Suede Discography
Suede Discography
because we're young, because we're gone But weird karma was afoot. He had written a
we'll take the tide's electric mind, oh yeah? oh song called “space oddity”, Neil Armstrong was
yeah fourth months away from sketching that crucial
inaugural moonwalk. And David Bowie was five
we're so young and so gone, let's chase the months away from making that giant step into
dragon, oh what, in the vernacular, would be called
“headfuck stardom”
because we're young, because we're gone
we'll scare the skies with tigers eyes, oh yeah?
oh yeah “I like to imagine,” suggests Brett Anderson over
yet more tea “that he’s just sitting there thinking
we're so young and so gone, let's chase the that no one quite knows yet. He looks very cool
dragon, oh and inscrutable. I’ve always thought like that.
let's chase the dragon . . . I’ve always had a kind of romantic self-image,
sitting in drab surroundings thinking of what I
. . . from our home high in the city could possibly do.”
where the skyline stained the snow
i fell for a servant who kept me on the boil
What Brett Anderson and Suede could do is the
we're so young and so gone, let's chase the most exciting moot point in rock music today.
dragon from our home! Depending where you’re standing, they could go
any or all of the following… Become Britain’s
Whatever happened to the teenage dream? By biggest and sexiest rock band of the 1990s in
Dave Cavanagh (Q magazine) UK december record time… re-familiarise a jaded notion with
1992 glamour, sex and songwriting class on a scale not
seen since Roxy Music, Marc Bolan and the
On the wall of Brett Anderson’s dingy finest inter-galactic hour of Bowie himself…
claustrophobic Notting Hill first-floor flat hangs Have a number 1 debut album in March…. Bond
a poster of David Bowie. A pretty cool idea. hedonistic and neurotic youth alike in the most-
Millions had it before him. Anderson likes to all encompassing display of life-threatening
contemplate the picture while he sips his tea. ambisexual teenage fan-worship since the
heydays of the Smiths… Write some of the most
But this is one of the most anomalous and beautiful songs about complete unquestioning
challenging images from Bowie’s mighty folio. sexual devotion since Bowie’s Lady Grinning
Soul… Induct the hitherto underrated word think we can live up to it. It would be dreadful
“paracetamol” into rock’s workable thing if it was under-listened to.”
vocabulary…And turn the Brighton commuter
belt satellite town of Haywards Heath into the He speaks fluently, confidently, his sentences
most famous British Rail Southern pitstop since building up into paragraphs of vaguely neurotic
Paul Weller first announced he hailed from self-reference, all delivered with a bright glint in
Woking… the eye. Like Morrissey, there’s a love of arcane
words: “gruesome” and “drab” tend to re-appear.
For Suede, after two brilliant singles, years of Unlike Morrissey, there’s no coy self-loathing,
daydreaming, and horrible upbringing in no “well, of course, I’m unloveable”. Brett
working-class nowherevilles, have it in them to Anderson seems particularly pleased with the
be just about the most extraordinary, intelligent new vistas his talent has opened up.
and potentially enormous guitar band and
potentially enormous guitar band this country has It’s difficult to avoid comparing Suede to The
seen in a decade. Smiths. Anderson’s deliberately blurred gender
references recalls Morrissey on songs like
Handsome Devil and Reel Around the Mountain.
“There’s nothing more frustrating than knowing (Anderson claims to be a bisexual who has yet to
you’ve got all these songs that no one knows have a homosexual relationship). Morrissey,
about yet” says Anderson moodily, as he leans possibly sensing a chip of the old block here, has
over to the tape machine to play a song from become a fan: he has covered “My insatiable
Suede’s as yet untitled debut album. The song is One” live and has gushed about Suede to
a beautiful piano ballad called “The Next Life”, journalists on his autumn American tour….
which Anderson wants to end the record.
The relationship between Anderson and his co-
As it unfolds – and it takes a while – a scene writer, guitarist Bernard Butler, too, has strong
lodges in the memory. A decrepit little Notting echoes of Morrissey and Marr. The singers are
Hill flat. An upright piano in the corner with its eloquent and witty, the guitarists are moody and
front removed and all its mechanics showing in a aloof.
gynaecological pre-war pianola effect.
