Early career In 1963 Parfitt was playing guitar and singing in The Prince of Wales Feathers, a
pub on
Warren Street in
Camden, London, when his father was approached by an agent from Sunshine
Holiday Camp on
Hayling Island, who gave Parfitt a performing job. At the camp Parfitt joined Jean and Gloria Harrison – performing as the
double act The Harrison Twins – to form a
cabaret trio called The Highlights. Following the season, the Harrison Twins' manager Joe Cohen – who had been one of the
Keystone Cops – arranged for The Highlights to perform at
Butlins in
Minehead. Here, Parfitt met future
Status Quo partner
Francis Rossi, who was playing with
Alan Lancaster and
John Coghlan in a band called The Spectres (soon to be renamed Traffic Jam) – a forerunner to Status Quo. "I remember wandering over there one afternoon for the first time and watching them rehearse," Parfitt recalled. "I may still have been in my silver
lamé suit, which I used to wear all the time. They were playing ''[Chuck Berry's]'' '
Bye Bye Johnny' and it sounded absolutely fantastic." After Parfitt befriended the band, their manager Pat Barlow invited him to join, as they needed another singer. In 1976, they signed a pioneering sponsorship deal with
Levi's. Quo were highly successful in Europe, Japan, Australia and New Zealand throughout the 1980s and 90s, and were the opening act for 1985's
Live Aid, and they continued to be successful to the present day. By February 2015 they had sold over 118 million records worldwide. In 2013 and 2014, Parfitt and Rossi reunited temporarily with original Quo bandmates Alan Lancaster and John Coghlan for a series of reunion concerts on what would be called the "Frantic Four" tour. At the time of Parfitt's death, he was the longest lasting member of Status Quo aside from Francis Rossi; who co-founded the band in 1962. He wrote some of their greatest hits, also in collaboration with the group's keyboard player
Andy Bown, among them "Whatever You Want", "
Again and Again", and "
Rain".
Solo endeavours and other projects in 2013 at the premiere of
Bula Quo! In 1984, the year before Quo would open Live Aid, Parfitt and Rossi appeared on the
Band Aid charity single, "
Do They Know It's Christmas?".
Bob Geldof asked Parfitt and Rossi to take part, knowing that although the group were from an entirely different musical era and background, their consistent chart success and fame would bring a certain amount of credibility to the project from the rock fraternity and ensure that the group's loyal following of fans (the "Quo Army") would support the cause and buy the record in large numbers. Parfitt played guitar on the song "It's an Illusion" recorded for the 1984 album
Strange Frontier by
Roger Taylor. Parfitt wrote and recorded a solo album
Recorded Delivery in 1985, but it was never released. Among the musicians on the record were bassist
John "Rhino" Edwards and drummer
Jeff Rich, formerly with the
Climax Blues Band and
Judie Tzuke. Edwards and Rich were subsequently invited by Parfitt to join Status Quo. In 2006 Parfitt released his guitar refacing overlay invention, the "guitar facelift", which was licensed by guitar manufacturer
Fender. In December 2009, Parfitt teamed up with
Rolf Harris for the single "
Christmas in the Sun", following on from the 2008 Status Quo hit "
It's Christmas Time" which Parfitt wrote with Wayne Morris. In 2013, Parfitt and Rossi starred as themselves in
Bula Quo!, a
comedy film in which the duo find themselves becoming accidentally involved with
mafia operations on
Fiji. The film was generally poorly-received by critics. An
album was released alongside the film. In April 2015, in partnership with Julian Hall and his wife Lyndsay, Parfitt set up "Status Homes", a real estate company based in
Marbella, Spain. On 1 December 2017, a press release from the earMusic record label on Status Quo's website announced that
Over and Out, a solo album planned by Parfitt, would be released posthumously on 23 March 2018. Parfitt had worked on the album during his hiatus from the band following a heart attack in 2016, completing vocal and guitar tracks, but dying before he had had an opportunity to produce it. Guest musicians helping to complete the album included
Brian May of
Queen,
Chris Wolstenholme of
Muse, former Status Quo bassist
Alan Lancaster and current bassist
John "Rhino" Edwards and co-produced by Parfitt's son Rick Parfitt Jnr. The album entered the UK charts in its first week of release at number 3 and the German album charts at number 10. ==Musical equipment==