About: Chris de Burgh
Few artists can lay claim to international success spanning
three decades but, beginning with his very first release, Chris de Burgh has
achieved precisely that.
The foundations for a remarkable and durable career were
laid back in 1975 with the release of Chris’s debut album, ‘Far Beyond These
Castle Walls’, featuring a single, ‘Flying’, which spent 17 weeks at No. 1 in
Brazil.
Subsequent records, almost in turn, continued to steadily
draw in audiences around the world; Scandinavia was early to embrace the vivid
story-telling that is Chris’s unique talent, South Africa quickly tuned in to
his power as a live performer, North America even demanded its own specially
compiled ‘greatest hits’ collection, ‘Best Moves’. In the United States,
meanwhile, relentless touring with his management stablemates Supertramp was
beginning to establish Chris as a gritty, charismatic stage presence.
Indeed, by 1980, Chris’s global profile had already mushroomed
to the point where that year’s album, ‘Eastern Wind’, became one of the
biggest-selling albums of all time in Norway. A year later, its follow-up, ‘Man
On The Line’, was a Top 30 album in the UK, the US and 20 other countries,
while producing the single ‘High On Emotion’, which went to No. 1 in ten
European countries.
In many respects, it was this album that opened the door to the enormous success which was to follow and scale new heights with the arrival of Chris’s 1986 album ‘Into The Light’. Chris, by his own estimation, had shrewdly perceived this record to be one which could place him fully centre stage as an artist and, indeed, it featured the song which finally established him as a known singer-songwriter around the world. ‘The Lady In Red’, now undeniably an evergreen classic, achieved No. 1 status in 25 countries, including the UK, went to No. 2 in America – and has now sold in excess of 8 million copies. To this day, it remains one of the most played songs on the planet; in America alone, it has subsequently been the recipient of six annual ASCAP (Association of Composers and Publishers) Awards, presented to acknowledge the track as one of the Top 20 most played records in the United States in a period of 12 months.
By now, Chris’s stature had reached true superstar status in
many territories – particularly in Germany, where his sell-out tours were
grossing more than any other artist on the road.
Come 1990, Chris’s German popularity was such that he was
the only international artist personally invited by then Chancellor Kohl to
perform at the historic public celebrations marking the re-unification of East
and West Germany. This momentous privilege immediately followed sell-out tours
of Australia and Japan.
In the intervening years, and on the eve of the Millennium,
Chris continued to add new audiences to his vast fan base – from Moscow to
Malta, from Singapore to Sarajevo – and, always, to find and embrace new
challenges for himself as a musician and a performer. Specifically, his 1995 album,
‘Beautiful Dreams’, realised a long-held ambition to have his music (both new
material and selected highlights from his previous repertoire) recorded in a
classical style – with a full, 32-piece orchestra.
Not only did this album breathe new life into Chris
artistically, but it also enabled him to embark on a series of open-air shows
in some of the UK’s finest palaces and stately homes.
His 1999 album ‘Quiet Revolution’ featured a band for the
first time since his ‘This Way Up’ LP, five years earlier. Road-tested as
players via tours of Germany, South Africa, the Eastern Bloc, Middle East and
South East Asia, a solid line-up of musicians once again invigorated Chris’s
approach to making music in a group scenario, a philosophy still very much in
evidence on his next studio album, ‘Timing Is Everything’, released in 2002.
In every sense, the record was a current statement of
Chris’s craft, easily placing all of the several trademarks he had made his own
– vivid story-telling, powerful anthems and heartfelt ballads – against an
undeniably contemporary backdrop.
“It was a modern-sounding record, within the parameter of me
as a songwriter, because I write in the classic vein. I’m writing in that
old-fashioned way, but I think we brought a very new and dynamic sound to it.”
Musically and lyrically, his 16th studio album moved with
the times, but on his terms; as always, Chris was content to pursue his own,
personal and unique path. It has proven to be the successful route to longevity
which, across three decades, has won him a devoted, worldwide following.
All eleven new songs presented on the album were instantly
in tune with this international acclaim, reputation and credibility. Each was
written and recorded with uncommon ease and speed, factors which infected both
the vocal performance and the overall mood of the album. “I found that writing
the songs was not a grind and a chore; they came out very easily. I felt so
good about the album that I actually recorded four or five full, finished,
vocals in an afternoon. That’s unheard of for me! Another day I recorded vocals
for four other songs; I just thought ‘Well, I’m in the voice for it – why don’t
I just do them?’ It was like I was saying ‘There’s no big deal about this…’
“The speed with which we recorded reflected the fun we were
having. That was a big part of it all. When making records previously, there
had always been that slightly freaky thing of saying to myself ‘Today I’m doing
a lead vocal’. In the past, I have been aware of the need to get my singing, my
vocal performance, absolutely right in the studio – because what is recorded
there stays with you forever. It’s like taking a penalty in an important
football match; you’ve got to get it right.”
