Wreckless Eric

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Wreckless Eric
Birth name Eric Goulden
Born 18 May 1954 (1954-05-18) (age 54)
Origin New Haven, East Sussex, England
Genre(s) Rock and roll
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter
Label(s) Stiff Records
Website Official website

Wreckless Eric (born Eric Goulden, 18 May 1954, Newhaven, East Sussex, England) is a rock and roll singer-songwriter best known for his hit 1978 song "(I'd Go The) Whole Wide World" on Stiff Records. He currently lives in France with his wife, singer-songwriter Amy Rigby.

Contents

[edit] History

Wreckless Eric is best known as one of the original members of the late 1970s Stiff Records artist roster, along with Ian Dury, Elvis Costello and Nick Lowe. Eric's biggest hit record was "(I'd Go The) Whole Wide World," which was his debut single. The song was produced by, and featured bass (and most of the other instruments) by Nick Lowe, with Ian Dury on drums. Nearly 20 bands have covered "Whole Wide World"[original research?], such as The Monkees, who covered the song on their Pool It! album in 1987.

His debut album Wreckless Eric was a Top 50 hit in the UK Albums Chart. But, by the time his second album with Stiff Records The Wonderful World of Wreckless Eric came out, he was pushed by the punk record label to openly display the effect of his alcohol intake.[citation needed] He attempted a more pop music style on his next album, entitled Big Smash, his last with Stiff. Ironically Cliff Richard's cover of "Broken Doll", from Big Smash, was the highest one of his songs that ever charted.

[edit] End of Stiff Days

Eric became increasingly unhappy with Stiff Records business ideas and promotion. The label forced Eric to work with songwriting teams and hired backing bands.By 1980, shortly after the release of "Big Smash," he decided to leave Stiff and record music at his home studio. While Eric may have left the music business and the public eye, he has continued writing songs and performing consistently at underground clubs and bars. Throughout the 1980s, 90s and 2000s Eric has released albums on numerous independent record labels.[1]

[edit] Post Stiff Bands

Eric's post-Stiff bands include: The Captains of Industry, The Len Bright Combo, Le Beat Group Electrique, The Hitsville House Band and one album called "Karaoke" (1997) under his real name, Eric Goulden. [2]

The Wreckless Eric Manual
The Wreckless Eric Manual


[edit] Post Stiff Albums

In 1985 he released A Roomful of Monkeys with a new band, Captains of Industry. It was followed in 1986 by a couple of homemade garage albums with "The Len Bright Combo". He always stayed in touch with Ian Dury and the Blockheads - two Blockheads, Norman Watt-Roy and Mickey Gallagher, were in the Captains of Industry.

In 1989, he signed to New Rose Records as Eric Goulden, released the homemade Le Beat Group Electrique with bassist André Barreau and drummer Catfish Truton. This same year he moved to France, in a quiet countryside corner where he stayed for about ten years. By the time he made this move to the vineyard country, he had already ended his "career of full-time alcoholic."[citation needed]

Eric toured Eastern Europe in a 1960s Peugeot car, both solo and with his band. In 1990, he released a second Le Beat Group Electrique album, recorded live in a New Rose record shop in Paris, entitled At the Shop with Eduardo Leal de la Gala and Fabrice Bertran on the drums. Together they formed the Hitsville House Band.

Eric returned to the UK in 1998, wrote his autobiography A Dysfunctional Success - The Wreckless Eric Manual about his life in England in the punk rock years and the music industry, ending at his departure for France. A second part is expected. Eric contributed his version of "Clevor Trever" (sic) to the Ian Dury tribute album Brand New Boots and Panties released in 2001. His latest album Bungalow Hi was home recorded, produced and released in 2004.

In late 2005 Eric toured the UK (also playing Dublin and Belfast) supporting fellow ex-Stiff artists The Damned.

A tribute album to Wreckless Eric is currently being recorded, featuring cover versions of his songs performed by upcoming bands like The Crimea, plus established acts, such as The Wedding Present, among others.

In the 2006 film, Stranger Than Fiction, starring Will Ferrell, Ferrell sings "Whole Wide World" while playing the guitar, until the original Wreckless Eric version takes over.

In early 2007, Eric began working on a new album with his girlfriend, Amy Rigby, who has relocated to France. The two were married on April 30, 2008.

[edit] Discography

As Wreckless Eric

  • Wreckless Eric (1978) [album]
  • The Wonderful World of Wreckless Eric (1978) [album]
  • The Whole Wide World (1979) [album]
  • Big Smash (1980) [album]
  • "Yuletide Forty-Five" (1990) [single]
  • "Sweet Jane" (2002) [single]
  • Almost a Jubilee: 25 Years at the BBC (with Gaps) (2003) [album]
  • Bungalow Hi (2004) [album]

With Captains of Industry

  • Roomful of Monkeys (1984) [album]

With The Len Bright Combo

  • The Len Bright Combo Presents... (1985) [album]
  • Combo Time (1986) [album]

(The two Len Bright Combo albums were re-released on a single CD on Eric's Southern Domestic label in 2004).

With Le Beat Group Electrique

  • Le Beat Group Electrique (1989) [album]
  • At the Shop (1990) [album]
  • The Donovan of Trash (1991) [album]

With Hitsville House Band

  • 12 o'Clock Stereo (1996) [album]
  • "The Girl with the Wandering Eye" (1996) [single]

As Eric Goulden

  • Karaoke (1997) [album]

Compilation appearances

  • A Bunch of Stiff Records (1977) [album]
  • Live Stiffs Live (1978) [album]
  • Heroes & Cowards (1978) [album]
  • Can't Start Dancing (1978) [album]
  • The Last Compilation Album (1980) [album]
  • The Stiff Records Box Set (1991) [album]
  • DiY 3: Teenage Kicks - UK Pop I (1976-79) (1993) [album]
  • Stranger Than Fiction Soundtrack (2006) [album]
  • The Sandinista! Project (2007) [album]

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] References

  • "Wreckless Eric Interview": Tupica, Rich [3]

[edit] External links