Conny Veit

Wolf Conrad "Conny" Veit was a German musician, singer, composer and painter, best known for his appearances in Gila and Popol Vuh. His main instrument was the guitar. His name was misspelled "Conny Veidt" in Gila's first album.

Conny Veit
Birth nameWolf Conrad Veit
Also known asConny Veit, Coney Fight
Born(1949-06-05)5 June 1949[1]
Stuttgart, Germany
Diedat least 2009, date unknown
unknown
GenresKrautrock, progressive rock
Occupation(s)Musician, songwriter, painter
InstrumentsGuitar
Years active1969–1986
LabelsBASF, Second Battle
Associated actsGila, Popol Vuh

Biography and career

Little is known about Conny's life. In 1969 he founded Gila and, in 1971, recorded their first album, Free Electric Sound. In 1972 he joined Popol Vuh for a short period.

According to Conny, as for myself, in 1972, aged 21, I decided to move to Munich, because Popol Vuh’s Florian Fricke had invited me to collaborate on his new LP Hosianna Mantra. I had accepted the offer, yet I didn't want to leave Gila because Popol Vuh was a pure studio project. Anyway for me, it was not until I took that step that my life as a professional musician began.[2]

In 1973 he released the second Gila album, Bury my heart at wounded knee, with a new line-up featuring Daniel Fichelscher, Florian Fricke, Conny and his girlfriend Sabine Merbach. The second Gila iteration didn't have much of a lifespan either. Seemingly uninterested in touring, the band's focus splinted with Fichelscher and Fricke returning to Popol Vuh. For his part, Veit began working with Amon Duul II, before briefly hooking up with Guru Guru. He later turned his attention to painting. Suffering from alcoholism, Merbach died from liver failure.[3]

Daniel Fichelscher once stated that Conny was my best friend, I will never forget how we played 8 days a week.[4]

After the intensive work for Hosianna Mantra Conny Veit toured in France with Amon Düül II during the winter of 1973-1974 with Chis Karrer, John Weinzierl, Peter Leopold, Nick Woodland, Andy Vix and Jutta Weinhold.[2]

During 1985 and 1986 he was member of a band called Coney Island, under the name of Coney Fight.

In August 1999, Conny wrote to Wolf-Reinhart Kotzsch (owner of Second Battle recording company), stating that he had found suitable musicians for a new line-up of Gila, with whom he wanted to overdub some tracks recorded in their rehearsal studio in the eighties, which had not been released at that point in time. In Conny's view, the tapes were very interesting, because they offered a view about the possible development of the group at that period, if that should ever have materialized. In Hamburg I found some motivated musicians with close contacts to Berlin to bring Gila back to life again. There are some valuable tapes, although the material is not known to the public.[5]

Unfortunately, Second Battle couldn't get the project off the ground, because the label had to endure a lot of problems, like the insolvencies of business partners and the bootleg pirates, who have flooded the market of Progressive Rock for years and also destroyed more than one fellow company. Walter Nowicki released Gila's second album officially, so Conny had the chance to beat the bloodsucking "rip-off-managers" for once, just before his sad and untimely death.[5]

In 2008, Second Battle released the album Free Electric Rock Sessions, live in Koln 1972.[6]

Notes

  1. "Bluesnaptár - Június". w3.enternet.hu. Retrieved 2017-06-12.
  2. "conny veit | popolvuh.nl". www.popolvuh.nl. Retrieved 2017-06-12.
  3. "B". badcatrecords.com. Retrieved 2017-06-12.
  4. Breznikar, Klemen (November 1, 2014). "An interview with Danny Fichelscher, member of Popol Vuh, Gila, Amon Düül II and Niagara". It's Psychedelic Baby! Magazine. Archived from the original on September 18, 2016. Retrieved June 12, 2017.
  5. "Free electric Sound" (PDF).
  6. "Gila (2) - Free Electric Rock Session - Live In Köln (26.02.1972)". Discogs. Retrieved 2017-06-12.
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