| Julian Cope |

Julian
Cope live 1980
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Julian David Cope |
| Born |
21 October 1957 |
| Origin |
Tamworth, Staffordshire,
UK |
| Genre(s) |
Post-punk, Alternative
rock |
| Occupation(s) |
Singer/songwriter
Author
Antiquarian |
| Instrument(s) |
Vocals
Guitar
Piano |
| Years active |
1978 - present |
| Label(s) |
Zoo, Mercury,
Island, Echo,
Head Heritage |
Associated
acts |
The Teardrop Explodes
Queen Elizabeth
Brain
Donor |
| Website |
Head
Heritage |
Julian Cope (born Julian David Cope, on 21 October
1957) is a British rock musician, writer, antiquary, musicologist,
and poet who
came to prominence as singer of Liverpool post-punk band The Teardrop Explodes
in 1978. Cope has since released many solo albums and is a founding
member of the bands Queen Elizabeth and Brain
Donor. In addition to his musical career, Julian Cope has
written several books of non-fiction and autobiography.
|
Contents
- 1 Career
- 2 Discography
- 2.1 The
Teardrop Explodes
- 2.1.1 Singles
- 2.1.2 Albums
- 2.1.3 Compilations
- 2.2 Solo
- 2.2.1 Singles
- 2.2.2 Albums
- 2.2.3 Side projects
- 2.2.4 Compilations
- 3 References
- 4 External
links
|
Career
Born Deri, Mid Glamorgan in South Wales, Cope grew up
in Tamworth,
Staffordshire
in the English Midlands. He attended the City of Liverpool College of
Higher Education (COLCHE - linked to Lancaster University) near Prescot
- some years later the college became part of Liverpool
Polytechnic as CF Mott Campus. Cope's musical career began as bass
player with a band known as Crucial Three, which also
featured Ian McCulloch
(future guitarist and singer for Echo
and the Bunnymen) and Pete Wylie. The band lasted for
little more than six weeks and disbanded without any public
performances or formal recordings, although the song "Books" was later
recorded by both Cope's and McCulloch's subsequent bands. Cope went on
to form other short-lived bands before first achieving fame and success
as the singer, original bassist and primary songwriter of The Teardrop Explodes.
In 1981 he compiled Fire
Escape in the Sky: The Godlike Genius of Scott Walker,
which was released by Zoo Records, and sparked renewed interest in the
work of the reclusive singer; though years later Cope commented that
Walker's 'Pale White Intellectual' outlook on life no longer held any
fascination for him.
After The Teardrop Explodes disbanded in late 1982 following
the completion of 3 albums, Cope returned to live close to his
hometown of Tamworth,
settling in the nearby village of Drayton
Bassett, and soon began recording. In 1983 he recorded some tunes for
John Peel's show. He re-worked these introspective works for his first
solo album, World Shut Your Mouth,
released in 1984. This was soon followed by Fried,
which featured a sleeve with Cope clad only in a turtle shell. Cope's
third solo album was the well-received Saint
Julian and produced the single "World Shut Your
Mouth", which became his biggest solo hit, reaching the UK Top 20 in
1986.
Cope was extremely displeased with his 4th solo album, My
Nation Underground, feeling that he had been
pressured by his management into recording something that did not
represent his artistic intentions.
This spawned a Top 40 single in 'Charlotte Anne'. He recorded his next
album, the low-fi Skellington, in
secret during the course of a single weekend, playing in the same
studio used for My Nation Underground.
His management had no desire to release Skellington,
and Cope refused to record any other material while he feuded with them
to try to get his new work released. This was to become the first of
many feuds with his record companies. He also released by stealth an
album in aid of Roky Erickson entitled Droolian,
and his ongoing battle with those he referred to as "greedheads"
eventually saw him turn his back on the music industry. In the course
of one of his stand-offs, Cope began to write his first
autobiographical book, Head-On which primarily
covered the years 1976 to 1982, focusing on Cope's time before and
during the life of The Teardrop Explodes and ending with the break-up
of the band. This was followed a few years later by Repossessed,
covering the years 1983 to 1989 and the recording of Cope's first
series of solo albums, as well as the writing of Head-On.
The books were republished in one volume in 2000, titled Head-On/Repossessed.
Peggy Suicide
and Jehovahkill,
both recorded in the early 1990s, reflected his interest in the occult, animal
rights, the goddess
and ecology.
In 1995, Cope released 20 Mothers spawning the
single "Try, Try, Try". These 3 albums all achieved UK Top 20
status.
