| Ian Dury |
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Ian
Dury, live on Top of the Pops 2
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Ian Robbins Dury |
| Born |
May 12, 1942
Harrow, Middlesex |
| Origin |
Upminster, England |
| Died |
March 27, 2000 |
| Genre(s) |
Rock/Pop |
| Occupation(s) |
Vocalist, Actor |
| Instrument(s) |
Vocals, Drums |
| Years active |
1971-2000 |
| Label(s) |
Pye-Dawn, Stiff,
Polydor, Demon, Ronnie Harris |
Associated
acts |
Kilburn and the High-Roads,
The Blockheads |
| Website |
http://www.iandury.co.uk/ |
Ian Dury (May 12, 1942 – March 27, 2000) was an English rock and roll singer, songwriter, and
bandleader who initially rose to fame during the late 1970s, during the
punk
and New Wave era of rock music. He is
best known as founder and lead singer of the British band Ian
Dury and the Blockheads, though he began his musical career
in pub-rock
act Kilburn and the High Roads.
|
Contents
- 1 Early
life
- 2 Kilburn
and the High-Roads
- 3 The
Blockheads
- 4 Acting
and other activities
- 5 Illness
- 6 Discography
- 6.1 Singles
- 6.2 Albums
- 6.3 Blockheads
Albums (without Dury) and DVDs
- 7 Audio
sample
- 8 References
- 9 See
also
- 10 External
links
|
Early life
Ian Robin Dury was born at his parents' home at 43 Weald Rise,
Harrow Weald, Harrow (although, probably because he
felt that his true birthplace was not in keeping with his "cockney wide
boy" public persona, he often claimed that he was born in Upminster, Havering). He lived with
the effects of polio,
which he contracted at the age of seven — very likely, he believed,
from a swimming pool at Southend on Sea during the 1949 Polio Epidemic.
His 1981 song Spasticus Autisticus, intended to
mark the International
Year of Disabled Persons, was banned by the BBC despite having been written by a disabled
person. The lyrics were uncompromising:
- So place your hard-earned peanuts in my tin
- And thank the Creator you're not in the state I'm in
- So long have I been languished on the shelf
- I must give all proceedings to myself
The song's refrain, "I'm spasticus, autisticus" was inspired
by the response of the rebellious Roman gladiators
in the film Spartacus,
who, when instructed to identify their leader, all answered, "I am Spartacus,"
to protect him.
Dury left the Royal Grammar
School, High Wycombe at 16 to study at Walthamstow
Art College. In 1964 he won a place at the Royal
College of Art where he was taught by the eminent British artist Peter
Blake and, in 1967, Dury himself started teaching art at various
colleges in the south of England. When asked why he did not pursue a
career in art, he once said, "I got good enough [at art] to realise I
wasn't going to be very good."
Dury married his first wife Betty Rathmell in 1967 and they
had two children, Jemima and Baxter, who is now also a recording artist
(he is the author of the ballad Cocaine Man). They
divorced in 1985 but remained on good terms until Betty died of cancer
in 1994
Kilburn and the High-Roads
Dury was inspired to form Kilburn and the High-Roads (a pun on
the road in north London) in 1971
following the death of his hero Gene Vincent. Dury was vocalist and
lyricist, co-writing with pianist Russell Hardy and later enrolling
into the group a number of the students he was teaching at Canterbury School of Art,
including guitarist Keith Lucas (who later became the guitarist for 999
under the name Nick Cash) and bassist Humphrey Ocean. Managed by Charlie
Gillett and Gordon Nelki, The Kilburns found favour on London's Pub
Rock circuit and signed to Dawn Records in 1974, but despite favourable
press coverage and a tour opening for The Who,
the group failed to rise above cult status. The group disbanded in 1975.
