Adam Ant | |
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Adam Ant in 2011 |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Stuart Leslie Goddard |
Born | 3 November 1954 |
Origin | Marylebone, London, England |
Genres | New Wave, post-punk, New Romantic |
Occupations | Musician |
Instruments | Vocals, Guitar, Bass |
Years active | 1976–present |
Labels | CBS, Columbia, MCA, EMI |
Website | www.adam-ant.net |
Adam Ant (born Stuart Leslie Goddard on 3 November 1954 in Marylebone, London) is an English musician who gained popularity as the lead singer of New Wave/post-punk group Adam and the Ants and later as a solo artist, scoring ten UK top ten hits between 1980 and 1983, including three No.1s. Ant was also a star in America where he not only scored a string of hit singles and albums, but was once voted sexiest man in America by the viewers of MTV. He is also an actor, having appeared in over two dozen films or television episodes between 1985 and 2003.[1]
Since 2010, Ant has undertaken a major reactivation of his musical career, performing live regularly in his hometown London and beyond, recording a new album and with two full-length UK national tours now completed[2][3][4] and a US national tour now scheduled. His present comeback continues and thrives despite concerns about such activities being merely another symptom of the mental health issues which were in considerable part responsible for his lengthy spell of near-inactivity spanning the late 1990s and 2000s.[5][6][7]
Stuart Goddard was born an only child in Marylebone. One of the themes he used in his later work — oppressed minorities — was part of his heritage; he is of Romnichal descent. His maternal grandfather, Walter Albany Smith, was a full-blooded Romani.[8] Home was two rooms in De Walden buildings, St John's Wood.[9] He recalls "There was no luxury, but there was always food on the table." His father, Leslie Goddard, worked as a chauffeur and his mother, Betty Kathleen Smith, was a domestic cleaner, briefly working for Paul McCartney.
His parents divorced when Goddard was seven years old,[10] mainly on account of Les Goddard's chronic alcoholism and abusive behaviour. Goddard's first school was Robinsfield Infants School, where he created a considerable stir by throwing a brick through one of the head-teacher's [Principal's] office windows.[11] In the aftermath of this incident, Goddard was placed under the supervision of teacher Joanna Saloman, who encouraged him to develop his abilities in art and whom he would later credit as the first person to show him he could be creative artistically.[12][13] He continued to attend Robinsfield and subsequently gained a place at St Marylebone Grammar School where he would later become a school prefect.
After taking and passing his A levels, Goddard went on to the famous Hornsey College of Art to study graphic design and for a time was a student of Peter Webb. He later dropped out of Hornsey, short of completing his B.A, to focus on a career in music.
The first band Goddard joined was Bazooka Joe, in which he played bass guitar. It was at a gig in November 1975 at St. Martin's College, London, that Goddard was witness to the first-ever public performance of the Sex Pistols, who were billed as Bazooka Joe's support act. Goddard, alone of his band, was impressed by their performance and consequently left Bazooka Joe to form a group of his own called the B-Sides (which rehearsed but never gigged).
Since starting his course at Hornsey, Goddard had married fellow student Carol Mills, with whom he lived at her parents' residence in Muswell Hill. Shortly after, he developed anorexia. "I just didn't eat," he has said of this period, "I wasn't attempting to slim, I was attempting to kill myself." Eventually, Goddard took an overdose of all the pills he could find in his mother-in-law's kitchen cabinet. After having his stomach pumped, he was sent to Colney Hatch mental hospital in North London, eventually being discharged on condition of supervision by Mills. "I was totally fucked up in the head. Things went wrong and something snapped. I just became a vegetable for three months. I couldn't talk to people. I was very ill and that was part of the reason I left college."[14]
Upon his discharge from the hospital, Goddard renamed himself Adam Ant (with Mills renaming herself Eve). Ant remade connections with fellow former B-Sides Lester Square and Andy Warren and together with drummer Paul Flanagan, they formed Adam and the Ants (initially named just 'The Ants') in 1977, with the inaugural band meeting held in the audience at a Siouxsie and the Banshees performance at the Roxy Club in London's Covent Garden.[15]
Adam and the Ants started as part of the burgeoning punk rock movement. Ant later acted in Derek Jarman's seminal "punk" film Jubilee in 1977, as Adam and the Ants were beginning to gig around London with manager Jordan from the SEX Boutique on Kings Road. His debut as a recording artist was the song "Deutscher Girls", which featured on the film's soundtrack, along with "Plastic Surgery" which was performed in the film itself, and was re-released as a single in 1982. The band toured extensively around the UK, but proved to be unpopular with much of the British music press who disliked their fetishistic lyrics and imagery. Late 1979 saw the release of their début album Dirk Wears White Sox (1979, Do It Records).
Adam approached and asked Malcolm McLaren (the manager of The Sex Pistols) to manage the band. McLaren subsequently stole the rest of the Ants from under Adam's feet when he introduced the singer Annabella Lwin and began the process of honing Bow Wow Wow for chart success. A new version of Adam and the Ants was formed with Marco Pirroni (guitar), Kevin Mooney (bass guitar), and two drummers, Terry Lee Miall and Chris Hughes (ex-Dalek I Love You), who used the name Merrick. The band signed a major label deal with CBS Records and recorded Kings of the Wild Frontier during the summer of 1980. That album was an enormous hit in the United Kingdom and the "Antmania" that ensued put the band at the forefront of the New Romantic movement. The single "Antmusic" went to #2 on the U.K. singles chart by December 1980. Following the abrupt departure of Mooney in February 1981, the well known bassist Gary Tibbs, formerly of Roxy Music, joined the band.
In November 1981, Adam & the Ants released another highly successful album, Prince Charming. The album featured two United Kingdom #1 singles — "Stand and Deliver" and the title track "Prince Charming" — as well as the #3 UK hit "Ant Rap". This trio of singles were promoted by some of the most lavish music videos of the period, and paved the way for Adam Ant's later acting career.[16]
In March 1982, feeling certain band members "lacked enthusiasm", Ant disbanded the group. A few months after the split Ant launched a solo career (though he retained Marco Pirroni as guitarist and co-songwriter). Merrick returned to the band Dalek I Love You and would subsequently produce many hits for Tears for Fears.
