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Tony Hicks Bio, Age, Wife, Net Worth, The Hollies, Songs And Awards

Author

Sarah Oconnor

Updated on January 03, 2026

Tony Hicks Biography

Tony Hicks who was born as Anthony Christopher Hicks is an English guitarist and singer who is a member of the Hollies.

He has been with them since 1963 and he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2010. He was born on December 16th, 1945 in Nelson, Lancashire, England. Hicks initially had a sample of notoriety at age 12 as an individual from Les Skifflettes when they were highlighted on the Carroll Levis ability appear in 1957.

By the mid-1960s, he was a regarded individual from the Manchester music scene and had become the lead guitarist with Ricky Shaw and the Dolphins. At the point when then neighborhood equals the Hollies required a trade for their guitarist Vic Steele in February 1963, Hicks was drawn closer to join the band.

Albeit at first hesitant, he was at long last persuaded to join subsequent to tuning in to The Hollies through the air vent of the Twisted Wheel in Manchester. They had verified a test recording session with EMI’s Parlophone name for staff maker Ron Richards, which Hicks properly went to like their new guitarist in April 1963 and which brought about an account contract with Parlophone.

Tony Hicks

Tony Hicks Age

He was born on December 16th, 1945 in Nelson, Lancashire, England.

Tony Hicks Wife | Tony Hicks Son

Hicks has been hitched to Jane Dawton since 1974. Hicks’ child, Paul, functioned as an honor winning sound specialist at Abbey Road Studios and helped on blends of a few vintage Hollies chronicles.

Paul has additionally chipped away at ventures by Pink Floyd, Paul McCartney, and George Harrison, just as a few of The Beatles remastering ventures – prominently the Anthology and Let It Be… Bare collections, and the mono variants of The Beatles back inventory on Compact Disk. Paul, alongside buddy Dhani Harrison, is an individual from the band thenewno2, whose music was included in the 2013 film, Beautiful Creatures.

Tony Hicks Net Worth

As indicated by Wikipedia, Forbes, IMDb, and Various Online assets celebrated Guitarist Tony Hicks’ total assets are $1 Million – $5 Million. He earned the cash being an expert Guitarist. He is from England. As of now, We need more data about Cars, Monthly/Yearly Salary, and so on. We will refresh you soon.

Tony Hicks Hollies | Tony Hicks of The Hollies | Tony Hicks The Hollies

The Hollies before long got one of the best groups in Britain; they had an unmistakable, windy pop style worked around the three-section agreement of Hicks (lower concordance) and bandmates Allan Clarke (lead vocals) and Graham Nash (high congruity).

Hicks contributed his first independent piece for the gathering (“When I’m Not There”) to an EP discharge in 1964 and co-composed a B-side (“Keep Off That Friend of Mine”) with drummer Bobby Elliott that year. Hicks at that point joined Clarke and Nash as the gathering’s in-house songwriting group, who from 1964 to mid-1966 composed as “Chester Mann” and “L. Ransford” before embracing the Clarke-Hicks-Nash standard.

By the mid-1960s the trio had gotten answerable for composing the vast majority of their melodies, including singles hits, for example, “Stop! Stop! Stop!”, “On A Carousel”, “Carrie Anne” and “Ruler Midas in Reverse”. Hicks infrequently sang lead vocals on Hollies tunes, yet was included on “Glance Through Any Window” (1965), and sang refrain leads on “An excessive amount of Monkey Business” (1964), “Carrie Anne” (a tune he started for the band in Stavanger, Norway in 1967) and “Open Up Your Eyes” (1968).

Hicks took solo lead vocals on his tune “Pegasus” (1967), the Clarke-Sylvester-wrote “Take a gander at Life” (1969), his “Brought into the world A Man” (1973), “Hillsborough” (1989) and Bobby Elliott’s “At that point, Now, Always (Dolphin Days)” (2009).

In 1966, with commitments from individual Hollies Clarke and Nash, Hicks contributed guitar work nearby Yardbirds guitarist and session artist Jimmy Page to the Everly Brothers’ collection Two Yanks in England (which included spread forms of various Hollies melodies co-composed by Hicks).