And Bernard Butler is really aloof. He won’t
actually talk at all. That’s pretty aloof for
And the singer and writer of “The next life” someone who has only two singles out. He’s
nonchalantly sipping tea while he gazes at a 23- quiet explicit about it. Request to Suede’s
year old poster of David Bowie that was taken management for permission to ask him “a couple
when he himself was two. of questions” in the studio come back with a curt
communique that reads “don’t bug Bernard.”…
“We always knew the kind of bands we’d be” At 22, Bernard Butler is already a serious
states Suede’s bassist Mat Osman categorically candidate for guitar hero of the next decade, a
through long, thin hair “which was an important, wonderfully fluid, almost bluesy musician, he
celebratory, huge rock band. A really old- dips dextrously from metallic T-Rex thrash into
fashioned thing. A great British rock band.”…. sympathetic sad clown texture that drip with
emotion and melody. Mat Osman, a bit of a star
Somewhere in among that bizarre little lexicon, himself on bass at it happens, calls Butler
in the songs’ fantastic hooklines, in Anderson’s “uncanningly brilliant”
self belief, in the guitar playing of Bernard
Butler, and in the sweaty high dram of Suede’s
1992 live shows, four putative stars have been “One of the most poignant thing he’s ever said”
fashioned. …….. recalls Anderson “is he thinks of himself as a
“It’s always been a case of wanting to make pop singer who can’t sing. He speaks through his
songs that people love,” says Anderson in his guitar, pretty much. He definitely co-stars with
slightly camp, precious twang “there’s a sense of me on the song. He astounds us with what he can
expectancy about our record, but that’s good. I play.”……
probably quite unemployable as well.”
“The feeling of desperation in the lyrics is
reflected in the music,” says Anderson His father was an “insane classical music fan”
approvingly “and there’s something really dark who was in the habit of taking yearly pilgrimages
about it that I like. Those were always the kind to Franz Liszt’s birthplace in Hungary, where he
of songs that I wanted to write – something that would kiss the ground and bring back some soil
was incredibly emotional, but not necessarily in as a souvenir.
the normal way. Usually, something that’s
emotional is quite inspiringly emotional… “His three heroes are Liszt, Nelson and
Churchill. And on their birthdays he puts a
The recording of the album seems to be giving Union Jack outside his council house on his
him a kind of ulcer of the soul. flagpole. That used to bug me to sh1t when I was
a kid, but now I think it’s one of the greatest
things ever.”
“It’s been upsetting us for quite a long time,” he
says thoughtfully. “Even one duff track and it Brett himself was a bit of a loner; nominally
would be a failure. We don’t really have any aligned to a punk gang at school, but appalled by
refuge from it at all.” the violence.
Suede’s roots lie in working-class, early ‘80ies “There is really a violent element to the school I
Britain. The thing is, they don’t look like it, as went to. I remember once this boy got lifted up
Mat Osman ruefully concedes. by these older kinds with a huge iron bar,
……………
“If we were the tea-drinking fops that we’re An early love for Crass and Discharge (he
made out to be, we’d probably all be Seatle compares Feeding of the 5000 to “your first …”
grunge chic types by now,” he reckons “I don’t soon mutated into a love affair, via his big
think you can be interested in looking good or sister’s record collection, with David Bowie.
being glamorous without coming from the most Here, he was bang on tune with Mat Osman.
stultifyingly boring backgrounds. And there is
nowhere duller than the suburbs of London. I do At 16, Brett was wearing a tuxedo to school or,
think if you come from there you’re the only failing that, a “yellow Cliff Richard suit” in an
people left who believe in the pop dream. All of effort to get the David Bowie blow-dried Let’s
us, from the age of seven, have assumed this is Dance look. He compounded the effect by dying
what we were going to do.” his hair blonde and sporting a bow tie. He sang
in a band called Suave and Elegant (error: they
Anderson seems particularly keen to stress the were called Geoff, they were called Suave and
seediness of his roots. He claims that every Elegant when the band played in London). “I
single member of Suede had had a job at one was a right ponce, actually.” He says breezily.
time or another scrubbing toilets. He told one
interviewer that when he was growing up, a raw But there was fear about. Aside from the very
onion was “a luxury”. obvious threat of a nuclear war (1983 was the
year of the Cruize/Pershing crisis) – about which
He and Mat Osman grew up in Haywards Heath, he used to have nightmares every night, the
near Brighton. Both were working-class. Osman teenage Brett’s chief concern was to avoid
was a one-parent family. “Whenever I went getting beaten up, while Simon Gilbert, the
round there,” remembers Anderson “the place drummer, paid the price for being the first 12-
always smelled of cat piss and they were having year old punk in Stratford-On-Avon in 1977 by
baked beans for tea.” having the shit kicked out of him on almost an
hourly basis.