After the split, Ant went solo, taking his song writing partner Pirroni with him. Merrick also briefly stayed aboard as drummer/producer for the UK edition of the first solo single Goody Two Shoes and demos for the upcoming Friend Or Foe album before moving on to other production work, while Miall and Tibbs' contracts were left to expire.[17] The Friend or Foe album, released in late 1982, proved to be Ant's greatest American chart success and included the hit single Goody Two Shoes which made it to #1 in the UK and Australia, and #12 in the U.S. Other hits from that album included the title song (which made #9 on the UK chart) and "Desperate But Not Serious". "Goody Two Shoes" first charted in the UK in Spring 1982, reaching no.1 that summer, but its US peak did not come until 1983 when it reached #12 on the Billboard Top 100.
With the old Ants all gone except Pirroni, and even he unwilling to perform live any more for the time being, Ant recruited a new band for touring, consisting of new dual drummers Bogdan Wiczling (ex-Fingerprintz) and Barry Watts (ex-Q-Tips), plus guitarist Cha Burns (also ex-Fingerprintz), bassist Chris Constantinou and the former Q-Tips brass section of trumpeter Tony Hughes and twin saxophonists Stewart van Blandamer and Steve Farr.[18] Wiczling had already served as session drummer for the Friend or Foe album and had even re-recorded the drum part for Goody Two Shoes to fit the album sound - it would be this reworked version of the song that would achieve US success. The album sessions had also featured session brass players Jeff Daly and Martin Drover.[19]
This new band made its debut at London's Astoria Theatre on 1 October 1982[20] (the day after Tibbs and Miall's contracts ran out)[17] and played a further five UK provincial tour dates on 1–6 November 1982 before heading off to the USA for the start of a US tour in New York on 8 November. The New York concert would be the first of twenty six club-level US tour dates running up to the 16 December 1982 concert in Hollywood California.[20] These concerts were intended as a warm-up for a more intensive 1983 US tour of over 60 dates, scheduled to run until May 1983.[21] However, on the nineteenth tour date on 20 February 1983 in Cleveland Ohio, disaster struck when Ant suffered an injured knee onstage (a relapse of a previous injury suffered while filming Jubilee in 1977), forcing the postponement and/or cancellation of dates throughout February and March while he recuperated. Ant eventually returned to action when he appeared as a guest performer on the NBC television network's Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever special filmed on 25 March 1983 in Pasadena, California (and aired in May that year), performing Where Did Our Love Go, during which he was joined onstage by Diana Ross. The following evening in Palm Desert, he resumed the US tour, which was finally completed on 18 May 1983 at the Bronco Bowl in Dallas, Texas.[21]
During his recuperation from the knee injury, Ant had stayed in New York and Los Angeles and worked with Pirroni on writing new material.[22] The fruits of this and a further writing session with Pirroni in Paris in late May/early June formed the basis of Ant's second solo album Strip. The album was recorded at Polar Studios in Stockholm in the late summer of 1983 with Phil Collins as both drummer and producer on both the title track and planned single Puss 'N Boots, with Richard James Burgess adopting the same roles for the non-single album tracks . The single "Puss 'N Boots" reached #5 on the UK charts, but the BBC banned both the video and the song for the follow-up single "Strip." Despite a vocal cameo performance from former ABBA member Anni-Frid Lyngstad, "Strip" only managed to peak at #41 before being withdrawn by CBS while the parent album barely scraped the UK Top 20. However, the Strip single fared quite well in America, only narrowly missing out on a US Top 40 hit single. To promote the album, which reached #65 on the Billboard Top 200 Albums, in early 1984 Ant undertook another extensive US tour, some sixty dates in length, starting on 27 January 1984 at the Atlanta Civic Centre in Atlanta in Georgia and lasting until 27 April 1984 at the Irvine Meadow Amphitheatre in Laguna Hills, California.[23] Although UK television performances of Puss N'Boots and Strip had featured a quartet of Ant, Pirroni, Wiczling and Constantinou, the US tour featured the same seven-piece backing band as the previous album's tour, except for Steve King in place of Stewart Van Blandamer on saxophone.[24] The tour shows were also notable for featuring a recreation by Ant of the infamous Chinese Water Torture Cell escapology stunt originally performed by Harry Houdini. In preparation for this Ant would, in keeping with the album title, undress onstage down to a pair of boxer shorts.[25]
Around this time, Ant also received an endorsement contract from Honda to promote their new line of motor scooters, where he appeared with model and fellow alternative musician Grace Jones. In the commercial, Ant is being persuaded by Jones to try the new scooter. Ant, who had never driven anything in his life, hesitates before finally submitting. Ant did successfully obtain a driver's license a short time after the commercials began airing. Ant also made his second movie appearance during this time, in the science fiction thriller Nomads starring Pierce Brosnan, eventually released in 1986.
With promotion on the Strip album complete, Ant reduced his band down to the quartet of himself, Pirroni (now out of retirement again), Wiczling and Constantinou. The latter two adopted the stagenames Count Wiczling and Chris De Niro respectively and were upgraded from live backing musicians to being full-time band members, featured on record sleeves,[26] logos[27] and even in song lyrics.[28] Ant formally unveiled his new four-piece band, all clad in a leather motorcycle gang image, at the 1984 Montreux Pop Festival,[29] where they gave a mimed performance of Dog Eat Dog, Goody Two Shoes and the Strip track Navel To Neck. Shortly thereafter, the new band began work with veteran producer Tony Visconti on Ant's third solo album, Vive Le Rock. Initial sessions in the summer of 1984 yielded the single Apollo 9, a UK #13 hit in September 1984;[30] however the remainder of the album was not recorded until January–March 1985.[31] That summer, Ant secured a spot at the Live Aid concert - the first live performance of the "Ant/Marco/Wiczling/De Niro" band - but was asked to cut his set to one song, for which he chose his new single, the Vive le Rock title track[32] The single, however stalled at #50 in the UK, in part due to a pressing error with many copies featuring the A-side track on both sides.[33]
A year after the top 15 hit success of Apollo 9, the parent album Vive Le Rock was released in September 1985, to mixed reviews. As part of the promotion, around this time the band performed a live TV session for Channel 4 music show Bliss hosted by Muriel Gray. Several songs were recorded although only two - Miss Thing from the new album and Killer In The Home from Kings Of The Wild Frontier - were actually transmitted. Following a warm up date in Puerto Banús, Spain on 23 August 1985, a seventeen date UK Vive Le Rock tour was due to start in Southampton on 10 September 1985, however due to insurance problems relating to the stage set (which included a particularly rickety bridge) and/or poor ticket sales, this was reduced down to three dates - 25 September 1985 in London, 27 September in Birmingham and 28 September in Manchester.[34] The tour fared better in North America with 34 US and Canadian shows from 11 October 1985 in Santa Cruz, California until 14 December 1985 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The Fort Lauderdale show would prove to be Ant's last full-length concert until February 1993 (while the four UK/Spanish shows plus Live Aid would be Ant's only public live concerts outside North America between December 1982 to February 1995[35] (other than a 1987 fanclub party performance[36] and a September 1994 EMI corporate event in Brighton[37]) as Ant decided to pause his career in music and at the end of the year to focus on his acting career.[38] He would finally sever ties with CBS a year later, following the release of the Hits audio/VHS compilation.[39]
As the 1980s wore on, Ant's attention turned toward acting, especially television and movie roles. He spent three months in England on stage starring in Joe Orton's Entertaining Mr. Sloane. In 1993 he played the lead in the Steven Berkoff play Greek, which was directed by Bruce Payne. He also appeared on American television shows, notably The Equalizer, Sledge Hammer!, Tales from the Crypt and Northern Exposure. He began taking roles in films such as Nomads, Sunset Heat, Love Bites and Slam Dance. He moved to Hollywood and appeared in a wide range of productions and shows, producing a musical about rock 'n' roll legends Gene Vincent and Eddie Cochran's days on tour in England Be Bop A Lula, with a set designed by L.A. artist Michael Pearce.
