Midge Ure

Midge Ure
OBE

Ure in 2004
Background information
Birth name James Ure
Born (1953-10-10) 10 October 1953
Cambuslang, Lanarkshire, Scotland
Genres
Occupation(s) Musician, singer-songwriter, producer
Instruments Vocals, guitar, keyboards, synthesizer
Years active 1972–present
Associated acts Slik, Rich Kids, Misfits, Visage, Thin Lizzy, Ultravox, Band Aid
Website midgeure.com
Notable instruments
Fender Stratocaster
Yamaha SG 2000
Ibanez Roadstar RS125

James "Midge" Ure, OBE (born 10 October 1953) is a Scottish musician, singer-songwriter and producer. His stage name, Midge, is a phonetic reversal of Jim, the diminutive form of his given name.

Ure enjoyed particular success in the 1970s and '80s in bands including Slik, Thin Lizzy, Rich Kids and Visage, and most notably as frontman of Ultravox. In 1984 Ure co-wrote and produced the charity single "Do They Know It's Christmas?", which has sold 3.7 million copies in the UK. The song is the second highest selling single in UK chart history.[1] Ure co-organised Band Aid, Live Aid and Live 8 with Bob Geldof. Ure acts as trustee for the charity, and serves as ambassador for Save the Children.

Ure is known for being the producer and writer of several synthpop/new wave hit singles of the 1980s, including "Fade To Grey" (1980) by Visage and the Ultravox signature songs "Vienna" (1980) and "Dancing with Tears in My Eyes" (1984), for which he was also on lead vocals.[2] In 1985 Ure's solo debut album The Gift, which reached number two in the UK Albums Chart, included the UK number one single "If I Was". Ure has had four other UK top-30 solo hit singles: "No Regrets", "That Certain Smile", "Call of the Wild" and "Cold, Cold Heart".

Career

Early years

Born to a working-class family in Cambuslang, Lanarkshire, Scotland, Ure attended Cambuslang Primary School and Rutherglen Academy in Glasgow until he was 15 years old. For the first 10 years of his life he lived in a one-bedroom tenement flat on the outskirts of Glasgow with his brother, sister and parents.[3]

After leaving school Ure attended Motherwell Technical College and then began to work as an engineer, training at the National Engineering Laboratory (NEL), in nearby East Kilbride.[4] He started playing music in a Glasgow band called Stumble (c.1969 – c.1971). The band's line-up included lead guitarist Alan Wright, Fraser Spiers on harmonica, Kenny Ireland on bass and Alec Baird on drums.

Salvation, Slik and PVC2

Ure joined Salvation as a guitarist in 1972. The band had been formed in Glasgow in June 1970 by the brothers Kevin (vocals) and Jim McGinlay (bass guitar). Jim McGinlay (born James McGinlay) decided to turn Ure's name backwards to "Mij" (Midge) to avoid any confusion caused by two members of the band having the same first name.[4] Ure has since presented himself in the music scene as Midge Ure.[5] The band performed covers as house band in the Glasgow discothèque Clouds, the venue for major bands playing on tour in the city. The band also comprised Billy McIsaac on keyboards and Kenny Hyslop on drums.

In April 1974 Kevin McGinlay left to pursue a solo career,[5] so Ure assumed vocals in addition to his guitar duties. In November 1974 the band changed its name to Slik, with Bay City Rollers writers Bill Martin and Phil Coulter providing songs. In 1975 Ure turned down an offer to be the lead singer of the Sex Pistols, stating that he felt at the time that Malcolm McLaren had "his priorities completely wrong!", a position he later reversed.[6]

Slik achieved a UK number one single in February 1976 with "Forever and Ever". In early 1977 Jim McGinlay decided to quit the band, being replaced by Russell Webb. Slik terminated their contract with Martin and Coulter, believing that their boy-band image was hindering their chances of success during the rising punk rock scene. They changed their name to PVC2 and adopted a more punkish style. Ure's only release with the band under this name was the single "Put You in the Picture".

