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Jollification

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76-689: Jollification is the third album by English rock band the Lightning Seeds . All songs were written by Ian Broudie , with contributions on some tracks from Alison Moyet , Ian McNabb and Terry Hall . Four tracks from the album were released as singles in the UK: " Lucky You ", "Marvellous", "Change" and "Perfect". It peaked at number 12 in the UK Albums Chart , and gained platinum certification in December 1995. In 1989 Ian Broudie began recording alone under

152-639: A No. 1 on the UK Singles Chart and was adopted as a football chant , not only in the UK but also in countries such as Germany, where the single and accompanying video reached No. 16 in their charts. In 1997 Lightning Seeds headlined the Hillsborough Justice Concert, which was held at the Liverpool Anfield stadium to raise fund for the families in their struggle for justice. During this period

228-400: A PR campaign that proclaimed it "the greatest album ever made" according to McCulloch, 1984's Ocean Rain reached No. 4, and today is widely regarded as the band's landmark album. Single extracts " Silver " (UK No. 30) and " Seven Seas " (UK No. 16) consolidated the album's continued commercial success. In the same year, McCulloch had a minor solo hit with his cover version of

304-702: A UK promotional tour followed. In 1998, Broudie, Baddiel & Skinner reworked and recorded an updated version of their hit football anthem for the FIFA World Cup in France . "3 Lions '98" reached No. 1 in the UK Singles Chart, becoming the first song to top the charts on two occasions with different sets of lyrics. In 1998, the Lightning Seeds also performed on the Main Stage at both the Glastonbury Festival and

380-588: A band featuring musicians Sean Payne ( The Zutons ), Bill Ryder Jones and Nick Power ( The Coral ) and Broudie's son, Riley. The event was filmed but is yet to be released. On 22 August 2014, the Lightning Seeds were joined by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in Liverpool's Sefton Park for a show in front of 30,000 people, reprising the Philharmonic show without the special guests. In December 2016,

456-580: A consistently changing line up over the years with Broudie the only constant. The tour benefitted from the success of the second single from the album, "Change", which reached No. 13 in the UK Singles Charts , becoming the band's second UK top 20 hit. The song was also featured on the soundtrack for the hit movie Clueless . The album Jollification became a critical success and the singles taken from this album, "Lucky You", "Marvellous" and "Perfect" made noticeable impact. Mark Farrow 's album cover featured

532-529: A cover version of the Doors song " People Are Strange " to The Lost Boys soundtrack, which featured a guest appearance by original Doors keyboard player Ray Manzarek , who also contributed keyboards to a re-recorded version of "Bedbugs and Ballyhoo". "Never Stop" was used in the Alan Bennett film History Boys . Although the album was a significant commercial success, it received mixed reviews from critics, and

608-488: A flock of seagulls flying across sky in front of them. The photograph was taken on the beach at Porthcawl in South Wales on a day off from recording. According to photographer Brian Griffin, they had to use buckets of fish offal to entice the seagulls to fly through the shot. Manager Bill Drummond and Korova label head, Rob Dickins, reportedly hated the image and Atkins, Griffin and the band had to fight to have it accepted as

684-558: A hired musician rather than a full member of the band. The revised lineup performed live on BBC TV in September, presenting two new songs, "The Game" and " Lips Like Sugar ", but by this stage, they were under intense pressure from their label to create what Warners considered to be more commercial material. Will Sergeant later recalled the band's outrage when Warner executive Rob Dickens played them Peter Gabriel 's album So , declaring "I want you to sound like this!" Their fifth studio album,

760-538: A montage of the activities of the band members as they prepare for and head to the show. The concert was staged on January 17, 1981, in the striking Victorian-era glass concert hall in the Buxton Pavilion Gardens in Derbyshire before a specially invited audience. Before the show, advertisements had been placed in the music press, and 500 lucky fans who responded were given free passes and a map directing them to

836-627: A month on a single song, and tensions within the band were being inflamed by McCulloch's increasing alcohol use, and the star treatment he was being accorded. In the United States, the band's best-known songs were "The Killing Moon" and " Lips Like Sugar ". "Bring on the Dancing Horses" is well known as one of the songs on the soundtrack to the John Hughes film Pretty in Pink . The band also contributed