In 1990, Ant re-entered the pop music world with the album Manners & Physique, a collaboration with André Cymone, a solo artist and an early member of Prince's band. The album was another moderate success, and featured the single Room at the Top, which was a Top 20 hit on both sides of the Atlantic. Rough Stuff became the second single for the United States and Germany as Can't Set Rules About Love charted in the United Kingdom
In 1993, he toured in support of a planned album called Persuasion. On account of a regime change at MCA, the record company made the unilateral decision not to release this album on the basis that Manners & Physique had failed to achieve a gold sales certification. Ant was subsequently released from his contract with MCA and later signed by EMI. Persuasion remains unreleased to this day and, as a result, it has become something of a lost legend among "Antfans", although it is widely available online for download.
Later in 1993-1994, following a move to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career, he found himself pursued by a stalker, Ruth Marie Torres, whose erratic behaviour - poisoning his fish pond, trying to kill his dogs, shouting obscenities while naked in the street outside his house - sent Ant over the edge. He suffered a breakdown and admitted himself to Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre. During this period, he had moved in with aspiring actress Heather Graham but when that relationship fell apart he moved back to London.[40]
In 1995, Ant released his last album to date, Wonderful. The title track was a successful single, as was a tour of the U.S. in support of the album. While Ant and his group (which retained longtime guitarist Pirroni) played in smaller venues than they had played in the 1980s, the houses were often packed with enthusiastic fans. The tour was cut short due to Ant and Pirroni both contracting glandular fever.[41] Ant also played three shows at Shepherds Bush Empire in London and did a mini tour of Virgin Record Shops playing selected tunes from the album Wonderful and signing records. Adam and his band also played shows in Dublin, Glasgow, Middlesbrough and Stoke-on-Trent.
In 1996, Ant and Pirroni recorded two new songs, Lamé and Inseminator for the soundtrack to Ant's latest film Drop Dead Rock. Also around this time, they recorded a cover version of the T.Rex song Dandy in the Underworld which would eventually emerge on the 2005 CD Redux. The duo continued to demo other songs around this time, including such titles as Tough Blokes, Justine, Picasso Meets Gary Cooper and Call Me Sausage (the last of which leaked out into bootleg circulation among fans).[42] and also guested with such bands as Dweeb and Rachel Stamp.
In 1997, Ant married again to Lorraine Gibson, a 25-year-old PR for Vivienne Westwood. The ceremony took place in Dayton, Tennessee, between which and London they would divide their time. In April 1998, the couple had a daughter, Lily, but they separated soon afterwards. While in Tennessee, Ant bought a portastudio as a first step towards a home studio[43] and began demoing new songs with Pirroni for Ant's own new label Blend Records. Pirroni would later refer to these recordings as the Blend Demos. Interviewed in 2000, Ant's then manager Bryan Stanton reported of Blend that "there’s loads of legal nonsense behind it. It was set up with two other people, and one of those people is causing a few problems. So what he needs to do is leave that and set up another one"[44]
In 2000, Sony released Antbox - a 3-CD retrospective box set of Ant's career including various unreleased demos, many of them from the early punk days of unreleased songs from the original Ants' live repertoire.
In 2001, following the September 11 attacks Ant recorded a charity single for New York firefighters; a double A-side of Neil Diamond's America with an X-rated new song of his own entitled Big Trouble. The latter received an abortive radio airplay on an edition of Nicky Campbell's radio show on BBC Radio 5 Live on which Ant was interviewed.[40][45] In interviews from the time, Ant talked of numerous varied plans including starting another new record label, reforming Adam and the Ants and a star-studded benefit concert for a forest in Patagonia.[14]
Ant was poised to join the '80s-focused Here & Now tour in January 2002, but was unable to do so after he was charged with throwing a car alternator through a pub window and then threatening patrons with an imitation firearm. The previous evening, Adam has since claimed, he had received telephone threats to himself and his young daughter from the jealous husband of a female Camden Market stallholder who had agreed to make some clothing for him. The following morning, advised by people around Camden that he would find the man in question at the Prince Of Wales pub in Camden, Ant arrived there to confront his persecutor. Some of the pub patrons made fun of his appearance and told him in mocking terms that the man he was looking for was not present. Staff then asked him to leave as the premises was in fact a private members' club. Ant angrily told them all that he would be back before storming off and, some hours later, finding a discarded car alternator in the street, threw it through the pub window, the broken glass injuring a local musician. Chased through the backstreets of Camden by pub security and others, he drove them away by pulling out an old World War II-era starting pistol, once the property of his father. Returning afterwards to the main street, he was spotted by a police patrol, gun still in hand, and arrested as he tried to leave the scene in the back of a minicab.[46]
Ant was brought to court at the Old Bailey. The charges against him, which included criminal damage and threatening members of the public, were reduced to a single count of causing affray, to which he pleaded guilty. He was fined £500 and ordered to psychiatric care with a suspended sentence. In June 2003, he was arrested again by police after a conflict with a neighbour resulted in his attempting to smash the neighbour's patio door in with a shovel and then lying down on the concrete floor of a cafe basement with his trousers pulled down, curled up and trying to sleep. Once again he was charged with affray and criminal damage and spent time in psychiatric wards. In September of that year, he was sectioned under the Mental Health Act 1983 and spent a further six months of in-patient psychiatric care. He was eventually granted a conditional discharge by the judge at Highbury Magistrates Court.[47]
While awaiting his court appearance for the café incident, Ant attempted several fresh musical projects. In 2003, Ant and Wonderful collaborator, Boz Boorer teamed with the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund (now called The Gorilla Organisation) in a reworking of Stand and Deliver as Save the Gorillas. Originally intended as a benefit record for the endangered mountain gorilla, it was never released, due to copyright and licensing issues relating to the title track.[48] One track from the EP, Jungle Rock, was eventually released on Boorer's 2008 solo LP Miss Pearl[49]
