and in the Redwoods of Northern California, at a site to be determined by his daughter.[20]
Neil Peart, the drummer for Rush, said in tribute to Peterson:
Dickie Peterson was present at the creation — stood at the roaring heart of the creation, a primal scream through wild hair, bass hung low, in an aural apocalypse of defiant energy. His music left deafening echoes in a thousand other bands in the following decades, thrilling some, angering others, and disturbing everything — like art is supposed to do.[21]
Discography
- 1998: Child of the Darkness Captain Trip Records; released only in Japan
- 1999: Tramp Captain Trip Records; released only in Japan
References
- ^ a b Comments of Marilyn (Peterson) Stephens, first wife of Dickie Peterson, October 13, 2009. Tribute blog to Dickie Peterson; www.inlog.org. Peterson's first wife asserts that his year of birth was 1946, rather than 1948.
- ^ a b R.I.P. Richard ‘Dickie’ Peterson (Blue Cheer) (1948 – 2009); www.inlog.org.
- ^ Peterson remained a resident of Grand Forks; his time in East Grand Forks was primarily to listen to emerging local bands. See Comments on background of Dickie Peterson[permanent dead link]; www.areavoices.com.
- ^ a b Chuck Haga, "Final cheer for a Blue Cheer". Grand Forks Herald, October 22, 2009; www.grandforksherald.com.
- ^ Online comment by former schoolmate in response to Chuck Haga, "Final cheer for a Blue Cheer". Grand Forks Herald, October 22, 2009; www.grandforksherald.com.
- ^ Interview with Dickie Peterson by Jason Ritchie, 2003; www.getreadytorock.com.
- ^ Died August 9, 2002; see "Blue Cheer News". Archived from the original on September 20, 2007. Retrieved 2013-08-18.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b c Interview with Dickie Peterson Archived 2011-09-28 at the Wayback Machine by Ken Schneider, 2005; www.stonerock.com.
- ^ Interview with Dickie Peterson by John Battles, 2007; www.roctober.com.
- ^ Blue Cheer News Archived 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine, "Dickie Peterson-Hank Davison Band-Dos Hombres"
- ^ See Notice of 2001 performance and Notice of 2002 performance; www.klubder40.de
- ^ a b Dickie Peterson dies at 63; bassist and lead singer for the power trio Blue Cheer Los Angeles Times, October 16, 2009.
- ^ As recounted by Blue Cheer bandmate Andrew "Duck" MacDonald in interview with Chuck Haga,"Final cheer for a Blue Cheer". Grand Forks Herald, October 22, 2009; www.grandforksherald.com.
- ^ a b William Grimes, Dickie Peterson, Singer for Rock Band Blue Cheer, Dies at 63. Obituary, The New York Times, October 13, 2009.
- ^ Ilka Diener
- ^ Marilyn (Peterson) Stephens
- ^ Corrina Peterson-Kaltenrieder, age 36, a former professional ballerina, previously associated with the Texas Ballet Theatre; see Performance announcement and bio, 2006; www.rpcb.net.
- ^ Blue Cheer's Dickie Peterson Remembered[permanent dead link]; www.roadrunnerrecords.com.
- ^ Vincent; see Performance announcement and bio of Corrina Peterson; www.rpcb.net.
- ^ Comments of Blue Cheer co-founder, producer and former manager Eric Albronda, October 28, 2009 at Blue Cheer Message Board (Thread: "Death of Dickie"); www.bluecheer.proboards.com.
- ^ "Louder Than God": Rush's Neil Peart Remembers Blue Cheer's Dickie Peterson. Rolling Stone Rock & Roll Daily, October 21, 2009; www.rollingstone.com.
External links
- 1946 births
- 2009 deaths
- 20th-century American guitarists
- 20th-century American singers
- American male singers
- American rock bass guitarists
- American rock singers
- Blue Cheer members
- Deaths from cancer in Germany
- Deaths from liver cancer
- Singers from North Dakota
- People from Grand Forks, North Dakota
- Guitarists from North Dakota
- American male guitarists