Rich Kids

By October 1977 Ure had left PVC2 to join former Sex Pistol Glen Matlock in Rich Kids. He moved to London and soon found himself immersed in a scene he had previously only read about in the pages of the NME.[7] Musical tensions within the band led to Ure's departure. Having acquired a synthesiser, Ure – alongside band-mate Rusty Egan – wanted to integrate the new instrument into the band's sound. With Glen Matlock and Steve New preferring to remain with the traditional guitars and drums approach, the band split.

In January 2010 Rich Kids reformed, for one night only, for a benefit concert for Steve New who was fighting terminal cancer (and died on 24 May 2010).[8] Although it had been over 30 years since they played together, the press reports praised the gig, which included energetic performances of "Ghosts of Princes in Towers" and "Hung on You". Rich Kids were joined on stage by Mick Jones (The Clash) and Gary Kemp. Ure also played an acoustic set of Ultravox and Visage songs.

In February 2016 it was announced that Rich Kids will reform for a joint headline show with The Professionals at London’s O2 Shepherds Bush Empire.[9]

Visage

In 1978 Egan and Ure formed Visage with lead vocalist Steve Strange, and utilised their new synthesiser when they recorded a cover of the Zager & Evans classic "In The Year 2525" for promotional purposes. The line-up was expanded in 1979 with the addition of Magazine members Dave Formula, John McGeoch and Barry Adamson, and Ultravox keyboardist Billy Currie, and the band signed briefly to Radar Records for the release of their first single "Tar". Egan and Ure also formed the short-lived band The Misfits, whose career was curtailed by an approach from Thin Lizzy. Though Visage's first single was unsuccessful, they signed with Polydor Records in 1980; their second single, "Fade to Grey", became a hit.

Thin Lizzy

Ure already knew Thin Lizzy singer Phil Lynott, and in early 1979 Ure received co-writing credit for "Get Out of Here" on Thin Lizzy's album Black Rose. In July 1979 Ure stepped in to help Thin Lizzy complete a US tour following guitarist Gary Moore's abrupt departure. Ure also contributed guitar parts to "Things Ain't Working Out" and "Dublin" for the 1979 Thin Lizzy remix compilation "The Continuing Saga of the Ageing Orphans". Thin Lizzy then toured America and Japan. In 1980, during the second part of this tour, Ure switched to keyboards, and was replaced by Dave Flett and then Snowy White as guitarist. At the end of the tour Ure left Thin Lizzy and returned to his primary interest at that time, Ultravox. Ure continued to collaborate with Lynott, co-writing Lynott's biggest solo hit, "Yellow Pearl".

Ultravox

In 1979 Ure and Billy Currie formed a close bond playing together in Visage. The pair decided to resurrect Currie's former group, the synthpop band Ultravox. The group had been presumed defunct since guitarist Robin Simon quit and lead singer John Foxx had left to pursue a solo career. In April 1979 Ure regrouped the band and assumed duties as bandleader, singer, songwriter, guitarist and second keyboardist. This was now the second incarnation of that band, and it would prove to become the "classic" line-up, with Currie (keyboards, violin), Chris Cross (bass) and Warren Cann (electronic drums). Although Ure had spent the latter half of 1979 on tour with Thin Lizzy, Ultravox found time late in the year to tour in the USA. During this time the band wrote a number of songs which were included on their first album with Ure.

The album, "Vienna", was recorded in 1980. Although it was the band's fourth album, it was the first of the "new" phase with Ure, and the first one to chart, although it was only a minor success on first release. However, when the title track "Vienna" was released as a single in early 1981 it became a huge hit and spent four weeks at no.2 in the UK singles chart and was the 5th highest selling single in the UK that year. The album itself re-entered the album chart and peaked at no.3, proving itself one of New Wave's, and New Romantic's, best-known examples.

