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Billy Mackenzie

 
Artist: Billy Mackenzie
Billy Mackenzie

Influenced By:

Worked With:

Dieter Meier, Boris Blank, Beat Ash

Formal Connection With:

  • Born: March 27, 1957, Scotland
  • Died: January 23, 1997, Scotland
  • Active: '90s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Vocals, Vocals (Background), Producer
  • Representative Albums: "Transmission Impossible," "Beyond the Sun," "Auchtermatic"

Biography

It wouldn't be right to say Billy Mackenzie was merely a special talent. His voice might bear dabs of David Bowie and Scott Walker, but his soulful falsetto shoots clean through any possible comparisons. Depending on your preference, you'll either feel as if you're inside a dream or a nightmare when listening to him. Hear him once and that sound will cling to your memory bank indefinitely. With Alan Rankine as Associates, the man with a four-octave voice and mile-deep soul attained his highest level of success with a number of chart hits and Top Ten LPs. As a solo artist, he appeared to be on the brink of a welcomed return just prior to exiting. Try to think of another voice that could possibly gain the admiration of Bono, Ian McCulloch, Morrissey, and Andrew Lloyd Webber.

The Scotland-born Mackenzie grew up under the spells of glam, soul, and standards, veering from Roxy Music to Philadelphia Soul to Engelbert Humperdinck. While auditioning for a cabaret troupe in 1976, he met Alan Rankine, with whom he forged an immediate bond. They shared the same rabid passion for music, including Krautrock, disco, and film music. Initially, the pair worked as a duo performing standards and soul covers. They eventually named themselves Associates and set about recording their own material. By 1982, the duo had racked up chart hits and a number of other recordings that fused their influences with a naturally experimental streak rarely seen before or since. However, Mackenzie's sometimes-flaky behavior and ardent refusal to become part of the industry's machinations helped build a rift between him and Rankine; they severed ties in October of 1982. Mackenzie continued Associates with supporting musicians, sporadically recording through 1990. Two years later, Mackenzie released his first solo record in name, Outernational. Around this time, Mackenzie linked with Rankine again only to see the reunion aborted. The label they were talking with wanted Mackenzie to devote all of his energies to the reunited Associates, handcuffing him from any outside work or freedom. Mackenzie refused to cave in, so a number of demos and written songs went unrealized. It has also been said that Rankine wanted Mackenzie's full artistic attention as well.

By 1995, Mackenzie found himself financially bankrupt. Nude Records became interested in Mackenzie, who signed a deal with them for another solo record. He also signed a publishing deal with Sony, with the wheels set in motion for Mackenzie to make another return. Four days after inking the publishing deal, he died from an overdose of prescription drugs while inside the shed of his father's Auchterhouse cottage. The culmination of his nagging depression and looming sadness since the death of his mother pushed him to his breaking point. He might not have reached 40 years of age, but there's little denying that he did enough living to fill several normal life spans.

The incomplete Nude recordings were released in 1997 as Beyond the Sun, thanks to post-session help from the Cocteau Twins' Simon Raymonde. Friend Paul Haig (Josef K) issued a couple of Mackenzie records on his Rhythm of Life label in the immediate years following his passing. 1999's Memory Palace is a collection of Mackenzie/Haig collaborative efforts dating from several years prior. 2001's Eurocentric compiles the recordings of Mackenzie with Steve Aungle made between 1992 and 1996. The man's soulful ebullience can also be found on records by the Skids, BEF, Yello, Siobhan Fahey, and Barry Adamson. ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide
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For motocross racer, see Billy MacKenzie (motorcyclist).

William MacArthur "Billy" Mackenzie (27 March 1957 – 22 January 1997) was a Scottish singer.

Billy Mackenzie

Billy Mackenzie in concert, University of Dundee Student Union, Dundee. 1985
Background information
Birth name William MacArthur "Billy" Mackenzie

Contents

Career

Mackenzie was born and grew up in Dundee. As a youngster, he lived in Park Avenue in the Stobswell area and attended St Mary's Forebank Primary School and St Michael's Secondary School. He led a peripatetic lifestyle, which included decamping to New Zealand at the age of 16, and travelling across America aged 17. Here he married Chloe Dummar. While some say the marriage was made to stave off deportation, Ms. Dummar states the marriage was made for love[1]. Her brother, Melvin Dummar, claimed to be the "one sixteenth" beneficiary of the estate of Howard Hughes, until the case was thrown out in 1978.

