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Dexys Midnight Runners

 
Artist: Dexys Midnight Runners
Dexys Midnight Runners

Group Members:

Kevin Rowland, Jimmy Paterson, Helen O'Hara, Steve Brennan, Billy Adams, Steve Wynn, Pete Williams, Steve Spooner, Paul Speare, Seb Shelton, Peter Saunders, Mick Talbot, Giorgio Kilkenny, Jeff Blythe, Mickey Billingham, Al Archer, Andy Growcott

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Kevin Adams, Jimmy Paterson

Formal Connection With:

Billy Adams, Bureau, Kevin Rowland, That Petrol Emotion, 4-4-2, The Killjoys
  • Formed: 1978 07, Birmingham, England
  • Disbanded: 1986
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Too-Rye-Ay," "Searching for the Young Soul Rebels," "Greatest Hits"
  • Representative Songs: "Come on Eileen," "Geno," "Jackie Wilson Said (I'm in He"

Biography

Dexys Midnight Runners are best known in America as one of new wave's ultimate one-hit wonders, thanks to their 1982 number one smash "Come on Eileen," a distinctive fusion of '80s pop, Celtic folk, and blue-eyed soul. In the U.K., however, they earned a fair amount of critical acclaim and made a greater impression on the public consciousness with their frequent changes in sound, wardrobe, and personnel.

Dexys were formed in 1978 by singer/guitarist/songwriter Kevin Rowland and singer/guitarist Kevin "Al" Archer (who changed his first name to avoid confusion). Both had been members of the Birmingham, England, punk band the Killjoys, and Rowland, who was ethnically Irish, had split his childhood between London, Ireland, and Birmingham, and soaked up the influence of Irish folk and the so-called Northern soul music popular in the Midlands. Seeking a new direction, Rowland and Archer decided to put together a full-fledged soul outfit and named it after the stimulant Dexedrine, a popular drug on the Northern soul scene (despite the strict no-drinking-or-drugs policy Rowland later imposed on the band). The lineup eventually settled on trombonist Big Jim Paterson, tenor saxophonist Geoff Blythe, alto saxophonist Steve "Babyface" Spooner, keyboardist Mick Talbot (who replaced Pete Saunders, was once a member of the Merton Parkas and later joined the Style Council), bassist Pete Williams, and drummer Andy "Stoker" Growcott (who replaced Bobby Junior). Acutely image-conscious, Rowland tried to reflect the band's working-class roots by dressing them as New York dockworkers, with a wardrobe lifted straight from the Martin Scorsese/Robert DeNiro film Mean Streets. The band struggled financially at first, especially given its large membership, and according to legend, Rowland organized (or at least encouraged) shoplifting expeditions to make ends meet.

Dexys didn't take long to release their first single; "Dance Stance" (aka "Burn It Down"), an attack on anti-Irish discrimination, appeared on EMI in 1979, but only scraped the lower reaches of the charts. However, their next single, "Geno," a tribute to American-born soul singer Geno Washington (who'd made his career in the U.K.), went all the way to the top of the British charts in early 1980. Dissatisfied with their share of the profits, the band stole the completed master tapes of their debut album, Searching for the Young Soul Rebels, and successfully reworked their deal. When the album was released later in 1980, it caused a sensation. With their bright, tuneful, horn-heavy take on Memphis soul (which predated Paul Weller's similar transformation of the Jam), Dexys were hailed as British rock's return to an organic, soulful sound in the post-punk/new wave era. Their third single, "There There My Dear," became a Top Ten hit, but Rowland insisted on following it with the inadvisable single choice of "Keep It, Pt. 2," which flopped. This was the last straw for most of the band, who had grown tired of Rowland's control-freak leadership and restlessness. Archer left to form the Blue Ox Babes, and most of the rest of the group wound up in the Bureau, leaving only trombonist Paterson with Rowland.