His own family had little money, since his “Me and Brett would go and see the Smiths in
mother (now dead) was an unsuccessful artist Brighton.” Says Osman “And you’d see rugby
and his father was “permanently unemployed” players down the front with their arms round
(taxi driver, ice cream van driver), And I think each other – very strange – and you’d know that
these people kissing each other’s necks were the overdoing-it limpwrist warbling untold
same people who were going to beat you up on perversions in music-hall cockernee. (estuary
the way back to the station.” english)
As one pledged to looking “quite chic, quite But they were learning. Bernard Butler was
special”, Brett was an obvious target of grief brilliant anyway, and Anderson’s writing was
“Everywhere you went, there was always the showing signs of a definite peculiar skill. All
threat of someone beating you up.” He sighs they needed was to work as a songwriting
“Everyone was always pushing themselves partnership. (Meanwhile Justine left the band)
towards being some sort of sexual, potent, One day they got it right. And they swear the
violent character all the time. glam rock sound is wholly accidental.
And Suede emerged from that smog of small “Well,” sighs Anderson “We’re a guitar band,
town violence, Anderson and Osman have been and that’s the accidental sound we’ve arrived at.
making music together since they were “about We’ve grown up playing venues where you have
14”. Early catastrophes were survived (one to be blatant about what you do. I think a lot of
prototype demo is voted “a horrible twee perfect glam music was quite blatant, quite teenage, and
pop piece of crap” by Brett now) and when they that’s the accident we’ve arrived at. There were a
pocked up Butler through an NME ad (which lot of definite points made in the 70ies and recent
actually did say: “No musos”), they knew that guitar music has tended to be very obscure. We
they were on to something. Osman and Anderson do have a desire not to sound like that, I guess.”
maintain that they’ve known since age 16 that Osman is more forthright:
they would be in a shudderingly successful and
very brilliant band.” “I came from a background where any
excitement or any degree of extremity came
through records. If you took me when I was 13
They (moved to London and) went on to record or 14 and said. Show me something glamorous,
their first single “Be my god/art” (produced by sexually bizarre and talented, I’d have pointed
Mike Joyce) in 1990. The band in those days was you to my Bowie records. And if you listen to it
Anderson, his girlfriend Justine on guitar (who every day for five years, it’s imprinted in your
inspired the name of the band after a laundrette memory cells. You can’t help it. Your fingers
in Stoke Newington), Butler and Osman (and move that way. It feels right.
drum machine). They were “unripe musically”.
They needed a drummer. So they advertised for a Mat Osman is shooting pool in the studio
temporary one. kitchen. A quick appraisal of his physique,
haircut and attire conforms that, sure enough,
“And Mike Joyce walked in” laughs Anderson this man could walk into Mott the Hoople circa
incredulously “He just randomly answered the Honaloochie Boogie.
ad. One of the most incredible things ever to “Hmm” he considers “I just can’t understand the
happen to us. It was like Jim’ll Fix. A beautiful way they’re always singing about being in Mott
guy, though. He was so helpful.”. The single the Hoople and how awful it is. Incredibly
never materialised (it’s the one named above arrogant. Mind you, give us 10 years and it’ll
which was printed but not distributed), hence the probably be the most meaningful music I’ve ever
legal wrangling with the label boss, who heard.”
apparently thinks now is the suitable time – and
suede embarked on the long and painful process Bernard Butler is nowhere to be seen, ferociously
of becoming famous by playing gigs. avoiding those who might bug him.
“We were useless.” Says Anderson. And they Simon Gilbert is trying to persuade Brett to
were despised. Gigs throughout 1990 and into reconsider his power of veto on one of the songs
1991 were a mixture of catcall cacophonies and tentatively lined up for the album. But the veto is
silence, as audiences were trying to get their such that if one member of Suede isn’t happy
collective heads round a bunch of mincing glam with the song, it gets dropped immediately, so –
primadonnas in crimplene, fronted by a seriously out it goes.