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912-704: A month-long round of dates in the United States beginning in March. April-May saw them playing concerts in Europe and the UK, followed by the second and more extensive leg of their U.S. tour during August-September, concluding with a show at the famed Greek Theater in Los Angeles on September 9. The band then immediately undertook an intensive two-month UK tour, beginning in Dublin on September 15 and concluding at London's Brixton Academy on October 24 (their last concert of 1984). Following

988-557: A motorcycle accident on 14 June 1989. De Freitas was on his way to Liverpool from London to take part in the group's first rehearsal with Burke, when his Ducati motorbike collided with another vehicle on the A51 At Longdon Green in Staffordshire, killing him instantly. He was 27 years old and was survived by his widow and their infant daughter, who was born in 1988. After recruiting new drummer Damon Reece to replace de Freitas,

1064-526: A re-worked version also reaching the top spot in 1998. Prior to the forming his own project, Ian Broudie had been a member of the 1970s post-punk band Big in Japan and the new wave bands Original Mirrors and Care . By the late 1980s, Broudie was better known as a producer than as a musician, and had produced albums for new wave and alternative rock artists such as Echo & the Bunnymen , Wall of Voodoo and

1140-582: A show on November 11 at the Manly Vale Hotel on Sydney's northern beaches. This was recorded, and four tracks from that concert were subsequently included as bonus tracks on the 2003 CD reissue of the second album. Heaven Up Here was recorded at Rockfield Studios in Wales during March, and was released in May 1981. Produced by the band and Hugh Jones , it proved a very positive and enjoyable recording experience for

1216-540: A tour of Scandinavia in April 1985, performing cover versions of songs from Television , the Rolling Stones , Talking Heads and the Doors . Recordings from the tour emerged as the semi-bootleg On Strike . On 21 June, they performed a headlining set at that year's Glastonbury Festival , where they premiered two new songs from their next album. Ocean Rain proved difficult to follow up, and their only releases in 1985 were

1292-472: The Kurt Weill standard " September Song ". After the release of Ocean Rain , manager Bill Drummond announced that the band was taking a year off to write material for the next album, but at the end of 1984 they replaced him, reportedly because they were unhappy that the band wasn't making enough money. Drummond was succeeded by Duran Duran tour manager Mick Hancock. Echo & the Bunnymen resumed work with

1368-422: The V Festival in the UK. Their album Tilt (1999) was dance-oriented and featured collaborations with Stephen Jones . The single "Life's Too Short" was heralded by BBC Radio 1 DJ Chris Moyles as "one of the band's strongest singles to date" and rose to No. 27 in the UK Singles Chart. The band's second greatest hits album The Very Best of the Lightning Seeds was released on 12 June 2006, followed by

1444-717: The psychedelic hit " Pure ", which reached the top 20 in the UK, and the top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States. Both "Pure" and followup single "All I Want" also reached the Modern Rock Tracks top 10. Broudie resumed his production career after the success of the first Lightning Seeds album, but returned to songwriting in 1991 and moved labels from Rough Trade to Virgin . He then resumed his Lightning Seeds recording career, drafting Simon Rogers as his studio partner in production, arrangements, and instrumentation. Rogers, who had also helped with programming on

1520-451: The Drummers of Burundi . Their only American date that year was a one-off show at New York's Peppermint Lounge on August 24, and their 1982 touring schedule concluded with four UK dates in December. Much of 1982 was taken with the difficult and protracted process of recording of their highly anticipated third album Porcupine , which reunited them with Crocodiles producer Ian Broudie (who

1596-490: The Fall . In 1989, Broudie began recording alone under the name "Lightning Seeds". The name derives from a misheard lyric from Prince 's 1985 hit single " Raspberry Beret ", in which Prince sings the line "thunder drowns out what the lightning sees". Broudie performed all vocals and instruments on the band's first album, 1989's Cloudcuckooland , which he also produced. The Lightning Seeds achieved success with their debut single,

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1672-414: The Lightning Seeds supported Madness on their British pre-Christmas arena tour. In June 2018, the single " Three Lions " re-entered the UK chart and reached number one on the chart dated 19 July 2018, celebrating the progress of England national football team at the 2018 FIFA World Cup , with the phrase "it's coming home" featuring heavily on social media and television. A new single, "Sunshine",