Ant also began writing songs again, following a visit to his house by old schoolfriend Dave Pash, who had brought a guitar with him.[48] The upshot of this was that it was reported that he was writing songs for an album Fist In The Skull in 2003 just before he was sectioned over the café incident. He was working on some "very personal" songs for it.[40][49][50] Asked in retrospect about the project in a 2007 interview, Ant claimed that Fist In The Skull was the title of a song-idea, not an album title.[51]
Another project in the pipeline was a concert planned for 25 September 2003 at the 100 Club. Like the planned album and Save The Gorillas, this was postponed indefinitely[49] and fell by the wayside (before any tickets went on sale) once Adam had been sectioned. One project from this period, however, which did go all the way to release was a guest appearance on an EP, Mike's Bikes by former Ants bassist Kevin Mooney's new band, the Lavender Pill Mob, on Mooney's own label Le Coq Musique. Ant provided lead vocals for Black Pirates, a reworking of the song Chicken Outlaw by Mooney's earlier band Wide Boy Awake, which was inspired by Mooney's departure from the Ants.[52]
In 2003, the successful Antbox was re-released due to popular demand, but presented in a different form. A television special entitled The Madness of Prince Charming[53] was aired in the UK in 2003 documenting Ant's career and his struggle with mental illness (he was diagnosed as suffering with bipolar disorder).
In 2004 and 2005, six remastered compact discs were released, spanning the years 1979 (Dirk) through to 1985 (Vive Le Rock). The CDs include previously unreleased demos and material from the "Ant vault". The project was overseen by Marco Pirroni, and includes a written message from Adam Ant. A limited edition box-set, 'Adam Ant Remasters', was made to hold all 6 of the albums and Redux. This product was re-released with all 7 albums in 2006.
In September 2006, he published his autobiography, Stand & Deliver. Marking the release of the book Adam Ant did a UK book signing, he went from London to Edinburgh.[54] After the success of the first edition the paperback edition was published (a year later, September 2007); it contains a new epilogue which covers the year following the initial hardback release.
Ant performed a live reading from his autobiography and played some of his songs at the Bloomsbury Theatre in London on 24 September 2007. It was his first live performance in 11 years.[55] The special performance is available on CD via adam-ant.net. The CD was officially released on the 12 December 2008. The CD is not available in the shops, only as an online purchase. It includes parts of the readings and songs performed on the night, complete with snatches of unscripted dialogue between Adam and his guitarist for the gig, Dave Pash.[56]
In early October 2008, Ant was awarded the Q Music Icon Award. Receiving the award from The Sugababes, he said how flattering it was to get an award that last year had gone to Paul McCartney, and that it was an honour to be chosen for the work that he’d done in the past. He mentioned was looking forward to next year with anticipation, not only because it would be the 30th anniversary of his first album release.[57]
On August 2009, Cherry Pop Records UK, a subdivision of Cherry Red, re-released "Manners & Physique" remastered with bonus tracks.
On 4 March 2010 Adam Ant registered his new label Blue Black Hussar Ltd. as a private limited company at Companies House.[58] That month also marked a return to live music. Ant's first live performance since The Bloomsbury in 2007 was at Through The Looking Glass bookshop in London on 18 March, at which he played Ants Invasion, Cartrouble, Physical and a cover of Iggy Pop's The Passenger. A day later on 19 March, Ant guested at a Zodiac Mindwarp and the Love Reaction gig at the Pipeline Bar, London E1 in which he provided lead vocals for the band's Top 20 hit Prime Mover.[59] Ant performed yet another low key show at the Southwark Playhouse on Saturday 20 March.[59] During the intervals Ant talked about Sony records, how he rejected an alleged £2.6 million O2 deal and a new album collaboration with Chris McCormack.[60]
On the Sunday, he appeared at another nightclub in London, this time at the Monarch's regular Sunday hard rock evening on Camden High Street tonight as part of his present assault on London's live circuit. He played alongside members of Zodiac Mindwarp's Love Reaction band for a second time that week, Ant performed Prime Mover again. He was also called to the stage by headliners Metalworks for a version of Born to Be Wild before making his leave.[59][61] After a night off Ant was photographed outside the Groucho Club on Dean Street with Mighty Boosh star Noel Fielding and the press reported on Wednesday that Ant was indeed back in the studio again after an absence of 16 years.[62]
Adam Ant performed at The Troubadour Cafe on Friday 2 April. He played an extended live set of early Ants material including Red Scab, It Doesn't Matter and Lady along with hits such as Stand & Deliver and even a rare live outing for Prince Charming. The gig also saw the debut of Ant's new song,Gun In My Pocket the tale of the Russell Brand and Jonathan Ross incident involving Hayley’s friend Georgina Baillie. Added to this was a cover of Johnny Kidd and the Pirates "Shakin’ All Over", a favourite live number that Ant has been performing since around 1990. With recent late night visits to the recording studio that week, Ant had the benefit of playing the last minute set with a full backing band with Will Crewdson and Dave Ryder-Prangley from the band Rachel Stamp providing guitar and bass respectively, Hayley Leggs drumming, Peter Olive with keyboards and Tree Carr backing up the vocal sound,[59][63][64]
On 9 April 2010 Adam Ant appeared on a bill featuring Angie Bowie, The Glitter Band, Spizzenergi and Bubblegum Screw at the Scala, London where he sang "Antmusic" and joined The Glitter Band along with Spizz of Spizzenergi for the finale of 'I'm the Leader of the Gang'. In the early morning hours, he went on to play his own set and was joined by Angie Bowie for a rendition of Get It On by T Rex.[59] For this performance, Ant was backed by a similar band lineup to his previous Troubador performance except for one Johnny Love of the musical project Modernless, instead of Hayley Leggs on drums,[65] plus an additional guitarist, Miles Davis Landesman.[66] On 13 April Ant appeared at the Gary Numan gig at the Scala, London where he joined Numan on "Cars".[67] Ant's scheduled live appearances with The Glitter Band on Friday 16 April (in Birmingham) and Saturday 17 April (in Manchester) were cancelled due to plans for Malcolm McLaren's funeral that took place on Thursday 22 April.[68][69]
