The Dream Academy

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The Dream Academy

The Dream Academy, from the cover of Remembrance Days. Clockwise from bottom, Nick Laird-Clowes, Kate St. John, and Gilbert Gabriel.
Country England
Years active 1983 – 1991
Genres Folk Rock
Labels Blanco y Negro
Reprise Records
Warner Bros.
Members Gilbert Gabriel
Nick Laird-Clowes
Kate St. John

The Dream Academy were a 1980s British folk rock band, comprising singer/guitarist Nick Laird-Clowes, multi-instrumentalist (chiefly oboeist) Kate St John and keyboardist Gilbert Gabriel. They are most noted for their only hit single, Life in a Northern Town.

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[edit] History

Nick and Gilbert met each other in the late 1970s while Nick was in a band called The Act. Their idea was to create a songscape different from the power pop groups so popular at that time in England by mixing instruments and sounds that had not been done prominently before, such as strings, woodwinds, percussion (tympani), and synthesizers. At first, Nick & Gilbert called themselves the "Politics of Pop." In the early years before they were signed, they were also rumoured to have been over a dozen rotating members of the group playing various unique instruments until Nick met Kate St. John (then of The Ravishing Beauties) at a party. Nick was immediately enthralled with Kate's amazing talent (and beauty) and asked her to join. The trio settled on the name The Dream Academy and shopped their demos for nearly two years and were rejected "by every record label" before finally landing a record deal with Warner Bros. in 1985. Along the way, the made some close connections with Adam Peters and Pink Floyd's David Gilmour, a friend of Laird-Clowes', who produced and/or played on two of their albums and co-wrote one song, "Twelve-Eight Angel".

Their first single, "Life in a Northern Town" was a world-wide smash and sizeable hit in the U.S., charting at #7 on the Billboard Pop Music chart from an album co-produced by Pink Floyd's David Gilmour. The single was a tribute to the English singer/songwriter Nick Drake. It was their only major chart success. Interestingly enough, their record label initially didn't want to release this single. They thought it needed more drums but Nick and Gilbert were staunch in their opinion that it was perfect and often commented on its unique sound and feeling of a winter's snowstorm created almost unintentionally by the recording looping techniques of the time. The song also was initially called "Morning Lasted All Day" but was changed when Paul Simon commented to Nick (whom he was giving guitar lessons to) that it wasn't a very good title. The band launched a world-wide promotional tour based on the chart success of this song and appeared on such popular TV shows as Saturday Night Live, The Tonight Show, American Bandstand (with Dick Clark), MTV (interview with J.J. Jackson), and Top of the Pops. The Dream Academy's eponymous debut album also reached a wide audience in the States. Their two subsequent albums did not match the initial success.

They toured once, in 1991. During the same year, Gilbert and Kate decided to leave the group to pursue solo musical interests and projects. Nick ultimately decided that he could not go on further under the Dream Academy name as "it wasn't the Dream Academy with just me" and took some time off to travel to South East Asia and Africa. Shortly thereafter, he began to work with Pink Floyd on The Division Bell album before recording his solo album under the name Trashmonk and working on movie soundtracks.

All three members of the band remain active recording musicians, each with their own careers. They are said to have reunited on a forthcoming album, "Angels and Fools", by Gilbert's new band, The Excellent Staircase (formally The Believers); on the track "Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want", a cover of the song by The Smiths.

[edit] Trivia

  • The trance pop outfit Dario G reached number 2 in the UK singles chart in 1997 with "Sunchyme", a track which heavily relied on a sample of the "Ah hey ma ma ma" vocal chant from "Life in a Northern Town".
  • Another song from their debut album, "The Edge Of Forever", was featured in the closing stages of the popular film "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" in 1986, just as Ferris says goodbye to his girlfriend before racing home.
  • The band also performed a cover of The Smiths' "Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want", which was featured in the same film.

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

[edit] Singles

[edit] External links

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