| Mike Scott |

Mike
Scott performing at a 2002 concert in The Hague.
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Michael Scott |
| Born |
December 14, 1958 (1958-12-14) (age 48)
Edinburgh, Scotland |
| Genre(s) |
Rock |
| Instrument(s) |
Singing, Guitar, Piano, Drums, Hammond
organ, Bouzouki |
Associated
acts |
The Bootlegs, Another Pretty Face, The
Waterboys |
Michael 'Mike' Scott (born December
14, 1958 in Edinburgh, Scotland) is
the founding member and chief songwriter of rock band The
Waterboys. He has also produced two solo albums, Bring
'em All In and Still
Burning. Scott is an accomplished vocalist, guitarist
and pianist,
and has played a large range of other instruments, including the bouzouki, drums, and hammond
organ on his albums.
Having begun a musical career in the 1970s which has continued
to this day. Scott has been described a "madman or genius, depending on
your point of view" by Peter Anderson in Record Collector
magazine,
and is well-known for his radical changes in music
genres throughout what Scott refers to as his "allegedly unorthodox"
career.
Scott is divorced (from ex-wife Irene Keogh)
and is currently remarried and living in Findhorn,
Scotland,
when not touring with The Waterboys.
|
Contents
- 1 Early
life and education
- 2 Pre-Waterboys
musical career
- 3 The
Waterboys
- 4 Solo
albums
- 5 Discography
- 5.1 Solo
- 5.2 Another
Pretty Face
- 5.3 The
Waterboys
- 6 Notes
and references
- 7 External
links
|
Early life and education
Mike Scott reads aloud at a concert in Antwerp in 2004.
Scott was born and raised in Edinburgh, Scotland. His father
left the family when Scott was ten years old. Scott notes that he has
"a lot of baggage to do with that, and [is] hurt over it and [is]
vulnerable and [is] angry".
Scott was interested in music from an early age. At age
twelve, after the family had moved to Ayr, he began a serious interest in learning guitar.
Scott remembers that, "from the minute [he] bought" Last
Night in Soho by Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tich in 1968
"knew [he] had to be in music", and mentions listening to Hank
Williams as a "life-changing" experience.
The next year, Scott was playing in school bands and formed the band
Karma, named after the
tenet in Hinduism, with a friend named John Caldwell. Karma's sound was
inspired by David Bowie, The
Beatles and Bob Dylan.
In 1977 Scott entered the University of Edinburgh,
studying English literature and philosophy.
Scott would later arrange poetry from William
Butler Yeats, Robert Burns,
and George MacDonald for The Waterboys
recordings. Other literary influences on Scott's career include C.S. Lewis
and The Diary of Vikenty
Angorov. Scott left Edinburgh University after
his first year.
Scott became interested in the United
Kingdom punk
music scene, and began writing for fanzines, eventually starting his own, Jungleland.
Scott was especially interested in the music of The
Clash and Patti Smith, a tribute to whom, "A Girl
Called Johnny", would become the first Waterboys' single.
Pre-Waterboys musical career
Whatever Happened to the West?, the second single
from Another Pretty Face, demonstrates an entirely different aesthetic
and style than later Mike Scott projects.
Scott and a guitarist named Allan McConnell formed a band, The
Bootlegs, which gave way to Another Pretty Face in 1978 when Caldwell
and two other friends joined. The friends created their own record
label, named New Pleasures, "obtained financial backing from the
enigmatically named Z"
and began releasing Another Pretty Face's singles. The band achieved
remarkable success with their first single "All the Boys Love
Carrie"/"That's Not Enough" when New
Musical Express named it "Single of the Week". The band signed a
contract with Virgin Records, was featured on the
cover of Sounds magazine, and toured with Stiff
Little Fingers. Virgin, however, after receiving a demo tape from
Another Pretty Face, released the band four months after the signing. Nikki
Sudden, who had interviewed Another Pretty Face in Edinburgh
for ZigZag magazine, asserts that "the APF stuff is
still some of Mike Scott’s best work".
In 1980 through 1982 Scott, amongst other projects, worked
occasionally with Sudden. Another Pretty Face continued to release
music, and came to the attention of Nigel Grainge, founder of Ensign
Records. Grainge signed Another Pretty Face to the label, and the band
moved to London,
changing its name to Funhouse (taken from the name of The
Stooges' album Fun House). Scott
had become dissatisfied with the band. He later described Funhouse's
sound as "similar to a jumbo jet flying on one engine".
Scott began working on solo songs and recordings, a decision that led
to the creation of The Waterboys. A December 1981 session at Redshop
Studios formed the beginnings of The Waterboys' first album, The
Waterboys.
