| Bobby Gillespie |
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Robert Gillespie |
| Born |
22 June 1962 |
| Origin |
Glasgow,
Scotland |
| Genre(s) |
rock |
| Occupation(s) |
Singer, Songwriter, Drummer |
| Years active |
1984 - present |
Bobby Gillespie (born Robert Gillespie, 22 June 1962, Glasgow[1]) is a Scottish musician. He
is the lead singer and founding member of the alternative rock band, Primal
Scream. From the south side of Glasgow he attended Kings Park secondary
school. His father is Bob Gillespie, former Labour Party candidate in
the 1988 Govan by-election, who infamously lost the seat to the SNP's
Jim Sillars. For more information, see [2].
|
Contents
- 1 Jesus
and Mary Chain days
- 2 Primal
Scream
- 3 Controversy
- 4 Trivia
|
Jesus and Mary Chain days
Gillespie first found fame playing drums for the influential
Glasgow band
The Jesus and Mary Chain.
Prior to The Jesus and the Mary Chain, he worked as a roadie for Altered
Images and played bass in The Wake. Gillespie was a friend
of Mary Chain bassist
Douglas
Hart, who asked Gillespie to join the band after their original drummer
had left following the release of their debut single
in 1984. Gillespie's style of drumming was minimal to say the least,
with his drum kit consisting only of a snare and a floor tom, which he
played standing up; an idea he borrowed from the Velvet
Underground drummer Moe Tucker. This fitted the Mary Chain's
style which was drowned in layers of feedback.
Gillespie played on the Mary Chain's classic debut LP Psychocandy,
which was released in 1985 to wide critical acclaim. By this time
Gillespie had already released a single, albeit to little attention,
with his own band, Primal Scream. Throughout
his days as a drummer Gillespie had continued to work at Primal Scream,
the band he started along with guitarist Jim
Beattie in 1982. By early 1986, Gillespie had played his last show with
the Mary Chain and left to devote his attentions to Primal Scream.
Primal Scream
The band signed to Creation Records in 1985, and over the next
year, they released a pair of singles. However, Primal Scream didn't
really take off until the middle of 1986, when Gillespie left the Mary
Chain and guitarists Andrew Innes and Robert Young joined the band.
"Velocity Girl," a rush of jangly guitars, was a B-side that wound up
on NME's C86
cassette compilation, a collection of underground pop groups that
defined the U.K.'s mid-'80s indie pop scene. After the band rejected
the initial version of debut album, Sonic
Flower Groove, recorded with Stephen Street,
they re-recorded the album with Mayo Thompson, and the record was
finally released in 1987 on the Creation subsidiary Elevation. The
album was well received in the British indie community, as was its 1989
follow-up, Primal Scream, which demonstrated hard rock influences from
the Rolling
Stones and New York Dolls to the
Stooges and MC5.
As the '80s drew to a close, Britain's underground music scene
became dominated by the burgeoning acid house scene. Primal Scream
became fascinated with the new dance music, and they asked a friend, a
DJ named Andrew Weatherall, to
remix a track from Primal Scream, "I'm Losing More Than I'll Ever
Have." Weatherall completely reworked the song, adding a heavy bass
groove echoing dub reggae, deleting most of the original
instrumentation (even the layers of guitars), and interjecting layers
of samples, including lines of Peter Fonda's dialogue from The
Wild Angels. The new mix was retitled "Loaded,"
and it became a sensation, bringing rock & roll to the
dancefloor and dance to rock & rollers. "Come Together," the
first single from their forthcoming third album, was in much the same
vein, and was similarly praised.
For their third album, Screamadelica,
Primal Scream not only worked with Andrew Weatherall and Hugo
Nicholson, the pair who essentially designed the sound of the album,
but also the Orb and former Stones producer Jimmy Miller. The resulting
album was a kaleidoscopic, neo-psychedelic fusion of dance, dub,
techno, acid house, pop, and rock, and it was greeted with rapturous
reviews in the U.K. Released in the spring of 1991, Screamadelica
also marked an important moment in British pop in the '90s, helping to
bring techno and house into the mainstream. The album was a massive
success, winning the first Mercury Music Prize in 1992.
In the wake of the groundbreaking Screamadelica,
most observers wondered what Primal Scream would do next, yet few would
have predicted their retreat to '70s hard rock for Give Out But Don't Give Up.
