Joe Hall (musician)


Joe Hall was a German-Canadian folk rock singer-songwriter.

Biography

Hall was born in Wuppertal, Germany, the son of Johann Boenke and Johanna Maria Zeirmann. He grew up in London, Ontario, Canada, and by the 1960s had begun performing in a trio, Drummond-McCaul, with pianist, Daryl LeBerg and guitar player, Bill Williams, and by the mid-1960s had begun performing and touring with another band, the Eyeball Wine Company with Roger Brant on bass and George Dobo on guitar and piano. An album, Joe Hall and the Eyeball Wine Company, was recorded in 1972 and released as a CD many years later. An earlier record, produced by Bob Ezrin, was never released. His first release was an album entitled H J Boenke,his birth name, produced by Joe and his longtime collaborator, Tony Quarrington, and engineered by Daniel and Bob Lanois, in 1976. Also playing on the album were George Dobo, keyboards; Roger Brant, bass; Mike Boyer, drums, and Joe Mendelson, "demented steel." The album was actually Volume 5, Number 2 of Impulse, a Canadian arts magazine. In the 1970s and 1980s he led a new band, Continental Drift, composed of Joe,
Tony Quarrington on guitar, George Dobo on keyboards, and additionally Paul Quarrington on bass and Martin Worthy on drums, based in Toronto, and released several more albums. Many of his records were released independently.

As well as his songs, Hall became noted for his "eccentric and often very funny stage chatter". One obituary commented on his performances: "From his then-considered daring stage apparel to his Zappaesque monologues and asides during songs, he seemed to do whatever came to mind with no regard for decorum or convention, his aim solely on the integrity of his artistic expression."
From the late 1980s he lived in Peterborough, Ontario. He continued to perform, and recorded and mentored younger musicians. He died at home in 2019, aged 71, after suffering from liver cancer for several years.

Discography