The Boston Globe

Gary Wright, who had a ’70s hit with ‘Dream Weaver’

- By Alex Williams

Gary Wright, a spirituall­y minded singer-songwriter who helped modernize the sound of pop music with his pioneering use of synthesize­rs while crafting infectious and seemingly inescapabl­e hits of the 1970s including “Dream Weaver” and “Love Is Alive,” died Monday at his home in Palos Verdes Estates, Calif. He was 80.

The cause was complicati­ons of Parkinson’s disease and Lewy body dementia, said his son Justin.

The New Jersey-bred Wright rose to prominence in the late 1960s after relocating to London and helping to form the bluesy British progressiv­e rock band Spooky Tooth.

He soon befriended George Harrison, with whom he would collaborat­e frequently over the years, including playing keyboards on that former Beatle’s magnum opus triple album, “All Things Must Pass,” released in 1970.

Their long friendship would have a lasting impact on both Mr. Wright’s life and his music. Harrison introduced him to Eastern mysticism, giving him a copy of “Autobiogra­phy of a Yogi,” by Paramahans­a Yogananda, who helped popularize yoga and meditation in the United States, and Harrison traveled with him to India.

“That was his life path after that,” Justin Wright said in a phone interview. “Deep down inside of him, he was searching for something, and this was the answer for him.”

His spiritual awakening helped spawn “Dream Weaver,” a track from his 1975 album, “The Dream Weaver,” which hit No. 7 on the Billboard album chart and rocketed him to fame. The song was inspired by the yogi’s poem “God, God, God,” which includes the line “My mind weaves dreams.”

Mr. Wright begins the song with the lyrics “I’ve just closed my eyes again / Climbed aboard the dream weaver train / Driver take away my worries of today / And leave tomorrow behind.”

The “Dream Weaver” single, swept along by a wave of lush electronic­a that bordered on the interstell­ar, soared to No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 in March 1976. The song became a softrock touchstone, appearing in such movies as “Wayne’s World” (1992) and “The People vs. Larry Flynt” (1996), as well as on a 2010 episode (called “Dream On”) of the musical comedy-drama TV series “Glee.”

It was not the only smash hit from that album. Like “Dream Weaver,” “Love Is Alive” rose to No. 2 that July, conjuring the languid sexuality of the water bed era. Mr. Wright performed at stadium shows on the same bill as heavyweigh­ts like Peter Frampton and Yes, standing out among the guitar gods with his strap-on keyboard known as a keytar.

While his biggest hits became emblematic sounds of the 1970s, Mr. Wright had taken an unconventi­onal musical approach on the album “The Dream Weaver,” relying almost entirely on keyboard instrument­s, including a Minimoog synthesize­r, as opposed to guitars, and foreshadow­ing the synth-pop boom of the early ’80s.

“The theme of having only keyboards, drums, voices — and no guitars — came accidental­ly,” Mr. Wright said in a 2010 interview with Musoscribe, a music website. When he went back and listened to the demos he had recorded, he said, “I thought, ‘Wow. This sounds good. It doesn’t really need guitars.’”

Gary Malcolm Wright was born April 26, 1943, in Cresskill, N.J., the middle of three children of Lou Wright, a structural engineer, and Anne (Belvedere) Wright.

His mother helped instill in him an interest in music and acting, driving him to piano lessons and eventually to auditions. Their efforts paid off when he made an appearance on the seminal science fiction TV series “Captain Video and His Video Rangers” and later won a role in the 1954 Broadway musical “Fanny,” starring Florence Henderson.

“I originally came into the play as an understudy to the main role, and then I picked up the main child role,” Mr. Wright said in a 2014 interview with Smashing Interviews Magazine. “I was only 11 and 12 during those years. It was an amazing experience to act and sing every night before sold-out audiences and sing with a full orchestral band.”

Within a few years, he abandoned the stage and screen “to be a normal kind of person in school, playing sports and Little League baseball and that kind of thing,” he told Smashing Interviews. While attending Tenafly High School, he played in various rock groups, including a duo called Gary and Billy with his school friend Bill Markle. Their single “Working After School” was played on the TV show “American Bandstand.”

After high school, Mr. Wright attended William & Mary in Virginia for a year before transferri­ng to New York University, where he switched his focus to medicine. After graduating in 1965, he briefly enrolled in medical school before moving to Berlin to study psychology.

Losing interest in a life in clinical practice, he went back to music, helping to form a band that built a following in Europe; at one point it opened for the rock group Traffic in Oslo, Norway. There he caught the attention of Chris Blackwell, the founder of Island Records. Blackwell summoned him to England to join a band called Art, which evolved into Spooky Tooth.

Spooky Tooth temporaril­y disbanded in 1970, and a year later Mr. Wright released his first solo album, “Footprint.” That album featured Harrison on guitar on the track “Two Faced Man,” which the two performed with Mr. Wright’s band Wonderwhee­l on “The Dick Cavett Show” in 1971.

In addition to his son Justin, Mr. Wright leaves his wife, Rose (Anthony) Wright; another son, Dorian; a sister, Lorna Lee; and two grandchild­ren. His marriages to Christina Uppstrom, the mother of his sons, and Dori Accordino ended in divorce.

Along with his work with Harrison, Mr. Wright was a session keyboardis­t for Harry Nilsson, B.B. King, and Jerry Lee Lewis, and he continued to record solo albums.

 ?? PAUL NATKIN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Mr. Wright performed onstage at the Auditorium Theater in Chicago, Ill., in 1977.
PAUL NATKIN/GETTY IMAGES Mr. Wright performed onstage at the Auditorium Theater in Chicago, Ill., in 1977.

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