In addition to his two volumes of autobiography, Cope has
written 3 other books of nonfiction. Krautrocksampler,
released in 1996 and now out of print, covers the German krautrock
musical movement. Reviews at the time were ecstatic, Rolling
Stone citing it as "a work of real passion and scholarship". NME agreed: "This is a
superb book ... this is an extraordinary book." Mojo went further,
writing: "Brilliantly researched, Krautrocksampler abounds with
revelations, and Cope's enthusiasm verges on the lethal ... a sort of
lysergic Lester Bangs." In the Sunday
Times, the reviewer wrote: "German 1970s
minimalism is invading the British rock scene ... an Englishman is to
blame ... Krautrocksampler is a lively history of a fascinating period,
half encyclopedia, half psychedelic detective story." Before the
publication of this book the genre itself had all but disappeared off
the musical map; both the phrase and the genre are now firmly ingrained
and have subsequently been heralded in the likes of Mojo and The
Wire. The book was also the subject of fierce controversy due to Cope's
outspoken remarks that Can's Bel-Air was a
'shambles'. 1998 saw the release of the widely-acclaimed bestseller The Modern Antiquarian,
a large and comprehensive full-colour 448-page work detailing stone
circles and other ancient monuments in the British
Isles, which sold out of its first edition of 20,000 in its first month
of publication and was accompanied by a BBC Two documentary. The Times
called the book: "A ripping good read ... it is deeply impressive ...
ancient history: the new rock 'n' roll." The
Independent called it: "A unique blend of information, observation,
personal experience and opinion which is as unlike the normal run of
archaeology books as you can imagine." The renowned archaeologist Ronald
Hutton went further, calling the book: "the best popular guide to Neolithic
and Bronze
Age monuments for half a century." The Modern Antiquarian
was followed in 2004 with an even larger 484-page study of similar
monuments across Europe entitled The Megalithic European,
the most extensive study of European megalithic sites to date. In
addition to his books on prehistoric monuments, Cope hosts a
community-based Modern Antiquarian website [1]
that invites contributors to add their own knowledge of the ancient
sites of the United Kingdom and Ireland. Cope
has lectured nationally on the subject of prehistory,
and also at the British Museum on the subjects of Avebury and Odin.
Cope has opted out of the mainstream in recent years,
releasing and promoting his music himself, rather than working with a
major record label. He continues to record new material both under his
own name and with regular collaborators under the band names Brain
Donor - his proto-metal power trio, and Queen Elizabeth, an ambient
two-piece. Most of his more recent releases are available either
primarily or exclusively through Cope's extensive and interactive
website, Head Heritage[2].
Cope is also a musicologist, and an avid champion of obscure and
underground music. His Album of the Month reviews on the Unsung section
of his website [3]
have promoted bands such as Comets on Fire, Sunn O)))
(with whom he performed a guest vocal on their White1 album) and
several Japanese bands which will feature in his soon-to-be-published
book Japrocksampler
(September 2007). Unsung is another community-based site that invites
contributors' reviews, and Cope and the site's numerous contributors
have been instrumental in kickstarting the interest in bands like Sir
Lord Baltimore, Blue Cheer, Les
Rallizes Denudes and the Groundhogs. Cope is also
considered to be one of the first bloggers; he has been airing his
sometimes controversial views after 1998 via his website's "Address
Drudion" on the first day of each month [4].
Cope has continued to perform live in the UK (including an
appearance at the Glastonbury Festival in 2003)
and other parts of Europe in recent years. He has not toured beyond
Europe for several years. In 2005, he dropped attempts to plan a tour
of the United States because a work visa
could not be secured through the INS.