The Blockheads
The original UK 45rpm single picture cover of Ian Dury and the
Blockheads' — Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick
Managed by Andrew King, Ian Dury and The Blockheads
had several hit singles, including What a
Waste, Hit Me With Your
Rhythm Stick (which was a UK number one at the
beginning of 1979, selling just short of a million copies), Reasons
to be Cheerful, Part Three (number three in the UK in 1979),
and the rock and roll anthem Sex and Drugs and
Rock and Roll, often credited with introducing
the phrase to the language.
Dury's lyrics were a unique combination of lyrical poetry, word play,
alternative sexuality,
observation of British everyday (working-class) life, acute character
sketches and vivid, earthy humour:
| “ |
Home
improvement expert Harold Hill of Harold Hill
Of do-it-yourself dexterity and double
glazing skill
Came home to find another
gentleman's kippers in the grill
So he sanded off his winkle
with his Black & Decker Drill
|
” |
|
—from This Is What We
Find
|
| “ |
I
had a love affair with Nina
In the back of my Cortina
A seasoned-up
hyena
Could not have been more obscener
She took me to the cleaners
And other misdemeanours
But I got right up between her
Rum and
her Ribena...
|
” |
|
—from Billericay
Dickie
|
| “ |
Einstein can't
be classed as witless
He claimed atoms were the littlest
When you did a bit of splitness
Frighten everybody shitless.
|
” |
|
—from There ain't half
been some clever bastards
|
| “ |
In
the deserts of Sudan
And the gardens of Japan
From Milan to Yucatan
Every woman, every man
Hit me with your rhythm stick
Hit me, hit me
Je t’adore, ich liebe dich
Hit me, hit me, hit me
Hit me with your rhythm stickv Hit me slowly, hit me quick
Hit me, hit me, hit me
|
” |
|
—from Hit Me With Your
Rhythm Stick
|
His vocal style was to clearly enunciate the words with a
London accent.
The Blockheads' eclectic sound meanwhile was drawn from their
many musical influences which included jazz, rock and roll, funk and reggae, not to
mention Dury's love of music hall.
The band were formed after Dury began writing songs with
pianist and guitarist Chaz Jankel. Jankel took
Dury's lyrics, fashioned a number of songs, and they began recording
with members of Radio Caroline's Loving Awareness
Band, drummer Charley Charles, bassist Norman Watt-Roy,
keyboard player Mickey Gallagher,
guitarist John Turnbull and the former
Kilburns saxophonist Davey Payne. An album was completed, but
major record labels passed on the band. However, next door to Dury's
manager's office was the newly formed Stiff
Records, a perfect home for Dury's maverick style. The classic single Sex
& Drugs & Rock and Roll marked Dury's Stiff
debut and this was swiftly followed by the album New Boots and Panties!!,
which was to eventually achieve platinum status.
It wasn't until October 1977 that Dury and his band started to
go out as Ian Dury and the Blockheads, when the band signed up for the
Stiff "Live Stiffs Tour" alongside Elvis
Costello And The Attractions, Nick
Lowe, Wreckless Eric and Larry
Wallis. The tour was a success and Stiff launched a concerted
Ian Dury marketing campaign, resulting in the Top Ten hit What
a Waste and the classic UK number one Hit Me With
Your Rhythm Stick. The band toured to great acclaim
throughout Europe.
The band's second album Do It Yourself was
released in June 1979 in a Barney Bubbles-designed sleeve of
which there were over a dozen variations, all based on samples from the
Crown
wallpaper
catalogue. Another top ten single, Reasons to be Cheerful,
kept Dury in the public eye.
In 1980 Jankel left The Blockheads to concentrate on a solo
career and was replaced by former Dr Feelgood guitarist Wilko
Johnson, who also contributed to the next album Laughter
and its two minor hit singles. In 1980-81 Dury and Jankel teamed up
again with Sly and Robbie to record Lord
Upminster.
Ian Dury And The Blockheads disbanded in 1981 after Dury
secured a new recording deal with Polydor
Records through A&R man Frank Neilson, choosing to work with a
group of young musicians which he named The Music Students and recorded
the album Four Thousand Weeks' Holiday. This album
marked a departure from his usual style and was not as well received by
fans for its American jazz influence. In 1998, following Dury's
diagnosis with cancer, he reunited with the Blockheads to record the
well-received album Mr Love-Pants and play a number
of live dates.
