Briana Corrigan (born May 30, 1965) was the first
female singer for The Beautiful South,
from 1988 to
1994.
She was born in Northern Ireland and was known for
her quiet and intelligent personality, and hot temper. Her family moved
from the city of Belfast
in County
Antrim to scenic Portstewart on the North Coast of
Ireland when she was eleven, but her love for the theatre made her
move to Newcastle in England at the
age of eighteen, to take an acting course. There she began singing with
The Anthill
Runaways. Go! Discs Records, who were
considering signing the band, gave her an offer, to travel to Hull
and sing with Paul Heaton and Dave
Hemingway of The Beautiful South. Soon after she was asked to
go to Milan
with the band to help record their debut album Welcome to the
Beautiful South. She appeared alongside Dave
Hemingway on the band's only UK number 1 single "A
Little Time".
After appearing on three albums, Corrigan left the band in
1992 to pursue a solo career, a decision that was prompted partly by a
desire to record and promote her own material (which she felt was not
getting enough exposure in The Beautiful South) and partly by ethical
disagreements with some of Heaton's lyrics, particularly songs such as 36D,
which criticized British glamour models and the industry
that employed them. Hemingway later remarked, "We all agree that we
should have targeted the media as sexist instead of blaming the girls
for taking off their tops".
After she left the band, she recorded the solo album, When
My Arms Wrap You Round, in 1996. The single, "Love Me Now", did not make
the top 40, and the album itself never charted.
She moved to the West Country with her partner, but
eventually moved to Dublin,
Ireland
where she lives now.
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