Classically trained (viola and piano) and well-educated, Welsh-born
John Cale became interested in both the experimental side of classical
music (including artists like
John Cage), and American rock-n-roll. When
offered a chance to study music in New York in the early 1960s, Cale
accepted, and along with school became an apprentice of Cage's,
including performing a relay piano piece with him ("Vexations")
onstage.
Needing some quick cash away from his studies during 1964, Cale next
became the bass guitarist for a band called the Primitives, put
together around a song (called "The Ostrich") by
Lou Reed, who was then
a staff writer for a small record label. The record bombed, but Cale
and Reed became musical partners and co-writers.
Forming
The Velvet Underground the next year with Reed's old college classmate
Sterling Morrison, a cornerstone of the band was the camaraderie of Reed and
Cale, and the way they worked together. Cale's classical touches gave
the streetwise rock group's sound a unique, refined edge, and an added
intellectual appeal.
Making slow progress as a rock band, though, and Cale's missing the
British Isles, had nearly persuaded the Velvets to pack up and try
their luck in England, before their fateful meeting with artist and
filmmaker
Andy Warhol at the end of 1965. Acting as their manager and
producer, Warhol put the band to work the next year, performing live at
his shows, providing soundtracks for his films, and even appearing in
the films occasionally. He also teamed up actress and "chanteuse"
Nico with the Velvets, and secured them the recording contract (for
MGM's Verve label) they'd wanted. Besides their working relationship,
Cale and Reed each formed close personal ties with Warhol.
A falling-out between Cale and Reed during 1968 led to his exit from
the Velvet Underground (not long after Nico's, and the band's firing of
Warhol). With all the experience he'd gained, Cale became a writer and
producer in his own right, making solo albums ("Vintage Violence", "The
Academy In Peril", "Music For A New Society") and producing records for
other artists (including Nico's "The Marble Index"). He and Lou Reed
mended their friendship during the 1970s, but never worked together
again until 1988, after Andy Warhol's death. The tributes each had been
working on separately turned into the joint album "Songs For Drella" (a
nickname for Warhol), which became a surprise hit in 1989.
Cale continued his solo writing and producing, but reunited with the
Velvet Underground in 1992 for a tour, and a live album. With admirers
in both the rock and classical worlds, Cale has secured a place for
himself in popular music.