Paul Cunniffe | |
---|---|
Paul Cunniffe in London |
|
Background information | |
Born | 23 June 1961 Cambridge, England |
Died | 11 August 2001 Whitechapel, London, England |
(aged 40)
Genres | Rock Punk Folk |
Occupations | Musician, Songwriter |
Instruments | Vocals |
Years active | 1979–2001 |
Associated acts | Blaze X, The Saw Doctors |
Paul Cunniffe (23 June 1961 – 11 August 2001) was a British-born Irish singer-songwriter. He fronted the 1980s punk band Blaze X.
Contents |
Cunniffe was born in Cambridge, England, and then lived in Ellesmere Port, but moved back to his family's hometown of Tuam in Ireland at the age of 14. In the Christian Brothers School in Tuam he formed Blaze X with friends Paul Ralph, Davy Carton and Ja Keating.
After Blaze X split, he moved to London. He began to write songs on his own, and play on the Irish pub scene around the capital. He won the London Pub Entertainer of the Year award in 1996
He wrote the first version of the Saw Doctors number 1 single, "I Useta Lover". He also wrote the track "Funny World" which is covered by the Saw Doctors on their album The Cure.[1]
Following his death, an album of his songs entitled Excuse My Accent was released to critical acclaim. Many songs on this album evoke a sadness which seems to be in Paul's life. In the documentary, Man of Music, Heart of Gold, Kenny Ralph describes him as having frailty in life, similar to the life of Nick Drake. Others, such as Sunshine, suggest otherwise; Sunshine, lights up a cloudy day, moonlight helps me to find my way. You can't beat the feeling, when you've made it on your own. Dreams is considered the song which most aptly displays Paul's fine[1] talent for words and the English language. There were only 500 copies of this album pressed. A catalogue of unreleased songs may be released at some point in the future. Paul left behind his partner Jo and three children, Paula, Shane and Mollie Rae.
A no-budget documentary about his music entitled Man of Music, Heart Of Gold was shown to a packed audience in his hometown of Tuam on 19 August 2007. The film had its Galway premiere on 6 December 2007 in Monroe's Tavern.[2]
Paul died in suspicious circumstances, following a fall, in Whitechapel, east London on 11 August 2001. In January 2010, The Guardian claimed that Paul fell from the balcony of Paul Roundhill's flat,[3] and that the circumstances surrounding the fall have never been discovered. The guardian printed an error regarding Paul's death. Paul was living in the same street in a flat on the opposite side of the street to Roundhill. On the day of Paul's death he had been a visitor in the top flat and for some reason, climbed out of the window, hanging onto the gutter, the gutter broke and Paul fell to his death.