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Canadian guitarist and vocalist (1951–2023) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Timothy Gregg Bachman (August 1, 1951 – April 28, 2023) was a Canadian guitarist and vocalist best known for his work with rock bands Brave Belt and Bachman–Turner Overdrive (BTO). Bachman was one of the four founding members of BTO together with his brothers Randy (guitar/vocals) and Robbie (drums), and Fred Turner (bass/vocals). BTO has sold nearly 30 million albums worldwide.[1]
Tim Bachman | |
---|---|
Birth name | Timothy Gregg Bachman[1] |
Born | Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada | August 1, 1951
Died | April 28, 2023 71) | (aged
Genres | Rock |
Occupation(s) | Guitarist, singer |
Instrument | Guitar |
Formerly of | Brave Belt, Bachman-Turner Overdrive |
Tim Bachman played guitar in a few Winnipeg-area bands, some with his younger brother Robbie on drums. He then briefly quit music, feeling that the Winnipeg scene had become stagnant. He got a job and began attending college. He returned to music in 1972, when his older brother Randy was looking to add a second guitar to the Brave Belt lineup. This occurred after the departure of Chad Allan, which left Brave Belt with only three members.[2]
Bachman left BTO in 1974, shortly after the release of Bachman–Turner Overdrive II. Tim said it was to spend more time with his family and to work on concert promotion but brothers Rob and Randy reported that he was fired for breaking Randy's rules of the road which prohibited alcohol and drugs.[3]
Tim Bachman rejoined BTO whose other members, at that time, were Randy Bachman, Fred Turner, and Garry Peterson), for a 1984 reunion album and supporting tours, including a high-profile world tour opening for Van Halen.
In 2008, he suffered a heart attack and subsequently underwent quadruple bypass surgery.[4]
Bachman died on April 28, 2023, at the age of 71, after battling cancer.[5] His brother Robbie had died just 106 days earlier.
On June 14, 2010, Bachman was charged by Abbotsford police with sexual interference of a person under 14, touching a young person for a sexual purpose, and sexual assault. Police recommended a charge of sexual exploitation, but Crown counsel opted to split the case into three separate counts.[6][7] After an 11-month investigation,[8] police charged Bachman for incidents that allegedly began in Abbotsford in 2000 when the complainant was 11 years old and continued for three years.[1]
Stacy Bohun alleged that Bachman would grope her when she was a foster child living in his home in the Fraser Valley. Bachman was found not guilty on these counts, as Justice Neill Brown ruled that the testimony of Bohun was too unreliable to support a criminal conviction.[9]
On May 26, 2014, Bachman was arrested again by Abbotsford police on new sex charges relating to incidents from the 1990s involving a different underaged victim. He faced charges of sexual assault, sexual interference, and invitation to sexual touching. He was released pending trial on conditions which included avoiding contact with anyone under the age of 16, and avoiding any public park, schoolground, daycare, swimming pool or any other facility where minors under 16 may be present.[10][11] Those charges were stayed on November 19, 2015. A representative of the Criminal Justice Branch could not provide any details regarding why the charges were stayed, but did state that this decision was reached while the prosecutor was preparing for the preliminary inquiry.[12]
Title | Details |
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Bachman–Turner Overdrive |
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Bachman–Turner Overdrive II |
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