He returned to Scotland where he met Alan Rankine and in 1976 formed the Ascorbic Ones. They changed the name to Associates in 1979. Rankine left The Associates in 1982, but Mackenzie continued to work under the name for several years until he began releasing material under his own name in the 1990s. Mackenzie also collaborated with many other artists during his career, including contributions to Swiss duo Yello's One Second album in 1987. Mackenzie provided vocals and wrote lyrics for two tracks on that release, and one of them, "The Rhythm Divine", became a hit European single when legendary diva Shirley Bassey was recruited for vocals (Mackenzie's original vocal track was released on the CD version of the Associates Popera compilation). He also collaborated with B.E.F. (British Electric Foundation) for their two albums Music of Quality and Distinction Volume I (1982) & Volume II (1991).

On 22 January 1997, depression and the death of his mother are believed to have contributed to Mackenzie's suicide.[1] He overdosed on a combination of the anti-depressant amitriptyline, paracetamol, and other prescribed medication in the garden shed of his father's house in Auchterhouse, Dundee. He was 39 years old. Now a significant cult figure, much of his musical legacy has been released in the past few years. He was the subject of a biography by Tom Doyle, The Glamour Chase, in 1998.

The Cure song "Cut Here" written by Robert Smith, a friend of Mackenzie, is about his suicide. The Morrissey song Suedehead and The Smiths song William It Was Really Nothing are both said to be about Billy's friendship with The Smiths iconic front man. Siouxsie Sioux - a Morrissey collaborator, wrote the song "Say" about his suicide, revealing in the lyrics that they were going to meet just before his suicide. The song was released as a single in 1999 and charted in the UK Top 75. For her Medúlla album, Björk considered singing a beyond the grave duet with Mackenzie using recordings given to her by his father, but eventually decided against it.[2]

Between 9-27 June 2009, a play entitled Balgay Hill about the story of Mackenzie's life was showing at Dundee Rep Theatre, in Mackenzies home town. It tells the story of his life through the eyes of four fictional characters, and the title of the play derives from the name of the Dundee cemetery where the singer was laid to rest. [3]

Associates releases

Singles

  • Boys Keep Swinging (1979) unauthorised cover of Bowie song
  • The Affectionate Punch (1980)
  • Tell Me Easter's On Friday (1981)
  • Q Quarters (1981)
  • Kitchen Person (1981)
  • A (1981)
  • Message Oblique Speech (1981)
  • White Car In Germany (1981)
  • Kites (1981) A-side credited to 39 Lyon Street / B-side to Associates
  • Party Fears Two (1982)
  • Club Country (1982)
  • 18 Carat Love Affair (1982)
  • A Matter Of Gender (1982)
  • Those First Impressions (1984)
  • Waiting For The Loveboat (1984)
  • Breakfast (1985)
  • Take Me To The Girl (1985)
  • Heart Of Glass (1988)
  • Country Boy (1988) unreleased
  • The Peel Sessions (1989)
  • Fever (1990)
  • Fire To Ice (1990)
  • Poperetta EP (1990)
  • Just Can't Say Goodbye (1991)
  • untitled 4-track V2 Records promo EP (2000) Party Fears Two/Club Country/Love Hangover/The Associate

Albums

  • The Affectionate Punch (1980 Fiction) reissued by Universal in 2005 with 4 extra tracks
  • Fourth Drawer Down (1981 Situation 2) reissued by V2 in 2000 with 5 extra tracks
  • Sulk (1982 WEA) reissued by V2 Records in 2000 with 7 extra tracks
  • The Affectionate Punch (1982 Fiction) remixed version of 1980 album with different sleeve, reissued on CD by Fiction in 1997
  • Perhaps (1985 WEA)
  • The Glamour Chase recorded 1988, unreleased until 2002, then as a double CD album, packaged with (the first CD release of) Perhaps (WEA)
  • Wild & Lonely (1990 Circa Records) reissued in 2006 with 4 extra tracks

(Last three are effectively Billy Mackenzie solo albums)

  • Popera - The Singles Collection (1990 WEA)
  • The Radio 1 Sessions (1994 BBC Nighttracks)
  • Double Hipness (2000 V2 Records) double CD album of early demo's and the six 1993 reunion tracks with Alan Rankine
  • The Radio 1 Sessions Vol. 1 1981-1983 (2003 BBC Strange Fruit)
  • The Radio 1 Sessions Vol. 2 1984-1985 (2003 BBC Strange Fruit)
  • Singles (WSM 2004) double CD

Mackenzie solo releases

Singles

  • Ice Cream Factory (1982 WEA) credited to Mackenzie Sings Orbidöig
  • Baby (1992 Circa)
  • Colours Will Come (1992 Circa)
  • Pastime Paradise (1992 Circa) unreleased
  • Wild Is The Wind EP (2001 Rhythm Of Life)(500 issued)

Albums

  • Outernational (1992 Circa Records) reissued in 2006 with 3 extra tracks
  • Beyond The Sun (1997 Nude Records)
  • Memory Palace (credited with Paul Haig) (1999 Rhythm Of Life) reissued in 2005 by One Little Indian with 4 extra tracks
  • Eurocentric (credited with Steve Aungle) (2001 Rhythm Of Life)
  • Auchtermatic (2005 One Little Indian)
  • Transmission Impossible (2005 One Little Indian)

Haig/Mackenzie

Tracks recorded by Paul Haig and Billy MacKenzie in the period 1993 to 1995, appeared on the album release Memory Palace on One Little Indian, in 2005.

