Danny Wilson (band)

For other people with the same name, see Daniel Wilson.
Danny Wilson
Origin Dundee, Scotland
Genres Pop rock,[1] sophisti-pop[2]
Years active 1984–1991, 1993, 2014
Labels Virgin Records
Associated acts King L, Transister, Swiss Family Orbison, Pony, Simple Minds, Deacon Blue, The Bible, Boo Hewerdine
Past members Gary Clark
Kit Clark
Ged Grimes

Danny Wilson were a Scottish pop group formed in Dundee, Scotland. The band are best known for their 1988 UK number 3 hit single "Mary's Prayer".

The band served as a launchpad for the career of Gary Clark, who also played in the 1990s bands King L and Transister before becoming a successful songwriter for other artists including Natalie Imbruglia, Liz Phair, Nick Carter, k.d. lang and former Spice Girls Melanie C and Emma Bunton. Other former members of the band have played in Simple Minds, Deacon Blue and Swiss Family Orbison.

History

Background and early history

Gary Clark and Ged Grimes grew up together in Dundee, Scotland and played together in school bands.[3][4] Influenced by sophisticated soul and pop artists such as Steely Dan, Stevie Wonder and Bacharach and David, they eventually moved to London, where they played in the bands Perfect Strangers and Dream Kitchen during the early 1980s. Neither band met with success: circa 1984, while still in London, Clark and Grimes noticed that talent scouts and journalists were beginning to follow the soul and pop scenes in Scottish cities. Returning to Dundee, they teamed up with Gary Clark's younger brother Kit Clark to form a new band called Spencer Tracy (after the film star of the same name).[4]

Initially spotted busking around Dundee, Spencer Tracy signed to Virgin Records in 1986. After objections from the estate of the original Spencer Tracy the band was obliged to change its name. Gary Clark recalls this as "a real last-minute crazy, fearful moment... The album was done, the artwork was done... We were just told, 'If you try and use this, you will be sued.' And so the label just went 'Nope. Change it. Now.'"[3] For their new name, the band chose Danny Wilson, taken from a 1952 Frank Sinatra film called Meet Danny Wilson (itself a favourite film of the Clark brothers' father).[3]

All three members of Danny Wilson played a variety of instruments and had a good grounding in production skills, resulting in a degree of skill and practical independence which stood them in good stead for future development. The band would later summarise their approach as follows: "Whoever has an idea can play it and we'll record it. However that means that it's pretty impossible to document who played what on what track. Sometimes Ged might be playing an instrument (usually a rented ethnic one) and Kit would jump in for the middle eight."[5] Generally speaking, Gary Clark played most of the guitar and piano parts on album while Grimes played all of the bass parts. Kit Clark functioned as a multi-instrumental wild card (including accordion, guitar and found percussion) and provided unorthodox musical ideas. The band once summarised his contribution as "if you hear something mental and think to yourself "What the f**k was that?" then it's probably Kit."[5]

The band remained a trio throughout its lifetime, hiring in other members (drummers in particular). Lead vocals were shared between the Clark brothers: Gary, as the band's main songwriter, took the majority of these, but over time Kit would sing more of them.

Meet Danny Wilson

The band's debut album Meet Danny Wilson was released in 1987. An acclaimed mix of sophisti-pop featuring elements of soul, jazz and bossa nova, it featured guest appearances by Lester Bowie's Brass Fantasy among others.

The lead single, "Mary's Prayer", issued in the spring, was initially unsuccessful in the United Kingdom, missing the official UK Top 75 and peaking at number 86. However the US release of "Mary's Prayer" that summer afforded Danny Wilson a surprise US Top 40 hit, peaking at number 23 on the Billboard Hot 100 The band toured the United States in the autumn of 1987, supporting Simply Red and proving successful with that group's fans. [4]

The US success of "Mary's Prayer" led to its UK re-release with a resultant number 42 UK chart peak. After "Mary's Prayer" topped a BBC Radio 1 phone-in poll of listeners' nominations for 1987 singles which had undeservedly failed to reach the upper UK chart, [6] Virgin Records UK gave the single a second re-release with a resultant number 3 UK chart peak. [7] Meet Danny Wilson generated two more singles: "Davy" and "A Girl I Used To Know", both of which preceded the successful reissue of "Mary's Prayer" but neither of which matched its success. [7]

Bebop Moptop

The band released its second album, Bebop Moptop the following year. Although the debut album had been entirely written by Gary Clark, he was no longer the band's only songwriter. Ged Grimes and Kit Clark co-wrote "I Can't Wait" and Kit also contributed "N.Y.C Shanty", both of which Kit sang on the record. The first single released from the album was "Never Gonna Be The Same", but this was overshadowed by its successor, the hit single "The Second Summer of Love", which reached number 23 in the British charts. [7] The song had originally been written by Gary Clark as a joke about the rise of acid house and its associated culture and media impact. As initially written it was barely more than a minute long, so when Virgin Records picked the song for single release the band extended it via a long harmonica solo. [3]

Three more singles were released from Bebop Moptop – "If Everything You Said Was True", the slow ballad "If You Really Love Me (Let Me Go)", and "I Can't Wait", but in spite of Virgin Records' promotional efforts, none of them were hits. Gary Clark has subsequently suggested that this was simply down to airplay problems: "Virgin were really great at that time, and, y'know, we didn't really fit what was on the radio at any time. We kind of got lucky with "Mary's Prayer," in the sense that it just happened to fit, whereas the records were pretty eclectic. And Virgin, even though they loved the band and loved the stuff, they obviously had trouble at radio. It didn't fit with what was going on." [3]