Inspired by the 1949 film "The Third Man", the promo video for "Vienna" was directed by Russell Mulcahy[10] utilising cinematic techniques, and became quite influential. In an interview Ure recalled the way that "music video changed after that. All these things that became video clichés – cropping the top and bottom off the screen, shooting on film as opposed to videotape, making it look like a movie ... we were quite a groundbreaking act for a while."[7] The same year that Ultravox released the "Vienna" album, Visage also released their debut album which made the UK Top 20 and featured the hit single "Fade to Grey" (co-written by Ure and Currie with Chris Payne), also influential in the direction of the New Romantic electropop music scene.[11] For a while between 1979 and 1980, then, Ure was deeply committed to three different bands, all of them quite successful: Ultravox, Visage and Thin Lizzy.

Ultravox (Midge Ure) in concert, April 1984

In 1981 Ultravox recorded their second album with Ure as frontman, "Rage in Eden", which was also a Top 5 hit in the UK. After its release Ure and Currie reconvened with Visage to record the band's second album, "The Anvil". Released in early 1982, it was a Top 10 hit; but Ure left the band soon after its release, citing creative differences with frontman Steve Strange. The same year saw Ultravox record and release their third album with Ure, "Quartet", with production by Beatles producer George Martin. The album became their third Top 10 hit and featured four Top 20 singles. This period also saw Ure work as a producer for other artists, amongst them Steve Harley, Skids and Strasse, and in 1982 he released his first solo single, a cover of the 1968 Tom Rush song "No Regrets" (based on the 1975 hit cover version by The Walker Brothers), which made the UK Top 10.

After the live album "Monument" in 1983 Ultravox released their fourth studio album with Ure, "Lament", in 1984. The album was another Top 10 success and contained the Top 3 hit "Dancing with Tears in My Eyes". The band released their first "greatest hits" album at the end of the year, featuring all the singles from 1980 onwards. The album peaked at no.2 in the UK and was later certified triple platinum.[12]

After Ure's successful debut solo album in 1985, the fifth and final Ultravox album with Ure, U-Vox, was released in 1986. Although another Top 10 hit, the album (and singles) fared less well than their earlier releases.[13]

In 2004 he collabored with the electro-trance band "Jam & Spoon" on the title "Something To Remind Me", a song featured on their "Tripomatic Fairytales 3003" LP.

In 2009 Ure and the other members reformed Ultravox for the Return to Eden tour to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the "Vienna" album, followed up the next year with a second round of the tour. In late 2010 Ultravox started working on their sixth album fronted by Ure. This album, titled "Brilliant", was released in May 2012.[14] Following this release the band embarked on the 'Brilliant Tour' performing shows in the UK and Europe in late 2012. In November 2013 Ultravox were special guests on a four-date arena tour with Simple Minds.

Band Aid

In 1984 Ure co-wrote the Band Aid hit, "Do They Know It's Christmas?" with Bob Geldof. Ure was rehearsing with Ultravox for an episode of the Channel 4 music show "The Tube" when host Paula Yates handed him the phone. It was her then husband, Geldof, who proceeded, recalls Ure, "to rant on about the Michael Buerk BBC news report on the Ethiopian famine". Geldof provided the initial lyrics, with Ure working the musical theme on a small keyboard in his kitchen. The second half was composed by Ure, with the bridging chorus only assembled in the studio when the artists had gathered. Ure has described the song as not one of the best he has ever written, commenting that "the momentum the artists gave it in the recording studio is what made it".[15]

At the studio recording Ure also took on the production duties for the song. Although Trevor Horn had been approached to undertake this role, he needed more time to fulfil other obligations than was available.[16] Ure stepped into the breach, with Horn providing his studio, remixing the track and producing the 12" version. Ure and Geldof jointly set up the Band Aid Trust, and he remains active as a Band Aid Trustee to this day. He also co-organised the Live Aid concert of 1985 along with Geldof and Harvey Goldsmith. Geldof and Ure have been honoured with two Ivor Novello awards for writing the song.[17]