Malcolm McLaren's funeral was held on the 22nd. Ant attended the high profile ceremony which had the cortège pass through Camden High Street on its route towards Highgate Cemetery. Images of Ant attending the event, several of them featuring him in the company of McLaren's former partner Dame Vivienne Westwood, featured prominently in much of the media coverage of the funeral. The night after, the band appeared at the Purple Turtle in Camden at Simon Price's Stay Beautiful evening,[59] which was a warm up for the headlining show at the Scala on the 30th, (as was Adam's solo appearance in Portsmouth on the 29th).[59] The Stay Beautiful performance featured the same lineup as the April 9th Scala lineup.[70]
The sold out night on the last day of the month billed as The Pirate Metal Extravaganza would be the largest show that Ant had performed at since 1995. There was concern in the building as rumour had it (quite correctly) that Ant was still in Portsmouth, but fears were put aside just after 8pm as he turned up and headed off into the venue to chat to fans waiting around the merchandise stall. The evening was running late, but as the band - also named Adam Ant's Pirate Metal Extravaganza as he explained at the start of the show - went on the place erupted, and rather than the expected half hour set, the final running time was almost 3 times that with a set consisting several covers and a batch of Ant material spanning from 1977 to 1985, although one glaring omission from the set was the planned new single "Gun In My Pocket" which was on the setlist but never performed. On this occasion, both Leggs and Love teamed up as double drummers, (as had been the custom on several of Adam's previous backing bands, most notably Hughes and Miall in the early 80s Ants) and two female backing vocalists (Sacha and Tasha) additional to Carr were featured. Much of Adam's entourage were on the stage also, including promoter Simon "Barnzley" Armitage (also designer of East-end fashion line Child of the Jago). Marc Almond and Simon Price[6] were also in the audience that evening.[70]
Following the concert, Ant returned to his holiday in Portsmouth, where he played further concerts including one at the Oasis Centre which ended in some acrimony between Ant and the venue owner and audience members.[71] Ant subsequently returned to London where he and his band performed at the Paper Dresstival event at London's Paper Dress shop on 15 May.[72]
This brief period of manic musical activity came to a pause on, or just prior to Tuesday 18 May 2010 when, for unspecifed reasons, Adam Ant was returned to psychiatric hospital - in his own words "at Her Majesty's Pleasure", albeit in a comfortable regime at a London NHS hospital, where he remained until mid-June, subsequently returning home under outpatient supervision. In an official statement, Ant expressed an intention to perform further gigs later in the year once his hospitalisation had ended.[72][73]
It remained to be seen, however, whether or not a medicated and stabilised Ant would wish to continue the direction his unmedicated self had taken. Although he gave at least one live performance in the immediate aftermath of his release (a jam at a Chelsea bar at some point during the weekend of 19–20 June 2010), which appeared consistent with his previously stated intentions,[74] he otherwise kept a mostly low profile for the rest of his supervised outpatient period.[59] Ant was subsequently reported to have been rehearsing in East London, with a band retaining Landesman but otherwise featuring a new all-female lineup including former Babyshambles drummer Gemma Clarke and Suffrajets frontwoman Claire Wakeman on guitar. A possible concert on 12 August 2010 at the Electric Ballroom, featuring songs from the lost Persuasion album, was mooted but did not materialize.[66] Some smaller guerilla gigs were performed that Autumn which received no advance billing whatsoever, including a solo show at the Dark Mills festival at London's Colour House Theatre on 4 September 2010, the launch party of the Illamasqua store on 16 September (at which Boy George served as DJ), and a guest spot at the Monster Raving Loony Party's annual conference in Fleet, Hampshire, on 25 September.
On Thursday 21 October, Ant performed at the Union Chapel, London. The gig, which was announced only two days beforehand and billed as Adam Ant (the last of the Punkrökkers) and his new band of buccaneers appearing live on stage in ... "THE GOOD, THE MAD AND THE LOVELY WORLD TOUR OF LONDON 2010/11"[75] featured a line up including both Crewdson and veteran Ant-guitarist Boorer with Love now appearing on bass guitar, and saw Ant singing a selection of iconic songs from his back catalogue. The support act was Scottish funkster Jesse Rae. Sixteen days later, on 7 November 2010, Ant, accompanied by Crewdson, appeared on Today Is Boring, the regular radio show of Carr and her husband Adam Carr on the online radio station Recharged Radio. Although not Ant's first radio appearance in 15 years (contrary to the claim made in programme pre-publicity materials)[76] it was nonetheless his first radio music session in that same timeframe as he and Crewdson gave an acoustic rendition of his punk-era (and later CBS B-side) song Juanito The Bandito. In the preceding interview, among other topics Ant revealed that the ...Blueblack Hussar ... album had now been rerecorded on a laptop studio belonging to Boorer and would consist of twelve songs, six co-written with Boorer, the other six co-written with McCormack (but made no mention of the previously intended collaborations with Baillee, Pirroni or Bell). [77]
Ant headlined at the Scala again on 18 November[78] (in a concert billed as the second date of his "THE GOOD, THE MAD AND THE LOVELY WORLD TOUR OF LONDON 2010/11" and featuring support from Birmingham-based electro artist Johhny Normal, Rae again and Edward Tudor-Pole) and three days later, topped the bill at a tribute concert for former Ant Matthew Ashman on 21 November at the same venue, in a show also featuring later Ashman bands Bow Wow Wow, Chiefs Of Relief and Agent Provocateur). Boorer, a schoolfriend of Ashman's, again provided guitar for Ant's set[79] The concert on 18 November received highly positive reviews from the Daily Telegraph[80] and former Guns 'N Roses guitarist Duff McKagan in his column for the Seattle Weekly.[81]
Ant thereafter made further broadcast media appearances - on Iain Lee's show on Absolute Radio on 28 November and, in a higher profile, on ITV's London Tonight regional news programme on 14 December.[82] This featured Adam in preparation for two upcoming further dates of his "... WORLD TOUR OF LONDON" for 16 December at the Electric Ballroom in Camden [83] and 21 December at the London Forum.[84] The concerts attracted some controversy for their £50 ticket price and an incident with a heckler that forced an abrupt end to the Electric Ballroom gig[85] as well as the last minute move of the Forum concert to the Relentless Garage in Islington.[86][87][88] Ant was back playing live two days later on 23 December, when he and Baillee guested onstage at the Christmas party of West Rocks at Shepherds Bar in Shepherds Bush and played live again at Proud, Camden on 5 January 2011[89] and at Madame JoJo's in Soho on 17 January.[86] He finished the month by playing further dates of his "... WORLD TOUR OF LONDON ..." with a two-night stand at the 100 Club on 26 and 27 January 2011.[90][91]