Track Listing

  • Track 1: Thunderstorm
  • Track 2: Stone The Memory Palace
  • Track 3: Beyond Love
  • Track 4: Transobsession
  • Track 5: Trash 3
  • Track 6: Listen To Me
  • Track 7: Listen Again
  • Track 8: Take A Chance
  • Track 9: Give Me Time
  • Track 10: Give Me Time (Dennis Wheatley Mix)
  • Track 11: Beyond Love (Remix)
  • Track 12: Stone The Memory Palace (Remix)
  • Track 13: Thunderstorm (Instrumental Mix)

Other collaborations

Lead vocals

  • BEF's Music Of Quality & Distinction Volume 1 album: Secret Life Of Arabia and It's Over (1982)
  • Stephen Emmer's Vogue Estate album: duet with Martha Ladly on Wish On (1982)
  • Annie Lennox: duet on The Best Of You; the original Perhaps sessions version, the re-recorded album featured Eddi Reader (1985) †
  • Sweden Through The Ages EP: It Helps To Cry (1986)
  • Yello's Snowball And The Sound Of Yello: Life Is A Snowball (1987); unreleased promo CD
  • Yello's One Second album: Moon On Ice (1987) †
  • Yello The Rhythm Divine (version 2): special limited edition 12" single (MERXR253) featuring MacKenzie's lead vocals in place of Shirley Bassey's (1987); the same recording later appeared on the Popera album (1990) †
  • Uno's self-titled album: Cinemas Of The World single (1987)
  • Holger Hiller's Oben Im Eck album: title track and version, We Don't Write Anything On Paper Or So, and Whippets single (1987)
  • Yello's Baby album: Capri Calling (1991)
  • BEF's Music Of Quality & Distinction Volume 2 album: Free. (1991) Free also appears on the 1998 BEF 'Best Of' album, later reissued by Disky in 2001
  • Loom's Anacostia Bay (At The Edge Of The World) single (1996) † ‡
  • Barry Adamson's Oedipus Schmoedipus album: Achieved In The Valley Of The Dolls (1996) ‡
  • Apollo Four Forty's Electro Glide in Blue album: Pain In Any Language (1997) † ‡

† lyrics by Mackenzie ‡ also appear on Auchtermatic

  • Unreleased tracks Sinking Deeper and The Hungry Look recorded 1980 under name Strange News. Billy, Steve Reid and rhythm section Andy and Gavin. Only copies of tracks exist.

Backing vocals

  • The Skids 'Joy' album: 'Fields' single (1982) also released on the Skids 'Dunfermline' CD (1987)
  • Yello's One Second album: the singles 'Call It Love', 'The Rhythm Divine' > and 'Goldrush' (1987)
  • Yello's 'Flag' album:, the single 'Of Course I'm Lying', and 'Otto Di Catania' (1988)
  • Jih's 'Take Me To The Girl' single >, title track plus 'Come Summer Come Winter' and 'Wake Up' (1988)
  • Boris Grebenshikov's 'Radio Silence' album/single: 'That Voice Again' (1989)
  • Yello's 'Baby' album: 'Drive/Driven' and the single 'Rubberbandman' (1991)

(6 of Billy's Yello tracks later released on the 'Essential Yello' album) (1992)

  • Siobhan Fahey: 'Do I Scare You' (1996) unreleased until 2004 when it first appeared on Shakespear's Sister's 'Best Of' double CD, and then on the "3" album in 2005
  • Peach Union - 'AudioPeach' album: 'Deep Down Together' and 'Give Me Tomorrow' credited as The MacArthurettes with Caragh McKay (1998)
  • Paul Haig's 'Listen To Me' single (1997)> = lyrics by MacKenzie

Other credits

  • Orbidöig's 'Nocturnal Operations' single: Billy played tubular bells (1981) this single reissued in 1984, credited as The Sensational Creed
  • Paul Haig's 'Chain' album: 'Chained', lyrics by Mackenzie, performed by Haig (1989)

Tributes

Dundee Repertory Theatre is producing a play based on the life of Billy Mackenzie called Balgay Hill opening on June 9th 2009[4].

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
One Second (1987 Album by Yello)
Electro Glide in Blue (1997 Album by Apollo 440)
One Second [Bonus Tracks] (2006 Album by Yello)

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