Rowland and Paterson regrouped Dexys, adding guitarist/banjoist Kevin "Billy" Adams (again renamed), drummer Seb Shelton (ex-Secret Affair), keyboardist Mickey Billingham, alto saxophonist Brian Maurice, tenor saxophonist Paul Speare, and bassist Giorgio Kilkenny (who replaced Steve Wynne). After the 1981 single "Plan B" (which featured a new wardrobe of boxing boots and ponytails), the new lineup left EMI and signed to Mercury. Their first single for the label, "Show Me," became a Top 20 hit, but the follow-up, "Liars A to E," flopped, and Rowland considered modifying the group's approach. Allegedly, he heard a demo tape of Archer's folk-influenced Blue Ox Babes material, and decided to reinvent Dexys in a similar fashion. He infuriated the Babes by not only borrowing from their sound, but recruiting violinist Helen O'Hara out of their lineup; he also added Steve Brennan and Roger MacDuff on the same instrument. The second Dexys album, Too-Rye-Ay, was released in 1982, and while their soul sound was still easily audible, it was now sitting alongside a strong Irish folk influence, making for a striking hybrid. The makeover was accompanied by yet another wardrobe change, this time to a scruffy gypsy/hobo image that wound up changing the standard of acceptable dress at many a restrictive London club. Dexys introduced their new sound on the single "The Celtic Soulbrothers," which was a mild success; however, the follow-up, "Come on Eileen," was a smash, becoming their second British number one. A few months later, helped along by the group's highly visual, MTV-ready appeal, "Come on Eileen" broke in America and went all the way to number one there as well. With their new folky direction thus established, the entire horn section (even the loyal Paterson) departed in the summer of 1982, as did keyboardist Billingham. Unfortunately, at the peak of the group's success, the rest of the lineup proved unstable as well, due in part to rifts with Rowland; eventually, the core of the group was whittled down to Rowland, guitarist Adams, and violinist O'Hara.

Rowland took Dexys to New York to work on the follow-up album, which -- slowed by his perfectionism -- took a year and a half to record. In the meantime, EMI released the singles compilation Geno in 1983. Paterson rejoined the group when Rowland decided to blend his soul and folk phases more thoroughly, and the rest of the instrumentation was filled out by hired session musicians. When Don't Stand Me Down was finally released in 1985, Rowland insisted that no singles were to be pulled from the album, wanting it to stand as a cohesive piece of work in the manner of '70s LPs. As a result, it sold much more poorly than expected and wasn't helped by lackluster reviews that slammed Rowland's attempts at Van Morrison-esque poetry. After a few weeks, a panicked Mercury -- who'd spent quite a bit of money to make the record -- released "This Is What She's Like" as a single, but the damage was already done. One last single, "Because of You," charted in 1986 after being used as the theme to a British TV show, but with Don't Stand Me Down having bombed, the group disbanded. Rowland mounted a solo career and returned in 1988 with The Wanderer, a mellow record flavored with country and lounge-pop, which failed to sell. A disheartened Rowland spent the next few years in a deep depression, fighting off bankruptcy and cocaine addiction. In 1996, he signed with Creation as a solo artist, but in typically idiosyncratic fashion, his comeback effort was an all-covers album; My Beauty was released in 1999 and sold abominably, probably not helped by Rowland's new wardrobe of dresses and suspenders. Meanwhile, ska-punk revivalists Save Ferris covered "Come on Eileen" for a U.S. hit in 1997, a testament more to the song's enduring popularity than to the imagination of their rearrangement. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Dexys Midnight Runners
Top
Dexys Midnight Runners
Origin Birmingham, England
Genres Pop, Soul, New Wave
Years active 1978–1986, 2003–present
Labels EMI, Windsong, Mercury
Associated acts The Killjoys, The Bureau, The Blue Ox Babes
Members
Kevin Rowland
Former members
Billy Adams
Al Archer
Mickey Billingham
Jeff Blythe
Steve Brennan
Vincent Crane
Andy "Stoker" Growcott
John "Rhino" Edwards
Giorgio Kilkenny
Andy Leek
Robert Noble
Helen O'Hara
Jimmy Paterson
Peter Saunders
Seb Shelton
Paul Speare
Steve Spooner
Mick Talbot
Simon Walker
Pete Williams
Steve Wynn

Dexys Midnight Runners are a British pop group with soul influences, who achieved their major success in the early to mid-1980s. They are best known for their songs "Come on Eileen" and "Geno".

