Fraser was born in the
Paddington area of
Central London to a
Barbadian-
Guyanese father of mixed European and African ancestry, and an English mother. His parents later divorced and, along with his three siblings, he was raised by his mother. He began playing the piano at the age of five. He was trained classically until twelve, when he switched to guitar. By thirteen he was playing in
East End, West Indian clubs and after being expelled from
St Clement Danes Grammar School in 1968 at the age of 15, enrolled at
Hammersmith College of Further Education. There, another student, Sappho Korner, introduced him to her father, pioneering
blues musician and radio broadcaster
Alexis Korner, who became a father figure to him. Shortly thereafter, upon receiving a telephone call from
John Mayall who was looking for a bass player, Korner suggested Fraser; still only 15, he was now in a professional band and earning £50 a week, although it ultimately turned out to be a brief tenure. Simon Kirke later recalled: "'All Right Now' was created after a bad gig in Durham. We finished our show and walked off the stage to the sound of our own footsteps. The applause had died before I had even left the drum riser. It was obvious that we needed a rocker to close our shows. All of a sudden the inspiration struck Fraser and he started bopping around singing 'All Right Now'. He sat down and wrote it right there in the dressing room. It couldn't have taken more than ten minutes." Fraser also co-wrote two other hit singles for Free, "
My Brother Jake" and "The Stealer". Free initially split in 1971, and Fraser formed a trio, Toby, with guitarist
Adrian Fisher, and drummer Stan Speake. Material was recorded but not released, and Fraser re-joined Free in December 1971. He left for the second time in June 1972. After leaving Free, Fraser formed
Sharks with vocalist
Snips (later
Baker Gurvitz Army), guitarist
Chris Spedding and drummer
Marty Simon. Despite being well received by the critics, especially for Spedding's tasteful guitar work (Crawdaddy Lead Review, Bruce Malamut Vol. 27, 1973), Fraser left after their debut album,
First Water (1973). He then formed the Andy Fraser Band, a trio with Kim Turner on drums and Nick Judd on keyboards. They released two albums,
Andy Fraser Band and
In Your Eyes, both in 1975, before that also folded. Attempts to form a band with
Frankie Miller came to nothing, and Fraser relocated to California to concentrate on songwriting. He wrote hits for
Robert Palmer,
Joe Cocker,
Chaka Khan,
Rod Stewart and
Paul Young. He married Henrietta ("Ri") from Australia in 1974. In that year their first daughter
Hannah was born in England, and after moving to California they had a second child in 1977. Fraser's most famous compositions remain "
All Right Now" and "
Every Kinda People", which Robert Palmer recorded in 1978 for his
Double Fun album. == Later period (1980s–2015) ==