Despite the Kinks' success, Quaife was never satisfied with his role in the creative process. "I would have been squished with a size 16 boot I had even suggested they listen to an idea from me," he said in a 2005 interview. "I felt like a session man most of the time. Ray wanted complete control of everything. He was a control freak." In June 1966 Quaife broke his leg in a car accident and briefly left the band. "It was a good break for me," he said in 2005. "The band was fighting all the time and I couldn't take it." He rejoined after a few months, but quit for good three yeas later. In a 1998 interview, Quaife pointed to the band's 1968 disc Village Green Preservation Society as his favorite. "For me, it represents the only real album made by the Kinks," he said. "It's the only one where we all contributed something."
Pete always struck me as a truly decent fellow, one completely overshadowed by the Davies brothers. He was perhaps the most approachable of The Kinks, and had interactions with fans over the years, answering questions on a Kinks-themed email list I belong two. About six years ago, he appealed to fans for help after a live-in girlfriend abruptly absconded with much of his valuable (monetary and sentimental) memorabilia dating back to his days as part of the British Invasion. He also played impromptu gigs with the so-called Kast-Off Kinks, a group comprised of the various former members of the famed band.
His passing is very sad. Now, the hoped-for reunion of the original Kinks can never happen. Let's hope the Davies brothers can patch up their differences before there are too few Kast-Offs left to reunite.
Now Playing: The Kinks Village Green Preservation Society
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