1748-642: The Lightning Seeds to Epic Records , put other projects on hold and embarked on a touring schedule: I'd been wanting to perform live again for some time and this was the first time I found myself talking to somebody at a record company who believed in Lightning Seeds By the end of 1993 Broudie had finished the Jollification (1994) album, which included contributions from Terry Hall , Alison Moyet and Ian McNabb . The promotional tour began in August 1994 with

1824-607: The Sound , during which they performed their first European concerts in France, The Netherlands and Germany. The end of the Camo tour was followed by a four-month break, mainly dedicated to the preparation and recording of their second LP. Manager Bill Drummond (later of KLF ) and lighting director Bill Butt launched plans for a one-off promotional concert event as the final date of the Camo tour, which would be professionally filmed and recorded. It

1900-611: The Teardrop Explodes) broke into the Top 20, reaching No. 17, and garnered wide critical acclaim. Eschewing the traditional "pin-up" cover shot, Crocodiles featured an atmospheric cover image, which showed the band posed in a mysterious woodland setting, lit by hidden coloured lights. Designed by Martyn Atkins and photographed by Brian Griffin, it became the first in a coordinated series of elemental-themed album covers by Atkins and Griffin, which spanned their first four LPs, each depicting

1976-503: The album proved to be a difficult and protracted process. Early sessions with Gil Norton took place at the famous Cologne studio of German producer Conny Plank , but both band and label were unhappy with the results and these recordings were shelved. They began re-recording material from the Cologne sessions with Laurie Latham in Brussels, but the sessions were grueling, with Latham spending up to

2052-524: The albums Flowers (2001), Siberia (2005), The Fountain (2009) and Meteorites (2014). The Siberia band line up was Ian McCulloch, Will Sergeant, Paul Fleming (keyboards), Simon Finley (drums) and Pete Wilkinson (bass), Hugh Jones produced Siberia after previously engineering early Bunnymen albums. Since August 2009 the group's touring incarnation has comprised McCulloch and Sergeant along with Stephen Brannan (bass), Gordy Goudie (guitar), Nicholas Kilroe (drums) and Jez Wing (keyboards). In 2002,

2128-513: The band achieved three more UK Top 20 hits, including a cover version of The Turtles " You Showed Me ", which became their highest-charting hit other than "Three Lions" when it reached No. 8. 1997 gave the Lightning Seeds international exposure with "You Showed Me" included on the Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery soundtrack. The release of greatest hits compilation Like You Do... Best of The Lightning Seeds and

2204-443: The band agreed to re-record the entire LP, and Drummond brought in noted Indian violinist and composer Shankar to add strings. During this period, tensions within the band had increased dramatically. Bassist Les Pattinson was openly expressing his weariness with the industry, and personal relations among the four deteriorated to the point that they either refused to speak to each other or argued when they did. McCulloch later described

2280-408: The band don't even appear clearly until partway through the film. The audio recordings of the four songs featured in the film were also released on the "Shine So Hard" EP, which reached #37 on the UK singles chart, thus becoming the group's first British hit single. In 1982, the film was released as a limited edition of 500 VHS cassettes, redeemable only with a voucher given out to those who had attended

2356-399: The band for several years previously, and a contributor to the 1987 album) was promoted to full member, and after hearing an album by the defunct UK group St Vitus Dance, the Bunnymen offered the lead singer spot to vocalist Noel Burke , who accepted after the band assured him that they did not want "a McCulloch clone". Their plans were thrown into disarray when Pete de Freitas was killed in

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2432-468: The band in the week leading up to the concert, and they were given a completely free hand to structure, shoot and edit the project. Smith and Duval shaped the first part of the film around the differing characters of the four band members, filming both the town and the musicians, but using unusual shooting angles and perspectives. This material was then assembled into an impressionistic sequence of seemingly disconnected images, which are gradually revealed to be

2508-534: The band posed at some distance from the camera, in a visually striking natural setting -- a forest ( Crocodiles ), a beach at sunset ( Heaven Up Here ), a frozen waterfall in Iceland ( Porcupine ) and a subterranean river ( Ocean Rain ). It would not be until their fifth, self-titled album that the band employed a traditional group portrait. The band embarked on their first major concert tour between September and December 1980 to promote Crocodiles , supported by London band