“I have high expectations.” Grimaces Osman s’engouffreront dans cette brèche en cristallisant
over a tricky cannon “I think there is a curse of le mouvement, établissant ainsi des carrières
low expectations in British music at the moment. durables - Supergrass, The Boo Radleys, Oasis,
The curse of the mediocre – oh, it’ll do. The Blur. Mais dans ce contexte de début des années
march of the average. Well, no, it won’t bloody 1990 où le grunge fait rage outre Atlantique,
do.” c’est bien Suede qui, en Angleterre, tient la barre
de la pop à tel point que ce disque a été, sur
r. certaines éditions, baptisé symboliquement « The
French Review by xavier www.pafpaf.org : London Suede »...
released by nude records/ epic 1992 uk
Suede » serait-il une nouvelle illustration de ce Translation:
postulat selon lequel les grandes réussites, les suede album - released by nude records/ epic
grands albums sont le fait de rencontres 1992 uk - review by xavier paf-paf fr. -
marquantes, de confrontations novatrices ? En translation: zebras54 2004
restant en Angleterre, on se souvient que David
Bowie et Mick Ronson avaient été identifiés Suede would this be a new illustration of this
comme tels, Morrissey et Johnny Marr postulate: the great successes, the great albums
également. C’est précisément sur ces deux bases, are the result of marking encounters, innovative
on ne peut plus recommandables, que Suede confrontations? Staying in England, we
nous avait été introduit en 1993. remember that David Bowie and Mick Ronson
were identified as such, Morrissey and Johnny
Suede, c’est d’abord le charme de l’esthète Brett Marr as well. The album Suede was introduced
Anderson : des vocalises passionnées et to us on precisely these two bases, - which could
romantiques, des mimiques de scène maniérées not come more recommended.
mais juste ce qu’il faut pour ne pas tomber dans
le pompeux, des emprunts au glam dans son côté
théâtral mais en laissant de côté les bouclettes, le Suede it is first the charm of the aesthete Brett
maquillage et les déguisements. Suede, c’est Anderson: passionate and romantic vocalises,
aussi toute la virtuosité du guitariste Bernard mannered mimicry on stage but just enough not
Butler : des rythmiques, des solos, des arpèges le into the pompous, borrowings of glam from the
tout baignant dans un subtil dosage d’effets du theatrical side but leaving aside curly locks,
type flanger, fuzz ou e-bow. Sacré boulot make up and disguises.
d’enregistrement mais aussi sacré boulot en
concert quand on sait qu’il fait ça sans aide. Aux
postes de bassiste et batteur, Mat Osman et Suede it is also the virtuosity of guitar player
Simon Gilbert portent le fertile duo avec justesse Bernard Butler: rhythms, soli, arpegio - all of this
et assiduité. Ce premier album aligne de bathing in a subtle dosage of flanger, fuzz or e-
puissants hymnes rock - « Animal Nitrate », « bow. What a heck of a recording, but also what a
Metal Mickey », « Animal Lover » - sur lesquels heck of concert when it is known that he does so
Anderson contribue à forger des refrains without help. Posted as bass-player and
particulièrement entraînants à l’aide d’une très drummer, Mat Osman and Simon Gilbert bring
juste maîtrise du tambourin. Le disque propose accuracy and assiduity to the inspired duo.
également des titres comme « Pantomime Horse
», « Sleeping Pills » ou encore « Breakdown », This first album lines up powerful rock anthems -
plus calmes, plus noirs mais tout aussi prenants. "Animal Nitrate", "Metal Mickey", "Animal
Enfin, non content de placer ses terribles talents Lover" on which Anderson contributes to forge
de guitariste, Butler s’offre deux parties de piano particularly catching choruses with the help of a
- « So Young », « The Next Life ». very accurately mastered tambourine. The record
also offers titles like "Pantomime Horse",
C’est grâce à cette première œuvre éponyme que "Sleeping Pills" or else "Breakdown" which are
Suede posera, en premier, les fondements de la calmer, darker but as much catching. Finally, not
touche Brit Pop - même si les Stones Roses happy enough only to place his amazing talents
avaient déjà pas mal déblayé le terrain. De as a guitar player, Butler treats himself with two
nombreux artistes d’influences plus diverses parts on piano "So young" and "The next life"
bend?