Split

By the time the band began to demo the third Danny Wilson album in 1991, all three members had written more songs than would fit onto the album, leading to arguments and frustration. Kit Clark made an attempt to solve the situation by persuading Virgin Records to let him record a solo album, but was rebuffed - following this, he decided to leave the band.[3] Deciding that Danny Wilson would be too much reduced without Kit's contribution ("he was kind of a really good force just in terms of ideas and the flavor of things"[3]), Gary Clark opted to break up the band, maintaining its creative integrity and the friendships between all members before both were spoiled.[3][8] A second reason cited for Danny Wilson's dissolution was the three members' collective frustration with the way the band itself overshadowed the people in it. The band name was often mistaken for that of a non-existent frontman, for whom Grimes and the Clark brothers were simply sidemen. Kit Clark once commented "We felt like three men in one grave."[9]

The split was amicable, with all three members supporting – and sometimes playing on – each other's future projects. A compilation album, Sweet Danny Wilson, was released by Virgin Records in 1991 (containing a bonus album of live recordings called Three-In-A-Bed Romp). The songs which Clark had written for the unrecorded third Danny Wilson album ended up on his 1993 solo album Ten Short Songs About Love (on which both Ged Grimes and Kit Clark performed).[3]

Post-band activities

Following the relative commercial failure[3] of Ten Short Songs About Love, Clark abandoned solo work to form first the rock band King L (with American bass player Eric Pressly and former Bible guitarist Neill Maccoll) and then the pop band Transister (with Pressly and lead singer Keeley Hawkes). Clark then stepped down from performing to turn his attention to writing and producing for other artists, such as Natalie Imbruglia, Liz Phair, Nick Carter, Ashley Parker Angel, k.d. lang, Ferras and Spice Girls Melanie C and Emma Bunton. Following spells living in London, France and Los Angeles, he has recently returned to live in Dundee.

In 1991, Kit Clark released a solo EP called Lovedung on Reverb Records. He went on to play with his own bands Pony and Swiss Family Orbison[10] during the 1990s and early 2000s. In 2010 he began to perform as a solo artist.[11][12][13]

Having spent time as a music writer for computer games, Grimes is currently the bass player for Simple Minds (and has also played with another high-profile Scottish rock band, Deacon Blue).

Occasional reunions (1993, 2014)

On 30 October 1993, Gary Clark and former Bible frontman Boo Hewerdine (who were friends and songwriting collaborators) played a full-length concert at London's Queen Elizabeth Hall, sharing the stage throughout while alternating songs written by one or the other or by both together. Both Ged Grimes and Kit Clark played in the five-piece concert band, which played a number of a number of Danny Wilson songs (in effect, performing as a version of Danny Wilson fronted by both Clark and Hewerdine, although the evening was billed very much as friends playing together rather than a formal reunion).

The Danny Wilson trio would not reunite on stage for another twenty-one years. In mid-2014 (around the time Gary Clark returned to live in Dundee following many years of being based in London or Los Angeles), the band briefly and secretly reformed to play a short set at a friend's wedding in Dundee. Clark announced afterwards that there were no plans to extend the reunion and that it had taken place as a favour. However, on 24 September 2014 the band reunited for their first true public performance in twenty-five years, playing "Mary's Prayer" at the opening ceremony of the Ryder Cup at Glasgow Hydro (alongside other performers including Texas, Amy Macdonald, Twin Atlantic, Eddi Reader and Midge Ure). Emphasizing Kit Clark's solo career and Ged Grimes' ongoing work with Simple Minds, Clark once again stated that the performance was "unlikely to herald a permanent reunion".[1][14]

Group members

Core band

Discography

Albums

Singles

References

  1. 1 2 Wilson, Alan. "Danny Wilson to reunite for Ryder Cup gig". The Courier. Retrieved 2016-08-20.
  2. Inskeep, Thomas; Soto, Alfred. "The Bluffer's Guide – Sophisti-Pop". Stylus. Retrieved 28 April 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Will Harris (2009-08-31). "Hooks 'N' You: A Portrait of Gary Clark as a Young Recording Artist". Popdose.com. Retrieved 2016-08-20.
  4. 1 2 3 "Meet Danny Wilson/lisa Lisa & Cult Jam/alabama/expose - philly-archives". Articles.philly.com. 1987-10-30. Retrieved 2016-08-20.
  5. 1 2 "Danny Wilson | Listen and Stream Free Music, Albums, New Releases, Photos, Videos". Myspace.com. Retrieved 2016-08-20.
  6. "Hooks 'n' You: A Portrait of Gary Clark as a Young Recording Artist". PopDose.com. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
  7. 1 2 3 Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 140. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
  8. "Danny Wilson (2) Discography at Discogs". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2016-08-20.
  9. Sleevenotes from Sweet Danny Wilson compilation album
  10. "Haven Records - Swiss Family Orbison". Boohewerdine.net. Retrieved 2016-08-20.
  11. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 21 August 2014. Retrieved 2013-02-23.
  12. "Jocknroll News: Dropkick's Autumn Newsletter | Jocknroll Ain't Noise Pollution". Jocknroll.wordpress.com. 2010-10-14. Retrieved 2016-08-20.
  13. "Belladrum Tartan Heart's in the right place". The Courier. Retrieved 2016-08-20.
  14. "Danny Wilson to play again". Evening Telegraph. 2014-09-16. Retrieved 2016-08-20.

External links

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