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Lindisfarne

 
Artist: Lindisfarne

Group Members:

Ray Laidlaw, Simon Cowe, Rod Clements, Ray Jackson, Alan Hull, Paul Nichols, Charlie Harcourt, Tom Duffy, Ken Craddock

Similar Artists:

Performed Songs By:

Formal Connection With:

Brethren
See Lindisfarne Lyrics
  • Formed: 1968, Newcastle-on-Tyne, England
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "The Best of Lindisfarne," "The River Sessions," "On Tap"
  • Representative Songs: "Lady Eleanor," "Meet Me on the Corner," "Fog on the Tyne"

Biography

Lindisfarne barely commands more than a footnote in most rock reference books. During the early '70s, however, Lindisfarne was one of the hottest folk-based rock bands in England, with chart placements on two of their albums that rivaled Jethro Tull, and had them proclaimed one of the most important groups of the decade. With a sound that mixed plaintive folk-like melodies, earthy but well-sung harmonies, and acoustic and electric textures, the group seemed poised for international success, when a series of unfortunate artistic decisions, followed by a split in their lineup, left them bereft of audience and success.

Singer/guitarist Alan Hull (b. Feb. 20, 1945), guitarist Simon Cowe (b. Apr. 1, 1948), mandolin player Ray Jackson (b. Dec. 12, 1948), bassist/violinist Rod Clements (b. Nov. 17, 1947), and drummer Ray Laidlaw (b. May 28, 1948) all hailed from Newcastle-on-Tyne, England, and the surrounding area. At some point, they were known as Downtown Faction, but they took their familiar musical form under the name Brethren. The band became a very popular act on the college circuit, playing what was known as "good time" music, singalong numbers resembling (or directly derived from) pub songs in which audiences could luxuriate, usually with Jackson's harmonica honking along. Alan Hull had a background in folk music which enabled him to freely incorporate that influence, and he was the major songwriter and singer in the band.

In 1968, they discovered that an American group was already using the name "Brethren," and the Newcastle group rechristened itself Lindisfarne, taken from the name of an island off the coast of Northumberland in Northern England -- the island Lindisfarne (also known as "Holy Island") is most famous for its early medieval monastery and castle and the ancient "Lindisfarne Gospels" medieval manuscript. The new name fit the times and the group's sound, which was evolving in the direction of folk-style music. The group was signed to Tony Stratten-Smith's Charisma Records, England's premiere progressive rock label, in 1970.

They released their first (and best) album, Nicely Out of Tune, that same year. Their debut album captured the group's best attributes, a rollicking, upbeat, optimistic collection of hippie/folk music, somewhere midway between Fairport Convention and the early Grateful Dead, with a peculiarly urban, English working-class ambience. Their "Englishness," coupled with the occasionally uneven quality of their songwriting, may explain one major reason why Lindisfarne never achieved more than a tiny cult following in the United States.

Nicely Out of Tune contained one wistfully romantic number, "Lady Eleanor," which became a favorite number in the band's concert repertory, and seemed destined to find an audience. The album and the "Lady Eleanor" single failed to chart, but the group's live shows only grew in popularity -- by the end of 1970, they were able to ask for £1500 a night from promoters, a far cry from the £300 they had been getting on the college circuit. Their second album, Fog On The Tyne, released in 1971, marked their commercial breakthrough -- a collection of earthy, folk-type pub songs, Fog On The Tyne entered the British charts in October of that year and began a slow climb into the middle reaches. In February of 1972, however, the group's label belated issued a single off of the album, "Meet Me On The Corner." That record was number five on the charts the following month, while Fog On The Tyne suddenly rose to the number one spot. Within a matter of weeks, Nicely Out Of Tune entered the charts for the first time and eventually hit number eight; "Lady Eleanor," reissued in June of 1972, made it to number three.

That was when the media hype kicked in, raising expectations and aspirations for a group that, until four months earlier, had been a pleasant folk-rock outfit with a solid cult following. Alan Hull was referred to in the press as the most important new songwriter since Bob Dylan, and Lindisfarne was saddled with the designation as "the 1970s Beatles." Up to this time, the group had played in England and Wales, but, apart from one show in Scotland and individual forays to Paris and Holland, its members hadn't even pondered the notion or implications of an international career. It all seemed too good to last, and it was.

Later in 1972, after a frantic period capitalizing on one massive success after another, the band released their third album, Dingly Dell. The album was troubled from the start. The record's producer was Bob Johnston, the American who had worked on Bob Dylan's John Wesley Harding, among many other records, and who had also produced Fog On The Tyne. The band had a falling out with Johnston over Dingly Dell, and remixed the album themselves immediately prior to release. The resulting record had a very crisp sound, very upfront, and more of a mainstream hard rock sound than their previous two long-players. Unfortunately, this was not the move that the critics had wanted or expected of the band -- they wanted a richer, more progressive folk-type sound, in some ways closer to Fairport Convention, not the harder, more basic sound that they found here. Additionally, the songwriting didn't match the prior two albums, and nobody was drawing comparisons between Alan Hull and Dylan over the songs on Dingly Dell.