The Blockheads have continued after Dury's death, contributing
to the tribute album, Brand New Boots And Panties,
then Where's The Party. The Blockheads still tour,
and are currently recording a new album. They currently comprise
Jankel, Watt-Roy, Gallagher, Turnbull, Dylan
Howe on Drums, Gilad Atzmon and Dave Lewis on Sax,
Derek The Draw (who was Dury's friend and minder) is now writing songs
with Jankel as well as singing. They are aided and abetted by London
guitarist Lee
Harris who is their 'aide de camp'. For more information visit their
website.
Acting and other activities
Dury had small parts in several films, probably the most
well-known of which was Peter Greenaway's The Cook,
the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover, as
well as cameo
appearances in Roman Polanski's Pirates
and the Sylvester Stallone science
fiction film Judge Dredd. He
also wrote a musical, Apples,
staged in London's Royal Court Theatre. He had a
small supporting role in The Crow: City of Angels,
directed by Tim
Pope, who had directed a few of Dury's music
videos. He also appeared alongside fellow songwriters Bob Dylan
and Tom
Waits, respectively, in the movies Hearts of Fire
(1987) and Bearskin: An Urban Fairytale (1989).
Dury wrote and performed the theme song Profoundly
in Love with Pandora for the television series The
Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, Aged 13 3/4
(1985), based on the book of the same name by Sue
Townsend, as well as its follow-up The Growing Pains of
Adrian Mole (1987).
Dury turned down an offer from Andrew
Lloyd-Webber to write the libretto for Cats
(a gig which reportedly earned Richard
Stilgoe millions). The reason, said Dury, "I can't stand his
music."
"... I said no straight off. I hate Andrew Lloyd Webber. He's a wanker,
isn't he?" "Every time I hear `Don't Cry for Me
Argentina' I feel sick, it's so bad. He got Richard Stilgoe to do the
lyrics in the end, who's not as good as me. He made millions out of it.
He's crap, but he did ask the top man first!"
When AIDS
first came to prominence in the mid-1980s, Dury was among celebrities
who appeared on UK television to promote safe sex,
demonstrating how to put on a condom using a model of an erect penis. While
Dury undertook the task with the seriousness it deserved, it was
difficult for viewers not to find some humour in the pairing of a man
whose surname was often subject to the playground pun "Ian Durex" with a radio DJ called Janice
Long.
Dury cohabited with actress and singer Jane
Horrocks for approximately two years in the 1980s.
In the 1990s, he became an ambassador for UNICEF, recruiting
stars such as Robbie Williams to
publicise the cause. The two visited Sri Lanka in this capacity to promote
polio vaccination.
Dury appeared with Curve on the Peace
Together concert and CD (1993), performing What a
Waste, with benefits to the Youth of Northern Ireland. He was
also involved with the charity Cancer Bacup.
Illness
It was known for some time before his death that Dury had cancer. In 1998,
his death was incorrectly announced
on XFM radio
by Bob
Geldof, possibly due to hoax information from a listener. Upon hearing
of his illness Dury took the opportunity to marry his girlfriend, sculptor Sophie Tilson, with whom he had two
children, Billy and Albert.
In 1999, Dury collaborated with Madness
on their first original album in 14 years on the track Drip
Fed Fred. Suggs and the band cite Ian
as a great influence. It was to be one of Ian's last recordings.
Ian Dury & The Blockheads' last performance was a charity
concert in aid of Cancer Bacup on February 6, 2000 at The London
Palladium, supported by Kirsty MacColl and Phill
Jupitus. Dury was noticeably ill and had to be helped on and
off stage. He could not stand unaided for most of the evening but
delivered a powerful and uncompromised performance. The Blockheads have
continued performing without Dury since his death.
Dury died of colorectal cancer in 2000. One of
his obituaries read: "one of few true originals of the English music
scene" (The Guardian).
