Alex Lusty
Alex Lusty | |
---|---|
Born |
England, U.K. | 9 April 1973
Genres | Rap, punk, urban folk, alternative/experimental |
Occupation(s) | Lyricist, rapper, singer, producer |
Years active | 1999–present |
Labels | Shifty Disco, Rotator, Hoolie Tunes, Revolver, Drive By Shouting |
Associated acts | Frigid Vinegar, Acarine, The OneThree, Loner Party, Who Shot Who?, Happy Martyr |
Website |
www |
Alex Lusty is a UK-based rapper born 9 April 1973.
Early influences
While growing up, Lusty listened to Old School Hip Hop. His work has been influenced by his favourite Old School artists KRS-One, Kool G Rap, Rakim, Kool Keith, Proof and Nas. Lusty is also a Morrissey fan. Lusty has attended more than 50 Morrissey concerts, and this fandom led directly to the creation of his projects The OneThree and Happy Martyr.[1]
Musical projects
Frigid Vinegar
Alex Lusty's first release was "Dogmonaut 2000" under the guise Frigid Vinegar in 1999.[2] The single sampled It's Not Unusual by Tom Jones and was first released on Oxford-based Shifty Disco records. The single was first played by John Peel on BBC Radio 1. It was then championed by DJ Steve Lamacq on the evening session where it went on to be one of the year's most requested records.[3] Frigid Vinegar performed the track "Jack Biscuit" live on Lamacq's show from Maida Vale studios. Frigid Vinegar recorded 4 tracks in session for Lamacq, one of the tracks being "Lamacqmanaut 2000" a reworking of "Dogmonaut 2000" with several lyric changes paying homage to the DJ. The track also found its way onto a CD compilation of Lamacq session tracks (Bootleg Session 3)[4] that was given away with the Melody Maker magazine. "Dogmonaut 2000" was also played on BBC daytime shows by DJs Mark and Lard, Chris Moyles, Jo Whiley and Dave Pearce, and appeared on the UK singles chart.[5] Frigid Vinegar also appeared 10 times on the Radio 1 roadshow.
The next single "How Cheap Is Your Love?" was released on Rotator records[6] the following year and was both the Melody Maker and Daily Mirror's single of the week.[7][8] It was again championed by Lamacq on Radio 1 and made it to number 5 in the chart of the year.[9]
More singles followed: "Jesus Presley Superstar" and "Diddleysquat". "Diddleysquat" featured Family Fortunes game show host Les Dennis singing the chorus and appearing in the video. The last Frigid Vinegar single, "Champagne", was released 1 January 2002. Following its release Lusty assembled a 5-piece band to back him for a UK tour that year. In addition to headlining, Frigid Vinegar also supported Echobelly.
Acarine
It was then Lusty teamed with Brett Gordon to form Acarine. The first single "Blinder" sampled the theme from the 1970s television show Minder and was played by Zane Lowe and Chris Moyles. The next single "God Shoots Jesus Saves" sampled the 1980 movie The Long Good Friday and was released on limited edition numbered 7-inch vinyl only.[10][11] Acarine were then signed to CNR, a subsidiary of RoadRunner records, where they released the singles "Screw Your Head On" and "Organ Donor", as well as the 14 track album Call It On.[12] The duo, along with live drummer Paul Kodish and Scratch DJ Matt Lewis, played the Glastonbury and Glade festival.[13] They also toured with Chumbawamba and headlined shows in London at Koko, Dublin Castle, 93 Feet East, Bar Fly and Liberty. In addition, they supported the Cockney Rejects at the first Rejects' London show in 20 years.
Gigs in London were attended by ex-football hooligan turned author Cass Pennant. A track on the album was written and recorded about Pennant, and they performed at his book launch for Rolling With The 657 Crew about Portsmouth F.C. hooligans.[14] Ex-Stoke City hooligan Mark Chester followed suit and had Acarine perform at the launch for his book Naughty Forty. Director Lexi Alexander then asked Acarine to provide a song for his film Green Street starring Elijah Wood which was about West Ham United hooligans. Acarine recorded the song "Stand Your Ground" for Green Street.[3] The band also appeared in the film as extras. Subsequently a proposed gig in Southend was cancelled by the police and the local Council following concerns about violence from rival hooligans.[15]
The OneThree
In December 2004 Lusty met Morrissey and Polecats guitarist Boz Boorer backstage at an after show party at Morrissey's Earl Court show in London. Alex and Boz discussed recording together, and soon after The OneThree was born. Lusty wrote the lyrics and provided vocals, while Boz wrote the music and played guitar.[16] Brett Gordon was again involved, this time playing bass, songwriting and handling the production as well as all chorus and backing vocals and contributing to arrangement. A 13 track album, Life Goes On, was recorded and released on Revolver Records in August 2005.[17] The album was well-reviewed [18] and BBC Radio 2's Janice Long and BBC 6 Music's Phil Jupitus both played the album's lead track Dive In.
