Tony Hooper

Tony Hooper was the co-founder and a key member of the Strawbs during the group's first five years of existence, from 1967 through 1972. Born into a musical family in 1943, he was drawn to acting as a boy, but he later developed an interest in music. During the mid-'50s, he first made the acquaintance of Dave Cousins at school and discovered, at age 12, that they shared admiration for England's skiffle king, Lonnie Donegan. Out of that shared fandom, they each took up the guitar and formed their first group together, a jug band called the Gin Bottle Four. The band evolved along with the bandmembers' interests, from skiffle and jazz in the early days, and later into blues and folk music; among their early idols were Leadbelly, Pete Seeger, Peggy Seeger, Ewan MacColl, and Ramblin' Jack Elliott. They discovered bluegrass music a little bit later, and out of that interest -- with Cousins taking up the banjo, while Hooper stuck with his guitar -- they plunged into the genre. During the early '60s, Hooper studied electrical engineering and kept his hand in music mostly at Cousins' urging -- they played clubs as a duo when Cousins was back from college in London, and sometime in 1963 he introduced Hooper to Arthur Phillips, a mandolinist who turned their unit into a trio. They finally became a formal group in 1964, on the spur of the moment naming themselves the Strawberry Hill Boys in honor of the London locale, Strawberry Hill, where they were rehearsing.

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