Ant subsequently spent time in Paris where he played low-key shows (his first gigs outside the UK in nearly 16 years.).[4] On 29 March 2011, BBC Radio 4 transmitted an interview of Ant by John Humphrys for the On The Ropes series in which Ant discussed his bipolar condition and its impact on his career. That same day, Ant held a press conference and media preview gig at Under The Bridge in Chelsea at which he formally unveiled plans for an eleven date UK concert tour (as with the Paris concert, the first such event in 16 years) due to run from 16 May to 4 June 2011. Also announced at the Chelsea event was a public screening of the December 1981 Prince Charming Revue concert video plus a question-and-answer session to be held in South London's Coronet Cinema on 11 May 2011.[92]
While awaiting the tour, Ant continued to perform solo concerts including a Get Tested Hepatitis C fundraiser on 31 March 2011 at London's Jazz Café (at which he duetted with fellow pop icon Boy George),[93][94] a show at Woody's tattoo parlour in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire on 1 April 2011,[95] the We Love Japan fundraiser for victims of the Tōhoku Earthquake marking his return to the Relentless Garage on 2 April 2011,[96] a book launch at Monto in London on 7 April 2011,[97] London's St Moritz club on 22 April and the Zetland Arms in Kingsdown on 29 April.[4] A more formal tour preview gig with the full band was held on 9 May at Bush Hall in London[4] and a solo gig was included as part of the proceedings at the aforementioned Coronet Cinema concert video screening two nights later on 11 May.[98]
By the time the tour itself got underway on 16 May in Brighton, the original eleven date itinerary had been expanded to fifteen dates.[4] In defiance of sceptics,[99] Ant successfully completed the entire schedule of tour dates[100] which were overwhemlingly enthusiatically received - Dave Simpson of The Guardian rated the 24 May 2011 Sheffield Academy concert four stars out of five, lauding "Ant still has the moves. However, this near two-hour voyage through his back catalogue delves beyond the hits. From his edgy, leftfield punk days, Zerox, Car Trouble and the rest sound icy, sensual and dangerous. This entertaining, fun show has everything: sex (he playfully removes a backing singer's top and hands it back, quipping, "Phew, I don't need that at my age"), surreal banter ("Hello, I'm Bryan Ferry") and controversy (Bob Geldof is "a twat")." and concluding " If an apparently finished album is anything like as good, Prince Charming's could be one of the great pop comebacks."[101] The Daily Mail reviewed the showcase 26 May 2011 concert at London's IndigO2 venue before an audience of 2,500 (at which Ant fell offstage but recovered to complete the concert) and reported "it sounds like the man who dominated the charts in the Eighties hasn't lost his touch," and quoted an online review as stating "Antmusic has lost none of its taste judging by a triumphant gig from Prince Charming himself and suggested he could lead his own Ant Army again at the drop of a hat," adding that "fans said it was good to see him back on form.".[102]
The Wolverhampton Express and Star praised his 1 June 2011 show at the Birmingham's O2 Academy saying "From the moment the Prince Charming singer opened his mouth for his first song, Plastic Surgery, his performance was full of energy with him barely pausing for breath as he played hit after hit."[103] Even the one serious negative onstage incident, at Fat Sam's in Dundee on 21 May 2011 when Ant reacted angrily to some crowd elements who booed his kilt decorated with the St George's Cross[104] (as previously worn at the Dark Mills concert) was mitigated by local newspaper The Courier as merely a "disappointing end to what had been a great show by the 56-year-old, who still looks the part and still managed a near two-hour set including hits like Goody Two Shoes, Stand And Deliver, Dog Eat Dog and Kings Of The Wild Frontier, bringing huge cheers and two encores."[104] The tour closed in Manchester on 5 June with a show at the city's Manchester Academy which was applauded by frequent supporter John Robb in hyperbolic fashion: "What a great singer he is, the yodelling is really fab, it’s that very Adam touch of pure pop and dark underground... this is one of the great rock n roll voices, a brilliant clarity that cuts like a knife even two weeks into a tour. The set list is perfect. Loads of ‘Dirk’ period stuff. Plastic Surgery, Kick, Cartrouble, Cleopatra, Physcial but also the hits including a great stripped down Prince Charming, and a whole host of off the cuff covers. It’s packed in here - Totally sold out.... The word is out. The tour has been brilliant and this is one of the great comebacks." [100]
Similar acclaim was given[105] to the five date Seaside Tour of coastal resorts in the south of England which Ant undertook on 17–22 June 2011.[106] Local Cornish radio station The Source FM cheered the 18 June 2011 Falmouth concert on its website: "The audience goes wild. Adam stalks the stage, in control, he already knows he’s got us ... he plays songs that a man in his mid fifties shouldn’t really get away with, but he does, with dignity. Here’s a man who still has something to say and manages to say it with 30 year old songs...Someone boos, Adam retaliates and we’re with him. There’s nothing to boo here... Did that really just happen? Did Adam Ant really just blow us all away with the best gig of the year so far? I think he did."[105] The Seaside Tour served both as a follow-up to the main UK tour and a warm-up to Ant's appearance at Hard Rock Calling 2011 in Hyde Park on 26 June 2011,[107] third on the bill to Rod Stewart and Stevie Nicks before an audience of 45,000.[108] The festival's official website lauded his performance, reporting that "Adam Ant returned to London in tip-top shape this afternoon on the Main Stage in Hyde Park ...he left the stage to rapturous applause and cheers, leaving no question as to who was the real Prince Charming this weekend."[109]
After Ant slotted in some more solo gigs, including the Soho Festival in London's Wardour Street on 11 July,[4][110] he and the band next played the Guildford GuilFest festival on 15 July.[111] His set won applause from online reviewer Virtual Festivals, who reported that the band "rocked the Good Time Guide Stage at Guilfest, leaving festival-goers wondering why anyone was watching anybody else. Unlike some of the other performers across the day, interaction with the crowd was at its peak and the band were introduced in full, mid-set, sandwiched amongst favourites such as Antmusic, Stand and Deliver and Goody Two Shoes." [112] The next day, 16 July 2011 he played the Southwold Latitude festival.,[113] winning more critical praise as Clash's online reviewer commented "Ant knows how to write pop songs, and he knows how to entertain ... Ant (and his saucy backing vocalists) flirts with the crowd, and need only say two words to us (“Good afternoon”) the whole show, but with such a cheeky grin, he doesn’t need to elaborate. The Adam Ant of today’s Latitude shows no flakiness of recent times, and it’s testament to his enduring popularity that fans are left wide-eyed, grinning and speechless by a performance that’s every bit as theatrical as you’d hope."[114] Writing for The Guardian, Paul Lester likewise enthused "Adam Ant was a revelation, albeit mystifyingly low on the bill. He looked in great shape and sounded even better, treating the sheltering hordes to one thrilling hit after another"[115]