Meanwhile, he was described by Suggs, the singer with Madness,
as "possibly the finest lyricist we've seen."
The Ian Dury website opened an online book
of condolence shortly after his death, which was signed by hundreds of
fans. The 250 mourners at his funeral included fellow musicians Suggs
and Jools Holland as well as
"celebrity fans" such as Mo Mowlam.
Dury's son, Baxter Dury, is also a singer. He sang a
few of his father's songs at the wake after the funeral, and has
released his own albums - Len Parrot's Memorial Lift
and Floor Show.
In 2002, a musical bench was placed in Poet's Corner, near
Pembroke Lodge, within Richmond Park, South-West London, being a
favoured viewing spot of Dury's. This solar-powered
seat was intended to allow visitors to plug in and listen to eight of
his songs as well as an interview, but has been subjected to repeated vandalism.
Discography
Singles
- Rough Kids / Billy Bentley (1974)
- Crippled With Nerves / Huffety Puff
(1975)
- Sex and Drugs and
Rock and Roll / Razzle In My Pocket (1977)
- Sweet Gene Vincent / You're More
Than Fair (1977)
- Sex and Drugs and Rock & Roll / Two Stiff
Steep Hills / England's Glory (1977) - NME Give-a-way
- What A Waste / Wake Up And Make Love
With Me (1978) UK #9
- Hit Me With Your
Rhythm Stick / There Ain't Half Been Some Clever Bastards
(1978) UK #1
- Billy Bentley / Pam's Moods (1978)
- Reasons to be
Cheerful, Part 3 / Common As Muck (1979) UK #3
- I Want To Be Straight / That's Not All
(1980) UK #22
- Sueperman's Big Sister /
You'll See Glimpses (1980) UK #51
- Spasticus Autisticus / (Instrumental)
(1981)
- Really Glad You Came / (You're My) Inspiration)
(1983)
- Very Personal / Ban The Bomb (1984)
- Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick (re-mix) / Sex And
Drugs And Rock And Roll / Reasons To Be Cheerful, Part 3 / Wake Up And
Make Love With Me (1985) UK #55
- Profoundly In Love With Pandora / Eugenius (You're
A Genius) (1985) UK #45
- Apples / Byline Brown (1989)
Albums
- Handsome - Kilburn
and the High Roads (1975)
- Wotabunch! - Ian
Dury & The Kilburns (1977)
- New Boots and Panties!!
- Ian Dury (1977)
- Do It Yourself
- Ian Dury & The Blockheads (1979)
- Laughter -
Ian Dury & The Blockheads (1980)
- Lord Upminster
- Ian Dury (1981)
- The Best Of Kilburn & The Highroads
- Kilburn and the High Roads (EP, 1983)
- 4,000 Weeks' Holiday
- Ian Dury & The Music Students (1984)
- Hold On To Your Structure - Ian Dury
& The Blockheads (VHS- Live Video, 1985)
- Apples - Ian
Dury (1989)
- Live! Warts 'n' Audience - Ian Dury
& The Blockheads (live album, 1990)
- The Bus
Driver's Prayer & Other Stories - Ian
Dury (1992)
- Mr. Love Pants
- Ian Dury & The Blockheads (1997)
- Straight From The Desk
- Ian Dury and The Blockheads (Live At Ilford Odeon, 2001)
- Ten More Turnips From
The Tip - Ian Dury & The Blockheads
(Posthumous release, 2002) (N.B. Released after Ian's death)
Blockheads Albums (without Dury)
and DVDs
- Brand New Boots And Panties (2001)
Various Artists. After Ian’s death in 2000, a tribute album was
released, a re-recording of ‘New Boots’ by guest artists under the
title of “Brand New Boots And Panties”.
- Straight From The Desk - 2 (Live At
Patti Pavillion, 2003)
- Where's The Party? (2004)
- Live In Colchester DVD (soundtrack is exclusively
available via iTunes) (2006)
Audio sample