Solo career

Midge Ure during Here and Now Tour 2011

After working on the Band Aid project and during a hiatus from Ultravox, Ure pursued a solo career in 1985. The single, "If I Was", was a UK number one single, and his debut album, The Gift, reached No. 2. After returning to Ultravox for what would be their final album together, the band effectively disbanded in 1987 and Ure concentrated solely on his solo career but with less success. The albums Answers to Nothing (1988) and Pure (1991) failed to make the UK top 20. "If I Was", a career retrospective, was released in 1993, and in 1998 the single "Breathe" was a hit in Europe, boosted by its use in a Swatch TV ad campaign. The video was directed by Dani Jacobs.[18]

In 2005 Ure organised Live 8 concerts with Bob Geldof with the aim of pressing G8 leaders into taking action to end world poverty. Later that year he was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services to music and charity. He has also received five honorary degrees in recent years. He was made an Honorary Doctor of Arts in 2005 by the University of Abertay Dundee for his artistic and charity work over the past 30 years.[19] He was made a Doctor of Music by University of Edinburgh in 2006.[20] In 2007 he received from the University of Paisley his third honorary doctorate, for his contribution to Scottish culture and charity work.[21] In 2008, Glasgow Caledonian University awarded him his fourth honorary doctorate, for his musical and humanitarian achievements.[22] He was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws from the University of Bath in December 2010.[23] Ure is an ambassador for Save the Children[24] and in recent years he has gone back to Ethiopia and visited Sierra Leone in that capacity.

Ure continues to perform his own songs, along with popular Ultravox songs, in concerts both solo, acoustic and with a band. Ultravox briefly reformed in 2009 and undertook a successful tour (as well as appearing at the Isle of Wight 2009 Festival) to celebrate, in their own words, the "anniversary of their classic line-up". Ure stated in a BBC interview in April 2009, "we are not trying to get our youth back, nor the hair that's fallen off already".[25][26] Further concerts in the UK and Europe were scheduled in 2010. Ure visited the US in 2013 for a tour and did a number of concerts.[27] His new solo album, Fragile, was released on 4 July 2014.

In 2015 his cover of David Bowie's "The Man Who Sold the World" was featured in "Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain".

In 2016. Midge played an acoustic set at the Acoustic Festival of Britain, where he received a 'Lifetime Achievement Award' from festival organiser Mike Stephens.

Personal life

Ure resides near Bath. He has been married twice: to actress and writer Annabel Giles (with whom he has one daughter, Molly, who later found fame with The Faders) and to Sheridan Forbes (with whom he has three daughters, Kitty, Ruby and Flossie).[4]

Ure's two main passions are music and cooking. He was able to indulge the second of these in the 2007 "Celebrity MasterChef" series, winning his heat and progressing to the final on 15 June, alongside Nadia Sawalha and Craig Revel Horwood. Although all three competitors greatly impressed the judges, the trophy was won by Sawalha.[28]

Ure is a recovering alcoholic, something he openly admits and discusses in his autobiography "If I Was".[29] In an interview with "The Guardian" in 2012 Ure said: "If my family hadn't supported me through my alcoholism, I don't know if I'd be here today." He said that the turning point came when he was on a holiday and he went back to his car to get a bottle of alcohol. "As I turned round there was my then 11-year-old daughter looking at me and it was utterly heartbreaking and devastating to see the look on her face."[3]

Solo discography

Albums

Year Album UK[30] US Label Catalogue Notes
1985 The Gift 2 Chrysalis 0946 CCD 1508
1988 Answers to Nothing 30 88 Chrysalis CCD 1649
1991 Pure 36 BMG 261,922
1996 Breathe 95 BMG 74321346292
1996 The Gift (Re-Release) Chrysalis CDGOLD 1045 Expanded reissue with four bonus tracks.
1998 Answers to Nothing Chrysalis 496 8242 Expanded reissue with four bonus tracks.
2000 Went to Coney Island on a Mission from God... Be Back by Five EvenMore Entertainment Instrumental soundtrack.
2001 Move Me Curb Records CURCD 100
2006 Move Me + Hypertension Expanded 2CD digipack reissue with bonus tracks.
2008 10 Hypertension HYP 8264 Cover versions album.
2009 Pure + Breathe Edsel Records EDSD 2034 Expanded 2CD reissue of both albums with bonus tracks.
2014 Fragile 66 Hypertension Music

