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Any Trouble

 
Artist: Any Trouble
Any Trouble

Group Members:

Clive Gregson, Phil Barnes, Chris Parks, Mel Harley, Martin Hughes, Steve Gurl, Andy Ebsworth

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  • Formed: 1975, Manchester, England
  • Disbanded: 1984 12
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Girls Are Always Right: The Stiff Years," "Where Are All the Nice Girls?," "Live at the Venue"
  • Representative Songs: "Second Choice," "Yesterday's Love," "Girls Are Always Right"

Biography

Any Trouble was an underappreciated bright spot on Stiff Records, a label which had no shortage of talented artists. Bandleader Clive Gregson's appearance, hardened love songs, and vocal style may have led to comparisons to Elvis Costello, but they were no second-rate rip-off -- each of their four albums revealed a songwriter of unique talent and a more-than-capable band to execute the songs.

Manchester-native Gregson formed the original band in 1975 while attending teaching school in Crewe, taking the group's name from a misquote from the Mel Brooks film Blazing Saddles. After a brief moment as a folky trio, by 1976 Any Trouble changed to a four-piece rock group, speeding up their repertoire in response to the punk movement -- by this point the lineup was Gregson (vocals/guitar), Chris Parks (guitar), Phil Barnes (bass), and Mel Harley (drums). They built a strong following playing the pub circuit and released their own single, catching the attention of Radio One's John Peel, who quickly took the band and played the song on his show. This exposure started a small-scale bidding war from several labels. By 1980, the group signed with Stiff Records.

Stiff enlisted John Wood, a renowned producer (Nick Drake, John Martyn, Richard Thompson) who had recently produced Squeeze, to produce Any Trouble's first album. Where Are All the Nice Girls? which had all the makings of a new wave classic, was met with some rave reviews but failed to rack up the big sales that were expected of it. After the record failed commercially, Stiff suggested that Gregson drop the band and redefine himself as a solo artist à la Elvis Costello -- Buddy Gregson. Gregson declined, deciding instead to replace the band's weak link, drummer Harley, with the more capable Martin Hughes. They began work on the follow-up immediately.

Wheels in Motion (1981), while certainly more accomplished, lacked the spark of the first album and the record simply didn't catch on in the U.K. Any Trouble took a stab at Stateside success with a small promotional tour. Halfway through the tour, the band heard by word-of-mouth that they had been dropped by Stiff and were left stranded in America. Eventually they found their way back, but the stress of the situation broke up the band temporarily -- for about 18 months.

A new deal was arranged with EMI-America in 1982. Hughes left the band and was replaced by Andy Ebsworth, and Steve Gurl was added on keyboards. Chris Parks left shortly thereafter. Essentially a new band, the four-piece recorded Any Trouble in 1983. Again, the same story -- should've been a hit, somehow overlooked. Gregson, knowing the band couldn't last much longer, talked EMI into letting them do a double album. As a parting shot, Gregson and company stretched out for Wrong End of the Race, a sprawling album that allowed them to show their diversity and influences over 25 tracks of new originals, remakes of earlier Any Trouble songs, and a few covers. In America, the album was distilled down to a single record. "Baby Now That I Found You" saw some airplay on MTV; the reviews were good, but the band's cult status didn't change. In of 1984, the band played their last gig and called it quits. Gregson went on to a distinguished, though still underappreciated, career both as a solo artist and as a collaborator with Christine Collister. ~ Chris Woodstra, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Any Trouble
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Any Trouble are a British rock band originating from Crewe, England.

Contents

History

Founding members were Clive Gregson, Chris Parks and Tom Jackson. Soon after, Mel Harley and Phil Barnes completed the line up. After Tom Jackson left, the band was fronted by Clive Gregson. The remaining four were the first Any Trouble line-up to record.

Signed to Stiff Records

Any Trouble signed to Stiff Records and their first release "Where Are All The Nice Girls" was perhaps their most successful. The album was produced by John Wood (Fairport Convention etc.) and the band gained instant notoriety for gaining a Melody Maker front cover with a gushing article by Allan Jones. In some ways the band's career never recovered from this early rush of success and Gregson's singing was unfairly compared to that of Elvis Costello.

Moved to EMI America

Endless touring and the release of a second fine album "Wheels In Motion" produced by Mike Howlett, nevertheless didn't further their status and by 1984 the band had moved to EMI America after exiting Stiff. By now the line-up consisted of original members Gregson and Barnes with the addition of Andy Ebsworth on drums and Steve Gurl on keyboards. Two albums followed (including the impressive double album "Wrong End Of The Race") but even the might of EMI couldn't give the band the success that many felt they deserved.

After a solo album of his own Clive Gregson joined Richard Thompson's road band for a time before continuing an extended solo career. Andy Ebsworth was one of the members of Ryder, the purpose-made pop group which represented the United Kingdom at the 1986 Eurovision Song Contest.

Re-formation

In 2007, following the re-release of several Any Trouble albums on CD, Clive Gregson and band members from various line-ups re-formed to record a new album which was released on the re-born Stiff Records label on 10 September 2007. The album is titled "Life in Reverse" and feature 13 new Clive Gregson songs.

Band members

  • Clive Gregson (Vocals/Guitar)
  • Chris Parks (Guitar)
  • Tom Jackson
  • Mel Harley (Drums)
  • Phil Barnes (Bass)
  • Martin Hughes (Drums)
  • Steve Gurl (Keyboards)
  • Andy Ebsworth (drums)

Where are they now

  • Clive Gregson is still a full time musician, working in America
  • Chris Parks is now working in the UK as a music software developer
  • Tom Jackson went into social work. Worked again with Chris in 'The Oatcake Brothers'
  • Phil Barnes worked producing music videos for bands such as Oasis, now produces TV adverts
  • Mel Harley runs a design & marketing company and property business
  • Andy Ebsworth is now a music tech college tutor in Croydon, London.

Discography

  • Where Are All The Nice Girls Pennine (1979) - handmade
  • Where Are All The Nice Girls (1980) - reissued 2007
  • Wheels In Motion (1981)
  • Live At The Venue (1981)
  • Any Trouble (1983)
  • Wrong End Of The Race (1984)
  • Girls Are Always Right - The Stiff Years (2002)
  • Where Are All The Nice Girls - Deluxe Reissue (2007)
  • Life In Reverse (2007)

See also

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Any Trouble" Read more

 

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