- Badly Drawn Boy
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Badly Drawn Boy Background information Birth name Damon Gough Born 2 October 1969 Origin Bolton, Lancashire, England Genres Alternative Occupations Singer-songwriter Instruments Guitar, vocals, bass guitar, drums, banjo, piano, keyboards, clavinet, mellotron, synthesizer, flute, harmonica, organ, harp, celesta Years active 1995–present Labels Twisted Nerve Records
XL Recordings (1998–2004)
EMI (2006–2008)
BDB Records/One Last Fruit (2009-present)Associated acts Beck Website badlydrawnboy.muronia.com Damon Gough (stage name Badly Drawn Boy) is an English[1] alternative music singer/songwriter. He was born on 2 October 1969, in Dunstable, Bedfordshire. He grew up in the Breightmet area of Bolton, Lancashire, England.
Damon Gough chose his stage name from the title character in the show Sam and his Magic Ball, which he saw on TV at a party in Trafford, Manchester in 1995. Before he thought of using this name he made some business cards, each one unique, with a printed picture of a drawing by his nephew and a small collage by Gough. This was then laminated and given out to friends and people at clubs in Blackburn and Manchester.[citation needed]
A chance meeting with Andy Votel at the Generation X bar in Manchester, where Gough's friends Scott Abraham and Damon Hayhurst were contributing to an exhibition by the Space Monkey Clothing Company and Votel was DJing, led to the foundation of Twisted Nerve Records. Badly Drawn Boy's first 7-inch single, EP1, was pressed the following year to critical acclaim, although only 500 copies were made.[citation needed]
In 2002, Q magazine named Badly Drawn Boy in their list of the "50 Bands to See Before You Die", although this was as part of a sub-list of "5 Bands That Could Go Either Way" on account of Gough's tendency to talk and tell stories for extended periods in concert rather than play songs.
Contents
History
Early years: 1995–1998
Gough's recording career began in September 1997 with the five track vinyl release "EP1". This was distributed among friends and family members. With only 500 being pressed, the record is now considered something of a Holy grail for Badly Drawn Boy enthusiasts, with copies commanding as little as £100 on eBay.[citation needed]
In April 1998 Gough released his second EP, "EP2". This featured one track less than its predecessor but twice as many copies were pressed. The highlight track "I Love You All" was later transferred to a music box which was released alongside the EP. The box plays eleven seconds of the song and is considered much rarer than the record itself due to its limited production.
Gough's third EP, "EP3", was released in November 1998 on both CD and vinyl formats, and was the first release in what would become a long-term partnership with XL Recordings. In the same year he collaborated with Unkle for their first album Psyence Fiction. "Road Movie" was released as a live recording with Gough's fellow Mancunians Doves. The B-side to the single was another track from the EP, "My Friend Cubilas". Music videos were recorded for both tracks.
Mainstream success: 1999–2002
It Came from the Ground was the next EP, released in March 1999 on CD and vinyl. The style of this recording focused on woodland environments, an aspect displayed in both the cover art and the title track's video. Also released during this period was the single "Whirlpool". An instrumental was released on vinyl in April 1999.
Gough's last EP, Once Around the Block, was released in August 1999 in two vinyl formats and one CD edition. The release is almost short enough to be considered a single.
Following the success of his early EPs, Gough's debut album, The Hour of Bewilderbeast, was released in June 2000, accompanied by four singles (including a re-release of Once Around the Block).
The album was critically acclaimed and Badly Drawn Boy was successful in winning the 2000 Mercury Music Prize, beating his contemporaries Doves to the £20,000 prize. The album sold well (300,000 copies) and is widely considered to be his defining work.
After a short break, Gough returned to score the film adaptation of Nick Hornby's novel About a Boy. Impressed by his past work, the Weitz brothers asked Gough to score the film, a task which he undertook alone. Three singles from the album were released over the course of 2002.
His third album, Have You Fed the Fish?, introduced more guitars and an increasingly mainstream pop sound which was not welcomed by all critics. The album is a play on Gough's minor celebrity status and namechecks music icons such as Madonna and John Lennon. Another three singles and a long American tour accompanied the album.
Later years: 2003–present
After his long spell in America, Gough suffered from homesickness and decided to record his next album closer to home. Recorded at Moulin Rouge studios in Stockport, Cheshire, One Plus One Is One was a portrait of his personal life. Documenting a death of a close friend and the loss of a grandfather in the Battle of Normandy, the album was released in 2004. It was not a great commercial success, and Gough decided to leave his contract with XL Recordings after only one single was released. He then signed to EMI.
Two years went by before Born in the U.K., which aims to explain Gough's experience of growing up in the United Kingdom. The album was promoted with a small UK tour, profits from which were donated to Oxfam, a charity which "offers the chance for thousands of people to use music to achieve something together, which is an idea that gets me excited," said Gough.[2]
The album "Is There Nothing We Could Do?", featuring 'music taken from and inspired by the motion picture The Fattest Man in Britain' was released on his own BDB Records label in 2009.
A seventh album, It's What I'm Thinking Pt.1 – Photographing Snowflakes, the first of a planned trilogy of albums all to be released under the title It's What I'm Thinking, was released in October 2010.[3]
On 17 December 2010 while on stage at the Troubador in Los Angeles, Gough became unhappy with the quality of the sound acoustics at the venue and the audience, which lead to Gough swearing at some members of the audience.[4]
Discography
Main article: Badly Drawn Boy discography- The Hour of Bewilderbeast (26 June 2000)
- About a Boy (8 April 2002)
- Have You Fed the Fish? (4 November 2002)
- One Plus One Is One (21 June 2004)
- Born in the U.K. (16 October 2006)
- Is There Nothing We Could Do? (14 December 2009)
- It's What I'm Thinking Pt.1 – Photographing Snowflakes (4 October 2010)
References
- ^ BBC.co.uk
- ^ Oxfam.org.uk
- ^ http://www.exclaim.ca/Interviews/WebExclusive/badly_drawn_boy
- ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2010/dec/20/badly-drawn-boy-onstage-meltdown
External links
Categories:- 1969 births
- English singer-songwriters
- English buskers
- English male singers
- English songwriters
- Living people
- Musicians from Manchester
- Music from Bolton
- People from Bolton
- People from Dunstable
- XL Recordings artists
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