Compilations and live albums

Singles

Single Year UK[30] US US
Alt
US
Main
Album
"No Regrets" 1982 9
"After a Fashion" (with Mick Karn) 1983 39
"If I Was" 1985 1 The Gift
"That Certain Smile" 28
"Wastelands" 1986 46
"Call of the Wild" 27
"Answers to Nothing" 1989 49 26 Answers to Nothing
"Dear God" 55 95 4 6
"Cold, Cold Heart" 1991 17 12 Pure
"I See Hope (In the Morning Light)"
"Breathe" 1996 70 Breathe
"Guns and Arrows" 166
"You Move Me" 2001 Move Me
"Beneath a Spielberg Sky"

References

  1. Sedghi, Ami (4 November 2012). "UK's million-selling singles: the full list". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 20 April 2013.
  2. "Midge Ure: Music's quiet man". BBC. London. 10 June 2005. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
  3. 1 2 McGrath, Nick (22 September 2012). "Midge Ure: My family values". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 Hanks, Robert (4 June 2005). "Midge Ure: Back in the spotlight". The Independent. London. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  5. 1 2 "Kevin McGinlay Salvation".
  6. "Midge Ure interview", Global Friends of Scotland. Archived 14 January 2009.
  7. 1 2 "Midge Ure on Rocking Scots Radio 4 12 May 2007".
  8. "2010 ➤ Rich Kid Steve New (aka Stella Nova) dies at 50". Shapersofthe80s.com. 24 May 2010. Retrieved 17 June 2013.
  9. http://www.withguitars.com/rich-kids-professionals-joint-headline-show-announced-first-time-ever
  10. Garcia, Alex S. "Ultravox – Vienna (version 1: concept)". Music Video Database. Retrieved 26 July 2008.
  11. Rimmer, Dave. New Romantics: The Look (2003), Omnibus Press. ISBN 0-7119-9396-3
  12. "Ultravox (albums)". www.officialcharts.com. Retrieved 2016-01-16.
  13. "Ulstravox - u-vox". Retrieved 2016-01-16.
  14. Eames, Tom (31 May 2012). "Ultravox release first new album with Midge Ure in 26 years". Digital Spy. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  15. Crichton, Torcuil. "Whatever Happened To Midge Ure?" 25 November 2007, Sunday Herald
  16. Hunt, Dennis. "Pop Music Ure, The Elf Behind 'Christmas'", 28 April 1985, LA Times, p.63.
  17. "Live Aid duo win second Ivor gong", 4 June 2005, Music Week, p.1
  18. "Midge Ure > Music Videos > Breathe". MTV. 11 April 1997.
  19. "Midge Ure given honorary degree, 12 October 2005". BBC News. 12 October 2005. Retrieved 5 January 2010.
  20. Vallely, Joanna (1 March 2006). "Midge Ure in line for great big honour from university, 1 March 2006". The Scotsman. Edinburgh.
  21. "Third degree for Scots singer Midge Ure, 26 June 2007". The Scotsman. Edinburgh. 26 June 2007.
  22. "Midge tots up 4th uni honour". 26 November 2008, Evening Times.
  23. "Singer Midge Ure to receive honorary degree from University of Bath". This is Bath. 7 December 2010. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  24. "Midge's work with Save the Children". Save the Children. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  25. "Ultravox announce UK dates for Return to Eden tour (2009)" indieLONDON, 2008.
  26. Spencer, Kathryn. " Midge collects another degree", 27 November 2008, The Express.
  27. Midge Ure delivers a memorable night of Ultravox and more at Beachland (review).
  28. Sloan, Billy (5 June 2011). "Rocker Midge Ure reveals his terror as he goes from Popstar to Operastar". Daily Record. Scotland. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  29. Egan, Sean (16 November 2004). "Midge Ure Feeds His Mind". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  30. 1 2 3 Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 577. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
  31. "midgeure.com – If I Was – DVD". Apple.clickandbuild.com. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
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