Released in 1994, the album was eagerly awaited, but its Stonesy hard
rock was not well received, and it was a relative commercial failure.
More importantly, it hurt the group's reputation as innovators, a
situation they reacted to with the title track to the hit 1996 film Trainspotting.
Primal Scream's contribution to the soundtrack was a return to the
dance stylings of Screamadelica, only darker. The
band continued to work on their next album, entitled Vanishing Point,
over the course of 1996, finally releasing it to enthusiastic reviews
in the summer of 1997. The ultra-aggressive XTRMNTR
followed in the spring of 2000. Two years later Primal Scream released Evil Heat,
a guest-laden (even supermodel Kate Moss makes an appearance) album in
line and on par with XTRMNTR, and in 2006 Riot
City Blues came out.
Controversy
Primal Scream were drafted at the last minute to play The Glastonbury
Festival in 2005, as one of the replacements for Kylie
Minogue. During the set Gillespie was abusive, making various gestures
including a Nazi
salute and referred to the crowd as "a bunch of fucking hippies". He
also declared that if the crowd wanted to see The Stone
Roses reunite that they "should've been here 15 years ago, you lazy
bastards". The band were eventually removed from stage by security for
over running their allotted time.
It was also reported that Gillespie made comments about one of
the Festivals headliners. He accused Coldplay
of being boring and that they are the reason why Radiohead
are so miserable.
Gillespie was also criticised for defacing a 'Make Poverty
History' poster signed by all the acts at the festival. Gillespie
scribbled over this and wrote 'Make Israel History.'[3] After the band left the stage,
Gillespie was asked why he had acted in this manner. Gillespie stated
that "Some fucking hippie robbed all my ale."
Gillespie and Glastonbury organiser Michael Eavis have since
met and Eavis reportedly brushed off the incident as amusing.
It was reported by the Scottish Daily Record in March 2007
that Gillespie was seen attending scientology classes with friends Juliette
Lewis and Kate
Moss in Los Angeles. However, Gillespie has yet to go on record about
his rumoured involvement with the controversial cult.
Gillespie has recently been involved in a campaign to prevent
a local pub gaining extended hours. This has caused controversy due to
what many consider his hypocritical attitude. Read about it here
Trivia
- Gillespie married stylist Katy England at St.
Margaret's Church, Betley
on 29 July 2006.
- Gillespie is a big fan of Echobelly
and has been known to play their hit King of the Kerb on Primal Scream's
tour bus.
- Gillespie joined Nick Cave's
band, Grinderman, as a backing singer at the band's first
stage performance at the ATP festival in Minehead, Somerset, in
April 2007.
Current Members: Bobby Gillespie ·
Andrew Innes ·
Robert
"Throb" Young ·
Gary
"Mani" Mounfield ·
Martin Duffy ·
Darrin Mooney
Former Members: Jim Beattie ·
Tom McGurk ·
Paul Harte ·
Martin St. John ·
Phil
King ·
Dave Morgan ·
Phillip "Toby"
Tomanov ·
Henry
Olsen ·
Kevin
Shields
Albums: Sonic
Flower Groove ·
Primal Scream ·
Screamadelica ·
Give Out But Don't Give Up ·
Vanishing Point ·
XTRMNTR ·
Evil
Heat ·
Riot City Blues
Remix and Compilation Albums: Echo Dek ·
Live In Japan ·
Dirty
Hits ·
Shoot Speed - More
Dirty Hits
See also: Creation
Records ·
The Jesus and Mary Chain ·
The Stone Roses ·
My Bloody Valentine
Jim Reid ·
William Reid
Current live band: Loz
Colbert ·
Mark
Crozer ·
Phil
King
Past members: Murray
Dalglish ·
Dave
Evans ·
Bobby Gillespie ·
Douglas
Hart ·
Ben Lurie ·
Steve Monti ·
John Moore ·
Nick
Sanderson ·
Richard
Thomas
Major studio albums: Psychocandy ·
Darklands ·
Automatic ·
Honey's
Dead ·
Stoned & Dethroned ·
Munki
B-sides and rarities: Barbed
Wire Kisses ·
The Sound of Speed ·
Hate Rock 'N' Roll ·
The Complete John
Peel Sessions ·
21
Singles
Related
articles
Primal Scream ·
Creation
Records ·
Shoegazing ·
Blanco
y Negro ·
Freeheat ·
Lazycame ·
Black Box Recorder