During the 1960s, with Nash performing barely any guitar obligations aside from the intermittent musicality part and acoustic work, Hicks turned into a vital piece of the Hollies sound. Aside from contributing unmistakable lead-guitar parts, he could be depended on to add abnormal instrumentation to their sessions, for example, the banjo which was a key segment of their hit “Stop! Stop! Stop!”, Greek-type (“Tell Me to My Face”) and fluff guitar (“Have You Ever Loved Somebody”).

At the point when no unique material was accessible, Hicks found demos of Hollies hits “Only One Look” (UK No. 2 of every 1964), “I Can’t Let Go” (UK No. 2 out of 1966) and “He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother” (UK No. 3 out of 1969) (which became probably the greatest hit).

Hicks recommended the band do a collection of Bob Dylan tunes in late 1968; Nash dissented, one reason for his exit from the band (in spite of the fact that he had just sung with David Crosby and Stephen Stills in the USA).

The Hollies supplanted Nash with Terry Sylvester and Hollies Sing Dylan (1969) was No. 3 in the UK collection diagrams, in spite of the fact that it neglected to outline in the US. This was one of the principal “tribute collections” gave to a solitary craftsman by a vocal gathering.

After Nash’s December 1968 takeoff from the gathering, Hicks started to compose all the more solo melodies, which were utilized as either B-sides or collection tracks, (for example, “Cos You Like To Love Me” and “Don’t Give Up Easily” in 1969 and “Dandelion Wine” in 1970). He composed a great part of The Hollies’ 1970 collection “‘Confessions of The Mind, including “Too Young To be in any way Married” (a No. 1 single in Australia and New Zealand).

Hicks additionally co-composed melodies with UK artist Kenny Lynch—for The Hollies, for example, “What A Life I’ve Led”, “Look What We’ve Got”, “Guaranteed Land”, the US hit single “Long Dark Road” (every one of the 1971) and “Blue in the Morning” (1972) and “Blurred Images”, recorded by Cilla Black on her 1971 collection Images.

He co-composed Hollies tunes somewhere in the range of 1974 and 1978 with Allan Clarke and Terry Sylvester. In 1974, Hicks created the eponymous gathering collection Taggett on EMI Records in the UK.

In 1990, Hicks co-stated “Naomi” for The Hollies with his child Paul. In 1993 he included new guitar parts and congruity vocals (with Clarke and Nash) to a “substitute” adaptation of “Peggy Sue Got Married” by Buddy Holly (credited to “Pal Holly and The Hollies”), which opened the Not Fade Away tribute collection to Holly by different specialists.

The Hollies kept on having hits past the 1970s, including a UK graph hit with the variety “Holliedaze” in 1981, a US Top 30 hit front of “Stop! In the Name of Love” in 1983, a UK No. 1 single in 1988 (a re-issue of “He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother”), and in 1993 “The Woman I Love”. The gathering still performs and records today; in any case, with the retirement of Allan Clarke in 1999, just Hicks and drummer Bobby Elliott stay from the band’s 1960s prime.

Tony Hicks Songs | Tony Hicks The Hollies Songs

Here is a list of his songs, either solo or with the Hollies;

  • Long Cool Woman
  • He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother
  • The Air That I Breathe
  • Carrie-Anne
  • Stop, Stop, Stop
  • On a Carousel
  • Bus Stop
  • Jennifer Eccles
  • King Midas in Reverse
  • Don’t Let Me Down
  • Look Through Any Window
  • Long Dark Road
  • Too Young to Be Married
  • Dear Eloise
  • Mighty Quinn
  • Pay You Back With Interest
  • Sorry Suzanne
  • We’re Through
  • Gasoline Alley Bred
  • Tell Me to My Face
  • Magic Woman Touch
  • Just One Look
  • Stop in the Name of Love
  • Elevated Observations
  • I Can’t Tell the Bottom From the Top
  • I’m Alive
  • Come On Back
  • The Day That Curly Billy Shot Down Crazy Sam McGee
  • Very Last Day
  • Hey Willy
  • I Can’t Let Go
  • I’m Down

Tony Hicks Awards

In 2010, The Hollies (who had just won an Ivor Novello Award in 1995 for extraordinary commitment to British prevalent music and were enlisted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2006) were accepted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Hicks and Elliott were missing from the acceptance function on account of the UK visiting duties with the present Hollies band, yet both were incorporated as a major aspect of the honor winning line-up.

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The Hollies Remember – Tony Plays “Stop Stop Stop” with banjo