Prefab Sprout
Prefab Sprout | |
---|---|
Origin | County Durham, England |
Genres | Pop rock, New Wave, sophisti-pop |
Years active | 1978–present |
Labels | Kitchenware EMI Liberty Epic (US) |
Members | Paddy McAloon Martin McAloon |
Past members | Wendy Smith Feona Attwood Neil Conti Michael Salmon Graham Lant Steve Dolder |
Website | The band's official site closed in 2004 |
Prefab Sprout are an English pop rock band from Witton Gilbert, County Durham, England who rose to fame during the 1980s. Eight of their albums have reached the Top 40 in the UK Albums Chart, and one of their singles, "The King of Rock 'n' Roll", peaked at number seven in the UK Singles Chart.[1] The band formed in 1978 in Newcastle.[1]
Prefab Sprout had minimal chart success in the United States. Their 1985 album Steve McQueen was released in the US with the title Two Wheels Good and peaked at number 180 in the Billboard 200. Frontman Paddy McAloon has been hailed as one of the great songwriters of his era.[2]
Career
Prefab Sprout debuted in 1982 with their self-released single, "Lions In My Own Garden: Exit Someone" - songwriter Paddy McAloon wanted a song title where the first letters of the words spelled out Limoges, the French city where his former girlfriend was staying at the time.[2] Music journalist Stuart Maconie described the track as "enigmatic, melancholy, tuneful and therefore perfect for a jobless literature graduate with girlfriend problems".[3] Their debut album, Swoon, was released on the Kitchenware label in March 1984.[2] The following album, the Thomas Dolby-produced Steve McQueen, (released in America as Two Wheels Good after McQueen's estate expressed their displeasure with the title) was highly praised by critics.[2] Their Protest Songs album was recorded next, but was not released until 1989. It included the song "Life of Surprises", which later became the title track for their greatest hits compilation album.
Their biggest commercial success in the UK came with the 1988 single "The King of Rock 'N' Roll", taken from the album From Langley Park to Memphis. It reached No. 7 in the UK Singles Chart, their only single to reach the Top 10. From Langley Park to Memphis included guest appearances from Stevie Wonder and Pete Townshend.[1]
In 1990, Jordan: The Comeback, again produced by Thomas Dolby, was nominated for a BRIT Award. Though the music was more accessible than their earlier material, the lyrics and subject matter remained characteristically oblique and suggestive (McAloon has often cited Stephen Sondheim as an influence).[citation needed] McAloon has alluded in interviews to several albums-worth of songs that he has written but are unreleased/unrecorded including amongst others, concept albums based on the life of Michael Jackson (Behind the Veil), the history of the world (Earth: The Story So Far) and (Zorro the Fox) about a fictional superhero.[citation needed]
Their greatest hits, A Life of Surprises - The Best of Prefab Sprout, gave them their biggest US hit, "If You Don't Love Me", which spent several weeks in the Top 10 on the dance chart. McAloon joked in the album liner notes about the band's lack of touring over the past decade.
Prefab Sprout released Andromeda Heights in the UK in 1997 and embarked on a short UK tour in 2000. This tour, and the subsequent album, did not feature Wendy Smith, who by this time had reportedly left the band. A double album anthology, the 38 Carat Collection was released by CBS in 1999 as the group was leaving the record label.[2] Unexpectedly, the group's US label, Epic, belatedly reissued this set as The Collection in early 2001.[2] Smith left the group during this period, after the birth of her first child.
In 2001 the band released The Gunman and Other Stories a concept album themed on the American Wild West. The opening track "Cowboy Dreams" was a hit for the British actor-singer Jimmy Nail. Though critically acclaimed, neither enjoyed major commercial success.
After being diagnosed with a medical disorder that seriously impaired his vision, Paddy McAloon released the album I Trawl The Megahertz under his own name in 2003 on the EMI Liberty label. As of 2006, McAloon had suffered another setback: his hearing had deteriorated, reportedly due to Ménière's disease. In early 2007 a remastered Steve McQueen was released in a two-CD package, containing new versions of eight of the songs from the original album, in different arrangements performed by McAloon on acoustic guitar.
Prefab Sprout's first album of new material since 2001, Let's Change the World with Music, was released on 7 September 2009. Reviews in the UK press were favourable (e.g. 5/5 in The Times, 4/5 in The Guardian, 4/5 in Record Collector). The release was also accompanied by a few interviews (e.g. Mojo).
