| Roxy Music |

From
left to right: Thompson, Manzanera, Ferry, and Mackay
Roxy Music, 2001–present
|
| Background information |
| Origin |
England |
| Genre(s) |
Art rock
Glam
rock |
| Years active |
1971–1983
2001–present |
| Label(s) |
Virgin Records |
Associated
acts |
The Explorers
801 |
| Members |
Bryan
Ferry
Phil Manzanera
Andy
Mackay
Paul Thompson |
| Former members |
Brian
Eno (1971–73)
Eddie Jobson (1973–76) |
Roxy Music is an English art rock group
founded in the early 1970s
by art school graduate Bryan Ferry (vocals and keyboards).
The other members are Phil Manzanera (guitars), Andy
Mackay (saxophone
and oboe)
and Paul Thompson (drums and percussion).
Former members are Brian Eno (synthesizer
and "treatments"), later famous producer and musician, and Eddie
Jobson (synthesizer and violin), replacing Eno. Extant from 1971
through 1983, they reunited for a concert tour in 2001, and have
announced that they are recording a new album in 2005-2007 for a
yet-to-be-confirmed release date.
The group's name was partly an homage to the titles of old cinemas
and dance
halls, and partly a pun
on the word 'rock'. Ferry had first named the band Roxy, but learning
of an American band with the same name prompted the alteration of the
name. The juxtaposition of nostalgia with contemporary or futuristic
themes was a distinctive feature of the band, particularly in their
earliest incarnation. The group is noted for their combination of
idiosyncratic experimentation and sophisticated wit, evident in their
literate lyrics, restrained instrumental virtuosity, and highly
developed visual presentation, mainly directed by Ferry, that
expropriated imagery from the realms of high fashion, kitsch, and
commercial photography.
During the 1970s, Roxy Music emerged as one of the foremost
bands of the time, popular throughout the UK and Europe. In the USA,
Australasia and other regions, the band was esteemed by critics and
enjoyed an ardent cult following, but they remained little-known among
the general public until the 1980s, when they received attention for
their cover of the John Lennon song "Jealous
Guy," which became their biggest hit.
|
Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 Formation
and first two albums (1970–73)
- 1.2 Stranded,
Country Life, Siren and solo projects (1974–77)
- 1.3 Final
albums and break-up (1978–83)
- 1.4 Reunion
and new album (2001–present)
- 2 Solo
work
- 3 Style
and legacy
- 4 Discography
- 4.1 Studio
albums
- 4.2 Live
albums
- 5 Band
members
- 5.1 Core
members
- 5.2 Former
members
- 5.3 Session
and touring musicians
- 6 Notes
- 7 References
- 8 External
links
|
History
Formation and first two albums
(1970–73)
In the winter of 1970/1971, ceramics teacher and aspiring rock
musician Bryan Ferry advertised for a keyboard player to collaborate
with him and Graham Simpson, a bass player he knew from his art college
band, "The Gas Board." Earlier in 1970 Ferry had auditioned as lead
singer for King Crimson (who were
seeking a replacement for departed vocalist Greg
Lake) and although Robert Fripp and Pete
Sinfield decided that Ferry's voice was unsuitable for King Crimson's
material, they were greatly impressed by his talent and they
subsequently helped the fledgling Roxy Music to obtain a contract with E.G.
Records.
Andy
MacKay replied to Ferry's advertisement, not as a keyboard player but
as a saxophonist and oboist; however, he did possess a VCS3 synthesiser. Andy
met Brian
Eno during university days, as both were interested in
avant-garde and electronic music. It was some time later that they met
again; although Eno was a self-confessed non-musician, he could operate
a synthesizer and owned a Revox reel-to-reel tape machine, so Mackay
convinced him to join the fledgling band as a technical adviser. It
wasn't long before Eno was a performing member of the group. After
Dexter Lloyd, a classically-trained timpanist, left the band the group
placed an ad in Melody Maker magazine saying wonder
drummer wanted for an avante rock group.
Paul Thompson
responded to that ad and joined the line-up in June 1971. Soon after
that, guitarist Phil Manzanera, replaced
former Nice
guitarist David O'List, making them a six-piece band. With this
line-up, their first album Roxy
Music was recorded in March and released in
June of 1972, receiving some good reviews and moderate success in the
charts. Simpson was then sacked and replaced with Rik Kenton.
