Nick_Laird-Clowes

Nick Laird-Clowes

Nick Laird-Clowes

British musician and composer; lead singer, songwriter for The Dream Academy


Nick Laird-Clowes (born 5 February 1957, in London, England)[citation needed] is an English musician and composer, best known as the singer, guitarist, and primary songwriter for The Dream Academy.

Quick Facts Born, Instruments ...

Life and career

Laird-Clowes was a member of Alfalpha and The Act[1] before forming The Dream Academy. He was also a presenter for the first series of the Channel 4 music show The Tube.[2]

The Dream Academy formed in 1983.[3][4] Laird-Clowes sang and played guitar for the band[5] and was its primary songwriter.[6] The band's other members were multi-instrumentalist Kate St John and keyboardist Gilbert Gabriel.[4] The Dream Academy is most noted for their 1985 hit single, "Life in a Northern Town" (1985),[7][8] which was a worldwide success and a sizeable hit in the U.S.[3] The band released three albums: The Dream Academy (1985), Remembrance Days (1987)[9] and A Different Kind Of Weather (1990).[7] The Dream Academy disbanded in 1991.[10]

Laird-Clowes released a solo album, Mona Lisa Overdrive, under the name Trashmonk in 1999.[11]

A friend of David Gilmour, with whom he co-produced both The Dream Academy and A Different Kind of Weather albums,[12] Laird-Clowes contributed lyrics to two songs on Pink Floyd's album The Division Bell.[13]

In the 2000s, Laird-Clowes was involved in film and documentary soundtracks. He produced the score for The Invisible Circus (2001), directed by Adam Brooks and starring Cameron Diaz,[14] and was the musical consultant for Bernardo Bertolucci's The Dreamers (2003).[15] Laird-Clowes composed the music for Fierce People (2005), which was directed by Griffin Dunne and starred Diane Lane and Donald Sutherland,[16] and for Wit Licht (2008), directed by Jean van de Velde.[17][18] Nick Broomfield's film Battle for Haditha, which premiered at the London Film Festival in 2007, also had a Laird-Clowes soundtrack.[19][20][21] In June 2009, he scored Broomfield's agitprop documentary for Greenpeace, A Time Comes, featuring the single "Mayday".[22]

In May 2007, Laird-Clowes and Joe Boyd produced a Syd Barrett memorial concert, "The Madcap's Last Laugh", at the Barbican Centre in London; the concert also featured both Pink Floyd and Roger Waters.[23]

In 2013, Laird-Clowes worked as both composer and music consultant for the Richard Curtis directed film, About Time.[21][better source needed] In 2014, The Dream Academy released a compilation album entitled The Morning Lasted All Day: A Retrospective; it was compiled, annotated, and remastered by Laird-Clowes.[24]

In 2017, Laird-Clowes composed the music for the feature documentary, Whitney: Can I Be Me, directed by Nick Broomfield.[25] In 2019 (and also for Broomfield), he composed the score for the acclaimed Universal film about Leonard Cohen, Marianne & Leonard: Words Of Love.[26]


References

  1. Harris, Will (7 July 2015). "Interview: Nick Laird-Clowes of The Dream Academy". www.rhino.com.
  2. Lindores, Mark (14 February 2022). "Remembering The Tube". www.classicpopmag.com.
  3. Smith, Christopher (12 September 2020). "WHERE ARE THEY NOW? The Dream Academy".
  4. "The Dream Academy special Gilbert Gabriel". www.c86show.org. 2 October 2022.
  5. Kamau, Eric (18 September 2022). "Top 10 Songs From The Dream Academy".
  6. Miles, Barry; Mabbett, Andy (1994). Pink Floyd - The Visual Documentary. Omnibus. ISBN 0-7119-4109-2.
  7. Rabinowitz, Mark (28 April 2005). "Fierce People". ScreenDaily.com.
  8. "INTERVIEWS WITH ACTORS AND FILMMAKERS". FILM TALK. 27 September 2016.
  9. D'Arcy, David (1 October 2007). "Battle for Haditha". ScreenDaily.com.
  10. "Real Gone Music - News - The Dream Academy". Real Gone Music. Retrieved 13 August 2014.
  11. Dalton, Stephen (26 April 2017). "'Whitney: Can I Be Me': Film Review". Hollywood Reporter.
  12. McCarthy, Todd (29 January 2019). "'Marianne & Leonard: Words of Love': Film Review". Hollywood Reporter.

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