2584-469: The band taking the stage 30 minutes after the scheduled start time. The performance was filmed by Smith, Duval and cameraman Mike Tomlinson, with multitrack audio recorded on the Manor Mobile studio by Peter Woods. The footage captures the band at the height of their early success, and documents both their musical prowess as a live act and the impressive staging and lighting designed by Bill Butt. The set list

2660-514: The band's UK chart success with its lead single " The Killing Moon " entering into the top 10. After they released a self-titled album in 1987, McCulloch left the band and was replaced by singer Noel Burke . In 1989, de Freitas was killed in a motorcycle accident. After working together as Electrafixion , McCulloch and Sergeant regrouped with Pattinson in 1997 and returned as Echo & the Bunnymen, before Pattinson's departure in 1998. The band has done some touring and released several albums since

2736-414: The band's drummer. Their 1980 debut album Crocodiles went into the top 20 of the UK Albums Chart . After releasing their second album Heaven Up Here in 1981, the band's cult status was followed by mainstream success in the UK in 1983 when they scored a UK Top 10 hit with " The Cutter ", and the album which the song came from, Porcupine , hit number 2 in the UK. Ocean Rain (1984), continued

2812-480: The band's mood at this time as "horrible", and de Freitas stated that, in stark contrast to the quick and confident making of Heaven Up Here , he felt that "we had to drag it out of ourselves" with Porcupine . Despite these impediments, the re-recording went relatively smoothly, and the sessions ultimately produced their UK chart breakthrough. Released in early 1983, the more radio-friendly " The Cutter ", became their first top 10 single, climbing to No. 8, while

2888-471: The band, and became an even bigger critical and commercial success, reaching the UK Top Ten (No. 10), although " A Promise ", the sole single lifted from the album, only reached UK No. 49. The cover image continued the elemental theme of Crocodiles , and depicted the group standing on a beach, with their backs to the camera, looking out to sea, silhouetted against a bank of storm clouds at sunset, with

2964-470: The band, but his October 12 live debut with them at London's Electric Ballroom was less than auspicious. Supporting hugely popular ska bands Madness and Bad Manners , the Bunnymen proved an uncomfortable fit, and they were booed off after just two songs. " Rescue " (produced by Ian Broudie ), the lead single from Crocodiles , reached No. 62 on the UK singles chart but the album (co-produced by manager Bill Drummond and his business partner David Balfe of

3040-421: The bands Big in Japan , Care , and Original Mirrors . Originally a studio-based solo project for Broudie, the Lightning Seeds expanded into a touring band following Jollification (1994). The group experienced commercial success throughout the 1990s and are well known for their single " Three Lions ", a collaboration with David Baddiel and Frank Skinner which reached No. 1 in the UK in 1996 and 2018, with

3116-591: The concert, and copies found their way onto the second-hand market. Beginning in April 1981, the band commenced another round of touring to promote the forthcoming album. This included their first American dates in New York, Toronto, Pittsburgh, Detroit, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. After another round of shows in the UK and Europe mid-year, they returned to America for more shows during October, and in November they made their only visit to Australia, including

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3192-480: The cover shot. After another break over the winter, the band played three UK dates in April 1982. In June, they achieved their first top 20 UK hit single with " The Back of Love " (No. 19). In July, they began a short round of festival appearances and headlining concerts in Britain and Europe, including an appearance at the first WOMAD festival, where they were joined onstage for the song "All My Colours (Zimbo)" by

3268-400: The end of 1993, Broudie had completed the third Lightning Seeds album Jollification , which included contributions from Terry Hall , Simon Rogers, Alison Moyet and Ian McNabb . A promotional tour began in August 1994 with their line-up consisting of, guitarist Paul Hemmings , drummer Chris Sharrock , bassist Martyn Campbell and keyboardist Ali Kane. The tour benefited from the success of

3344-450: The film would not be distributed commercially unless it was directed by a union member. Butt took over as producer, and on the recommendation of their mutual friend, Patrick Duval, Butt engaged novice filmmaker John Smith , who had earned a union ticket for a film he had directed while at university. After extensive consultation with their clients, Smith and Duval were "embedded" in Buxton with