Ironically, this album came out at just about the time the group was in the process of gaining a small following in America, although they never really had much chance of succeeding. Their association with Charisma Records meant that they were afforded a listen by the American progressive rock audience, and to some limited extent their mixture of folk and rock was "progressive." In reality, Lindisfarne was closer in spirit and music to such hard-rocking bands as Brinsley Schwarz, Bees Make Honey, and Eggs Over Easy, utterly lacking the pretensions needed for a prog-rock band.

Under other circumstances, the album would have been passed over by most critics as nothing more than a slightly disappointing lapse, but reviewers and journalists seemed bent on revenge for the group's failure to rise to the praise and hype lavished on them over the previous year. The record and the group were universally savaged, although it still got to number five on the charts and yielded one modest hit, "All Fall Down." The band toured America, but discovered that American listeners and critics found their sound too peculiarly English -- in the wrong ways -- to really accept Lindisfarne. The group was never remotely as popular as their Charisma labelmates Genesis, who were eagerly snapped up by Atlantic Records once their Charisma contract was up.

Cowe, Laidlaw, and Clements exited the band in early 1973 and formed a new group called Jack The Lad, which specialized in a harder, more basic pub-rock sound, and went on to release three albums on Charisma. A live Lindisfarne album, featuring the original lineup and songs mostly off of the first three albums, was issued by Charisma in 1973, but it was at best a holding action. Later that year, Alan Hull and Ray Jackson were back leading a new Lindisfarne line-up, featuring Ken Craddock on guitar, keyboards, and vocals, Charlie Harcourt on guitars, Tommy Duffy on bass and vocals, and Paul Nichols on drums. Their first album, Roll On Ruby, was a critical and commercial failure.

Hull embarked on a solo recording career at around this same time, which seemed to draw away still more of Lindisfarne's original audience. As the principal songwriter and voice of the group, and one of two original members, he held Lindisfarne's public better than the new Lindisfarne did.

The band switched to Warner Bros. for their next album, Happy Daze, but it fared no better. By 1977, Jack The Lad had called it quits and Cowe, Clements, and Laidlaw were back with Lindisfarne. Hull also recorded with Laidlaw and Craddock under the group name Radiator on the Rocket label, releasing a single album, entitled Isn't It Strange. Lindisfarne switched labels again to Mercury and debuted with a double live album, Magic In The Air, with songs drawn from the group's first three albums. The band remained intact, and on Mercury, for two more long-players, Back & Fourth (1978), which yielded a pair of modest hits in Alan Hull's "Run For Home," a song that sounds more like Springsteen than Springsteen does, and "Warm Feeling"; and The News (1979), all to little lasting commercial avail. They remained a reasonably popular concert attraction -- especially in Newcastle and the surrounding area -- into the early '80s, and have continued to record and reunite for concerts periodically in the years since. During the early '80s, they organized Lindisfarne Musical Productions and began releasing their work on the LMP label, including a live album cut in 1983. Their live recordings, featuring new renditions of their classic early '70s material, seem to draw the greatest enthusiasm.

Alan Hull has also maintained a separate solo career, and fans of the group should definitely own his Back to Basics CD, on which he does live acoustic versions of his best songs from 1970 onward. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Discography: Lindisfarne
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Magic in the Air/Caught in the Act

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Cropredy Concert

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Complete BBC Recordings 1971-1975

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Buried Treasures, Vol. 2

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Live

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Classic Rock Legends [Video/DVD]

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Here Comes the Neighbourhood

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Meet Me on the Corner: The Collection

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Very Best of Lindisfarne

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Buried Treasures, Vol. 1

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Wikipedia: Lindisfarne (band)
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Lindisfarne

Lindisfarne on stage in 1991
Background information
Origin Newcastle, England
Genres Folk rock
Years active 1970–2003
Labels Charisma, Elektra, Mercury, Atco, LMP
Website lindisfarne.co.uk
Former members
Simon Cowe
Rod Clements
Alan Hull
Ray Jackson
Ray Laidlaw

Lindisfarne were a British folk/rock group established in 1970 (renamed from Brethren[1]), fronted by singer/songwriter Alan Hull[2]. Their music combined a strong sense of yearning, often for home, with an even stronger sense of fun. Hit singles included "Meet Me On The Corner", "Lady Eleanor", "Run For Home", and the anthemic "We Can Swing Together", though perhaps their best-remembered song is "Fog On The Tyne" from the LP of the same name.

The original line-up comprised Alan Hull (20 February 1945 - 17 November 1995) (vocals/guitar/piano); Simon Cowe (born 1 April 1948, Jesmond Dene, Newcastle-upon-Tyne) (guitar, mandolin, banjo); Ray Jackson (born Lindsay Raymond Jackson, 12 December 1948, Wallsend, Newcastle-upon-Tyne) (vocals/mandolin/harmonica); Rod Clements (born Roderick Parry Clements, 17 November 1947, North Shields) (bass guitar/violin); and Ray Laidlaw (born Raymond Laidlaw, 28 May 1948, North Shields) (drums).

Contents

Early years

The group began as the Downtown Faction, but soon changed their name to Brethren. In 1968, after hearing of an American group of the same name, they were rechristened Lindisfarne after the island of that name off the Northumbrian coast.

In 1970 Tony Stratton-Smith signed them to Charisma Records and their debut album Nicely Out of Tune (so named because the group claimed they were 'nicely out of tune' with other prevailing musical trends at the time) was released, defining their mixture of bright harmony and rollicking folk rock. Both singles released from the album, "Clear White Light" and "Lady Eleanor", failed to chart, as did the album itself at first. Nonetheless, the band obtained a strong following from its popular live concerts.

Commercial success

Their second album, the Bob Johnston-produced Fog on the Tyne, followed in 1971 and began their commercial success, charting late in 1971 and reaching No. 1 the following year. Their profile was also raised when Jackson played mandolin on Rod Stewart's breakthrough hit single "Maggie May", even though Stewart only credited him on the sleeve of the parent album Every Picture Tells a Story as "the mandolin player in Lindisfarne. The name slips my mind." For years the legend persisted that disc jockey John Peel had played the mandolin part, solely as he was invited to mime it on Top of the Pops.

Top 10 singles "Meet me on the Corner", written by Clements, and a re-release of "Lady Eleanor", followed in 1972, and Nicely Out Of Tune belatedly made the Top 10. The band obtained a huge media following, with some calling Hull the greatest songwriter since Bob Dylan, and the band was even referred to as the "1970s Beatles". By the summer of 1972 they were one of the biggest names in British rock music, stealing the show at festivals and selling out live dates wherever they played.

At the pinnacle of their success, they recorded their third album, Dingly Dell, which featured strings arranged by Laidlaw's brother Paul on several tracks. They were unhappy with the initial production, and remixed it themselves. It was released in September 1972 in a plain beige cardboard sleeve, to demonstrate to fans that it was the music which mattered. Some overseas markets insisted on redesigning it with a photo of the band instead, the design which has since been used for the CD reissue. Though it entered the Top 10 in the first week of release, it received lukewarm reviews; the ecologically-themed single "All Fall Down" was a Top 40 hit, but the second single, '"Court in the Act", failed completely.

Internal tensions came to the fore during a disappointing tour of Australia in early 1973. Hull initially considered leaving the band, but was persuaded to reconsider. It was agreed that he and Jackson, the two joint lead vocalists, would keep the group name while Cowe, Clements, and Laidlaw left to form their own outfit, Jack The Lad. They were replaced by Tommy Duffy (bass guitar), Kenny Craddock (keyboards), Charlie Harcourt (guitar), and Paul Nicholl (drums). As an interesting aside, Jackson almost persuaded Phil Collins of Genesis to join the Mark II line-up after Laidlaw reversed his decision to continue.

The new lineup lacked the appeal of the original, and with Hull also pursuing a solo career, the band's next two albums, Roll On Ruby and Happy Daze, plus the tracks released as singles, failed to chart. They disbanded in 1975, but the old line-up continued to play annual Christmas shows at Newcastle.

In 1977 they reformed, and with a new record deal with Phonogram Records via their Mercury Records label, they were back in the charts in 1978 with the top 10 hit "Run For Home", an autobiographical song about the rigours of touring and relief at returning home. It gave them a Top 40 hit in the US at last, and the album Back and Fourth made the British Top 30. Subsequent singles "Juke Box Gypsy" and "Warm Feeling" failed to sustain their newfound success, and after the failure of The News, their second Mercury album in 1979, they were dropped by the label.

Final years

In the 80s, throughout various lineup changes, they continued to release albums, with only their nostalgic live recordings achieving any real attention, recording singles like "I Must Stop Going To Parties" on their own Lindisfarne Musical Productions label in the mid 1980s, with the catalogue numbers FOG1 to FOG4, as well as one album, Sleepless Nights. In 1984 they supported Bob Dylan and Santana at St James' Park, home of their beloved Newcastle United F.C. Saxophone player and vocalist Marty Craggs joined the group shortly afterwards. Throughout the 80s and early 90s they played annual Christmas tours. C'mon Everybody was a double vinyl LP consisting largely of old rock'n'roll standards, such as the title track, "Party Doll", and "Twist and Shout". Some diehard fans were horrified that their heroes should be seen to be "selling out" by recording a party album, though others thought the bad press was thoroughly undeserved.

In 1990 they introduced themselves to a new generation when a duet of "Fog on the Tyne Revisited" with footballer Paul Gascoigne rose to No. 2 in the UK singles chart. Soon afterwards Jackson left the band after a dispute with Hull, chiefly related to Hull's view that Jackson was not sufficiently interested in being a member any more. Cowe left amicably in 1993, to run a brewery in Canada.

After Hull's death on 17 November 1995, the band continued to play in many incarnations, until they felt they had run their course. They sensed that interest was diminishing, and each member wanted to pursue separate projects. Their last show was played on 1 November 2003 to the packed Newcastle Opera House. Playing together for the last time as Lindisfarne were Dave Hull-Denholm, Billy Mitchell, Rod Clements, Ian Thomson and Ray Laidlaw. The final concert was recorded for posterity and released under the appropriately named Time Gentlemen Please. Clements, who had taken over as the band's principal songwriter after Hull's death, has continued to release solo albums and play gigs in England, accompanied by his new outfit The Ghosts of Electricity.

A streamlined threesome known as Lindisfarne Acoustic honoured their commitments and toured until their last show on 17 May 2004 at Chesham, Buckinghamshire.

On 19 November 2005, the friends and colleagues of Alan Hull played a memorial concert to a packed house at Newcastle City Hall to perform his words and music, pay tribute to his talent, and celebrate his life. These artists included Alan Clark, Simon Cowe, Marty Craggs, Steve Cunningham, Steve Daggett, Tommy Duffy, Mike Elliot, Frankie Gibbon, Charlie Harcourt, Brendan Healy, Tim Healy, Ray Jackson, Ray Laidlaw, Finn McArdle, Ian McCallum, Billy Mitchell, Terry Morgan, The Motorettes, Jimmy Nail, Paul Nichols, Tom Pickard, Prelude, Bob Smeaton, Paul Smith and Kathryn Tickell. Proceeds from the concert were donated to The North East Young Musicians Fund.

Discography (no Best of's and Compilations)

  • Take Off Your Head and Listen (compilation - appeared as 'Alan Hull and Brethren')
  • Nicely Out of Tune (November 1970), No. 8
  • Fog on the Tyne (October 1971), No. 1
  • Dingly Dell (September 1972), No. 5
  • Lindisfarne Live (1973), No. 25
  • Roll on Ruby (December 1973)
  • Happy Daze (October 1974)
  • Lindisfarne's Finest Hour (1975), No. 55
  • Lady Eleanor (1976)
  • Back and Fourth (May 1978), No. 22
  • Magic In The Air (1978) Live), No. 71
  • The News (September 1979)
  • Sleepless Nights (October 1982), No. 59
  • Lindisfarntastic! Live (1983)
  • Lindisfarntastic! Two (1984)
  • Dance Your Life Away (October 1986)
  • C'mon Everybody (1987)
  • Amigos (November 1989)
  • Caught In The Act (1992 - Live 1983)
  • Buried Treasures Volumes 1 & 2 (1992)
  • Day Of The Jackal (1993) (EP)
  • Live 1990 (1993 - Live 1990)
  • Elvis Lives on the Moon (June 1993)
  • Lindisfarne On Tap - A Barrel Of Hits (1994)
  • Another Fine Mess (1996 - Live 1995)
  • City Songs (1996 - Compilation of BBC sessions
  • Untapped & Acoustic (1997)
  • The Cropredy Concert (1997 - Live 1994)
  • Blues From The Bothy (1997 (EP)
  • We Can Swing Together (1998 - The BBC Concerts 1971)
  • Dealers Choice (1998 - Mark II Band in Concert 1973 & in Session 1974)
  • Here Comes the Neighborhood (September 1998)
  • Live At The Cambridge Folk Festival (1999 - Live recordings from 1982 & 1986)
  • BT3 - Rare & Unreleased 1969-2000 (2000)
  • Promenade (2002)
  • Acoustic (2002 Live)
  • Time Gentlemen Please (2003 Live)
  • Acoustic 2 (2004 Live)
  • The River Sessions (2004 - Live at Glasgow Apollo 1982)
  • Happy Daze (incl 7 Alan Hull early demos, released 15.09.2008)
  • At The BBC (The Charisma Years 1971-1973, released 06.04.2009)

References

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 "Lindisfarne (band)" Read more