To garner more attention to their album, Roxy Music decided to
record and release a single. Their debut single "Virginia
Plain", which reached #4 in the British charts, was typical of the
band's blend of highly literate lyrics, postmodern
ironic approach, and musical inventiveness, combined with a powerhouse glam rock
backbone which was to exert a strong influence on the generation of
musicians who became the leaders of the later punk rock
movement. The band's strikingly eclectic visual image, captured in
their memorable debut performance on the BBC's Top
of the Pops, became a cornerstone for the
"glam" trend in the UK; the TOTP video of "Virginia Plain" was later
brilliantly parodied by the British comedy series Big Train.
The single sparked a renewed interest in the album, which started
rising in the charts.
Soon after "Virginia Plain", Rik Kenton departed the band.
The next album, For
Your Pleasure (recorded with guest bass player John Porter) was
released in March 1973. Although initial reviews were lukewarm, the LP
was influential and went on to be recognized as one of the most
original and enduring progressive rock recordings of the
early 1970s. It also marked the beginning of the band's long,
successful collaboration with producer Chris Thomas and
recording engineer Bill Price, who worked on all of the
group's classic albums and singles in the 1970s. The album was promoted
with the non-album single Pyjamarama, but no album
track was released as a single. At the time, Ferry was dating French
model Amanda
Lear, who was photographed with a black jaguar for the cover of For
Your Pleasure (Ferry appears on the back cover
as a dapper driver standing in front of a limousine).
Stranded, Country
Life, Siren and solo projects (1974–77)
Soon after recording For
Your Pleasure, Brian Eno left the band amidst
increasing differences with Ferry over the direction and running of the
group (and as some have contended, over a personal feud that developed
between the two).
The other key members of the band – the classically-trained Mackay, the
experienced progressive rock guitarist Manzanera and the rock solid drummer
nicknamed "The Great" Paul Thompson – are reported to have shared some
of Eno's concerns about Ferry's dominance of the band, but they elected
to remain in the group. The band would never again settle on a
permanent bass player. John Gustafson, John
Wetton, Gary Tibbs and Alan
Spenner among others would fill the revolving role.
Eno was replaced by 19-year-old multi-instrumentalist Eddie
Jobson, formerly of progressive rockers Curved
Air, who played both keyboards and electric violin. Although some fans
lamented the loss of the experimental attitude that Eno had brought to
the band, the classically-trained Jobson was a dynamic and accomplished
musician. His arrival reinvigorated the group, with his keyboard
expertise freeing Ferry from his keyboard duties on stage, as well as
lending greater refinement to the group's studio recordings. His
dazzling electric violin skills added an exciting new dimension to the
band's sound, as showcased on the song "Out of the Blue". Eno himself
later acknowledged the quality of the two albums that followed his
departure, Stranded
(1973) and Country Life
(1974), and they are widely regarded as being among the most original
and consistent British rock albums of the period. Rolling
Stone referred to the albums as marking "the
zenith of contemporary British art rock."
The songs on these albums also cemented Ferry's persona as the epitome
of the suave, jaded Euro-sophisticate. Although this persona
undoubtedly began as a deliberately ironic device, during the mid-1970s
it seemed to merge with Ferry's real life, as the working-class miner's
son from the north of England became an international rock star, an
icon of male style, who had love affairs with many beautiful women,
among them Playboy
playmate Marilyn Cole (who appeared on the cover
of the Stranded
album) and fashion models Amanda Lear (who would later date David
Bowie) and Jerry Hall (who later became the common
law wife of Mick Jagger).
On the first two Roxy albums, all songs were written solely by
Bryan Ferry. From the band's third album, Stranded,
Mackay and Manzarena began to co-write some material. Gradually, their
songwriting and musicianship became more integrated into the band's
sound, although Ferry remained the dominating songwriter; throughout
their career, all but one of Roxy's singles were written either wholly
or jointly by Ferry. Stranded was released in
November 1973, and produced the top-10 single "Street
Life."
The fourth album, Country
Life, was released in 1974, and was the first
Roxy Music album to enter the US Top 40, albeit at #37. Country
Life was met with widespread critical acclaim (Rolling
Stone referring to it "as if Ferry ran a
cabaret for psychotics, featuring chanteurs in a state of shock)."