Contents

Career

Searching for the Young Soul Rebels

Kevin Rowland (vocals, guitar, at the time going under the pseudonym Carlo Rolan)[1] and Kevin "Al" Archer (vocals, guitar), both previously of The Killjoys, founded the band in 1978 in Birmingham, England, naming the band after Dexedrine, a brand of dextroamphetamine popularly used as a recreational drug among Northern Soul fans at the time.[1] The midnight runners referred to the energy the Dexedrine gave, enabling one to dance all night. "Big" Jim Paterson (trombone), Geoff "JB" Blythe (saxophone, previously of Geno Washington's Ram Jam Band), Steve "Babyface" Spooner (alto saxophone), Pete Saunders (keyboard), Pete Williams (bass) and Bobby "Jnr" Ward (drums) formed the first line-up of the band to record a single, "Dance Stance" (1979).[1] The song was released on the independent Oddball Records, was named "single of the week" by Sounds,[1] and reached number 40 in the British charts, but the next single, "Geno" – about Geno Washington, and released on EMI – was a British Number One in 1980. It featured the band's newest recruits, Andy Leek (keyboards) and Andy "Stoker" Growcott (drums). Rowland had been taken to see Washington perform live by his brother when he was aged only eleven.[2] The success of the song prompted Washington to make a return to live performance, and also saw the departure of Leek, who himself cited the "Top of the Pops thing...people wanting your autograph and that just because you are in the band", while Rowland claimed that he left because "he wasn't into soul music and didn't think the band would ever amount to anything".[1] The band at this time dressed in donkey jackets and woolly hats, and had a look described as "straight out of DeNiro's Mean Streets".[1] Rowland said of the band's sound and look in January 1980: "we didn't want to become part of anyone else's movement. We'd rather be our own movement".[1] Image was very important to the group, with Rowland commenting "We wanted to be a group that looked like something...a formed group, a project, not just random".[2]

Searching for the Young Soul Rebels, their debut LP, was released later in 1980. The album's sleeve featured a photograph of a Belfast Catholic boy carrying his belongings after being forced from his home in the sectarian clearances of 1969, the half-Irish Rowland explaining "I wanted a picture of unrest. It could have been from anywhere but I was secretly glad that it was from Ireland".[2] Of the album's title, Rowland said "I don't know...I just liked the sound of it, really".[2] After the next single, "There, There, My Dear", was a hit, Rowland insisted on choosing the uncommercial "Keep It Part Two (Inferiority Part One)" for the following single. It was a failure, and most of the band members quit, angered over continual personality problems with Rowland, including Rowland's policy of not speaking to the music press (Rowland imposed a press embargo in July 1980, and would instead take out ads in the music papers explaining the band's position).[1] This was a response to some less than complimentary opinions from some music press writers; The NME's Mark Cordery accused the band of "emotional fascism" and described their music as a perversion of soul music with "no tenderness, no sex, no wit, no laughter".[2] Archer eventually formed The Blue Ox Babes, while Blythe, Spooner, Williams, Stoker and Mick Talbot (ex-The Merton Parkas, who had recently joined on keyboards) left to form The Bureau. Paterson stayed with Rowland, who added Billy Adams (guitar/banjo), Seb Shelton (drums, formerly of Secret Affair), Micky Billingham (keyboard), Brian Maurice (alto saxophone), Paul Speare (tenor saxophone) and Steve Wynne (bass), releasing a handful of singles in 1980 and 1981, and adopting a new image that included hooded tops, boxing boots, and pony tails.[2] Along with the new look, Rowland brought in a fitness regime, which included working out together and running as a group, Rowland commenting "The togetherness of running along together just gets...that fighting spirit going".[2] The group would also take part in group exercise sessions before performances, and drinking before shows was strictly forbidden.[2] By the time "Plan B" was released, the band were in dispute with EMI, claiming that as their contract option had not been picked up by the company, they were no longer under contract, and they asked, without success, that EMI not release the single.[1] In March 1981, an ad appeared in which Rowland claimed that the previous members of the band had "hatched a plot to throw Kevin out and still carry on under the same name". It also cited Rowland's suggestion that "they might learn new instruments" as a reason for their displeasure.[1] The ad announced that Dexys had been working on a new live venture, "The Midnight Runners Projected Passion Revue".[1] "Show Me" was released in summer 1981 and reached #16 in the UK. It was followed by a session for Richard Skinner's BBC Radio 1 show in which the band previewed tracks that would be reworked later on Too-Rye-Ay.[1] "Liars A to E" was released in October 1981, after which Rowland took the band in a new direction.

