Alex Chilton
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Alex Chilton | |
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Live in France, 2004.
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Background information | |
Birth name | William Alexander Chilton |
Born | December 28, 1950 Memphis, Tennessee |
Years active | 1966-present |
Associated acts | Box Tops , Big Star |
Alex Chilton (born William Alexander Chilton, on December 28, 1950, in Memphis, Tennessee) is an American songwriter, guitarist, singer and producer best known for his work with the pop-music bands the Box Tops and Big Star. Chilton's early commercial sales success in the 1960s as a teen vocalist for the Box Tops was not repeated in later years with Big Star and in his indie music solo career on small labels, but he did draw a loyal following in the indie and alternative music fields.
Chilton said in the September 1994 issue of Guitar Player that he considers himself a "musical performer, not a songwriter" and that some of his songs sound only "half-baked" to him. Nonetheless, his compositions have been performed by a number of artists, including This Mortal Coil, The Bangles, Wilco, Graham Coxon, Garbage, Son Volt, Counting Crows, Elliott Smith, Jeff Buckley, Cheap Trick, Superdrag, Evan Dando, Cat Power, Yo La Tengo, Placebo, Xiu Xiu, and His Name Is Alive. The Replacements wrote the song "Alex Chilton" in his honor on their 1987 Pleased to Meet Me album.
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[edit] Background and early career
Chilton grew up in a musical family; his father, Sidney Chilton, was a jazz musician. A local band recruited the teenager in 1966 as their lead singer after learning of the popularity of his vocal performance at a talent show at Memphis' Central High School; this band was The Devilles, later renamed Box Tops. The new group recorded with Chips Moman and producer/songwriter Dan Penn at American Sound Studio and Muscle Shoals' FAME Studios.
As lead singer for the Box Tops, Chilton enjoyed at the age of 16 a number-one international hit, "The Letter." The Box Tops went on to have several other major chart hits, including "Cry Like a Baby" (1968) and "Soul Deep" (1969). The group's songs were written by Penn, Moman, Spooner Oldham and other top area songwriters, with Chilton occasionally contributing a song. By late 1969, only Chilton and guitarist Gary Talley remained from the original group, and newer additions replaced the members who had departed. The group decided to disband and pursue independent careers in February 1970.
Chilton then began performing as a solo artist, maintaining a working relationship with Penn for demos. During this period he began learning guitar by studying the styles of guitarists like Stax Records great Steve Cropper, recording his own material in 1970 at Ardent Studios with local musicians like producer Terry Manning and drummer Richard Rosebrough, and producing a few local blues-rock acts. His 1970 recordings and productions from that time frame were released years later in the 1980s and 1990s on albums like Lost Decade (New Rose Records) and 1970 (Ardent Records).
[edit] 1970s career
After a period in New York City, during which he worked on his guitar technique and singing style, Chilton returned to Memphis in 1971 and joined the power-pop group Big Star, with Chris Bell, recording at engineer John Fry's Ardent Studios. The group's recordings met little commercial success but established his reputation as a rock singer and songwriter; later alternative music bands like R.E.M. would praise the group as a major influence. During this period he also occasionally recorded with Rosebrough as a group they called The Dolby Fuckers; some of their studio experimentation was included in Big Star's Radio City, including the recording of "Mod Lang." Rosebrough occasionally worked on later recordings with Chilton, including on Big Star's Third album and the 1975 solo recording Bach's Bottom. Chilton and Bell went on to co-write "In The Street" (best known as the theme song of That '70s Show).
Moving back to New York in 1977, Chilton performed as "Alex Chilton and the Cossacks" with a lineup that included Chris Stamey (later of The dB's) at venues like CBGB, recording an influential solo single, released in 1978: "Bangkok," backed with a cover of the Seeds' "Can't Seem to Make You Mine." This period learning from the New York CBGB scene marked the beginning of a key change for Chilton's personal musical interests away from multi-layered pop studio recording standards toward a looser, animated punk performance style often recorded in one take and featuring fewer overdubs. There he made the acquaintance of punk band the Cramps. He brought them to Memphis, where he produced the songs that would appear on their Gravest Hits EP and their Songs the Lord Taught Us LP.
