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KEEF TROUBLE

Keef Trouble

Birth name Keith Trussell
Born 13 September 1949
Origin Greenwich, London, England.
Genres Rock, pop, Blues.
Occupation(s) Singer, songwriter.
Instruments vocals
Zob Stick (see Monkey stick)
guitar.

Keef Trouble (born Keith Trussell, 1949, Greenwich, London) is an English composer, singer and musician.

Trouble studied at The Slade School of Fine Art, London, from 1968 to 1972. He is a founding member of British country-blues band Brett Marvin and the Thunderbolts as vocalist, guitarist, and player of the Zobstick (also known as the Lagerphone or Monkey stick), and electric ironing board. Commercial success came in 1972 under the guise of Terry Dactyl and the Dinosaurs with Seaside Shuffle with fellow band members Graham Hine, John Randall, and Jona Lewie (of Stop the Cavalry notability). This record became a hit in Europe and Australia, and reached No. 2 in the UK Singles Chart.

Trouble is also part of, and writes original material for, the folk rock band Okee Dokee, which plays within West Sussex and Kent, including the Broadstairs Folk Week. He has produced two solo albums, Oasis and Kix 4 U, for Sun House Records, and has collaborated with Tony O’Malley, previously from the bands 10cc, Kokomo (band) and Arrival, writing the lyrics for O’Malley’s Mr. Operator and Naked Flame. O’Malley has also contributed to Trouble’s recordings, as have artists such as saxophonist Mel Collins (Roxy Music, Rolling Stones, The Grease Band), guitarist Neil Hubbard, and vocalists Dyan Birch, Paddy McHugh and Frank Collins. In 2008 Trouble produced the Brett Marvin and the Thunderbolts’ album Keep on Moving; co-producer and audio engineer was Pete Ker, who produced The Motors, Man, and Arthur Brown, co-writing Brown’s Fire.

Trouble co-wrote Jona Lewie’s 1980 hit record You’ll Always Find Me in the Kitchen at Parties

Trouble’s association with Jona Lewie goes back to 1969, and later both were members of Terry Dactyl and the Dinosaurs. In 1986 the first recordings of Trouble’s Oasis and Mix ‘n’ Mingle for the album Oasis took place at Lewie’s home studio in Streatham, with keyboard musician, arranger and composer Tony O’Malley, guitarist Neil Hubbard and engineer Pete Ker, producer for Arthur Brown and co-writer of Brown’s Fire. Trouble had secured a 45rpm single record deal with Rodd Buckle (Habana Music) for the release and distribution of Mix ‘n’ Mingle. Because of master tape release difficulties and lateness of the production at the Lewie studio, the record deal fell. Oasis was re-recorded by Ker at a professional recording studio, Ferry Sound.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia