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Rod Clements

 
Artist: Rod Clements

Similar Artists:

Worked With:

Pick Withers, Danny Thompson, Ray Jackson, Graham Preskett, Simon Cowe, Ralph McTell, Ray Laidlaw, Alan Hull
  • Born: November 17, 1947, North Shields, England
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Keyboards, Guitar, Bass
  • Representative Albums: "Stamping Ground", "Odd Man Out

Biography

Rod Clements is best known as the co-founder of Lindisfarne and the author of such songs as "Meet Me on the Corner" and "Road to Kingdom Come." As a bassist and singer, he has played with artists and groups as different as Ralph McTell, Peter Hammill, and Pentangle. Born Roderick Parry Clements in 1947 in North Shields, England, he was an only child, and grew up in a household in which neither parent was especially active musically, though his mother played the piano. His father was a huge fan of classical music, however, and saw to it that the younger Clements attended numerous concerts. From an early age, he showed an ability to pick up a tune, even on a child's plastic saxophone, and play it. He reached his teens in 1960, as the first wave of home-grown rock & roll in England was about to crest, and gravitated toward the guitar -- he got his first six-string acoustic at age 13, and at 15 briefly took piano lessons at school. His initial inspiration to play music came from the guitar instrumentals of Duane Eddy and the Shadows, among others. He also discovered, in the course of singing hymns at services, that he had an innate ability to harmonize a difficult melody.

Those rock instrumentals, in turn, led him to the bass -- as he explained in an interview with Tom Cunningham that appears on Clements' own web page, he was always fascinated by the single-string melodies of many of those instrumentals such as the Shadows' "F.B.I.," which often tended toward the bass strings on the guitar. He also became much more comfortable with and intrigued by the bass parts of the songs played by the various bands with which he sat in, and discovered that his childhood knack for harmonizing transferred very well to his playing on the four-string instrument. Faced with an immediate future as a relatively undistinguished guitar player or a potentially talented bassist, he chose the latter.

There was also a certain consistency in his preferences -- he played in bands with vocalists, of course, but he reserved his admiration for the likes of Bert Jansch, Davy Graham, and John Renbourn, instrumentalists all. Clements attended university at the insistence of his parents but he devoted most of his energy during those three years to music, and especially to a band initially called the Downtown Faction Blues Band, later shortened to Downtown Faction. Originally known as the Cyclones and then the Wombats, the group had something of a floating lineup -- Clements moved in and out of membership as his time allowed -- Ray Laidlaw, Ray Jackson, and Clements' longtime friend Simon Cowe passed through as well. The group evolved into the Brethren, with Clements, Jackson, Cowe, Laidlaw, and Jeff Sadler. During this same period, Clements took up the violin, inspired in part by Fairport Convention and the album Liege & Lief -- this fit in perfectly with the Brethren's switch from blues to folk music.

It was at a gig at a folk club that the band crossed paths with Alan Hull, a guitarist/singer, who joined up soon after and replaced Sadler on guitar. The group changed its name to Lindisfarne -- which literally means "holy island" -- soon after. Hull and Clements dominated the band's songwriting, Hull writing most of the original numbers and generating the hits "Lady Eleanor" and "Fog on the Tyne," while Clements provided "Meet Me on the Corner" -- the latter often compared favorably to the classic songs of Bob Dylan -- and "Road to Kingdom Come," among other songs. Even during this period, in which the bandmembers were presumably working well together, Clements worked on the occasional outside project, and he and Jackson both ended up playing on Fool's Mate, the debut solo album of guitarist Peter Hammill (who was signed to the same label, Charisma).

The group split up in 1973, amid internal acrimony and management pressures, with the core Downtown Faction originals Clements, Cowe, and Laidlaw going off to form Jack the Lad in partnership with Clements' old friend Billy Mitchell -- Clements only stayed for the group's self-titled debut album, contributing four songs in the process. Rather than attach himself to another group, Clements chose to try establishing himself as a freelance musician in his own right, and he played on some pretty impressive recordings during this period, including Ralph McTell's hit version of "Streets of London." By 1978, however, Clements and the entire original lineup were back together in Lindisfarne, which began a highly successful second phase of its existence.

Clements lasted with his group into the start of the 21st century, along the way playing with such luminaries as Mark Knopfler, Michael Chapman, Bert Jansch, and briefly joining Jansch and co-founder Jacqui McShee in a latter-day lineup of the Pentangle. In 2000, Clements released his debut solo album, Stamping Ground, featuring a dozen original songs authored or co-authored by him, with veteran roots rocker Sid Griffin included among the musicians, on the Market Square label. He followed it up with One Track Mind on the Resurgent label, a year later. Thanks to his association with Lindisfarne, and "Meet Me on the Corner" and his other songs, he remains a much-loved music star in England, especially in the group's native Newcastle. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Rod Clements

Rod Clements on stage with Lindisfarne in 1991
Background information
Birth name Roderick Parry Clements
Born November 17, 1947(1947-11-17)
North Shields, Tyne and Wear, England
Genres Roots, blues, Americana, folk, rock
Instruments electric slide guitar, dobro, acoustic guitar
Associated acts Brethren, Downtown Faction, Jack The Lad, Lindisfarne, Pacamax, Pentangle, Rod Clements & The Ghosts Of Electricity

Rod Clements (born Roderick Parry Clements, 17 November 1947, North Shields, Tyne and Wear) is a British guitarist and singer/songwriter.

Contents

Career

Rod Clements is an only child, and grew up in a household in which neither parent was especially active musically, though his mother did play the piano. His father was a lover of classical music and he encouraged his son to attend concerts. At the age of 12 Clements was sent to boarding school in Durham and there, while singing hymns, he discovered he had a natural ability to create harmonies for tunes. From an early age he had been able to pick up a tune and play it - even on a child's plastic saxophone - and his first inspiration to play the guitar came from hearing the hits of Duane Eddy, The Shadows and The Ventures[1]. Learning to play their tunes on borrowed guitars provided the young Rod Clements with an escape from the rigorous regime of school life and it was not long before he bought his first guitar and formed his own group. By the time he left school in 1965, his group the Downtown Faction were playing R&B standards at local dances and parties.

Back home in North Shields, Clements teamed up with local musicians to form a blues band (also called the Downtown Faction), while moonlighting as bassist with a show band backing strippers and comedians on the Tyneside club circuit.

Rod's growing interest in country, blues and slide guitar, and his early attempts at songwriting, led him to the folk clubs where he and a stripped-down version of the Downtown Faction, by now known as Brethren, played Woody Guthrie and Leadbelly songs alongside their own embryonic efforts.

The Tyneside folk clubs of the late sixties brought Clements into contact with some of the influential names of the day, such as Billy Connolly, Ralph McTell, Rab Noakes, Gerry Rafferty, Al Stewart. Most significantly for him and his musical acquaintances, they befriended a Newcastle singer/songwriter called Alan Hull with whom they went on to form the folk-rock band Lindisfarne.

Although Alan was Lindisfarne's principal songwriter, it was Rod Clements who provided the band with its first hit in Meet Me On The Corner which reached the UK Top 5 in March 1972, won Clements a Certificate of Honour at the Ivor Novello Awards and paved the way for the band's chart-topping Fog On The Tyne album. Over thirty years on, Meet Me On The Corner continues to receive regular radio play, and it was used in 2006 by the makers of the BBC TV drama, Life On Mars.

During Lindisfarne's long career, Clements gave the band many album tracks and stage favourites, such as Road To Kingdom Come and Train In G Major. Following Alan Hull's untimely death in 1995 Rod became the band's main songwriter who, in partnership with producer and co-writer Nigel Stonier, provided the bulk of material for Lindisfarne's two last albums, Here Comes The Neighbourhood (1998) and Promenade (2002). Clements's contributions to the band's distinctive sound ranged from full-time bass player (a role he relinquished in 1990) to fiddle, mandolin, dobro and electric slide guitar, and - increasingly in later years - vocals.

Clements was also a founding member of Jack The Lad, the Lindisfarne spin-off band, on whose debut album It's Jack The Lad he played a significant role as multi-instrumentalist and songwriter.

Rod Clements's instrumental skills have been in demand from early in his career and he has contributed to the work of many other artistes. In 1974 he played bass on Ralph McTell's Streets Of London, which topped the UK charts at Christmas that year. Clements went on to tour and record several albums with McTell.

The McTell connection led directly to Rod's involvement with arguably the most influential guitarist of his generation, Bert Jansch. Rod and Bert worked closely through 1975-6, sharing a house in North London, touring Britain and Europe and recording Bert's comeback album A Rare Conundrum (produced by Rod) for the Charisma label.

Jansch and Clements also worked together occasionally throughout the eighties. The recording in Newcastle of a Woody Guthrie tribute album (Woody Lives!, Black Crow Records) led to the jointly credited Leather Launderette (Bert Jansch & Rod Clements) and two nationwide tours, which saw the pair returning to their folk club roots. Jansch, in turn, recruited Clements into a reformed Pentangle, with whom - stepping into the shoes of John Renbourn - he toured Britain, Europe and the USA and recorded an album, So Early In The Spring.

Clements has also toured and recorded extensively with Michael Chapman and Rab Noakes and contributed to albums by Peter Hammill (ex-Van Der Graaf Generator), Wizz Jones and Northumbrian piper Kathryn Tickell amongst others. He has supplied bass, dobro, and guitar parts to albums by singer/songwriter Thea Gilmore, who has, in turn, provided vocals on Rod's solo albums.

Rod Clements-penned songs have been covered by artists as diverse as Melanie Safka and Joe Brown and a Clements/Stonier composition, Can't Do Right For Doing Wrong, was a much played hit for Erin Rocha at Christmas 2003.

Surprising many who previously knew him only through his Lindisfarne connection, Clements released his Stamping Ground album in 2000, having written or co-written each of the tracks. On the album he fronted a band including ex-Lindisfarne colleagues Dave Hull-Denholm and Ian Thomson, Sid Griffin (formerly of the Long Ryders), an ex-10cc drummer Paul Burgess and Thea Gilmore on vocals. The recording won widespread critical acclaim.

Produced and partly co-written by Nigel Stonier, Odd Man Out (2006) followed on from Stamping Ground and once again featured Hull-Denholm, Thomson and Burgess, with Thea Gilmore's vocals complementing Rod's own.

Spring 2008 saw the reissue (with bonus tracks) of Rod's first solo album, the slide guitar-laden One Track Mind, featuring traditional blues songs, classics by Leadbelly, Oscar Woods and Woody Guthrie, and a handful of Clements originals.

Discography

Solo albums

  • One Track Mind (1994)
  • Stamping Ground (2000)
  • Live Ghosts (2004)
  • Odd Man Out (2006)
  • One Track Mind 2008 (2008) - with bonus tracks

Lindisfarne albums with Clements

  • Nicely Out Of Tune (1970)
  • Fog On The Tyne (1971)
  • Dingly Dell (1972)
  • Back And Fourth (1978)
  • The News (1979)
  • Sleepless Nights (1982)
  • Dance Your Life Away (1986)
  • Amigos (1989)
  • Elvis Lives On The Moon (1993)
  • Blues From The Bothy (EP) (1997)
  • Here Comes The Neighbourhood (1998)
  • Promenade (2002)

with Jack the Lad

  • It's Jack The Lad (1974)

with Bert Jansch

  • "In The Bleak Midwinter" (single) (1974)
  • A Rare Conundrum (1976)

Bert Jansch & Rod Clements

  • Leather Launderette (1988)

with Ralph McTell

  • "Streets Of London" (single) (1974)
  • Streets (album) (1975)
  • Right Side Up (1976)
  • Songs from Alphabet Zoo (1983)

with Prelude

  • Owl Creek Incident (1975)

with Dando Shaft

  • Kingdom (1977)

with Michael Chapman

  • The Man Who Hated Mornings (1977)
  • Looking For Eleven (1980)
  • Plaindealer (2005)

with Jim Rafferty

  • Don't Talk Back (1978)

with Rab Noakes

  • Rab Noakes (1980)
  • Under The Rain (1983)
  • Throwing Shapes (Rab Noakes & The Varaflames) (2000)

with Thea Gilmore

  • The Lipstick Conspiracies (2000)
  • Songs From The Gutter (2002)

with Nigel Stonier

  • Golden Coins (1993)
  • Brimstone & Blue (2002)

with Peter Hammill

  • Fool's Mate (1971)

with Wizz Jones

  • Happiness Was Free (1976)

with Kathryn Tickell

  • Borderlands (1986)

with Pentangle

  • So Early In The Spring (1989)

with Mark Knopfler

  • Newport Mount Rag (recorded 1974)

Various artists

  • Woody Lives! (Woody Guthrie tribute album) (1987)
  • People On The Highway (Bert Jansch tribute album) (2000)

External references

References

  1. ^ http://www.rodclements.com/frame.html

 
 
Learn More
Here Comes the Neighbourhood (1998 Album by Lindisfarne)
Looking for Eleven (1980 Album by Michael Chapman)
Nicely Out of Tune [Bonus Tracks] (2004 Album by Lindisfarne)

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