A Change in the Weather de Clive Gregson & Christine Collister en Amazon Music - Amazon.es

Clive Gregson & Christine Collister

A Change in the Weather

Clive Gregson & Christine Collister

11 CANCIONES • 51 MINUTOS • DEC 29 2016

  • CANCIONES
    CANCIONES
  • DETALLES
    DETALLES
CANCIONES
DETALLES
1
This Is the Deal
04:53
2
Blessing in Disguise
05:29
3
(Don't Step in) My Blue Suede Shoes
05:50
4
Tryin' to Get to You
02:54
5
How Weak I Am
05:08
6
Temporary Sincerity
05:12
7
Blues on the Run
04:16
8
Voodoo Doll
03:19
9
Standing in Your Shadow
04:10
10
Jumped up Madam
04:25
11
Talent Will Out
06:12
℗© 2009: Clive Gregson & Christine Collister

Biografías de artistas

One of the great unsung heroes of British songwriting, Clive Gregson has penned clever tunes with sometimes witty and always heartfelt lyrics since the mid-'70s. While he's performed in a variety of formats (with a rock group, as part of a contemporary folk duo, and as a solo act), he's been a favorite with critics, discriminating listeners, and his peers -- his songs have been recorded by Nanci Griffith, Norma Waterson, and Fairport Convention, and he's performed and toured with Richard Thompson, Eddi Reader, and Plainsong. Gregson's work with his band Any Trouble is best appreciated on the 2013 collection The Complete Stiff Recordings 1980-1981, while those interested in his collaborations with Christine Collister should investigate 1989's A Change in the Weather. Fine examples of his solo work include 1996's I Love This Town, 2002's Comfort and Joy, and 2004's Long Story Short.

Gregson was born January 4, 1955, in Ashton-under-Lyne, Tameside, England. He developed an ear for music during the first rush of Beatlemania in the U.K., and when his older brother gave up playing the drums, his parents sold his kit and bought young Clive his first guitar. While Gregson played in a band with his school chums, he didn't play his first professional gig until he founded the group Any Trouble, a pub rock/new wave quartet, in Manchester in 1975. The band's sound, and Gregson's songwriting and singing, reminded some critics of Elvis Costello, and Any Trouble was signed by Stiff, the label where Costello got his start. The band made several well-remembered but poor-selling albums, then split up in 1984.

Gregson discovered Christine Collister singing in a folk club in 1984 and, impressed by her talents, offered to work with her on future projects. He had already begun an association with Richard Thompson, initially singing backup on the classic Shoot Out the Lights album in 1982. While working on Thompson's Hand of Kindness, Gregson suggested using Collister for additional backup vocal duties. The formula worked, and the two continued for years as integral parts of the Richard Thompson touring band, arguably the finest live act he's assembled.

In 1985, Gregson made a solo album, Strange Persuasions, with Collister singing backup on a few tracks. The two began performing as a duo on the folk club circuit shortly thereafter; their first release was a homemade tape sold at gigs, later released on LP as Home and Away. It was followed by their first formal album, Mischief, in 1987, and by a Change in the Weather in 1989. Love Is a Strange Hotel, released later the same year, was an album of cover versions of Gregson and Collister's favorite songs.

By 1992, the stress of constant touring and working together without substantial success finally took its toll on Gregson and Collister. The two decided to go their separate ways after one parting shot, The Last Word, and one final tour. Gregson eventually relocated to Nashville and launched a solo career, releasing the live "official bootleg" Carousel of Noise on his own label in 1994. People & Places followed in 1995, and I Love This Town was issued by Compass Records in 1996. Gregson also did production work for acts such as the Weather Prophets, the Oysterband, and Brilliant Corners, and frequently collaborated with fellow songwriter Boo Hewerdine.

