| Dave Edmunds |
| Background information |
| Born |
15 April 1943 |
| Origin |
Cardiff Wales |
| Genre(s) |
Rock
Rockabilly
Pop
Pub
rock
New Wave |
| Occupation(s) |
Singer, guitarist, producer |
| Instrument(s) |
Guitar |
| Years active |
1968 - present |
| Label(s) |
EMI (UK)
London Records (US)
RCA
Records
Swan Song Records (US)
Arista Records (UK)
Columbia Records |
Associated
acts |
Love Sculpture
Rockpile |
Dave Edmunds (born 15 April 1943 in Cardiff, Wales) is a singer, guitarist
and record producer. Although he was
primarily associated with pub rock and New
Wave, and had numerous hits in the 1970s and early 1980s, he was
steadfastly devoted to pre-Beatles rock
and roll music.
|
Contents
- 1 Career
- 2 Discography
- 3 Notes
|
Career
In the late 1960s,
he led a blues-rock trio
called Love Sculpture, who scored a
quasi-novelty hit by reworking Khachaturian's classical
piece "Sabre
Dance" as a speed-crazed rock number, inspired by Keith
Emerson's classical rearrangements.
"Sabre Dance" became a hit after garnering the enthusiastic attention
of British
DJ
John
Peel.
After Love Sculpture split, Edmunds had a UK
#1 single
in 1970 with "I Hear You Knocking", a Smiley
Lewis cover,
which he came across while producing Shakin'
Stevens and the Sunsets' first album. The recording was the first
release on Edmunds' manager's MAM Records label. This single also
reached #4 in the U.S., making it Edmunds's biggest hit
by far on either side of the Pond. Edmunds had intended to
record Wilbert Harrison's "Let's Work
Together", but when he was beaten to that song by Canned
Heat, he adapted the arrangement he intended to use for it to "I
Hear You Knocking", producing a highly original remake. Unfortunately,
the success of the single caused EMI's Regal Zonophone Records to
use an option that it had to claim Edmunds' album, 1972's Rockpile,
and the momentum from the single's success on a different label went
away.
Edmunds' only acting role followed, as a band
member in the David Essex movie Stardust.
After learning the trade of producer, culminating in a couple of
singles in the style of Phil Spector, "Baby
I Love You" and "Born To Be With You", he became
linked with the pub
rock movement of the early 1970s, producing Brinsley
Schwarz, Ducks Deluxe, and also The
Flamin' Groovies, using a stripped down, grittier sound.
His own solo LP
from 1975, Subtle As a Flying Mallet,
was similar in style. The Brinsley Schwarz connection brought about a
collaboration with Nick Lowe starting with this
album, and in 1976 they formed the group Rockpile, with
Billy Bremner and Terry Williams. Because
Edmunds and Lowe signed to different record labels that year, they
could not record as Rockpile until 1980, but many of their solo LPs
(such as Nick Lowe's Labour of Lust
and Edmunds' own Repeat When Necessary)
were in fact group recordings. Dave
Edmunds had more UK hits during this time, including Elvis
Costello's "Girls Talk", Nick Lowe's "I Knew The Bride", Hank
DeVito's "Queen of Hearts" (written for
Edmunds but later a smash U.S. hit for Juice
Newton), Graham Parker's "Crawling
From The Wreckage", and Melvin Endsley's "Singing
the Blues" (originally a hit for Guy Mitchell).
Unexpectedly, after Rockpile released their first LP under
their own name (1980's Seconds
of Pleasure), the band split, generally
attributed to tensions not between Edmunds and Lowe but their
respective managers. Edmunds spent the 1980s collaborating with and
producing an assortment of artists, from Paul
McCartney to King Kurt, and from The
Stray Cats to Status Quo. He recorded the soundtrack
for Porky's Revenge,
supplying the main theme, "High School Nights", and was the musical
director for a television special starring Carl
Perkins, with assorted guests including George
Harrison, Ringo Starr, and Rosanne
Cash.
On his 1983 and 1984 releases, Information
and Riff Raff, Edmunds collaborated on two songs
with Jeff
Lynne, the leader of Electric Light Orchestra.
One of these songs, "Slipping Away" (from Information),
became Edmunds's only other U.S. Top 40 hit, albeit just barely, spending a
single week at #39. It was not a hit in the UK.
Edmunds recorded less frequently after the mid 1980s, and now
lives in Wales
in semi-retirement, touring Scandinavia infrequently, after
surviving a quadruple bypass
several years ago. However, 2007 marked a return to touring for
Edmunds, alongside fellow rock protagonist Joe Brown on a lengthy
jaunt around the UK.
Discography
Singles
as Love Sculpture:
- "Sabre Dance" (1968) UK #5
as Dave Edmunds:
- "I Hear You Knocking" (1970) UK #1
- "Baby I Love You" (1973) UK #8
- "Born To Be With You" (1973) UK #5
- "I Knew The Bride" (1977) UK #26
- "Girls Talk" (1979) UK #4
- "Queen Of Hearts" (1979) UK #11
- "Crawling From The Wreckage" (1979) UK #59
- "Singing The Blues" (1980) UK #28
- "Almost Saturday Night" (1981) UK #58
- "The Race Is On" (with The
Stray Cats) (1981) UK #34
- "Slipping Away" (1983) UK #60
- "King Of Love" (1990) UK #68
Albums
as Love Sculpture:
- Blues Helping (December 1968)
- Forms and Feelings (January 1970)
as Dave Edmunds:
- Rockpile
(June 1972)
- Subtle as a Flying Mallet
(April 1975)
- Get
It (April 1977)
- Tracks on Wax 4
(September 1978)
- Repeat When Necessary
(June 1979)
as Rockpile:
- Seconds of Pleasure
(October 1980)
as Dave Edmunds:
- Twangin... (April
1981)
- D.E. 7th (March 1982)
- Information (April 1983)
- Riff Raff (September 1984)
- I Hear You Rocking (June 1987)
- Closer to the Flame (April 1990)
- The Best of Dave Edmunds (March 1991)
- The Anthology: 1968-1990 (April 1993)
- Plugged In (August 1994)
- Hand Picked: Musical Fantasies (January
2000)
- A Pile of Rock: Live (September 2001)
- From Small Things: The Best of Dave Edmunds
(April 2004)
- Alive and Pickin' (February 2005)
Notes
-
Edmunds also appears in the Paul McCartney film Give My Regards to
Broad Street, but just as part of McCartney's
backing band.
Preceded by
Rolf Harris
Two Little Boys
|
UK Christmas Number One
single
I Hear You Knocking 1970
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Succeeded by
Benny Hill
Ernie (The Fastest Milkman In The West)
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