Richard Bell was the son of the Canadian composer and musician Dr. Leslie Bell. Richard started playing the piano at the age of four and studied music at Canada's Royal Conservatory of Music. After a short stint in The Mid-Knights, Bell's career first gained significance when he joined Ronnie Hawkins as a member of the group And Many Others, following the departure of Hawkins's previous band. Hawkins fired the entire band in early 1970, and they renamed themselves Crowbar, subsequently recording Official Music . Bell left Crowbar shortly after this to join Janis Joplin's Full Tilt BoogieBand, making good on an offer made the previous year by her manager.
Janis Joplin
In the late 1960s, while touring with Hawkins at the Fillmore East, Bell was approached by Michael Friedman, an associate of Joplin's manager, Albert Grossman, and invited to join her new ensemble. His playing can be heard on her posthumously released album Pearl and many bootleg recordings from her 1970 tour, including performances from the Festival Express "train tour" of Canada. Bell was interviewed many years later for the 2003 documentary film of the same name.
Bell moved to Atlanta, Georgia, in 1979 and played with various bands, including Pyro, with Jim Weider and Rick Pierce. He did session work also. He married Mary Deacon in 1979. He played with the Convertibles, with bandmates Scott Boyer and Tommy Talton, Topper Price, Brian Wheeler and Rick Kurtz, among others, before returning to Canada and the Band. In 1991, Bell joined the reconstituted lineup of the Band as a keyboardist, replacing Stan Szelest. Bell remained with the Band through their final three albums. He was credited as a co-writer of "The Caves of Jericho", from the albumJericho. The death of Rick Dankoin 1999 essentially ended the association known as the Band.
Later years
In later years, Bell performed as keyboard player with Canadian roots-rock performers such as Colin Linden, Blackie and the Rodeo Kings, Paul Reddick and Kathleen Edwards. At the time of his death, the Toronto-based musician had been performing regularly as a keyboardist, songwriter and occasional vocalist with the Porkbelly Futures and Danny Brooks & the Rockin' Revelators. Bell was also a member of the country-rock group Burrito Deluxe, performing and contributing songs to their CD Disciples of the Truth. Bell died after a long battle with multiple myeloma on June 15, 2007, in Toronto's Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, at the age of 61.