'Pick Withers' (born
April 4,
1948 in
Leicester,
England) was the original drummer for the rock band
Dire Straits and played on their first four albums, which included hit singles such as "Sultans of Swing," "Romeo and Juliet" and "Skateaway."
He first played a drum in the
Boys Brigade. He became a professional musician aged 17 in a band called the Primitives, followed by a band called Spring who had a record contract but little success. They recorded one album on the RCA label. In the mid-1970s he was a house drummer at
Rockfield Studios. He played on records by
Dave Edmunds, amongst others.
Pick has also studied at Drumtech drum school in London.
Withers's style with Dire Straits was distinct for being restrained, favoring spare
snare drum and
hi-hat combinations over heavy beats, speed and pyrotechnic flourishes. Like the guitar playing of the band's famous frontman,
Mark Knopfler, Withers's style was blues-based and instantly recognizable as part of the pop music the band perfected beginning around the mid-1970s. Knopfler met Withers in 1973 in London when he joined the blues band Brewer's Droop, for which Withers was already playing at the time. Withers continued to work regularly with Knopfler through the mid-1970s, although he also maintained his Rockfield affiliations, and was briefly a member of folk-rock outfit
Magna Carta in 1977. Once Dire Straits gained a recording contract, however, Withers turned to drumming for that band full-time.
In 1982, after Dire Straits completed the album ''
Love over Gold'', Withers left the band to spend more time with his family and to pursue
jazz music. He reportedly told an interviewer that he had succumbed to a growing feeling that there was nothing left in the music for him, that he was in danger of "becoming a rock drummer."
His replacement in Dire Straits was the dynamic
Terry Williams, also a Dave Edmunds sideman.
He also played on the
Bob Dylan album ''
Slow Train Coming''.