The Waterboys
- For the main article, see The
Waterboys.
The Waterboys' membership has changed a great deal throughout
the group's existence. Anthony Thistlethwaite, Karl
Wallinger, Kevin Wilkinson and Steve
Wickham all made major contributions, but Scott describes the band as
his project. "[T]o me there's no difference between Mike Scott and the
Waterboys; they both mean the same thing. They mean myself and whoever
are my current travelling musical companions.".
The Waterboys' first release was a single of "A Girl Called Johnny" in
March of 1983. The first album came out that June. Along with The
Waterboys, the next two albums, A
Pagan Place and This
Is the Sea, released in 1984 and 1985,
contained songs mostly written by Scott, and together formed the band's
"Big Music" period. After the official addition of fiddler Steve
Wickham and a move to Ireland, the next two albums Fisherman's
Blues (1988) and Room
to Roam (1990) were instead Celtic
music-inspired folk music,
a sound similar to that of We Free Kings, a band that Scott and Wickham
performed with in 1986.
Scott's musical style changed again when he, under the name The
Waterboys but without any other members, recorded a hard rock
album, Dream Harder,
in 1993. It was the last album to come out under the band's name until
2000. The band had dissolved over personnel issues and Wickham's desire
to remain with a folk-rock, or purely folk music, sound.
After two Mike Scott solo albums, A Rock in the Weary Land
was released under The Waterboys name, demonstrating yet another
musical style, which Scott called "Sonic rock".
2002's Universal Hall
was a return to a folk-rock sound. It was followed by Karma
to Burn, released in 2005, which was the
groups' first official live album.
Solo albums
1997's
Still Burning
was the last Scott solo
album before re-forming The
Waterboys.
In addition to the albums he released with The Waterboys,
Scott released two solo albums in the nineties. The first Bring
'em All In (1995), was recorded at the Findhorn
Foundation in north Scotland, with Mike Scott playing all instruments
himself. In contrast, for his second solo album, Still
Burning (1997), Scott assembled a group of
session musicians including Pino Palladino and Jim
Keltner. Guesting on the album was former Icicle
Works frontman Ian McNabb. Songs from the two
albums appeared on 1998's compilation album The
Whole Of The Moon: The Music Of Mike Scott And The Waterboys
along with songs from The Waterboys.
Scott created his own record label Puck Records
in 2003, which released The Waterboys' Universal
Hall. In 2005, Karma
to Burn was released, also by Puck Records, and
included tracks from Scott's solo career played by the current The
Waterboys line-up.
Discography
Solo
- Bring 'em All In
(1995)
- Lion of Love (fan club only release.)
- Sunflowers (fan club only release.)
- Still Burning
(1997)
- The Whole Of The Moon: The Music Of Mike Scott And
The Waterboys (1998) (Best-of collection including material
from The Waterboys)
Another Pretty Face
- I'm Sorry That I Beat You, I'm Sorry That I
Screamed, But For A Moment There I Really Lost Control (1981)
Another Pretty Face released a number of music
singles, including:
- All the Boys Love Carrie (1979)
- Whatever Happened to the West? (1980)
- Heaven Gets Closer Everyday (1980)
- Soul to Soul (1981)
The Waterboys
Mike Scott performs as the lead singer of The Waterboys at a concert in
Antwerp 2003.
Notes and references
-
Scott, Mike. "The day I downloaded myself". The
Guardian. March 23, 2007.
-
Too Close to Heaven Who's Who. mikescottwaterboys.
Retrieved on October 31, 2005.
-
Scott, Mike "Mike's world: Wikipedia" myspace.com Waterboys
blog. URL accessed January 6, 2007
-
Richard Skanse. Room to Roam. Rolling
Stone Network Random Notes. Retrieved on March 1, 2006.
-
Gerry Galipault. Mike
Scott is The Waterboys and The Waterboys Are Mike Scott. Pause
and Play. Retrieved on October 22, 2005.
-
The "Big Music" of the Waterboys: Song,
Revelry, and Celebration. Retrieved on October
22, 2005.
-
Nikki Sudden. A Few Mike Scott stories. Excerpts
from Nikki Sudden's Autobiography. Retrieved on October
23, 2005.
-
Scott, Mike (2006) "Fisherman's Blues, Roots and the Celtic Soul"
[CD liner notes] London: EMI
-
Archive 1986-90. mikescottwaterboys.com.
Retrieved on October 28, 2005.
-
Archive 1986-90. mikescottwaterboys.com.
Retrieved on October 29, 2005.
External links
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