Their fifth album, Siren,
contained their only US hit, "Love is the Drug" (Ferry said the song
came to him while kicking the leaves during a walk through Hyde
Park). At this time Ferry was involved in a high profile relationship
with Texas-born supermodel Jerry Hall. Hall had a major impact on
the group, being the subject of the influential Roxy song "Prairie
Rose" (from Country Life), a song that directly
inspired the Talking Heads' song "The Big Country".
Hall is also featured on the cover of the Siren LP
and in the video for Ferry's 1976 international solo hit, a cover of Wilbert
Harrison's "Let's Stick Together".
Following the concert tours in support of Siren
in 1976, Roxy Music disbanded. During this time Ferry released two solo
records on which Manzanera and Thompson performed, and Manzanera
reunited with Eno on the critically acclaimed one-off 801 Live
album.
Final albums and break-up
(1978–83)
Roxy Music reunited in 1978 to record a new album, Manifesto,
but with a reshuffled line-up. Jobson was not present (reportedly not
contacted for the reunion) as Ferry decided to perform keyboards
himself. After the tour and prior to the recording of the next album, Flesh + Blood,
Thompson broke his thumb in a motorcycle mishap and took a leave from
the band (and soon after left permanently). The three remaining members
were supplemented by a variety of session players over the next few
years, including Andy Newmark, Neil Hubbard and Alan
Spenner.
The changed line-up reflected a distinct change in Roxy's
musical approach. Gone were the jagged and unpredictable elements of
the group's sound, giving way to smoother musical arrangements (some
would say blander arrangements; Rolling
Stone panned Manifesto,
"Roxy Music has not gone disco. Roxy Music has not particularly gone
anywhere else either"
; as well as Flesh + Blood, "such a
shockingly bad Roxy Music record that it provokes a certain
fascination.")
Later, with more sombre and carefully-sculpted soundscapes, the band's
eighth and (until their 21st Century reunion) final album Avalon
in 1982, was a major commercial success and restored the group's
critical reputation (Rolling Stone:
"Avalon takes a long time to kick in, but it finally
does, and it's a good one.") The trio toured extensively until 1983,
when Bryan Ferry dissolved the band and band members devoted themselves
full time to solo careers (see below).
Reunion and new album
(2001–present)
Ferry, Manzanera, Mackay, and Thompson re-formed in 2001 to
celebrate the 30th anniversary of the band and toured extensively for a
couple of years. Absent was Brian Eno, who criticized the motives of
the band's reunion. "I just don't like the idea," Eno explained, "It
leaves a bad taste."
Later Eno remarked that his comment had been taken out of context.
Manzanera and Thompson recorded and toured with Ferry on his 2002 album
Frantic. Eno also contributed to Frantic
on the track "I Thought".
The track More than This featured on the
October 2002 PlayStation 2 videogame Grand Theft Auto: Vice
City as part of the Power Ballads radio station Emotion
98.3.
In 2004, Rolling Stone
magazine ranked the group #98 on their list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.
Roxy Music returned to the stage for a live performance at the
2005 Isle of Wight Festival on
Saturday 11
June 2005,
their first UK concert since the 2001-2002 world tour. On 2 July 2005, Roxy Music
played "Jealous Guy", "Do the Strand" and "Love is the Drug" at the
Berlin contribution to Live8; only "Do the Strand" was available on
the DVD.
In March 2005 it was announced on Phil Manzanera's official
site
that the band, including Brian Eno, had decided to record an album of
new material. The project would mark the first time Eno worked with
Roxy Music since 1973's For Your Pleasure. After a
number of denials that he would be involved with any Roxy Music
reunion, on 19
May 2006 Eno
revealed that he had contributed two songs to the new album as well as
playing keyboards on other tracks; he did, however, rule out touring
with the band.
The record will also be the first since Manifesto
on which original drummer Paul Thompson performs.
In early 2006, a lesser-known Roxy track, "The Main Thing",
was remixed by Malcolm Green and used as the soundtrack to a
pan-European television commercial for the Opel
Vectra. The film featured legendary football referee Pierluigi
Collina, whose sartorial elegance somewhat echoed Ferry's. The remix
was immediately popular across the continent and the UK, bringing Roxy
to a new generation of viewers and fans.