There were, and will be, many interpretations concerning the
meaning of ‘The Road To Freedom’, the title given to his 17th album, released
in 2004.
For Chris, the album name openly identified his enthusiasm
about not only producing an intensely individual record but, also, for choosing
to be at liberty to make it available on his own, Ferryman Records, label;
having been signed to a major record company for almost 30 years, the time had
come to do things on his own. For listeners, the album presented a vibrant and
emotionally uplifting journey along a path filled with insight, inspiration
and, as ever, colourful imagination. And it did so with a lyrical diversity
married perfectly against a musical backdrop of truly international appeal;
Spanish, Celtic, North American and Eastern European melodies are instantly
apparent.
Equally, it was a record which tackled a wide spread of
subject matter; the bittersweet life of Queen Elizabeth the First (‘Rose Of
England’), a rallying, heartfelt plea for people to make something of their
lives (‘Read My Name’), a moving tribute to the late Eva Cassidy (‘Songbird’)
and – possibly most intriguingly – a song called ‘Five Past Dreams’, the ‘what
happened next?’ follow-up to Chris’s biggest career hit, and one of the most
romantic ballads of all time, ‘The Lady In Red’.
Each of the songs, and the other seven original compositions
featured on the album, were written with a quite specific aim in mind; the
desire within Chris to be able to play them all in the context of solo concert
performance, without the need to embellish every track with any accompaniment
beyond his guitar or piano. An extensive World Tour, with dates across Europe,
the UK and North America, followed to support the album and that intent. ‘The
Road To Freedom’ presented an up-beat, positive and hopeful over-view of the
world as Chris de Burgh then saw it, viewed in the cinematic proportions which
have become one of his unique abilities.
By now recording and releasing albums with more regular
frequency than at almost any other point in his career, Chris delivered his
next studio LP, ‘The Storyman’, in 2006. Its title alone aptly summed up Chris;
imaginative story-making has, after all, always been at the very core of his
worldwide success.
Whether his lyrical – and musical – themes have tackled love
and loss or been set against imaginative backdrops created from the past,
present or future, the telling of tales is his special gift.
Across more than three decades by now, Chris’s extensive
repertoire of songs has taken his audience on travels through continents,
cultures and centuries – in cinematic proportion – and such was the inspiration
behind the concept of ‘The Storyman’.
Each one of the songs was accompanied by stories – also
written by Chris and printed in the CD booklet – which set the scene and expand
upon the lyrics with detail, colour and atmosphere.
In order to win a place on his next album, Chris de Burgh
selected the songs he recorded by applying three critical principles: he had to
love them, have sung them many times before – and, perhaps most relevantly,
they had to have inspired him.
As a result, and by any measure, the 13 ‘covers’ on ‘Footsteps’ represent a deeply personal and candid appraisal by Chris of songs which have influenced and affected the way he has crafted his own particular musical imprint.
There is little doubt that these songs and songwriters
provided solid cornerstones for him to build upon. Equally, there is no attempt
by Chris to disguise, in his selection, the creative models and ideals he
aspired to – and still does.
Writing and recording his new album ‘Moonfleet & Other
Stories’ took Chris de Burgh on the most ambitious, challenging and evocative
journey of his long and successful career,
With sales of his albums now approaching 50 million
worldwide, his unique, vivid slant on musical story-telling is already clearly
established, but ‘Moonfleet & Other Stories’ raises the bar to
unprecedented new heights.
It’s entirely appropriate to call ‘Moonfleet & Others
Stories’ a tour de force, not merely since it comprises 20 original elements
(including an orchestral overture), but because it’s a fully-rounded and
realised musical suite based on the book from which the album takes its name.
Yet while the piece – a sequence of songs threaded together
by narration – concerns itself with a musical and lyrical interpretation of the
classic work (a tale of 18th Century smuggling, treasure, friendship, love and
loss) by English novelist J. Meade Falkner, elsewhere on the album Chris
tackles an extraordinarily diverse and wide-ranging variety of topics.
Songs which moved and motivated Chris de Burgh to become a
better writer himself are at the core of ‘Footsteps 2′. In a variety of ways,
the 10 ‘covers’ on the new album each proved influential to Chris in forging
and developing his career – and one of the original versions quite literally
stopped him in his tracks when he first heard it.
“I had to pull my car over to the side of the road and
simply listen,” says Chris of ‘The Living Years’ by Mike & The Mechanics .
“It suddenly hit me about my own relationship with my father, which was not the
easiest. I couldn’t drive because I was crying. The tears were rolling down my
face and this song helped me to build bridges between myself and my father.”