Too-Rye-Ay

Rowland then recruited fiddle players Helen O'Hara (from Archer's new group, The Blue Ox Babes), Steve Brennan and Roger MacDuff, known collectively as "The Emerald Express". With the addition of new bass player, Giorgio Kilkenny, this line-up recorded Too-Rye-Ay in 1982, a hybrid of soul and Celtic folk, with strong influences from the music of Van Morrison, the new sound accompanied by a new look, with the band attired in dungarees, scarves, leather waistcoats, and what was described as "a generally scruffy right-off-the-farm look", or "a raggle-taggle mixture of gypsy, rural Irish and Steinbeck Okie".[1][3][2] Rowland said of the new image: "These are my best clothes. Again it just feels right for the music. Everybody else is dressing up sort of straightlaced and we come in wearing these and it's like, y'know here we are, a bit of hoedowning is even possible".[1] The first single, "The Celtic Soul Brothers", was mildly successful but "Come on Eileen" soon followed, and became a Number One hit in both the UK and the United States (and, in the former, the biggest-selling single of 1982). The follow-up "Jackie Wilson Said (I'm in Heaven When You Smile)", a cover of a Van Morrison tune, also reached the top 5 in the UK singles chart.[1] The band sang this song on the UK comedy The Young Ones.[1] When the band performed this single on the BBC TV music show Top Of The Pops, which was broadcast live, there was an infamous mix-up (or deliberate prank) by the BBC engineers in charge of the background graphics. Instead of a picture of Jackie Wilson, the American soul singer, the band performed in front of a photo of Jocky Wilson, the Scottish darts player.

Feeling that their role in the group had diminished following the arrival of the fiddles, the brass section of Paterson, Speare and Maurice left to form The TKO Horns and recorded an album in 1985 with Howard Jones, while Kilkenny was replaced by John "Rhino" Edwards on bass and Billingham left to join General Public. The group continued to tour until 1983 with a nucleus of Rowland, Adams, O'Hara and Shelton augmented by other musicians.

Don't Stand Me Down

After a two-year break, Dexys returned in 1985 with the critically panned[4] album, Don't Stand Me Down, featuring Rowland, Adams, O'Hara and Nicky Gatfield together with various seasoned performers including Vincent Crane (ex-Atomic Rooster), Julian Littman and Tim Dancy (who had been Al Green's drummer). The new album brought another image change, with the band pictured on the sleeve wearing ties, pin-striped suits, and with neatly combed hair, what Rowland described as "so clean and simple; it's a much more adult approach now".[2] Rowland at first refused to issue any singles from the defiantly uncommercial album, and by the time "This Is What She's Like" was released, it was too late to save the album from commercial failure. The group disbanded the following year after a brief return to the charts with the single "Because Of You" (which was used as the theme tune to a British sitcom, Brush Strokes), and Rowland became a solo singer with the release of 1988's poorly-received album, The Wanderer. Despite spending much of the 1990s suffering from financial problems and drug addiction, Rowland made plans to reform Dexys together with Big Jim Paterson, although these resulted in no more than a solitary TV performance in 1993. Returning once more as a solo performer, Rowland signed to Creation Records, releasing an album of cover versions called My Beauty in 1999, which sold poorly; some sources quote a figure of fewer than 500 copies sold.[5] This was followed by a disastrous appearance at the Reading festival where Rowland was bottled off by a hostile crowd after introducing two strippers who had accompanied him.[6] The demise of Creation Records meant that the planned follow-up album, which would have featured Dexys, was never made.

