Career
He was best known as the organist for The Crazy World of Arthur Brown and Atomic Rooster. Born Vincent Rodney Cheesman in Reading, Berkshire, he taught himself boogie woogie piano as a teenager before attending Trinity College of Music between 1961 and 1964. Influenced by Graham Bond, he took up Hammond organ and in 1967 teamed up with Arthur Brown in The Crazy World of Arthur Brown.
Their eponymous debut album, The Crazy World of Arthur Brown (1968) contained the song "Fire", a chart-topping hit single in the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States, with Crane"s organ and brass arrangement to the fore.
During their first tour of the United States of America in 1968, Crane suffered a nervous breakdown and returned to the United Kingdom where he spent 3 or 4 months in the mental hospital at Banstead. Crane rejoined the band but on a subsequent tour of the United States of America, the band disintegrated in June 1969 when Arthur Brown temporarily disappeared to a commune and Crane and drummer Carl Palmer (later of Emerson, Lake & Palmer) left to form Atomic Rooster, playing their first concert at the Lyceum in London on 29 August headlining over Deep Purple.
Atomic Rooster enjoyed success in 1971 with two hit singles, "Tomorrow Night", and "Devil"s Answer". Crane suffered from bipolar disorder from at least 1968 onwards, periodically necessitating treatment at both outand inpatient mental health treatment facilities.
He collaborated with other musicians on a number of albums, including Rory Gallagher (Rory Gallagher, 1971), Arthur Brown (Faster Than The Speed Of Light, 1979), Peter Green, Richard Wahnfried and Dexys Midnight Runners (Don"t Stand Maine Down, 1985).
In 1983 he was part of the one-off blues outfit, Katmandu, with Ray Dorset, Len Surtees and Peter Green, who recorded the album A Case for the Blues. Crane died of a deliberate overdose of Anadin tablets in 1989 at the age of 45.