Whereas the songs featured on his successful 2009 album
‘Footsteps’ were selected for being inspirational personal favourites often
performed by Chris, the material on ‘Footsteps 2′ was chosen for the “big
effect” it has had upon him. “Music is the soundtrack to our own lives,” he
says. “These songs, at particular times in my life, were cornerstones. They
were the footsteps, like stepping stones across the river, that helped me on my
way.”
Chris refers to the driving creative impetus of other
musicians on his career in a verse of ‘Every Step Of The Way’, one of three new
songs he wrote for ‘Footsteps 2′. They are joined by a reworking of a German
lyric in ‘Seven Bridges’, an orchestral version of the ‘Footsteps’ theme, The
Beatles tracks ‘Let It Be’ and ‘Lady Madonna’ and the Stevie Winwood song,
‘While You See A Chance’.
While his approach to several of the songs was to produce
‘faithful versions’ of the originals, Chris had an entirely different agenda
with others – particularly ‘SOS’ by Abba, for which both the tempo and
arrangement was altered, in part. His personal reading and interpretation of
particular song lyrics was also a key focus. “With certain songs, I wanted to
bring more attention to the lyric than was possibly there initially. I was
really concentrating on the feeling of the song.”
As with ‘Footsteps’, arriving at the final tracks for
‘Footsteps 2′ – and their positioning in the running order of the album – was a
painstaking process. “I spent a lot of time researching the tracks, going
through songs, listening to songs, wondering if I could do a good job on them,
whether I could add something to the original, or whether I was just going to
do an ‘homage’ to the original.
“There were no definite choices, immediately, but the album
began to take its own shape and, as always, it’s very important to have a
dynamic attitude to the overall; you can’t just have ten really powerful songs
at high tempo, you have to balance – the balance is critical.”
The result is the third new album Chris has recorded and
released in as many years; a prolific output by any standards, with the two
‘Footsteps’ projects sandwiching 2010′s hit album of original material,
‘Moonfleet & Other Stories’. “I gave myself the biggest challenge of my
career in writing and recording that album,” Chris estimates. “It was very
difficult but great, great fun to have done that, ultimately. Meanwhile, let’s
not forget that the ‘Footsteps’ albums were of songs that existed already! I
didn’t have to put a lot of songwriting into them, which is what really takes
the time.”
As always, Chris is set go on the road in support of his
latest release, just as soon as he’s completed the final leg of the ‘Moonfleet
& Other Stories’ tour. “I’m very much looking forward to going on tour in
2012 with ‘Footsteps 2′. We’ll be performing quite a few songs from it, which
I’m really excited about doing.”
And what of ‘Footsteps 3′? “I have no plans to write and
record another of my own albums at all at the moment because we’re still very
much involved with ‘Moonfleet’ , but ‘Footsteps 3′ is definitely a possibility.
“I think the day will come, as long as I’m still in good
voice and, certainly, people who have heard ‘Footsteps 2′ say it’s probably the
best singing I’ve ever done. I am very pleased with it. It also comes down to
public interest; whether they want to hear it. The material is out there. There
are plenty of great songs to record. Maybe we’ll approach it in a slightly
different way, perhaps look at a different kind of material. I’ve always been
drawn, for example, to classical music and to church chorale music. Maybe an
album of Christmas carols. Who knows?”
CONTACT: http://cdeb.com/contact/
Big City Sunday’s - 2014 (Official Video)
Chris de Burgh - The Hands of
Man – (2014 Full Album)
The Making of the Hands of Man (2014)
Seven Bridges - (Live 2014)
There Goes My Heart Again - (Official)
Sailing Away (Live)
Don’t Pay the Ferryman – (Live 2014)
High on Emotion – (Live 2014)
Riding on a Rainbow – (Live)
Home EPK – 2012 (Official)
Waiting for the Hurricane
(Album: Home - 2012)
People of the World - 2011 (Official Video)
Seven Bridges – 2011 (Official Video)
Footsteps 2 EPK (2011)
Go Where Your Heart Believes – 2010 (Official Video)
A Spaceman Came Traveling - 2010 (Official Video)
Transmission Ends – (Live 2010)
The Mirror of the Soul – 2010 (Official Video)
My Hearts Surrender – 2010 (Official Video)
Africa - 2010 (Live Cover)
One World – 2010 (Official Video)
Everywhere I Go - 2010 (Official Video)
Don’t Pay the Ferryman - 1982 (Official Video)
Chris de Burgh – Official Website
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https://soundcloud.com/cdebofficial
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http://www.last.fm/music/Chris+de+Burgh
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Chris de Burgh - YouTube
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