it is thanks to this first eponymous work that
suede, as the first band, put the foundations of . . . ever tried it that way, have you ever tried
the Brit Pop touch - even though the Stone Roses it that way?
had quite cleared the site. Many artists with
various influences would go through this opening
by crystalising the movement, thus establishing
long lasting careers - Supergrass, the Boo
Radley, Oasis, Blur. But, in this context of the
beginning of the nineties where grunge was all
the rage beyond the Atlantic, it is very much
Suede who in England, held the level of pop so
high that this record was on edition symbolically
baptised "The London Suede".
Pantomime Horse
anderson / butler
i was born as a pantomime horse
ugly as the sun when he falls to the floor
i was cut from the wreckage one day
this is what i get for being that way
he said,
"i don't care if you're black or blue
me and the stars stay up for you
i don't care who's wrong or right
and i don't care for the uk tonight so stay,
stay"
released 10th october 1994 and then one day she moved away from those
nude records garden walls
she left some flowers, he smoked for hours
formats: lp/mc/cd (nude3lp/mc/cd) she understood the law
01 introducing the band 02 we are the pigs 03
heroine 04 the wild ones 05 daddy's speeding
06 the power 07 new generation 08 this i don't care if you're black or blue
hollywood life 09 the 2 of us 10 black or blue me and the stars stay up for you
11 the asphalt world 12 still life members of i don't care who's wrong or right
the band: Brett Anderson (voc, lyrics), and i don't care for the uk tonight
Bernard Butler (music, guitar, some so stay, stay, stay, stay
arrangements, some piano), Mat Osman
(bass), Simon Gilbert (drums)
there was a girl who flew the world
Produced by Ed Buller,
guest musicians: London Sinfonia And those shoes,
during live tour: Richard Oakes replaces Q magazine
Bernard Butler
Brett Anderson’s footwear is battered and
gaping; he constantly picks at the stitching,
whose valiant attempt at holding the leather flaps
into shoe-shape will soon be over. The hems of
his trouser legs have been taken up and hand
sewn on the inside, a party to which no iron was
invited. The word scruffy simply doesn’t suffice.
“People are always going to think that this band Well the church bells are calling
is just about to fall apart.” Concludes Osman “I Police cars on fire
look at people like R.E.M. and Paul Weller and And as they call you to the eye of the storm
sometimes I’m really jealous of the goodwill All the people say "Stay at home tonight"
they generate. People were desperate for that
R.E.M. album to be good. It’s never going to be I say we are the pigs, we are the swine
like that for us; there are always going to be huge We are the stars of the firing line
gangs of masked men with baseball caps waiting
for us. Come on, fuck up, fuck up! It’s always And as the smack cracks at your window
one crisis after the other… You wake up with a gun in your mouth
Oh let the nuclear wind blow away my sins
And I'll stay at home in my house
a review:
Instead of following though on the Bowie-esque
glam stomps of their debut, Suede concentrated
on their darker, more melodramatic tendencies
on their ambitious second album, Dog Man Star.
By all accounts, the recording of Dog Man Star
was plagued with difficulties -- Brett Anderson
wrote the lyrics in a druggy haze while
sequestered in a secluded Victorian mansion,
while Bernard Butler left before the album was
completed -- which makes its singular vision all
the more remarkable. Lacking any rocker on the
level of "The Drowners" or "Metal Mickey" --
only the crunching "This Hollywood Life" comes
close -- Dog Man Star is a self-indulgent and
pretentious album of dark, string-drenched epics.