Julian Cope lives near Avebury,
Wiltshire (UK) with his wife, Dorian, and their
two daughters, Albany (Big Al/Alghost) and Avalon (Vince). He will be
appearing at Belladrum Tartan Heart Festival, Inverness-shire, in
August 2007
Discography
The Teardrop Explodes
Singles
- "Sleeping Gas" (1979)
- "Bouncing Babies" (1979)
- "Treason (It's just a Story)" (1980)
- "When I Dream" (1980) (#UK 47)
- "Reward" (1981) (UK #6)
- "Treason (It's Just a Story)" (reissued 1981) (UK #18)
- "Ha Ha I'm Drowning" (1981)
- "Passionate Friend" (1981) (UK #25)
- "Colours Fly Away" (1981) (UK #54)
- "Tiny Children" (1982) (UK #44)
- "You Disappear From View" (1983) (UK #41)
- "Serious Danger" (1990)
- "Count to Ten and Run for Cover" (1990)
Albums
- 1980 Kilimanjaro
(UK #35, #24)
- 1981 Wilder (UK
#29)
Compilations
- 1990 Everybody
Wants To Shag...The Teardrop Explodes - (tracks
from the band's unfinished 1982 album plus rarities)
- 1990 Piano
(rarities)
- 2004 Zoology
(rarities)
Solo
Singles
- 1983 "Sunshine Playroom" (UK #64)
- 1984 "The Greatness And Perfection Of Love" (UK #52)
- 1985 "Sunspots"
- 1986 "World Shut Your Mouth" (UK #19)
- 1987 "Trampolene" (UK #31)
- 1987 "Eve's Volcano (Covered In Sin)" (UK #41)
- 1988 "Charlotte Anne" (UK #35)
- 1988 "5 O'Clock World" (UK #42)
- 1988 "China Doll" (UK #53)
- 1991 "Beautiful Love" (UK #32)
- 1991 "Safesurfer"
- 1991 "East Easy Rider" (UK #51)
- 1991 "Head" (UK #57)
- 1992 "World Shut Your Mouth", re-released with different
songs (UK #44)
- 1992 "Fear Loves This Place" (UK #42)
- 1994 "Paranormal In The West Country"
- 1995 "Try, Try, Try" (UK #24)
- 1996 "I Come From Another Planet, Baby" (UK #34)
- 1996 "Planetary Sit-In" (UK #34)
- 1997 "Propheteering"
Albums
- 1984 World Shut Your Mouth
(UK #40)
- 1984 Fried
- 1987 Saint Julian
(UK #11)
- 1988 My Nation Underground
- 1990 Skellington
- 1990 Droolian
- 1991 Peggy Suicide
(UK #23)
- 1992 Jehovahkill (UK
#20)
- 1993 Rite (Julian
Cope and Donald Ross Skinner)
- 1993 Ye Skellington
Chronicles (an expanded version of Skellington
along with the sequel Skellington 2)
- 1994 Autogeddon (UK
#16)
- 1995 20 Mothers (UK
#20)
- 1996 Interpreter
(UK #39)
- 1997 Rite 2
- 1999 Odin
- 2000 An
Audience With the Cope 2000/2001
- 2001 Discover Odin
- 2002 Rite
Now
- 2003 Rome Wasn't Burned In A
Day
- 2004 Live Japan '91
- 2005 Citizen Cain'd
- 2005 Dark Orgasm
- 2006 Rite Bastard
- 2006 Jehovahkill: Deluxe
Edition, re-released with a disc of extra
material
- 2007 You Gotta Problem With Me
Side projects
With Queen Elizabeth :
- 1994 Queen Elizabeth
(Queen Elizabeth)
- 1997 QE2: Elizabeth Vagina (Queen
Elizabeth)
With The Serpents :
- 1999 You Have Just Been
Poisoned (The Serpents) **For contractual
reasons, participated as 'Merlin Zol**
With L.A.M.F. :
- 2001 Ambient Metal
(L.A.M.F.)
With Brain Donor :
- 2001 Love Peace & Fuck
(Brain Donor)
- 2003 Too
Freud To Rock'n'Roll, Too Jung To Die (Brain
Donor)
- 2005 Brain Donor
(U.S. compilation album)
- 2006 Drain'd Boner
(Brain Donor)
Compilations
- 1990 Where
The Pyramid Meets The Eye|Where The Pyramid Meets The Eye - A Tribute
to Roky Erickson (album)|Where The Pyramid Meets The Eye
Song: I Have Always Been Here Before (Sire Records US)
- 1992 Floored Genius
("best of" compilation of material with and without The Teardrop Explodes)
(UK #22)
- 1993 Floored Genius 2
(compilation of material recorded for BBC Radio sessions)
- 1997 The
Followers Of Saint Julian (rarities compilation)
- 1997 Leper Skin - An Introduction To
Julian Cope ("best of")
- 2000 Cornucopea
(various artists compilation of acts performing at Cope's Cornucopea
festival)
- 2000 Floored Genius 3 - Julian
Cope's Oddicon Of Lost Rarities & Versions 1978 - 98
(rarities)
- 2004 Left
of the Dial: Dispatches from the '80s Underground
- 2007 Christ vs Warhol
(rarities)
References
Cope,
Julian (1995). Krautrocksampler. ISBN-10:
0952671913.
Cope,
Julian (2000). Head-On/Repossessed. Thorsons
Publishers. ISBN
0-7225-3882-0.
Head Heritage. Julian
Cope Presents Head Heritage. Retrieved on June 19, 2006.
External links
- Head Heritage - Julian Cope's own
frequently updated site
- The
Modern Antiquarian - An online community and resource on
ancient sites in the UK & Ireland, inspired by Cope's book of
the same name