Sunday, 28 September 2025

Ray Warleigh born 28 September 1938

Ray Warleigh (28 September 1938 – 21 September 2015) was an Australian alto saxophonist and flautist. 

Raymond "Ray" Kenneth Warleigh was born in Sydney and migrated to England in 1960, where he quickly established himself as an in-demand session musician. He played and recorded with major figures and bands of the UK jazz and blues scene, including Alexis Korner, Tubby Hayes, Humphrey Lyttelton, Terry Smith, Ronnie Scott, Long John Baldry, John Mayall, Keef Hartley, Allan Holdsworth, Soft Machine, Georgie Fame, Mike Westbrook, Dick Morrissey and Kenny Wheeler, as well as Mike Oldfield, Nick Drake, and Charlie Watts. 

He accompanied visiting artists such as Champion Jack Dupree. According to John Fordham in The Guardian wrote: "Ray Warleigh brought a unique touch to every venture he played on from the 60s on, and had a successful 30-year career that partnered him with Dusty Springfield, Marianne Faithfull, Scott Walker and Stevie Wonder, among others." 

                                     

Warleigh's first album, in 1968, was produced by Scott Walker. During this same period a few years later, in 1971 he appeared on Nick Drake's second album, Bryter Layter, playing a beautifully memorable flute part on the final track "Sunday". His evocative performance, displaying both classical and jazz sensibilities, was in stark contrast to the percussive, unorthodox flute heard on contemporary albums such as Aqualung from the likes of Jethro Tull. 

In 1973 he joined Latin fusion band Paz, led by vibist and composer Dick Crouch. He featured with the band for eight years playing a weekly Sunday residency at the Kensington pub in Holland Park, recording albums including 'Kandeen Love Song', 'Paz Are Back' (Spotlite Records), 'Paz Live at Chichester Festival' (Magnus Records) and 'Look Inside' (Paladin Records). Other members of the band were Dick Crouch leader and vibes, Ed Speight on guitar, Geoff Castle on keyboards, Ron Mathewson on bass guitar, Dave Sheen on drums and Chris Fletcher on percussion. 

Warleigh's last album, 'Rue Victor Massé' (2009), is an improvisation with free-jazz drummer Tony Marsh, has received critical acclaim. According to Jazz Review: "The duo’s synergy and common goals resound mightily here, featuring Warleigh’s lyrically resplendent sax and flute lines, in concert with a crystalline audio sound, the musicians flex some muscle amid buoyant underpinnings." 

In his leisure time Warleigh was an accomplished yachtsman, completing many voyages with his long-standing friend, Dr Gillian Ross, with whom he co-owned several boats, before serious illness struck in 2011. He died of cancer on 21 September 2015.

1 comment:

boppinbob said...

Ray Warleigh – Ray Warleigh's First Album (1969 Phillips) (re-issue as CD 2006 Sunbeam)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/RyLbyJZW

1 The Look Of Love
2 Round Midnight
3 Dindi
4 Last Night When We Were Young
5 You're Gonna Hear From Me
6 Someone To Light Up My Life
7 Once I Loved
8 Lover Man

Bass – Kenny Napper
Drums – Ronnie Stephenson, Terry Cox
Guitar – Dave Goldberg, George Kish
Piano – Gordon Beck
Strings – Reg Leopold

Ray Warleigh – Specifics 29 – Woodwind (1996 Music House)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/dyyj6fXe

1 Butterflies
2 Quiet Landscape
3 Bird Sanctuary
4 Dismal
5 Spring Dawn
6 World At Peace 1
7 World At Peace 2
8 By The Fireside
9 Green Leaves
10 Atlantis
11 Winter Morning
12 Earth Worm
13 Low Down
14 Summer Haze
15 Ocarina Folk
16 Static
17 Goblins
18 Horn Pipe
19 Mulberry Round
20 Piccolo March
21 Happy As A Sand Boy
22 Pied Piper
23 Happy Hobgoblins
24 Court Jester
25 Tom Thumb
26 Kinda Play
27 On The Prowl
28 Up And Out
29 TV Tune
30 Lonely Lady
31 Purple Puma
32 Blue Velvet
33 Slow And Bluesy
34 Alto Flute Blues
35 I'm Happy
36 Humming The Blues
37 Whimsical

Red Price, Ray Warleigh & Chris Pyne With The Johnny Burch Trio – Groovin' High: Jam Session At The Hopbine, 1965

https://pixeldrain.com/u/5DEUDmG8

1. Billie's Bounce
2. All The Things You Are
3. Alexander's Ragtime Band
4. Groovin' High

Alto Saxophone – Ray Warleigh
Bass – Ron Mathewson
Drums – Alan "Buzz" Green
Piano – Johnny Burch
Tenor Saxophone – Red Price
Trombone – Chris Pyne

The Ray Warleigh Quartet – Times Gone By (2022 Jazz In Britain)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/iQRweadG

1. Times Gone By 11:44
2. Crotales 8:50
3. Warleigh Manor Part 1 20:59
4. Warleigh Manor Part 2 17.40
5.6. Do It In Two 6:27
6. The Return 9:31

Recorded in London 1979
Released June 18, 2022

Ray Warleigh – alto sax
Geoff Castle – piano
Ron Mathewson – bass
Bryan Spring – drums

Holdsworth, Warleigh, Mathewson and Spring - Warleigh Manor - contains a truly remarkable and previously unheard private session by four titans of British Jazz. These recordings feature an extended, predominately free jazz suite across two distinct parts that lay forgotten in a large box full of tapes for at least 40 years. The music can perhaps be best described as the sound of extraordinary telekinesis between players at the height of their considerable powers.

All albums are @192 are available on the usual streamers.