But Suede are one of the few bands who wear
pretensions well, and after a few listens, the
album becomes thoroughly compelling. Nearly
every song on the record is hazy, feverish, and
heartbroken, and even the rockers have an
insular, paranoid tenor that heightens the album's
melancholy. The whole record would have
collapsed underneath its own intentions if
Butler's compositional skills weren't so subtly
nuanced and if Anderson's grandiose poetry
wasn't so strangely affecting. As it stands, Dog
Man Star is a strangely seductive record, filled
with remarkable musical peaks, from the Bowie-
esque stomp of "New Generation" to the stately
ballads "The Wild Ones" and "Still Life," which
are both reminiscent of Scott Walker. And while
Suede may choose to wear their influences on
their sleeve, they synthesize them in a totally
original way, making Dog Man Star a singularly
tragic and romantic album. ~
Written by Roger Morton - The Beautiful Ones i'm so sorry to hear about the news,
ISBN 1-873884-80-X ufo music ltd 1997 don't you worry,
i'll buy us a bottle and we'll drink in the petrol
Reviews in quotes: fumes,
i'm so sorry to hear about your world,
3 Stars (out of 5) - ...Suede get back to pop don't you worry,
basics, offering concise melodies and taut, there's a gap in the fence down by the nature
brashly energetic arrangements... reserve,
Rolling Stone (05/29/1997) hey, such a lovely day, such a lovely day,
such fun, looking at the lovers in a lay-by with
8 (out of 10) - ...Swinging free of their past, my little one.
ignoring the football present, Suede concentrate i'm so sorry to hear the news today,
on one sweet, super-trebly corner of the world. don't you worry,
Madly devoted flash hounds, they erase the there's been a speeding disaster so we'll go
distance between 1973 and 1997 and triumph at we'll go to the motorway,
their own game. i'm so sorry to hear about the scene,
Spin (05/01/1997) don't you worry,
just put on your trainers and get out of it with
me,
5 (out of 5) - ...Suede view this album as a brand- hey, such a lovely day, such a lovely day,
new beginning, and though the themes are such fun, looking at the lovers in a lay-by with
familiar, low life and loveless, in many ways my little one,
they're right....Busy, brave, bright, that's hey, such a lovely day, such a lovely day,
COMING UP... such fun, looking at the lorries in the litter
Alternative Press (02/01/1997) with my lovely one,
we could go dancing, we could go walking,
Ranked #96 in Q's 100 Greatest British Albums - we could go shopping, we could keep talking,
...A glam-rock crunch redolent of DIAMOND we could go drinking, we could sit thinking,
DOGS-era Bowie, while visualising mid-'90s we could go speeding, or we could go
youth as bored teens and beautiful losers. In their dreaming, see? oh hey . . .
neon-lit world, the kids only come alive via pills,
booze, sex and music...
Q (06/01/2000)
down
Richard was well aware that the next record wrote the bulk of the material that would form
wasn’t going to be a traditional guitar record, but “Head Music”. “Can’t get enough” – his personal
while Neil was getting more and more interested Lust for Life – and she’s in Fashion based
in synthesiser experimentation, it left Richard in around a loop called “Gloopy Strings”, were both
a bit of a pickle. “It kind of meant that I didn’t based on tapes sent by Neil, while the deeply
really know what to write, because I always personal Indian Strings and Down about his slide
write on guitar.” He admits “I always write from into crack addiction, were solo works. “These
a fairly straightforward classic point of view. I songs were the first I had written using eight-
always write imagining a verse and a chorus. track rather than four-track portastudios and
Neil was far more… he’d write vibe pieces. And these songs were the first I had written around
he was doing some great stuff. He did the demo technology like Juno synth, loops and drum
for “She’s in fashion”, which was called “Gloopy machines rather than acoustic guitars and
Strings”. It was like something out of Doctor pianos.” He says “I was trying to do Prince,
Who at that point! He did a lot of really Tricky and Krautrock…”
innovative stuff and I was really into it as music, Written by David Barnett – Love and Poison
but there was no way, I could have written like (2003) Andre Deutsch Publishers London
that. I couldn’t find my way around a sampler. I
knew how to play the guitar but, especially with
Brett, that wasn’t what he wanted to hear.”