In June 2013, a leak of ten previously unreleased songs on Soundcloud led to speculation that a new Prefab Sprout album was being recorded. A proposed 7 October 2013 release date was subsequently confirmed on 14 July, with the title given as 'Crimson/Red'.[citation needed]
Band name
According to the Guinness Book of British Hit Singles & Albums, the band's name was a mondegreen from the Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazelwood song, "Jackson", misheard by frontman Paddy McAloon.[1] The correct opening lyrics for "Jackson" are "We got married in a fever, hotter than a pepper sprout", which McAloon misinterpreted as 'hotter than a prefab sprout'. However, Allmusic reckons that the prosaic truth is that "an adolescent McAloon had devised the meaningless name in homage to the longwinded and equally silly band names of his late 1960s / early 1970s youth". But it is equally valid that, because of the proliferation of pre-fabricated houses in the North East (due to World War II - and commonly called Prefabs), the former is true due to word association.[2]
Core members
- Paddy McAloon (born Patrick Joseph McAloon, 7 June 1957, Durham[4]); vocals / guitars / keyboards
- Martin McAloon (born 4 January 1962, Durham[4]); bass guitar
- Wendy Smith (born 31 May 1963,[4] Middlesbrough); vocals / guitars / keyboards
- Neil Conti (born 12 February 1959,[4] Luton); drums / percussion
- Feona Attwood (born, Chester-le-Street, County Durham); vocals - now Professor Attwood teaching Media and Communication Studies at Sheffield Hallam University.[5]
- Michael Salmon (born Durham); the band's first drummer and co-founder - left January 1983 replaced by Graham Lant. Steve Dolder joined in mid 1983 before Conti joined in late 1984[6]
Discography
Albums
Year | Album | UK Albums Chart | Billboard 200 | Details |
---|---|---|---|---|
1984 | Swoon | 22 | - | - |
1985 | Steve McQueen | 21 | 180 | Released in the US as Two Wheels Good |
1988 | From Langley Park to Memphis | 5 | - | - |
1989 | Protest Songs | 18 | - | Recorded in 1985 |
1990 | Jordan: The Comeback | 7 | - | - |
1992 | The Best Of - A Life Of Surprises | 3 | - | - |
1997 | Andromeda Heights | 7 | - | - |
1999 | 38 Carat Collection | 95 | - | Last album for Sony/Columbia |
2001 | The Gunman and Other Stories | 60 | - | Only album for EMI-Liberty to date |
2003 | I Trawl the Megahertz | 167 | - | Paddy McAloon solo project |
2007 | Steve McQueen | 155 | - | Remastered Legacy edition with second acoustic disc recorded by McAloon in 2005 |
2009 | Let's Change the World with Music | 39 | - | - |
2013 | Crimson/Red | TBC | - | New album due for release October 2013 on new Icebreaker Records |
- All chart positions takes from Chart Log UK <http://www.zobbel.de/cluk/CLUK_P.HTM>
Singles
Year | Song | UK [1][6][7][8] |
US | AU | Album |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1984 | "Don't Sing" | 62 | - | - | Swoon |
"When Love Breaks Down" | 88 | - | - | Steve McQueen | |
1985 | "Faron Young" | 74 | - | - | |
"Appetite" | 92 | - | 45 | ||
"When Love Breaks Down" (reissue) | 25 | - | 55 | ||
1986 | "Johnny Johnny" (called "Goodbye Lucille No. 1" on the album) | 64 | - | - | |
1988 | "Cars and Girls" | 44 | - | - | From Langley Park to Memphis |
"The King of Rock 'n' Roll" | 7 | - | - | ||
"Hey Manhattan!" | 72 | - | - | ||
"Nightingales" | 78 | - | - | ||
1989 | "The Golden Calf" | 82 | - | - | |
1990 | "Looking for Atlantis" | 51 | - | - | Jordan: The Comeback |
"We Let The Stars Go" | 50 | - | - | ||
1991 | "Jordan - The EP" | 35 | - | - | |
1992 | "The Sound of Crying" | 23 | - | - | The Best Of - A Life Of Surprises |
"If You Don't Love Me" | 33 | - | - | ||
"All The World Loves Lovers" | 61 | - | - | ||
1993 | "Life of Surprises" | 24 | - | - | |
"I Remember That" | - | - | - | ||
1997 | "A Prisoner of the Past" | 30 | - | - | Andromeda Heights |
"Electric Guitars" | 53 | - | - | ||
1999 | "Where the Heart Is" | 153 | - | - | 38 Carat Collection |
2001 | "Cowboy Dreams" | - | - | - | The Gunman and Other Stories |
2009 | "Let There Be Music" | - | - | - | Let's Change the World with Music |
Sources
- Myths, Melodies & Metaphysics: Paddy McAloon's Prefab Sprout - ISBN 978-0-9558832-0-0
References
- ^ a b c d e Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 433. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Biography by Stewart Mason". Allmusic.com. Retrieved 4 December 2008.
- ^ Maconie, Stuart (2004). Cider With Roadies (1st ed.). London: Random House. p. 161. ISBN 0-09-189115-9.
- ^ a b c d Roberts, David (1998). Guinness Rockopedia (1st ed.). London: Guinness Publishing Ltd. p. 327. ISBN 0-85112-072-5.
- ^ "Feona Attwood". Feona Attwood. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
- ^ a b Strong, Martin C. (2000). The Great Rock Discography (5th ed.). Edinburgh: Mojo Books. p. 760. ISBN 1-84195-017-3.
- ^ "Chart Log UK: Rodney P. - The Pussycat Dolls". Zobbel.de. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
- ^ "Prefab Sprout". Chart Stats. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
External links