In 1979 Chilton released, in a limited edition of 500 copies, an album called Like Flies on Sherbert, produced by Chilton with Jim Dickinson at Phillips Recording and Ardent Studios, which featured his own interpretations of songs by artists as disparate as the Carter Family, Jimmy C. Newman, Ernest Tubb, and K. C. and the Sunshine Band, along with several originals. While criticized by some as a druggy mess, this album is considered by many to be a lo-fi masterpiece. Sherbert, which included backing work by Memphis musicians including Rosebrough, Memphis drummer Ross Johnson, and Lisa Aldridge, has since been reissued several times. Beginning in 1979 he also co-founded, played guitar with, and produced some albums for Tav Falco's Panther Burns, which began as an offbeat rock-and-roll group deconstructing blues, country, and rockabilly music.
[edit] 1980s to present
He moved to New Orleans in the early 1980s, while also touring regularly with Panther Burns and occasionally as a solo artist, as documented in his poorly received 1982 solo release Live in London. After a six month span of working outside music at tree-trimming and dishwashing jobs in New Orleans, he resumed playing with Panther Burns in 1983. His new association with New Orleans jazz musicians including bassist René Coman marked a period in which he began playing guitar in a less raucous style and moved toward a cooler, more restrained approach, as heard in Panther Burns' 1984 Sugar Ditch Revisited album, produced by Jim Dickinson.
Immediately upon completing the recording in mid-1984, Chilton returned his focus to his own solo career. He stopped playing regular gigs with Panther Burns and took with him the group's bassist at the time, Coman. Chilton then formed a solo trio with Coman and jazz drummer Doug Garrison, then of Memphis. The trio immediately began touring intensely and recording at Ardent Studios, releasing in 1985 an EP, Feudalist Tarts, that featured his versions of songs by Carla Thomas, Slim Harpo, and Willie Tee, and releasing in 1986 No Sex. The latter EP contained three originals, including the extended mood piece, "Wild Kingdom," a song highlighting Coman's jazz-oriented, improvisational bass interplay with Chilton.
During this period, Chilton began to frequently use in his recordings a horn section consisting of Memphis veteran jazz performers Fred Ford, Jim Spake, and Nokie Taylor to imbue the soul-oriented pieces among his repertoire with a postmodern, minimalist jazz feel that distinguished his interpretative approach from that of a simple soul revivalist style. Chilton forged a new direction for his solo work, eschewing effects and blending soul, jazz, country, rockabilly and pop.
Coman ceased touring in Chilton's solo trio at the end of 1986 to pursue other projects, with Garrison eventually joining him three years later to form The Iguanas group with other musicians in New Orleans; both musicians recorded on occasion with Chilton after departing. Touring and recording as a solo artist from the late-1980s through the 1990s with bassist Ron Easley and eventually drummer Richard Dworkin, Chilton gained a reputation for his eclectic taste in cover versions, guitar work, and laconic stage presence.
Chilton included on 1987's High Priest a cover of "Raunchy," his instrumental salute to Sun Records guitarist Sid Manker, a friend of his father from whom he'd once taken a guitar lesson; this song was also a standard in his early Panther Burns repertoire. Along with four upbeat originals, High Priest also included other covers like "Nobody's Fool," a song originally written and recorded in 1973 by his old mentor Dan Penn. His EP Black List contained a cover of Ronny & the Daytonas' "Little GTO," along with an original song, "Guantanamerika." He also produced albums by several artists beginning in the 1980s, including the Detroit group The Gories, occasionally producing Panther Burns albums well into the 1990s.
In the 1990s, Chilton recorded an acoustic solo record of jazz standards in New Orleans' Chez Flames studio, with producer Keith Keller, and continued with a live CD released in 2004, Live in Anvers. Since the mid-1990s, he has added to his schedule concerts and recordings with the reunited Box Tops and a version of Big Star that included two members of The Posies, Jon Auer and Ken Stringfellow. A new Big Star album, entitled In Space, with songs written by Chilton, drummer Jody Stephens, guitarist Auer, and bassist Stringfellow was released September 27, 2005, on Rykodisc.
Chilton was present at his home in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina and was evacuated out safely on September 4, 2005.