On 31 July 2011 Ant guested at Wayne Hemingway's Vintage Festival at the Southbank Centre[116]and his band played two more shows at Chelsea's Under The Bridge (site of the 29 March press conference/preview gig) on 5 and 6 August 2011.[117] Ant performed solo at a screening of the 1981 Adam and the Ants "Live In Japan" concert video and the recent Hyde Park show at Finchley's Phoenix Cinema,[118] He completed his summer with two festival appearances with the full band over the Bank Holiday weekend - firstly headlining at the West Dean Festival on 27 August 2011[119] and the next day 28 August playing at the Voewood festival in Kelling, Norfolk.[120]
Ant also announced a follow-up UK tour (described as the "second leg" of the 2011 tour), initially scheduled to run for twelve dates from 11 November 2011 in Bristol until 13 December 2011 in Newcastle.[121] As with the previous leg, Ant passed the time until the tour playing one-off dates, appearing with his tour band in Bedford on 10 September[4] before three days later reuniting with 2010 band members Crewdson and Love for a charity show on board HMS Belfast.[122] He then played a three night series over 7-9 October, appearing in York and Clacton with his full current band and Brighton's Expo festival solo[4][123] and followed this with two more solo appearances, one at a 'Burlesque Evening' on 15 October in Deal, the other at St Joseph's School on 20 October.[4]
As with the previous tour, the itinerary was expanded from the inital 12 dates to an eventual 21 dates running from 10 November in Frome until 16 December in Norwich, (with a non-tour acoustic gig at a benefit event for London's Wilton Hall venue thrown in for good measure).[4] Likewise as with the previous tour, Ant completed the entire schedule[4] and to further hugely positive reviews. The Irish Evening Herald praised his 25 November concert at Dublin's Vicar Street venue: "He ain't like other performers, this guy. One drum kit could never be good enough for the likes of Stuart Leslie Goddard ... Plastic Surgery? A terrific opener. Stand and Deliver? Even better now than it was then. Prince Charming? Terrific, as always. And hey, that Marc Bolan tribute at the end more than sealed the deal ... there was no time for chit chat. Which, incidentally, pretty much sums up Adam's live performance these days: no chit chat and no messing about. A straight-up display of raw, often deafening post-punk, Adam's way of keeping the crowd happy is to play as many tunes as possible. He's well aware of what the people came to hear, so he gives it to them. Better still, his voice remains in fine shape. Oh, and as for the 'Posse'? Let's just say that 'The Good, The Mad and The Lovely' is a more than suitable moniker."[124]. The Southern Daily Echo heaped similar adulation upon the 18 November 2011 concert at Eastleigh's Concorde Club: "Adam Ant, along with his backing band of The Good, the Mad and the Lovely possee, showed he can still rock, even in his mid-50s now. We wanted to hear the greatest hits, and Adam duly delivered ... The crowd lapped it all up ... It was a brilliant evening."[125]
There was a local controversy over the Guilford Civic Hall show on 6 December 2011 after the venue's publicists had indulged in flyposting to promote the concert.[126] Three days later, The Wolverhampton Express and Star once again turned out for the tour, this time attending the 9 December 2011 concert at the city's Wulfrun Hall and again coming away suitably impressed. "Loyal fans were strong in their support for the star and packed out the Wulfrun Hall in Wolverhampton last night to see the 57-year-old Prince Charming perform again. The singer, famed for his outlandish outfits, did not disappoint and took to the stage last night in a classic brocaded hussar jacket and pirate hat ... Ant gave the fans exactly what they wanted including such hits such as Stand and Deliver and Prince Charming. Despite difficulties with the sound in places which made it difficult to hear the lyrics the joy for those in the audience was palpable."[127]
Also once again turning out for this tour was John Robb who again ecstatically reviewed the Manchester date of the tour (14 December 2011 at the HMV Ritz) for his Louder Than War website. Robb singled out for particular praise new album track Vince Taylor (about the 1960s musician of that name) which was premiered on the tour. "‘Vince Taylor’ is primetime Adam Ant. It sounds like those off the wall early pop songs like ‘Young Parisians’ crossed with the 3D filmscapes of the ‘Kings Of The Wild Frontier’ album and sounds like a potential single with its nagging riff in the verses and its great melody. It’s great to hear a new song in a near two hour set of Ant classics and obscurities and is a hint at the healthy future of this remarkable comeback from Adam... People keep talking about the best new band of the year. In a weird way here it is right in front of you. Decades in and Adam Ant sounds fresher than ever, reinvigorated he sounds like he has just started ... As Adam strips down to semi nakedness during the filthy ‘Physical’- the long, slow f--k of the set has reached its climax. It seems astonishing when you think about it but Adam Ant is currently fronting one of the best rock n roll shows in the UK right now."[128] Just three days after the final Norwich date of the tour, Ant was back onstage again with two members of his live band on 19 December at a charity event at Ronnie Scott's.[129]
A few days before the end of the UK Tour Second Leg, it was officially confirmed that Ant will be making his return to the USA with a 15 date North American tour in February 2012, starting on 2 February in Ant's former adopted hometown of Los Angeles and running until 25 February in nearby Anaheim.[86] As a warm-up, Ant and his band have a five-date UK mini tour scheduled for 19-24 January 2012.[86]
In 2009, it was announced that Ant was planning on putting a new record out, with "sources" telling The Sun that labels were involved in a bidding war over the new material. Adam also expressed interest in working with The Kaiser Chiefs.[130] [131]