3420-697: The first Lightning Seeds album, would continue as Broudie's in-studio partner throughout the rest of the Lightning Seeds' career. The album Sense (1992) featured the song " The Life of Riley ", written by Broudie for his son, which reached No. 28 on the UK Singles Chart . An instrumental version of the song later became better known as the BBC TV theme for the Goal of the Month competition. The album Sense would mark Broudie's first Lightning Seeds songwriting collaborations with former Specials singer Terry Hall . Broudie signed

3496-514: The group now gaining wider attention, they were invited to record a four-song set for the BBC'S John Peel Show on August 22, at which time they were still using a drum machine. This was the first of six live sets they would cut for the Peel show between 1979 and 1983. By the time of their debut album, 1980's Crocodiles (July 1980), the drum machine had been replaced by Trinidad-born Pete de Freitas . Unlike

3572-473: The group received the Q Inspiration award. The award is for inspiring "new generations of musicians, songs and music lovers in general." The band were said to be worthy winners as they have done much to promote the Mersey music scene. In a later interview for Magnet magazine, McCulloch said "It validates everything that we've tried to achieve—cool, great timeless music. It's not like an inspiration award affecting

3648-558: The late 1990s to varying degrees of success. Ian McCulloch began his career in 1977, as one third of the Crucial Three , a bedroom band which also featured Julian Cope and Pete Wylie . When Wylie left, McCulloch and Cope formed the short-lived A Shallow Madness with drummer Dave Pickett and organist Paul Simpson , during which time such songs as "Read It in Books", "Robert Mitchum", "You Think It's Love" and "Spacehopper" were written by

3724-444: The music press, with Melody Maker denouncing it as "a rancid effort". The end of the original Echo & The Bunnymen came in March 1988. Following a Japanese tour, McCulloch announced that the band was breaking up. He hastily departed for the UK to see his father, who had just suffered two heart attacks, but he died before McCulloch arrived. Months of speculation finally ended in September 1988 when McCulloch officially informed

3800-623: The name Lightning Seeds and achieved success with the psychedelic and synthpop hit " Pure ", from the album Cloudcuckooland , which reached the UK Top 20. The same year "Joy" and "All I Want" were also released but failed to make an impression. "Pure" had some success in the United States Billboard Top 40 , reaching No. 32. Both "Pure" and "All I Want" also reached the Modern Rock Tracks top 10. In 1991 Broudie returned to song-writing and moved labels from Rough Trade to Virgin . By

3876-561: The name says it all really doesn't it? No, that's not fair. It wasn't his fault, it was Will and Pete who were the berks really. But no, I thought it was disgraceful and after that I suppose it was quite surprising that I continued working with Will after that. I'm glad I did though. Johnny Marr called them Echo and the Bogusmen when that happened. Meanwhile, McCulloch released his well-received debut solo album Candleland in September 1989, shortly after de Freitas' death. His follow-up solo album

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3952-401: The new five-piece Bunnymen recorded the psychedelic-tinged Reverberation in 1990 with renowned former Beatles engineer and producer Geoff Emerick . The album did not generate much interest among fans or critics, it sold poorly, and the band was dropped by Warner Bros. In a 2003 interview, McCulloch said of his replacement with Burke: I think it's pretty obvious what I think. Noel Burke...

4028-522: The next album, including the song "Jimmy Brown", which was re-titled "Bring on the Dancing Horses" and released as their only single of 1986. Echo & the Bunnymen returned to the studio to record more material with a new producer, Gil Norton , but in July, David Palmer left the group and de Freitas expressed his wish to rejoin. The other members were concerned about both his commitment to the band and his drug and mental health problems, so he returned to group as

4104-603: The origin of the band's name: We had this mate who kept suggesting all these names like the Daz Men or Glisserol and the Fan Extractors. Echo and the Bunnymen was one of them. I thought it was just as stupid as the rest. In November 1978, Echo & the Bunnymen made their debut at Liverpool's Eric's Club , appearing as the opening act for the Teardrop Explodes. The band played one song, a 20-minute version of "Monkeys" which

4180-455: The other band members, who were from working class Liverpool families, de Freitas was considered "posh" - he came from an affluent background, grew up in the south of England, and attended an elite private school. Despite his different background, the drummer's affable and outgoing manner was a welcome addition for his famously fractious bandmates. De Freitas met the trio at their September 15, 1979 gig at Eric's in Liverpool and immediately joined