Loner Party
A second album for The OneThree was planned. Lusty had an album's worth of lyrics written, but Boz Boorer was unavailable as he was away on a world tour with Morrissey. Lusty and Gordon decided to put the lyrics to an alt, lo fi project called Loner Party. Again, Lusty provided the lyrics and vocals while Brett provided the music. The 14 tracks were released on the album Protest Is Dead. The album was signed by Electronica label CCT Records and was released for download in May 2007.[19]
The Loner Party album was the last release Lusty made with Gordon.
Lusty and Buzz
In September 2008, Lusty teamed up with the 'mysterious' Buzz as Lusty And Buzz for a single called Playin Dirty, a wry look at the pornographic film business. The video was even given credence by appearances from well-known established porn stars Lolly Badcock, Amber Leigh, Rio Mariah and Sensi.[20]
Who Shot Who?
Lusty then teamed up with old friend and ex-Nightingales and Goldblade guitarist Peter Byrchmore. They combined Peter's love of punk and Lusty's love of hip hop to form Who Shot Who?, an alternative punk/rap project. The first single Have You Seen Annette? was released on Lusty's own label, Drive By Shouting Records.[3] The video was shot by Terry Stephens and featured UK porn star Shay Hendrix.[21] Gigs throughout the UK followed with bands 999, Anti Nowhere League, Sham 69, The Lurkers, Total Chaos and at the Nice and Sleazy Festival.[22] The 13 track album Onwards And Upwards was released [23] and tracks were played by Rodney Bigenheimer on legendary LA Radio station KROQ. Reviews followed in Big Cheese and Rock Sound magazine. A second single, The Murder Of a Good Man, was released on download. The song was in tribute to the murdered weapons of mass destruction inspector, Dr. David Kelly. More gigs followed including ones in Dublin with Paranoid Visions and at the Bearded Theory Festival.[24] Lusty and Byrchmore are both currently writing new material for the next Who Shot Who? album.
Happy Martyr
Happy Martyr was born when Lusty and Boz Boorer finally found time to work on a second album together. The plan was to record some acoustic folk rap, a very stripped down affair inspired by a shared love of Johnny Cash, and which Boorer describes as "a MC fronting early Tyrannosaurus Rex."[25] The album was recorded between London and Boorer's studio at Serra Vista in Portugal. Serra Vista was also the location for the video, shot by Terry Stephens, for the debut single Painkillers, released 4 April 2011. Painkillers got its first airplay via Janice Long on her Radio 2 show, and was released on Lusty's Drive By Shouting Records label via download. The duo's first show was in London at the 12 Bar in April 2010. The album was completed in breaks between Boorer's hectic touring schedule with Morrissey. The second single Sleep Tight was released on 4 July 2011, with Terry Stephens again directing and filming the video. Both singles received very positive reviews.[26][27] A short autumn tour took place taking in Birmingham, Manchester, London and Dublin.[28] This Small Town from the upcoming album was released as a teaser track on soundcloud 11 December 2011.[29] Kiss Me Like You Stole It, a track from the as yet to be released album, was released on YouTube as a video. Directed and filmed by David J. Harris, the video is shot in black and white and features scenes from Brighton Rock in the background.[30] The 13 track debut Happy Martyr, One Square Mile, was released on Floating World Records 30 January 2012.[31] A 6-city tour was undertaken 20–28 January in support of the album, visiting Southend, Swindon, Winchester, London, Manchester and Birmingham.[32] The London show featured percussionist Woodie Taylor, who played on Morrissey's Vauxhall and I.[33] The fourth Happy Martyr single was "Christmas Kisses", released for download 17 December 2012.
September 2013 saw the release of a new single produced by Markus Kienzl. A short tour followed with Conflict and ex Morrissey drummer Spike Smith playing drums.
On 18 August 2014 the second Happy Martyr album 'Nothing Like Love' was released via CD and download on the band's own Suitcase Records. It was preceded by a video for the track 'All lies lead to the truth'.