In 1998, after a brief stint in the group Plainsong, Gregson returned with Happy Hour, and launched a successful tour of the U.K. with Hewerdine and Eddi Reader. Gregson's 2002 release Comfort and Joy was followed by extensive touring, including rare jaunts to the United States and Japan, but in 2003, his career was put on hold for several months after a fall from a ladder resulted in a broken shoulder and arm. Thankfully, Gregson fully recovered, and returned with a low-key solo set, Long Story Short, in late 2004.

In 2007, Any Trouble reunited to record an album, Life in Reverse, which they supported with a handful of live dates. Gregson resumed his solo career with the 2011 album Bittersweet, produced by him and featuring all-original material. Another solo set, This Is Now, followed in 2013, and Gregson brought Any Trouble back together in 2015 to record the album Present Tense, which was followed by a tour of the U.K. 2015 also saw Gregson touring with fellow singer and songwriter Liz Simcock, with the duo performing songs from the Gregson and Collister songbook. Gregson and Simcock reunited in 2017 to cut an album together, Underwater Dancing.

In 2020, Gregson announced he was retiring from live performing, and that his U.K. tour of that year would be his last. The COVID-19 pandemic scuttled Gregson's farewell tour plans, but he did launch another ambitious project for 2020 -- releasing a new album for each month of the year. He began with One Year, which included 12 tracks, each concerning a different month of the year. Next came Raggedy Ass (a collection of rock & roll tunes), Eighteen Strings (featuring material he wrote for his 3 Boxes project), Every Face Is Turned My Way (focused on his life in music), Poorville (devoted to political and topical material), and Bus Stop Conversations (a set of songs about life in the North of England). ~ Chris Woodstra, William Ruhlmann, & Mark Deming

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Christine Collister is one of the most respected female vocalists in contemporary British folk-rock. Although she first attracted attention as a member of Richard Thompson's band in the late '80s and then in a duo that she shared with Clive Gregson, the former leader of British rock band Any Trouble, she's continued to make her presence felt since embarking on a solo career in 1992.

Collister made her earliest mark as the singer of the theme song of the popular BBC television series The Life and Loves of a She-Devil. Meeting Gregson, who was playing backup guitar in Thompson's band, in 1985, she was quickly recruited as a harmony singer, touring with the group until 1988. Gregson & Collister's debut album as a duo, Home and Away, was a homemade cassette sold at their shows; it was later reissued by Flying Fish. Gregson & Collister released their first full-fledged album, Mischief, in 1987, following it with the all-original album A Change in the Weather in 1989, and Love Is a Strange Hotel, a collection of their favorite songs, in 1990. Their final album together, The Last Word, was released in 1992.

Collister has continued to balance her solo career with a variety of projects. In 1992, she joined with Barb Jungr, Michael Parker, and Ian Shaw in a four-part harmony show, Hell Bent Heaven Bound. In addition to a crowd-rousing performance at the Winnepeg Folk Festival in 1993, the show was presented during a sold-out tour of the United Kingdom. After touring with Richard Thompson in 1995, Collister joined a supergroup of British female performers, Daphne's Flight, that also featured Melanie Harrold, Julie Matthews, Helen Watson, and Chris While. The group recorded a self-titled album in 1996.

Collister's debut solo album, Live, was recorded during a 1994 concert in her hometown. Her solo studio debut, Blue Aconite, was released in 1996 and featured guest appearances by Thompson and Watson. Horizon was released in 1997. Collister's fourth solo album, The Dark Gift of Time, released the following year, featured guests B.J. Cole (pedal steel), Danny Thompson (double bass), Jacqui McShee (vocals), and John Surman (bass clarinet and saxophone), in addition to Thompson (electric guitar). Songbird appeared in early 2000, followed by Equal Love in 2002 and Into the Light in 2003, the latter two albums both released by Topic Records. Home and Love... were then released by the Stereoscout label in 2003 and 2005, respectively. Collister also formed a new duo with blues revivalist Dave Kelly; Collister and Kelly, with support from their backup band the Travelling Gentlemen, embarked on a 2005 U.K. tour, recordings from which were featured on their debut live disc, released by Beat Goes On the following year. ~ Craig Harris

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