4256-641: The other members that he was leaving the band, but Sergeant told McCulloch that he, Pattinson and de Freitas would continue working together. McCulloch departed, and later began work on his first solo album Candleland . Following an abortive attempt to record with singers Kate Pierson and Cindy Wilson of the B-52s , the group advertised for a new lead singer. Former Bourgie Bourgie singer Paul Quinn and former Colenso Parade singer Oscar Askin, both auditioned but ultimately turned down offers to take over from McCulloch. Keyboardist Jake Brockman (a touring member of

4332-415: The pair. When McCulloch left the band, A Shallow Madness changed their name to the Teardrop Explodes , and McCulloch joined with guitarist Will Sergeant and bass player Les Pattinson to form Echo & the Bunnymen. This early incarnation of the band featured a drum machine , assumed by many to be "Echo", though this has been denied by the band. In the 1982 book Liverpool Explodes! , Will Sergeant explained

4408-534: The parent album Porcupine (Feb. 1983), hit No. 2 in the album chart. Now firmly established as a chart act, further hits followed with a one-off single, the dance-oriented " Never Stop " (No. 15), and the epic " The Killing Moon ", a preview from the new album featuring a dramatic McCulloch vocal, which became the band's second UK top 10 single at No. 9. The band kicked off a hectic year of touring in 1984 with their first dates in Japan, in January, followed by

4484-714: The re-release of "Three Lions", which rose to No. 9 in the UK Singles Chart. In 2009, the band released their sixth studio album, Four Winds , and returned to touring in April 2010 after a ten-year hiatus. In 2014, the songs and career of Ian Broudie were celebrated in a concert held at the Liverpool Philharmonic Hall, featuring the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic orchestra and performances by Ian McCulloch ( Echo And The Bunnymen ), Miles Kane ( The Last Shadow Puppets ), Terry Hall ( The Specials ), James Skelly ( The Coral ) and Broudie himself with

4560-481: The second single from the album "Change", which reached No. 13 in the UK Singles Chart , becoming Lightning Seeds' second UK top twenty hit. The album Jollification became a critical success and the other singles taken from this album (" Lucky You ", "Marvellous" and "Perfect") all made noticeable impact. Mark Farrow 's album cover featured the use of computer graphics to create an enormous strawberry and depicting seeds with superimposed human faces. Jollification

4636-405: The secret location (called "Gomorrah" in the advertisement), which also advised "BE PREPARED: THIS IS AN ATLAS ADVENTURE". For an additional fee of £5, coach transport was provided for fans from London, Liverpool and other cities. Although inclement winter weather complicated the rehearsals, causing transport headaches for the band, as well as for their fans, the concert went ahead as planned, with

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4712-404: The self-titled Echo & the Bunnymen (1987), was recorded with Palmer, but when de Freitas returned in late 1986, it was largely re-recorded. Released in mid-1987, the record sold well (UK No. 4), and was a small American hit, their only LP to have significant sales there. It is also significant as the final album to be recorded with the original lineup. Like Porcupine , the making of

4788-457: The single, " Bring on the Dancing Horses " (UK No. 21), and a compilation album, Songs to Learn & Sing , which made No. 6 in the UK album chart. 1985/86 proved to be the turning point in the group's career. During their regular winter break, drummer Pete de Freitas had moved to America with a loose group of musical colleagues, friends and hangers-on dubbed The Sex Gods, but the other Bunnymen and his family later revealed that de Freitas

4864-451: The trio resurrected the Echo & the Bunnymen name and released the album Evergreen (1997), which reached the UK Top 10. Immediately before the release of the band's next album What Are You Going to Do with Your Life? (1999), Les Pattinson quit to take care of his mother. McCulloch and Sergeant have continued to tour and record as Echo & the Bunnymen, touring repeatedly and releasing

4940-407: The use of computer graphics to create an enormous strawberry , its seeds depicted with superimposed human faces, while the singles' covers featured different variations on this theme. During this period a number of songs were recorded at a private river barge studio located at Eel Pie Studios , then owned by Pete Townshend for the fourth studio album Dizzy Heights . The single "Ready or Not"

