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Billy Lyall

Musical artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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William C. Lyall[1] (26 March 1953 – 1 December 1989) was a Scottish musician, known for his work with Pilot, The Alan Parsons Project, and the Bay City Rollers. Lyall worked as a solo artist and session player into the 1980s before he died from AIDS in 1989.[2]

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Career

Lyall was an early member of Bay City Rollers. In 1973, he and David Paton also from Bay City Rollers formed Pilot. They went to number one with "January" in 1975.

He left Pilot in early 1976, and released a solo album, Solo Casting, later that year under the name "William Lyall".[3] A song from the album, "Us", was released as a single.[4] Phil Collins played drums on all but two songs on the album.[5] All members of Pilot contributed to The Alan Parsons Project. All four played on Tales of Mystery and Imagination but Lyall did not play on the next album I Robot as he had left Pilot by the time the album was in works.

He was the keyboard player for Dollar between 1978 and 1982 playing keyboards and synths on the duos first three studio albums. In 1979, he contributed string arrangements and synthesizers to an album by the band Runner.[6]

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Personal life and death

Lyall moved to London in the early 1970s and lived in a red-brick mansion flat on Fitzjames Avenue, West Kensington.[3] He died during the AIDS pandemic in 1989, at the age of 36.[7] Bay City Rollers' manager Tam Paton later acknowledged that Lyall was gay.[8]

Albums discography

Solo

  • Solo Casting (1976)

With Pilot

With Dollar

Others

References

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