In July 2006, the band toured Europe. Roxy Music second
drummer Andy Newmark handled the tour as Thompson withdrew due to
health issues.
On June
22, 2006,
Manzanera declared that the album would be ready for a 2007 release.
However, in a March 2007 interview with the Western Daily
Press, Ferry confirmed that although the next Roxy Music
album is definitely in the making it will not see light until the next
"year and a half", as Ferry had just released his twelfth studio album
called Dylanesque,
consisting of Bob Dylan covers. He added that his tour would continue
until August 2007.
Solo work
-
All members of Roxy Music have prolific careers. Ferry's solo
career had already begun in 1973 while he was still very much a member of
Roxy Music, and his solo albums (mostly containing ironic cover
versions of pop standards) alternated with Roxy's
releases. Ferry's solo debut These Foolish Things
is notable as one of the first and best examples of the much-imitated
trend which has seen scores of rock musicians recording albums made up
of cover versions of songs from earlier eras, which were chosen for
their influence on the performer's musical development. Ferry's battle
with writer's block, however, was probably a factor in his choice to
perform cover songs
. The same year, David Bowie's Pin Ups
adopted a similar formula, also employed earlier in Ringo
Starr's Sentimental Journey.
Manzanera and Mackay undertook solo projects, both of them
with Thompson drumming, and Manzanera also played guitar on many of
Eno's solo and collaborative recordings of the mid-70s. Manzanera and
Mackay, along with Thompson and Jobson, also took part in various of
Ferry's solo recordings (some of which included reworkings of old Roxy
material) and Manzanera regularly played with Ferry on his solo tours.
After their last album and tour, Mackay, Manzanera, and Ferry
all released solo albums. Ferry's solo career has continued
uninterrupted; Newmark participated on all of Ferry's subsequent
records and tours. Thompson worked as a session drummer for various
artists; his post-Roxy session work included such diverse acts as a
punk band The Angelic Upstarts on their
1983 album Reason Why and blues-rocker
Gary
Moore on his Emerald Aisles Live In Ireland tour in
1985, which was released on video. In 1990-91, Thompson replaced Harry
Rushakoff as the drummer in Concrete Blonde, during which time
they had their biggest hit with the single "Joey."
In 1984, Manzanera and Mackay teamed with vocalist James
Wraith to form The Explorers. Signed to Virgin, the
band released a self-titled album and a number of singles ("Venus de
Milo" and "Falling for Nightlife", the latter of which was not included
on the LP version), but none of their material charted in England.
Virgin dropped the band while in the studio recording a second album.
This eventually emerged in 1990 under the name Manzanera /
Mackay. In 1987, Manzanera teamed with former Roxy and King
Crimson bassist John Wetton for the LP Wetton/Manzanera.
Style and legacy
Roxy Music was one of the first rock groups who created and
maintained a carefully crafted 'look' and style that included their
stage presentation, music videos, album and single cover designs and
promotional materials such as posters and badges. Legendary critic
Lester Bangs went so far as to say that Roxy represented "the triumph
of artifice."
The band's debut album, produced by King Crimson's Pete Sinfield, was
the first in a series of increasingly sophisticated album covers,
art-directed by Ferry in collaboration with his art school friend Nicholas De
Ville.
The album artwork for the first five Roxy LPs imitate the
visual style of classic "girlie" and fashion magazines, featuring
high-fashion shots of scantily-clad models Amanda
Lear, Marilyn
Cole and Jerry
Hall, who each had romances with Ferry during the time of their
contributions, (as well as model Kari-Ann Muller who appears on the
cover of the first Roxy album but who was not otherwise involved with
anyone in the band, and who later married Mick
Jagger's brother Chris).
The title of the fourth Roxy album Country
Life was intended as a parody of the well-known
British rural magazine of the same name, and the visually punning front
cover photo featured two lingerie clad models (two German fans,
Constanze Karoli and Eveline Grunwald)
standing in a forest. As a result, in many areas of the United States
the album was sold in an opaque plastic wrapper because retailers
refused to display the cover.