In an April 2010 interview for the NME, Ant announced he was also working a new album, with the title Adam Ant Is The Blueblack Hussar in Marrying The Gunner's Daughter. This was planned to feature collaborations with former 3 Colours Red guitarist Chris McCormack, Ant's long-time songwriting partner Marco Pirroni, a member of Oasis (later identified as Andy Bell)[5] and Morrissey's writing partner Boz Boorer. According to Ant, the album is a "live record that lends itself to performance" and will feature a "kind of concept. It's a very old fashioned, old school, step-by-step album". In addition, Ant rerecorded a song in tribute to the late Sex Pistols manager Malcolm McLaren, who died earlier that month, and who also once managed Adam & The Ants. Named Who's A Goofy Bunny Then?, the track was only previously available as a demo recorded in the early '80s, but Ant said he wanted to release a new version in tribute to the late punk manager. "Malcolm was a sort of mentor in my life" he explained. "As close as you can get to a surrogate father." The song took its name from a term of endearment bestowed upon McLaren by Ant - referring to his "quite prominent teeth".[132]
Ant also reported that he still has "a whole bunch" of demos from the early part of his career that he is considering revisiting and recording properly now. "[There are] literally about a hundred songs done on a four-track and I use them whenever I can," he explained. "There was a whole album before 'Dirk Wears White Sox' (1979 debut album) that never really came out, but I've still got the masters. It's a labour of love, this catalogue. To get rid of it would be like giving away something John Lennon and Paul McCartney banged out in a night in a pub in Liverpool. I think it's your duty to catalogue your work."[132] [133] [134]
On 31 December 2010, Ant gave an interview for The Sun (featured in the "Something For The Weekend" segment) in which he discussed in considerable detail the various controversies surrounding his recent life and musical activities. He summed up his upcoming album thus: "The Blueblack Hussar is me coming back to life. I'm like The Terminator - I was a dead man walking".[7] He also discussed individual songs on the album - as well as Gun In My Pocket (which, aside from the Troubador live performance, had also been given a club dancefloor play by Ant himself as guest DJ at the Family Affair clubnight in Shoreditch, London on 24 April 2010),[135] the 31 December 2010 Sun interview also made mention of Shrink, a song about Ant's experiences in the mental healthcare system. Ant had previously discussed both of these songs in his April 2010 interview with Simon Price for online fanzine The Quietus.[6] On his second visit to Iain Lee's show on Absolute Radio on 4 January 2011, two further new tracks were premiered - Hard Men Tough Blokes and punkyoungirl [sic].[136] In an interview for Bizarre magazine published that month, Ant named the song co-written with Andy Bell as Cool Zombie[137]
In April 2011 it was confirmed that Jamie Reynolds, bassist with The Klaxons was set to produce and help film a new documentary about the forthcoming UK tour. "Adam is sounding great." said Reynolds of his foray into the film business. "I hadn’t seen him perform until last week when he announced his first tour and he’s back on form.".[138][139][140] In an interview with Clink Magazine, Ant added that he was "going to go meet The Klaxons in the studio; they’re fans of mine. They’ve financed this film, this documentary that Jack Bond is directing, who did a film called Dali in New York in 1965. And he’s been filming me for the last six months. And that was purely [The Klaxons] saying that they’d like to meet me, and I’m going to go down and have a little play with them. And they’re good-looking kids and they play good music. They’re trying to do something a bit different. And, erm, they’re good."[141]
By December 2011, it was reported that the documentary had completed filming and was now in post-production. The film, by now entitled The Blueblack Hussar, is due to feature the ongoing history of Ant's 2010s comeback, featuring interviews with Ant and fly-on-the-wall footage of him going about creating the Blueblack Hussar stage character and recording his new album. Reportedly among the scenes is footage of John Robb interviewing Ant for the cover feature of issue 2 of Vive Le Rock magazine[142]
On 1 April 2011, in an interview with Oliver Franklin for GQ Online, Ant revealed “I'm bringing out my own fashion line next year. I'm in business with a guy called Rob Lucas at Pimpernel in Oxford.[143] It's called Blueblack Hussar."[144] On 5 May 2011 some of the label's logo was revealed in an interview in the Yorkshire Evening Post while promoting the northern leg of his tour. “Adam is also designing a menswear collection with his friend, Rob Lucas. The logo is apt: 'An 18th century brain in a 21st century head'. It's borrowed from a line in his song 'Room at the Top'".[145]
The tone of Ant's debut solo album, Friend or Foe, was defined as glitzy glam pop with "tongue-in-cheek tunes, delivered with an excess of flair and good humour". It was also described as being "one of Ant's best records and one of the best new wave albums".[146]
In a review for Strip, the songs were considered to contain a "mixture of driving, danceable rock with humour".[147]
The music on Vive Le Rock has been said to be a "50s-style rock & roll sound".[148]
The fourth studio album, Manners and Physique was said to be a combination of "contemporary dance tracks" and Ant's "old flair for mockery".[149] Ant himself later claimed that the album was styled after the bass heavy Minneapolis sound of which Cymone, in Ant's words, was "one of the architects".[150]
Ant has been married twice: first to Carol Mills in 1975 (he divorced her shortly after); then to Lorraine in 1997 (they divorced shortly after their daughter Lily's birth in 1998).[151] He dated Amanda Donohoe between 1977 and 1981, Jamie Lee Curtis in 1983 and Heather Graham in the early 1990s.[40]
He was diagnosed as having bipolar disorder when he was 21, and has spoken candidly about his experiences with the effects of the illness.[152] In his 31 December 2010 interview for The Sun, Ant also discussed the side effects of medication for his bipolar condition: "In the past I've been a robot. It's been an out-of-body experience. Bipolar means up and down and that's me... Music has always been the best medication. I was on sodium valproate for seven years.... I couldn't get to sleep and I didn't make love for seven years. My hair fell out and I couldn't pick up a book as I couldn't concentrate. I didn't write a song or pick up a guitar in that time — and piled on the weight. I might as well have been dead. I work very closely with my GP and any decisions I make are made with him".[7] [153] During an interview with BBC 6 Music, he declared that "mental health needs a great deal of attention. It's the final taboo and it needs to be faced and dealt with."[154]
Year | Nominated work | Award | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1982 | Adam and the Ants | Grammy Awards: Best New Artist[155] | Nominated |
Kings of the Wild Frontier | BRIT Awards: Best British Album[156] | Won | |
Stand and Deliver | Ivor Novello Awards: Songwriters of the Year[157] | Won | |
2008 | Adam Ant | Q Awards: Q Icon[158] | Won |