0
Alan Gowen
Alan Gowen
British musician
1
Dave Stewart
Dave Stewart
English keyboardist and composer
2
Gilgamesh
Gilgamesh
British jazz fusion band
3
Richard Sinclair
Richard Sinclair
British bassist
4
Hatfield and the North
Hatfield and the North
band
5
Pip Pyle
Pip Pyle
British drummer
6
Soft Heap
Soft Heap
band
7
Hugh Hopper
Hugh Hopper
English bass guitarist
8
In Cahoots
In Cahoots
band
9
Egg
Egg
music group
10
Delivery
Delivery
prog rock band
11
John Greaves
John Greaves
British musician and composer
12
Elton Dean
Elton Dean
British saxophonist
13
Soft Machine
Soft Machine
English rock band
14
Hawkwind
Hawkwind
English rock band
15
Matching Mole
Matching Mole
band
16
Steve Hillage
Steve Hillage
British guitarist
17
Assagai
Assagai
British Afro-rock band
18
The Alan Parsons Project
The Alan Parsons Project
British band
19
Neil Murray
Neil Murray
British musician
20
Thin Lizzy
Thin Lizzy
Irish rock band
21
Molly Hatchet
Molly Hatchet
American southern rock/hard rock band
22
Bill MacCormick
Bill MacCormick
British musician
23
Steve Hackett
Steve Hackett
English musician, songwriter, singer, and producer
24
Phil Campbell
Phil Campbell
British musician
25
Tony Banks
Tony Banks
British musician and multi-instrumentalist, member of Genesis
26
Inner Circle
Inner Circle
Jamaican reggae group
27
The Sweet
The Sweet
British glam-rock band
28
Marmalade
Marmalade
Scottish band
29
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
American rock band
30
Roy Babbington
Roy Babbington
British bassist
31
Jimmy Bain
Jimmy Bain
Scottish bassist, songwriter
32
Hedgehog Pie
Hedgehog Pie
British folk rock group
33
Khan
Khan
British rock group
34
Frankie Miller
Frankie Miller
British singer
35
The Cure
The Cure
English rock band
36
UFO
UFO
English heavy metal and hard rock band
37
The Spencer Davis Group
The Spencer Davis Group
British band
38
Bruce Welch
Bruce Welch
English musician
39
Sky
Sky
British/Australian instrumental group
40
Osanna
Osanna
Italian band
41
Dave Pegg
Dave Pegg
English bassist, multi-instrumentalist and record producer
42
Brian Robertson
Brian Robertson
Scottish rock guitarist, songwriter
43
Juicy Lucy
Juicy Lucy
blues-rock band
44
Alan Clark
Alan Clark
English keyboardist
45
Phil Miller
Phil Miller
British musician
46
Anthony Phillips
Anthony Phillips
British musician
47
Level 42
Level 42
English jazz-funk band
48
Brian Downey
Brian Downey
Irish musician, songwriter and drummer
49
Mortal Sin
Mortal Sin
Australian thrash metal band
50
Eric Bell
Eric Bell
Irish musician and songwriter
51
Steve Miller Band
Steve Miller Band
American rock band
52
Brian James
Brian James
English punk rock guitarist, songwriter
53
Steve Morse
Steve Morse
American guitarist and composer
54
Centipede
Centipede
British musical group
55
Dixie Dregs
Dixie Dregs
American band
56
Dave Walker
Dave Walker
English rock singer
57
Micky Waller
Micky Waller
British musician
58
Sons of Champlin
Sons of Champlin
American rock band
59
Bruford
Bruford
British progressive rock band
60
John Scofield
John Scofield
American jazz guitarist and composer
61
Henry McCullough
Henry McCullough
British musician
62
The Pretty Things
The Pretty Things
English band
Members, past and present

National Health were an English progressive rock band associated with the Canterbury scene. Founded in 1975, the band featured members of keyboardist Dave Stewart's band Hatfield and the North and Alan Gowen's band Gilgamesh, including guitarists Phil Miller and Phil Lee and bassist Mont Campbell as original members. The band was named after Stewart's National Health spectacles. Bill Bruford (previously of Yes and King Crimson) was the initial drummer but was soon replaced by Pip Pyle. Campbell was replaced by Neil Murray and then John Greaves. Alan Gowen stopped performing with the group after their first album, but returned for their final tours replacing Dave Stewart who resigned after their second album. Guitarist Phil Miller was National Health's only constant member.

A frequently changing line-up, they toured extensively and released their first album, National Health in 1978. Although it was created during the rise of punk rock, the album is characterized by lengthy, mostly instrumental compositions. Their second record Of Queues and Cures, which included Henry Cow associates Peter Blegvad (recitation on "Squarer For Maud") and Georgie Born (cello), is held as one of the "best records ever" on the Gnosis website. After the May 1981 death of Gowen, Stewart rejoined the remaining members to record the album D.S. Al Coda, a set of compositions by Gowen, most previously unrecorded. The original albums and additional archival material have subsequently been released on CD.

The intro of National Health's "Binoculars" was used as a sample on American rock band Deftones' "Black Moon".