5016-405: Was Mysterio in 1992. After two more unsuccessful singles, which were released independently, the Bunnymen disbanded in 1993. In 1994, McCulloch and Sergeant began working together again under the name Electrafixion ; in 1997, Pattinson rejoined the duo, meaning the three surviving members of the original Bunnymen line-up were now working together again. Rather than continue as Electrafixion,

5092-512: Was also Sergeant's housemate at the time). Several members also undertook outside projects during the year. Pete de Freitas produced and played drums on Liverpool band the Wild Swans ' debut single "Revolutionary Spirit", and lead guitarist Will Sergeant recorded a solo album of instrumental music titled Themes for 'Grind' (1982). The original version of Porcupine was rejected by Warner Bros as "too uncommercial", so (over Sergeant's objections)

5168-493: Was disliked by the band, who were sharply critical of the mixing and production. The group jointly headlined an American tour with New Order in August-September 1987, followed by a UK tour in the northern autumn. After a winter break they undertook another round of touring in the U.S. and the UK, to general acclaim, but the March 1988 single release of their cover of the Doors' "People Are Strange" drew withering reviews from

5244-408: Was drawn mainly from Crocodiles , plus previews of several tracks from the upcoming second album. The finished 33-minute short film combined Smith and Duval's opening montage with dynamic footage of four songs from the show. Titled Shine So Hard: An Atlas Adventure , it was given a limited UK cinema release, but Warner executives were reportedly dismayed by its avant-garde structure and the fact that

5320-613: Was entitled "I Bagsy Yours" at the time. Echo & the Bunnymen's debut single " The Pictures on My Wall " was released on Bill Drummond & David Balfe 's Zoo Records in May 1979, the B-side being "Read It in Books" (also recorded by the Teardrop Explodes approximately six months later as the B-side of their final Zoo Records single "Treason"). Though credited as a McCulloch/Cope collaboration, McCulloch has denied on more than one occasion that Cope had any involvement with its writing. With

5396-407: Was primarily intended to provide material for the group's first music video, but Drummond and Butt's vision went well beyond the conventional three-minute pop-rock promotional clip, and it reflected their desire to capture Echo & the Bunnymen's live performance during this crucial breakthrough phase of their career. Butt was slated to direct, but British film union regulations at the time meant that

5472-479: Was released ahead of the album and reached No. 20 in the UK Singles chart. In 1996 The Football Association commissioned Broudie to write an England song for the upcoming Euro '96 football tournament. Broudie agreed on the condition that comedians Frank Skinner and David Baddiel , who had presented the late-night television show Fantasy Football League participated. The resulting song, " Three Lions ", became

5548-672: Was released in the UK on 5 September 1994 and in the US on 20 December 1994. Jason Damas for AllMusic felt that the album is "occasionally too produced", but called it Broudie's "strongest batch of songs yet". All songs written by Ian Broudie (except where stated). "Open Goals" contains a sample from "Look-Ka Py Py" as recorded by The Meters . The Lightning Seeds The Lightning Seeds (also known as Lightning Seeds ) are an English rock band formed in Liverpool in 1989 by Ian Broudie (vocals, guitar, producer), formerly of

5624-792: Was released on 15 June 2022. Alongside the new song "Emily Smiles" it was taken from the studio album See You in the Stars , which was released in October 2022. In 2023, the Lightning Seeds opened the Glastonbury Festival's "Other Stage". They also supported Madness on tour once again that year. Echo %26 the Bunnymen Echo & the Bunnymen are an English rock band formed in Liverpool in 1978. The original line-up consisted of vocalist Ian McCulloch , guitarist Will Sergeant and bassist Les Pattinson . By 1980, Pete de Freitas joined as

5700-530: Was replaced by former ABC drummer David Palmer. The group began recording material for the new album with Broudie and producer Clive Langer but they were unhappy with the results and the recordings were shelved. They then recorded with Laurie Latham , who was chosen by McCulloch because he had been impressed by Latham's work on the Stranglers ' single " Skin Deep ". Three tracks from these sessions made their way onto

5776-456: Was suffering from escalating mental health and drug problems, and following a New Year's Eve drug binge in New Orleans, de Freitas announced that he had quit the band. With tour commitments looming, the remaining members hastily recruited former Haircut One Hundred drummer Blair Cunningham as their new drummer, but he did not fit in, and left after their Spring 1986 American tour. Cunningham

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