A NEW MORNING
Everything will flow released: 30-09-2002 label: Sony 508956
producer: Stephen Street
anderson / oakes List of songs: Positivity, Obsessions, lonely girls,
watch the early morning sun, lost in tv, beautiful loser, streetlife, astrogirl,
drip like blood from the day, untitled morning, one hit to the body, when the
see the busy people run, rain fall, plus you belong to me, hidden track:
Oceans Suede are - Alex Lee (guitar, clavinova
produced by Stephen Street keyboards, harmonica), Richard Oakes (gibson
guitar), Simon Gilbert (drums), Mat Osman
members: Brett Anderson: (voc, some acoustic (bass), Brett Anderson (vocals, lyrics,
guitar and perc, some music, lyrics), Alex Lee percussions) (keyboard player Neil Codling (and
(guitars, clavinova, keyboards, harmonica), Simon's cousin) had to take early retirement in
Richard Oakes (some music, some keyboards, 2001 due to ME disease – (edit 2010) he now
guitars), Mat Osman (bass, some music), Simon makes music for Pearl Lowe, Faithless, Talvin
Gilbert (drums, some music) Singh, and his band Barry O Neill, played
(Neil Codling gets credits for some music but left keyboards on some Brett Anderson solo live
the band in 2001) dates and joined Penguin Cafe Orchestra in 2009
guest musicians: Millenia Strings
...morning review -
(Anderson) " a new morning is what it feels like to survive
A new morning" and come out the other end with a revitalised
sleepy head get out of bed the big bad world is joie de vivre. it’s an album that somehow
calling manages to combine all the best bits of previous
step in your shoes and catch the news suede records and still sound remarkably
it’s another morning unique." says Suede.net about the album .
reviewer is glad to hear that!
morning it’s morning
morning it’s morning again Three years in the make, produced by Stephen
Street of The Smiths, err Blur (Parklife) fame,
rub your eyes as nature sighs Stephen Street also produced "Disgraceful" by
the population’s yawning Dubstar which to me was a classy record,(A
as you step in your shoes there’s so much to record sounding like Beck was not really what
do Suede wanted so that's why they parted company
with Tony Hoffers, who produced Sea Changes,
it’s a brand new morning mind you the producer of the new Beck album
morning it’s morning called Nigel Godrich did produce the first
morning it’s morning again McAlmont&Butler album. Hence the Suede
family might know a thing or two about arty pop
and all around this cardboard town the cops music and if they listen to Cohen and
are crawling Bacharach...! And how does the music on that
the sirens scream and break your dreams record sound? Read on what a lefthanded guitar
it’s morning player has to say: "A new morning is a
it’s morning surprisingly harmonious affair with a lot of
it’s morning piano, acoustic guitar, beatleresque choirs and
lyrical bass-lines from the hands of the much
underestimated Master Mat Osman ( cut cut cut,
ed ) the wonderfully beautiful songs "When the
rain falls" and "Lonely girls" prove that, it is
still worth to go on giving an inclined listen to
this band" (writes Now Magazine, Austria) hmm
bringing the Beatles in a Suede review, lovely -
so you heard everybody? listen to this album!!! .
1. My Insatiable One
2. To The Birds
Drums: Simon Gilbert, bass: Mat Osman,
3. 3. Where The Pigs Don't Fly.
singing/lyrics: Brett anderson
4. He's Dead5.
guitars and keyboards as follows:
5. The Big Time
01 beautiful ones (richard Oakes/Neil Codling)
6. High Rising
02 animal nitrate (bernard butler)
7. The Living Dead
03 trash (new recording) (richard Oakes/1996
8. My Dark Star
Neil/2004 Alex Lee)
9. Killing Of A Flash Boy
04 metal mickey (bernard Butler)
10. Whipsnade
05 so young (bernard butler)
11. Modern Boys
06 the wild ones (bernard butler)
12. Together
07 obsessions (richard oakes, alex lee)
13. Bentswood Boys
08 filmstar (richard oakes, neil codling)
14. Europe Is Our Playground disc
09 can't get enough (richard oakes, neil codling)
10 everything will flow (richard oakes, neil
1. Every Monday Morning Comes
codling)
2. Have You Ever Been This Low?
11 stay together (bernard butler)
3. Another No One
(1994 not available on other albums)
4. Young Men
12 love the way you love (richard oakes, alex
5. The Sound Of The Streets
lee)
6. Money
(2004 not available on other albums)
7. W.S.D.
13 the drowners (bernard butler)
8. This Time
14 new generation (bernard butler)
9. Jumble Sale Mums
15 lazy (richard oakes, neil codling)
10. These Are The Sad Songs
16 she's in fashion (richard oakes, neil codling)
11. Sadie
17 attitude (richard oakes, alex lee)
12. Graffiti Women
(2004 not available on other albums)
13. Duchess
18 electricity (richard oakes, neil codling)
19 we are the pigs (bernard butler)
20 positivity (richard oakes, alex lee - music by
Neil Codling)
21 saturday night (richard oakes, neil codling)