Trevor Lucas was a secondary but notable figure in the British folk-rock scene of the late 1960s and 1970s, principally as a member of
Fotheringay and the mid-'70s version of
Fairport Convention. Originally from Australia, he came to the UK in the mid-1960s to work on the traditional folk circuit, and made an obscure and run-of-the-mill traditional folk solo album in 1966,
Overlander. From late 1967 to late 1969, the singer-guitarist was in Eclection, a little-known British folk-rock group that made recordings with Elektra.
Lucas became romantically involved with
Fairport Convention singer
Sandy Denny in the late 1960s, and together the pair formed
Fotheringay, who made a good folk-rock album in 1970. Despite the group's considerable promise, it folded after that sole LP, when
Denny, the biggest talent in the band by far, left for a solo career.
Lucas joined
Fairport Convention, who at that point had been shorn of all their original members, in mid-1972, with
Denny (whom
Lucas married in 1973) rejoining the band in early 1974. Both
Lucas and
Denny left two years later, and in the interim
Fairport could hardly have been said to have been at their peak.
After
Denny's death in 1978,
Lucas remarried and moved back to Australia to raise his family, dying of heart failure in 1989. In addition to his work in the bands
Fotheringay, Eclection, and
Fairport Convention, he also appeared as a guitar and singer on records by
the Strawbs,
Richard Thompson,
Al Stewart, and
Stefan Grossman.
–
Richie Unterberger, Rovi