[edit] Solo discography
- Singer Not the Song (EP) - (Ork, 1977)
- One Day in New York - (Trio, 1978, reissued 1991 on Art Union Records)
- Bangkok/Can't Seem to Make You Mine (single) - (Fun, 1978)
- Like Flies on Sherbert - (Peabody, 1979; Aura, 1980 UK)
- Hey Little Child / No More The Moon Shines On Lorena (Aura 1980 UK)
- Bach's Bottom - (Line, 1981), remixed & reissued 1993 on Razor & Tie)
- Live in London - (Aura, 1982 UK)
- Feudalist Tarts (EP) - (New Rose/Big Time), 1985; reissued 1994 on Razor & Tie)
- Lost Decade - (Fan Club, 1985)
- Document - (Aura, 1985)
- No Sex (EP) - (New Rose/Big Time, 1986; reissued 1994 on Razor & Tie)
- Stuff - (New Rose, 1987)
- High Priest - (New Rose/Big Time, 1987; reissued 1994 on Razor & Tie)
- Black List (EP) - (New Rose, 1989; reissued 1994 on Razor & Tie)
- Best of Alex Chilton (New Rose, 1991)
- 19 Years: A Collection of Alex Chilton - (Rhino, 1991)
- Clichés - (Ardent, 1994)
- A Man Called Destruction - (Ardent, 1995)
- 1970 - (Ardent, 1996)
- Acoustic By Candlelight - (Knitting Factory 1997)
- Top 30 - (Last Call, 1997)
- Cubist Blues, with Ben Vaughn and Alan Vega - (Discovery, 1997)
- Loose Shoes and Tight Pussy - (Last Call, 1999)
- Set (Bar/None, (Bar/None 2000) (U.S. release of Loose Shoes LP)
- Live in Anvers - (Last Call, 2004)
[edit] References
- Auer, Jon (April 11, 2005). "New Posies and Big Star release...?" Big Star Book. Accessed Apr. 28, 2005.
- "Box Tops Biographies." Box Tops official website. Accessed Jun. 16, 2005.
- "Box Tops Frequently Asked Questions." Box Tops official website. Accessed Jun 16, 2005.
- "Entertainment: Katrina Slams N.O. Music Scene." September 5, 2005. CNN.com International. Accessed Sep. 5, 2005.
- Johnson, Ross (February 1–7, 1996). "Bad Decisions and Busted Eardrums: an Insider's Retrospective on Tav Falco's Panther Burns, the Band That Won't Go Away." The Memphis Flyer.
- Koda, Cub. "Alex Chilton biography." All Music Guide. Accessed Dec. 1, 2004.
- Kurutz, Steve "Chips Moman." All Music Guide. Accessed Apr. 28, 2005.
- Mazzoleni, Florent (2003). 'Alex Chilton's 'Lost Decade.'" Spin Compact Discs. Accessed Apr. 27, 2005.
- Norton, Cathi. "Dan Penn: a Shade-Tree Guy." Box Tops website.
- "Rock City Bio." Rounder Records website. Accessed Jun. 19, 2005.
- Simon, Crawdaddy. "Alex Chilton Discography." Crawdaddy Simon's High Priest pages. Accessed Apr. 26, 2005.
- Sparks, Jon (September 5, 2005). "Memphis rocker evacuated from New Orleans home." The Commercial Appeal. Accessed Sep. 5, 2005.
- Stern, Theresa (December 22, 1996). "Interview: Jody Stephens." Perfect Sound Forever. Accessed Jun. 19, 2005.
- Talley, Gary (March 2004). "The Box Tops — Setting the Record Straight: a Firsthand Account." Puremusic.com. Accessed Jun. 16, 2005.
[edit] Further reading and criticism
- Baker, Michael (July 2004). "The Glory and Grandeur That Is Defeat: The Music of Alex Chilton, Part 2." Perfect Sound Forever. Accessed Apr. 26, 2005.
- Christgau, Robert (2000). "Alex Chilton: Consumer Guide Reviews." Robert Christgau: Dean of American Rock Critics. Accessed Apr. 26, 2005.
- Clark, Rick (1990). "Liner notes." #1 Record/Radio City. Big Beat Records.
- Gordon, Robert (1995). It Came From Memphis. New York: Pocket Books. ISBN 0-7434-1045-9, p. 244.
- Hogg, Brian (1990). "Liner notes." #1 Record/Radio City. Big Beat Records.
[edit] External links
- Last Call Records artist page
- Box Tops official band website
- Alex Chilton Biography at Bar/None Records
- The Unofficial Big Star Homepage
- Alex Chilton Yahoo! Group
- Big Star Book
- Big Star Page at Harmonē
- Big Star site from Rykodisc
- Big Star Reference Pages
- Judith Beeman's Back of a Car Big Star zine site
- Jeff the Joker's Alex Chilton, Big Star & the Box Tops: Interviews & Reviews
- Alex Chilton discography at MusicBrainz
- Artist catalogue entries at Last Call Records
- WWOZ Radio - List Of Found Musicians
- Annual Alex Chilton Birthday Bash in Chicago
- Rolling Stone Interview 2/2000
- Alex Chilton: The Gibson Interview