Terry Hall (born 19 March 1959, in Coventry, England) was the
lead singer
of The
Specials, the Fun Boy Three, The
Colourfield, Terry, Blair &
Anouchka and Vegas. He released his first solo album, Home,
in 1995. He has also worked with The Lightning Seeds, Stephen
Duffy, Dub Pistols, Gorillaz,
Tricky
and Lily
Allen.
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Contents
- 1 Biography
- 2 Discography
- 3 Quote
- 4 External
links
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Biography
Hall was an active member of the burgeoning Coventry music scene of the
late 1970s, playing in local punk band Squad, and being credited as a composer on
their single "Red Alert" / "£8 a Week".
This scene also produced acts such as The
Selecter and Hazel O'Connor.
As the frontman
for The
Specials (though initially called The Coventry Automatics and
then The Special AKA), Hall primarily struck it big in Britain
in 1979 when BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel
played their single "Gangsters" on his show; the song was included in
his Festive
Fifty at #7 in that year. The Specials' first self-titled album
features some of Hall's most recognizable and notable performances,
including "Little Bitch", "Nite Klub", "Concrete Jungle", and
"Gangsters". This debut album also displays Hall's writing
talent alongside Jerry Dammers.
In October of 1980, The Specials released their
second album, More Specials.
While singing such fan-favourites such as "Enjoy
Yourself", "Rat Race", and "Hey, Little Rich Girl", Terry successfully
helped the band recreate the upbeat music that the first album
possessed. The next album The Specials recorded, 1984's In
The Studio, did not include Hall.
After The Specials' last single with Hall, the UK
#1 hit "Ghost
Town", Hall left the band to start a new-wave
group, Fun Boy Three, with two
other Specials members, Lynval Golding and Neville
Staples. Fun Boy Three's first hit single occurred in late 1981,
entitled "The Lunatics (Have Taken Over The Asylum)", then followed-up
in early 1982 with "It
Ain't What You Do (It's the Way That You Do It)", a duet
with Bananarama.
Fun Boy Three then provided guest vocals for Bananarama's single, "Really Saying Something".
That same year, Hall and his bandmates appeared in the video
for "Driving in My Car" by ska band, Madness.
In February 1983, Fun Boy Three released Waiting.
It consisted of the Top Ten hits "The Tunnel of Love" and
the classic "Our Lips Are Sealed". The latter
was a song Hall wrote with Jane Wiedlin, who had already made it
into a hit the previous year with her group, The
Go-Go's.
In 1984 Hall formed the Coventry based band The
Colourfield, releasing the album Virgins &
Philistines in 1985, which included the single "Thinking of
You" (UK #12 hit single). This new musical direction would culminate in
collaborations with the Lightning Seeds' Ian
Broudie, contributing a number of songs to the Seeds' Sense
(1992), Jollification (1994), Dizzy
Heights (1996) and Tilt (1999) albums.
Hall also co-wrote the song "Smoke Rings" for Broudie's debut solo
album Tales Told. The track was subsequently
released as the lead track on the Smoke Rings EP.
In 2001 he appeared as a guest on the Gorillaz-D12 single "911", which
was a song about terrorist attacks in the U.S.
In 2007 he provided vocals for many tracks on the Dub
Pistols album Speakers and Tweeters, as well
he appeared live at the Glastonbury Festival in the UK on the Pyramid Stage
with Lily
Allen (and fellow Specials / Fun
Boy Three band member Lynval
Golding). He also played on the Park Stage, once again with Lynval
Golding and also Blur frontman Damon
Albarn and beatboxer Shlomo, playing a version of Specials
classic "A Message To You Rudi". Later
that year in July he appeared at GuilFest on the BBC2 radio stage with Dub
Pistols and Lynval Golding.
Discography
Albums
- Ultra Modern Nursery Rhyme as a member
of Terry, Blair and Anouchka (1990)
- Vegas with David
A. Stewart under the name Vegas (RCA
Records - 1992)
- Home (Anxious
Records - 1994)
- Laugh (The Southsea Bubble Company/Telstar
Records - 1997) - #50 UK
- The Hour of Two Lights with Mushtaq
(2003)
Singles
- "Missing" with Blair and Anouchka (Nov
1989) - #75 UK
- "Ultra Modern Nursery Rhyme" with Blair and
Anouchka (Feb 1990) - #77 UK
- "Forever J" (Aug 1994) - #67 UK
- "Sense" (Nov 1994) - #54 UK
- "Rainbows EP" (Oct 1995) - #62 UK
- "Ballad Of A Landlord" (Jun 1997) - #50 UK
- "Problem Is" with Dub
Pistols (Oct 2003) - #66 UK
Quote
"Wish I had lipstick on my shirt instead of piss stains on my
shoes". ("Friday Night, Saturday Morning" song lyrics)
External links