Roxy Music were a significant influence on the early English punk
movement, as well as providing a model for many "New
Wave" acts and the subsequent New Romantic and experimental
electronic groups of the early 1980s. Ferry and co-founding member Brian
Eno have also had broadly influential solo careers, and Eno
in particular has emerged one of the most significant record producers
of the late 20th century, with credits including landmark albums by Devo, Talking
Heads and U2.
Discography
-
Main article: Roxy Music discography
Studio albums
- Roxy Music
(July 1972)
- For Your Pleasure
(April 1973)
- Stranded
(December 1973)
- Country Life
(November 1974)
- Siren
(November 1975)
- Manifesto
(April 1979)
- Flesh and Blood
(May 1980)
- Avalon (June
1982)
Live albums
- Viva! (July
1976)
- Heart Still Beating
(October 1990)
- 2001
World Tour Live CD (Double Album) (June 2003)
Band members
Core members
- Bryan Ferry – vocals, keyboards
(1971-1983; 2001-)
- Phil Manzanera – guitar (1972-1983;
2001-)
- Andy Mackay – saxophone, oboe (1971-1983; 2001-)
Former members
- Brian Eno – synthesizer,
"treatments" (1971-1973)
- Paul Thompson – drums (1971-1980;
2001-)
- Eddie Jobson – synthesizer,
violin
(1973-1976)
Session and touring musicians
- Graham Simpson – bass
(1971-1972)
- Rik Kenton – bass (1972-1973)
- John Porter – bass
(1973)
- John Gustafson – bass
(1973-1976)
- Rick Wills – bass (1973-1975)
- Sal Maida – bass (1973-1975)
- John Wetton – bass (1974-1976)
- Alan Spenner – bass (1978-1983)
- Neil Jason – bass (1979-1982)
- Gary Tibbs – bass (1978-1980)
- Zev Katz – bass (2001)
- Paul Carrack – keyboards
(1978-1980)
- Colin Good – keyboards (2001-present)
- Dexter Lloyd – drums (1971)
- Rick Marotta – drums (1979-1982)
- Steve Ferrone – drums (1979)
- Simon Phillips – drums (1980)
- Allan Schwartzberg – drums (1980)
- Andy Newmark – drums (1980-1983, 2006)
- Jimmy Maelen – percussion (1982-1983)
- Roger Bunn – guitar (1971)
- David O'List – guitar (1971-1972)
- Neil Hubbard – guitar (1979-1983)
- Chris Spedding – guitar
(2001)
- Chris Laurence – string bass (1973)
- Richard Tee – piano (1979)
- Yanick Ettiene – vocals (1982)
- Lucy Wilkins – violin, keyboards (2001-present)
Notes
References
- Bracewell, Michael Roxy Music: Bryan Ferry, Brian
Eno, Art, Ideas, and Fashion (Da Capo Press, 2005) ISBN 0-306-81400-5
- Buckley, David The Thrill Of It All: The Story of
Bryan Ferry and Roxy Music (André Deutsch, 2004) ISBN 0-233-05113-9
- Rigby, Jonathan Both Ends Burning: The Complete
Roxy Music (Reynolds & Hearn, 2005) ISBN 1-903111-80-3
- Stump, Paul Unknown Pleasures: A Cultural
Biography of Roxy Music (Quartet Books, 1998) ISBN 0-7043-8074-9
External links
| v • d • e Roxy
Music |
| Bryan Ferry | Andy
Mackay | Phil
Manzanera | Paul Thompson |
| Brian Eno | Eddie
Jobson | Graham Simpson | Paul
Carrack | Andy Newmark |
| Discography |
| Studio albums: Roxy
Music | For
Your Pleasure | Stranded
| Country Life
| Siren
| Manifesto
| Flesh + Blood
| Avalon |
| Live albums: Viva!
| The High Road
| Heart Still Beating
| Concert Classics
| Concerto |
| Compilations: Roxy Music
Greatest Hits | The First Seven Albums | The
Atlantic Years | Street Life 20 Great Hits
| The Ultimate Collection | More
Than This | The Thrill of It All
| The Early Years | Slave To Love
| The Best of Roxy Music |
| Related
Articles |
| New Wave music | Glam rock | New
Romantic | EMS
VCS 3 | Chris Thomas |