Ray Burton (musician)


Raymond Charles Burton is an Australian musician and singer-song writer. He was briefly a member of rock 'n' rollers the Delltones on vocals, pop group the Executives on guitar and vocals, progressive rockers Leo de Castro and Friends on guitar, and jazz fusion band Ayers Rock on guitar and vocals. In 1971 Burton was working in the United States where he co-wrote "I Am Woman" with fellow Australian, Helen Reddy, which became a number-one hit for her on the Billboard Hot 100 late in the following year. Another song written by the pair, "Best Friend", was sung by Reddy while she was also acting in a disaster film, Airport 1975. As a solo artist, Burton issued an album, Dreamers and Nightflyers and two associated singles, "Too Hard to Handle" and "Paddington Green", in 1978 in Australia. He returned to the US where he worked as a song writer.

Biography

Ray Burton was born in 1944. He joined Dave Bridge Quartet as a rhythm guitarist in 1961 in Sydney. The instrumental band included Bridge on lead guitar, Warren Foley on drums and Ken White on bass guitar. They were signed to HMV which issued two singles, "Skip to My Lou" and "San Fernando Valley" before disbanding early in the next year. Burton on lead guitar formed his own instrumental group, the Telstars, and issued a single, "Reef Ride". He joined vocal harmony, rock 'n' roll group, the Delltones, for a year from 1965 to 1966.
In 1967 Burton was enlisted by pop group, the Executives, on lead guitar. According to Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, they had, "scored a run of hit singles" in Sydney with "My Aim Is to Please You'", "Sit Down I Think I Love You", "It's a Happening World", "Windy Day" and "Summerhill Road". The group toured the United States in 1968 and again in the following year, McFarlane observed, "by that stage, however, breezy pop had become outmoded in the face of rock's new progressive phase and the band quietly folded." Most of the members returned to Australia.
While in the US Inner Sense had worked with the talent management company, DiBlasio, Wald & Day, in Los Angeles, which led to Burton collaborating with fellow Australian, Helen Reddy, in early 1971. Two of their co-written tracks, "I Am Woman" and "My Friend", appeared on her debut album, I Don't Know How to Love Him. Burton's work permit had expired and he returned to Australia. By December 1972 "I Am Woman" had become a number-one hit on the Billboard Hot 100. In February of the following year it peaked at No. 2 on the Go-Set Australian National Charts top 40.
Burton travelled to Melbourne where he joined funk, soul and country music group, Leo de Castro and Friends, in April 1973 on guitar, alongside de Castro on lead vocals, Mark Kennedy on drums and Doug McGuire on bass guitar. Burton McGuire & Kennedy formed their own eponymous group in June and added Jimmy Doyle on guitar in August. In September they were renamed, Ayers Rock, as a jazz fusion, progressive rock group and in the next month, Col Loughnan joined on saxophones. Burton left the group in March 1974 and travelled to the US, "to push his claim for unpaid royalties due from the sales of 'I Am Woman'."
In the US he worked as a session musician for Billy Joel, Dave Mason and Jimmy Webb. He returned to Australia in 1977 where he formed a rock group, the Nightflyers, with Rex Bullen on keyboards, Ian Davidson on guitar and synthesiser, Gus Fenwick on bass guitar, Steve Hopes on drums and John Pugh on guitar. They recorded his debut solo album, Dreamers and Nightflyers, and two associated singles, "Too Hard to Handle" and "Paddington Green", in 1978, which was produced by Charles Fisher via Warner Records. He returned to the US where he worked as a song writer. As of June 2003 Burton was living in Queensland's Gold Coast, where he would occasionally perform at local venues.