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Culture Club
Culture Club
English pop band
1
Mike Leander
Mike Leander
English arranger, songwriter and record producer
2
Helen Terry
Helen Terry
British singer
3
Boy George
Boy George
English singer, songwriter, DJ, fashion designer, actor, photographer and record producer
4
Saint Etienne
Saint Etienne
British band
5
Jon Moss
Jon Moss
British musician
6
Westlife
Westlife
Irish boy band
7
Hybrid
Hybrid
Welsh band
8
Nile Rodgers
Nile Rodgers
American guitarist, singer-songwriter, record producer, arranger and composer
9
Damon Albarn
Damon Albarn
English musician, singer, songwriter, and record producer
10
Liam Gallagher
Liam Gallagher
English singer and songwriter
11
Thomas Bangalter
Thomas Bangalter
French musician
12
Jocelyn Brown
Jocelyn Brown
American musician
13
The Smiths
The Smiths
English rock band
14
T. Rex
T. Rex
English rock band
15
Small Faces
Small Faces
English band
16
Dr. Hook & the Medicine Show
Dr. Hook & the Medicine Show
American rock band
17
Why Don't We
Why Don't We
American boy band
18
The Prodigy
The Prodigy
English electronic dance music group
19
George Michael
George Michael
English singer-songwriter, musician, producer
20
Matt Cardle
Matt Cardle
singer
21
Jona Lewie
Jona Lewie
English singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist
22
New Radicals
New Radicals
band that played alternative rock
23
Phil Spector
Phil Spector
American record producer, songwriter, and convicted murderer
24
Richard Ashcroft
Richard Ashcroft
English singer-songwriter
25
Madness
Madness
English ska band
Intro
British musician
Genres
Music
Member of, past and present
Roy Hay during the Culture Club Tour 2015

Roy Ernest Hay (born 12 August 1961, Southend, Essex, England) is the guitarist-keyboardist with Culture Club, a band of the 1980s fronted by Boy George. Hay, a trained pianist since the age of five, replaced founding member Johnny Suede in 1981. Some of Hay's musical influences were Stevie Wonder, The Isley Brothers and Led Zeppelin. Before his involvement with Culture Club, Hay was a hairdresser in his native Essex.

It was during Culture Club's beginnings that Hay met Alison Green. The two married in 1982 and had a child, Sunny, in 1986. They divorced in 2005, although the two had been separated since 1995.

According to the "Culture Club" episode the VH-1 series Behind the Music, Hay assisted Boy George in giving up heroin. The singer suffered the painful withdrawal symptoms closely attended by Hay in his Essex home.

Following Culture Club, Hay formed another band, called This Way Up, with singer Robinson Reid. In 1987, they released three singles: "Tell Me Why", "If I Can't Have You" and "Louise". An album, Feeling Good About It, was released in some European countries and in Japan in 1987. All those records flopped, "Tell Me Why" being the only one that charted, for one week at number 72 in the UK Singles Chart.

Hay moved to Los Angeles, U.S. in 1989 and from there wrote for and produced young artists and bands for Sony Music. He branched into commercial composing and sound design with his own company Haywired Music.

Hay found later success as a composer in Hollywood, California, working with fellow composer Hans Zimmer and composing the music for a series directed by Robert Altman, as well as the music for Cracker and for Stephen King's The Dead Zone. Hay reunited with the three original members of Culture Club in 1998 to record a new album. In a Rolling Stone interview, Hay described the years apart as a healing process. "There was obviously a bit of a healing process that needed to happen between Jon [Moss] and George. They hadn't really spoken to each other in quite a while". The description of the tour was "Older and wiser...We've all been through some good and bad times since the band. I think we've all grown up a bit".