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Fine Young Cannibals

 
Artist: Fine Young Cannibals
Fine Young Cannibals

Group Members:

Roland Gift, David Steele, Andy Cox

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Smokey Robinson, Elvis Presley, Buzzcocks

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Roland Gift, David Steele, Andy Cox

Formal Connection With:

See Fine Young Cannibals Lyrics
  • Formed: 1984, Birmingham, England
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "The Raw & the Cooked," "The Finest," "Fine Young Cannibals"
  • Representative Songs: "She Drives Me Crazy," "Johnny Come Home," "Good Thing"

Biography

When the Beat (known as the English Beat in the U.S. only) split in 1983, it came as a surprise to guitarist Dave Cox and bassist David Steele. The first time they realized that the group's vocalists, Ranking Roger and Dave Wakelin, had gone off to form a group without them was when their accountant phoned to finalize the divorce. While the defectors had formed General Public, Cox and Steele set about creating something new of their own. Apart from not wanting to repeat the mistakes the Beat made, and a vague notion of adding both jazz and soul to the Beat's ska roots (they also decided to feature a strong vocalist), there was no real master plan.

The latter proved harder than they could have imagined. More than 500 potential singers auditioned, before, despairing of finding someone, they decided to seek out a singer whose band had once supported the Beat. They found Roland Gift singing with a barroom R&B band named the Bones, looking like Sidney Poitier but sounding like Otis Redding. He was everything they had remembered; he was their man. Gift had spent his teenage years in youth theatre, until the advent of punk made music his main passion. As punk gave way to the two-tone ska which gave rise to groups like Madness and, ultimately, the Beat, Gift took up saxophone and singing in a local band.

Keeping live work down to just the occasional on-off date, the Fine Young Cannibals signed to London Records in early 1985. Their name came from an obscure 1960 film starring Robert Wagner and Natalie Wood. Resisting the record company's attempts to team them up with a producer determined to make the group a product of her sound rather than theirs, the Fine Young Cannibals released a demo version of "Johnny Come Home" as their first single. Its instant success allowed them to team up with a compatible producer, Robin Miller, for the first Fine Young Cannibals album, also containing the group's trademark overstated version of Elvis Presley's "Suspicious Minds." For the Johnathan Demme film Something Wild, they reached back into Gift's punk past with a version of the Buzzcocks' classic "Ever Fallen in Love." Five years later, a second album emerged, The Raw and the Cooked, the raw side made up mostly of songs the group had contributed to Barry Levinson's film Tin Men. The single "She Drives Me Crazy" was a worldwide number one hit.

Since then, the Fine Young Cannibals have remained elusive. Cox and Steele continue to work together under various names, while Roland Gift's hoped-for film career never quite took off. The Fine Young Cannibals have never officially broken up, and rumors of reunions and recording sessions have persisted. Their 1996 greatest hits album, The Finest, featured the newly recorded track "Flame." ~ Ed Nimmervoll, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Fine Young Cannibals
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Fine Young Cannibals

Fine Young Cannibals, 1990
Background information
Also known as Two Men a Drum Machine and a Trumpet
Origin Birmingham, England
Genres Rock, Soul
Years active 1984 - 1992
1996 - present
Labels London, I.R.S.
Associated acts The English Beat
Former members
Roland Gift, David Steele, Andy Cox

Fine Young Cannibals is a British band formed in Birmingham, England in 1984, by guitarist David Steele and bassist Andy Cox (both formerly of The Beat[1]), and singer Roland Gift. They are best known for their 1989 hit singles "She Drives Me Crazy" and "Good Thing".

Their name came from the 1960 film All The Fine Young Cannibals starring Robert Wagner and Natalie Wood.

Contents

History

The group was formed in 1984 in Birmingham, UK, from the ashes of The Beat, with whom Cox and Steele previously played[1]. The band's eponymous debut album was released in 1985, spawning two UK hit singles, "Johnny Come Home" and a cover of Elvis Presley's "Suspicious Minds" featuring additional vocals by Jimmy Somerville.

Fine Young Cannibals appeared as the house band in a nightclub in the 1987 comedy film Tin Men, set in Baltimore, Maryland in 1963. Steele and Cox released an instrumental house single under the moniker Two Men, a Drum Machine and a Trumpet in 1988, called "Tired Of Getting Pushed Around", which reached #18 in the UK Singles Chart and was popular on the U.S. dance chart. During this time, Gift appeared in the movie Sammy and Rosie Get Laid.

Their highest charting hits were "She Drives Me Crazy" and "Good Thing", from the 1988 album The Raw and the Cooked. Both reached number one in the U.S. singles charts. The Raw and the Cooked included three songs the band had recorded for Tin Men (including "Good Thing"), and their cover of the Buzzcocks' "Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've)" recorded for the film Something Wild.

Fine Young Cannibals broke up in 1992, although they briefly returned to the studio in 1996 to record a new single, "The Flame", which would complement their greatest hits compilation The Finest released that year. Gift reactivated the band name and toured in the 2000s as Roland Gift and the Fine Young Cannibals.

Band members

Discography

Studio albums

Year Album details Peak chart positions Certifications
(sales threshold)
UK
[2]
US
[3]
CAN
[4]
AUS
[5]
NZ
[6]
NOR
[7]
SWE
[8]
AUT
[9]
SWI
[10]
1985 Fine Young Cannibals
  • First studio album
  • Release date: December 10, 1985
  • Label: I.R.S. Records
11 49 21 11 17
1989 The Raw and the Cooked
  • Second studio album
  • Release date: February 20, 1989
  • Label: I.R.S. Records
1 1 1 1 2 19 5 1 2
  • UK: 3× Platinum[11]
  • CAN: 6× Platinum[12]
  • US: 2× Multi-Platinum[13]
"—" denotes releases that did not chart

Compilation albums

Year Album details Peak chart positions Certifications
(sales threshold)
UK
[2]
NZ
[6]
BEL
[14]
AUT
[9]
1996 The Finest 10 21 39 22
2004 Greatest Hits
2006 The Platinum Collection
  • Release date: March 21, 2006
  • Label: Warner Deluxe
2009 She Drives Me Crazy
  • Release date: February 23, 2009
  • Label: MC Deluxe
"—" denotes releases that did not chart

Remix albums

Year Album details
1990 The Raw and the Remix
  • Release date: December 11, 1990
  • Label: I.R.S. Records

Singles

Year Single Peak chart positions[15] Album
UK US US Mod US Dance AUS IRE
1985 "Johnny Come Home" 8 76 9 14 8 Fine Young Cannibals
"Blue" 41 13
1986 "Suspicious Minds" 8 23 6 9
"Funny How Love Is" 58 97 27
1987 "Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've)" 9 11 20 10 Something Wild (soundtrack)
1988 "Tired of Getting Pushed Around" 18 3 20 Non-album song
1989 "She Drives Me Crazy" 5 1 5 1 1 2 The Raw and the Cooked
"Good Thing" 7 1 2 20 7 4
"Don't Look Back" 34 11 9 38 10
"I'm Not the Man I Used to Be" 20 54 8 8
1990 "I'm Not Satisfied" 46 90 19
1991 "It's O.K."
1996 "The Flame" 17 85 The Finest
1997 "She Drives Me Crazy 1997" 36
"—" denotes releases that did not chart

See also

External links

References


 
 

 

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
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