Considered to be one of England's best drummers, and very much in demand for rock and pop records,
Cozy Powell was almost legendary for a heavy-hitting style that could be made to work with many kinds of rock music, whether for the thundering pop productions helmed by
Mickie Most,
Black Sabbath,
Emerson, Lake & Powell, or even his own solo work (notably "Dance with the Devil," which was a major English hit in 1973.)
Powell began his professional music career in 1965 with the Sorcerers, eventually winding up working with
Jeff Beck after
Beck left
the Yardbirds. In 1971,
Powell formed
Bedlam, but eventually abandoned this project to produce singles such as "Dance with the Devil." He later formed Cozy Powell's Hammer, which broke up in 1975. After a brief sabbatical, he joined
Rainbow, helping to give the band a thundering rhythm section before quitting after four years and four albums in 1980. Always in demand for the drum seat, he alternated between session work and working in a variety of bands, including
the Michael Schenker Group,
Whitesnake and
Black Sabbath, never staying in any one band for very long.
In 1996, he worked with former
Fleetwood Mac guitarist
Peter Green on his long-awaited comeback tour. At the time of his death on April 5, 1998, he was recuperating from a foot injury that had sidelined him from touring work with guitarist Yngvie Malmsteen. He was driving on the M4 Motorway towards Bristol when he apparently lost control of his car (due to bad weather), slamming into the center divider of the motorway. He died a few hours later in the hospital. ~ Steven McDonald