Reunion

In April 2003, the group announced that they would be reuniting for a tour. A greatest hits album, Let's Make This Precious, was released in September 2003, and a successful tour took place in October and November. Two newly recorded songs, "Manhood" and "My Life in England," appeared on the album and were touted as new singles. Despite airplay on national radio, neither was officially released as a commercial single. During a June 2005 interview on BBC Radio 2, Kevin Rowland announced that Dexys were "back in the studio" and seeking a record deal for a new album.

Awards

Discography

Studio albums

Year Album details Peak chart positions Certifications[7][8]
(sales threshold)
UK
[9]
NZ
[10]
SWE
[11]
NOR
[12]
US
[13]
1980 Searching for the Young Soul Rebels
  • First studio album
  • Release date: July 1980
  • Label: EMI
6 11 31
  • UK: Silver
1982 Too-Rye-Ay 2 2 22 22 14
  • UK: Platinum
  • CAN: Gold
1985 Don't Stand Me Down
  • Third studio album
  • Release date: September 1985
  • Label: Mercury Records
22
"—" denotes releases that did not chart

Singles

Year Single Peak chart positions Album
UK AUS US US AC US Main
1979 "Dance Stance" 40 Non-album song
1980 "Geno" 1 Searching for the Young Soul Rebels
"There, There, My Dear" 7
"Keep It Part Two (Inferiority Part One)"
1981 "Plan B" 58 Too-Rye-Ay
"Show Me" 16
"Liars A to E"
1982 "The Celtic Soul Brothers" 45
"Come On Eileen" 1 1 1 31 6
"Jackie Wilson Said (I'm in Heaven When You Smile)" 5
"Let's Get This Straight (From the Start)" 17
1983 "Geno" (re-release) 81 Geno
"The Celtic Soul Brothers" (re-release) 20 86
1985 "This Is What She's Like" 78 Don't Stand Me Down
1986 "Because of You" 13 The Very Best of...
"—" denotes releases that did not chart

Compilations

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Gimarc, George (2005) Punk Diary: The Ultimate Trainspotter's Guide to Underground Rock 1970–1982, Backbeat Books, ISBN 0-87930-848-6
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Reynolds, Simon (2005) Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpunk 1978–1984, Faber & Faber, ISBN 0-571-21570-X, p. 293–296
  3. ^ Raggett, Ned "Too-Rye-Ay Review", Allmusic, Macrovision Corporation
  4. ^ Thompson, Dave "Don't Stand Me Down Review", Allmusic, Macrovision Corporation
  5. ^ Dexys History from www.dexys.co.uk
  6. ^ "Creation Records through the ages. 1983–2000", Creation Records Doing It For The Kids
  7. ^ http://www.bpi.co.uk/certifiedawards/search.aspx
  8. ^ http://www.cria.ca/cert_db_search.php
  9. ^ http://www.everyhit.com/
  10. ^ http://charts.org.nz/search.asp?cat=a&search=Dexys+Midnight+Runners
  11. ^ http://swedishcharts.com/search.asp?search=dexys+midnight+runners&cat=a
  12. ^ http://norwegiancharts.com/search.asp?search=dexys+midnight+runners&cat=a
  13. ^ http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:h9fpxqy5ld6e~T50

External links


 
 
Learn More
Pure 80s Rock (2002 Music Film)
Let's Make This Precious: The Best of Dexys Midnight Runners (2003 Album by Dexys Midnight Runners)
Miracle Hits (2002 Album by Various Artists)

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