Solo work
In 2012, Lusty returned to rap. The first single, "Self Medication", was released on his website on 24 September. The video for the single was filmed and edited by Terry Stephens. Lusty continued working on his debut solo album, completing production in the later part of 2012. The second single, "Country Bumpkin", was released 21 January 2013. The video was again filmed and produced by Terry Stephens, and was released 14 January 2013.
The album 'Public Mental Breakdown' was released in February 2013 as a 13 track free download via Lustys website www.alexlusty.com. A third video was taken from the album Bad Places again filmed by Terry Stephens and starred Lusty and Sensi as TV detectives in a spoof of 70s cop shows.
January 2014 saw Lusty released brand new single 'Where Your At' which sampled hip hop legend Rakim in the chorus. A new album 'Meet Uncle Splash' was released on both CD and download in February on and gigs with Pharorahe Monch and Ugly Duckling followed.
In May 2014 a video for the albums first track 'Just Like Me' was unveiled.
Discography
Albums
- Acarine - Call It On, CNR, 2004
- The OneThree - Life Goes On, Revolver Records, 2005
- Loner Party - Protest Is Dead, CCT Records, 2007
- Who Shot Who? - Onwards and Upwards, Drive By Shouting Records, 2010
- Happy Martyr - One Square Mile, Floating World Records, 2012[34]
- Lusty - Public Mental Breakdown, Drive Shouting Records 2013
- Lusty - Meet Uncle Splash, Drive By Shouting Records 2014
- Happy Martyr - Nothing Like Love, Suitcase Records 2014
References
- ↑ personal correspondence
- ↑ "NME Track Reviews - Frigid Vinegar : Dogmonaut 2000 (is there anyone out there)". Nme.Com. 1999-07-24. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 "Whoshotwho - MUDKISS FANZINE". Mudkiss.com. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- ↑ "Steve Lamacq's Bootleg Session Volume 3 (compilation) – MuseWiki: Supermassive wiki for the band Muse". Musewiki.org. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- ↑ "Frigid Vinegar | Artist". Official Charts. 1999-08-21. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- ↑ Frigid Vinegar. How Cheap Is Your Love?. Rotator Records, Oxford, 2000.
- ↑ Single of the Week. Daily Mirror, 9–15 June 2000.
- ↑ Melody Maker 9 June 2000.
- ↑ Radio Times, June 2000.
- ↑ Acarine. God Shoots, Jesus Saves. Hoolie Tunes, 2004.
- ↑ "Acarine- God Shoots, Jesus Save’s | Rapnews.co.uk UK rap, grime and hiphop culture resource!". Rapnews.co.uk. 2004-06-05. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- ↑ Acarine. Call It On. CNR Records, 2004.
- ↑ "Glasto - More Stages Revealed | News". Nme.Com. 2004-06-01. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- ↑ http://www.casspennant.com
- ↑ Curtis, A. "Band Slam Venue Over Cancelled Gig." The Citizen, 1 July 2004.
- ↑ video interview, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UxwQjg8qw8s
- ↑ The OneThree. Life Goes On. Revolver Music Ltd., Wolverhampton, 2005.
- ↑ "Manchester Music - Release Review From the Archive". Music-dash.co.uk. 2006-01-09. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- ↑ Loner Party. Protest is Dead. CCT Records, London, 2007.
- ↑ "video". Youtube.com. 2008-09-25. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- ↑ Manchester Music Review, October 2009
- ↑ Bombsite 11, October 2009
- ↑ Who Shot Who? Onwards and Upwards. Drive By Shouting Records, Devon, 2010.
- ↑ "Bearded Theory Festival Lineup2011". Beardedtheory.co.uk. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- ↑ "Painkillers - HAPPY MARTYR (epk edit)". YouTube. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- ↑ "Manchester Music - Release Review From the Archive". Music-dash.co.uk. 2011-04-30. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- ↑ http://www.music-dash.co.uk/releases/release.asp?item=7025
- ↑ "Birmingham Live! » Blog Archive » Happy Martyr at The Prince Of Wales, Moseley 16th September 2011". Brumlive.com. 2011-09-16. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- ↑ https://soundcloud.com/drivebyshouting/this-small-town
- ↑ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PglUhd6S9LY&feature=related
- ↑ http://www.floatingworldrecords.co.uk/albums/one-square-mile/
- ↑ http://www.typepad.com/site/blogs/6a014e8b3c7b7e970d01539148d3a4970b/post/6a014e8b3c7b7e970d0154387392c3970c/edit
- ↑ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZIi1uDa00Ps&feature=related
- ↑ http://www.frostmagazine.com/2012/05/03/happy-martyr-one-square-mile-music-review/