BILL NELSON BIOGRAPHY
(taken from Artist Direct ubl.artistsdirect.com)
Bill
Nelson is both an enigma and a highly public person whose motivations
sometimes seem shrouded in complex mysteries, yet whose sometimes prodigious
output amounts to public development of song ideas and musical experiments. He
has been both a guitar hero and the background figure in any number of art
installations, exhibitions and theatrical presentations. While difficult for
record company executives to grasp and often obscure to the general public, Nelson
has nonetheless built up a strong and loyal fan base around the world.
Nelson
was born in the West Riding of Yorkshire, in the semi-industrial town of
Wakefield, showing a talent for art and design and a passion for science
fiction. His father, saxophonist Walter
Nelson, was the leader of a dance band, and his mother, Jean, had once
performed as part of a dance troupe, so music permeated the household -- Nelson's
brother, Ian,
is also a saxophonist, while several close relatives were expert musicians. Even
so, Nelson
never learned to read music, and was relatively late coming to guitar -- he was
well into his teens before his father bought him the Gibson ES345 that
eventually became his trademark. His early influences included Duane
Eddy, as well as the icon of every budding English guitarist of the early
1960s, Hank
B. Marvin of the Shadows ("The Passion," included on The Two-Fold
Aspect of Everything, is a veritable chronicle of Marvin's influence). Later
influences included Jimi
Hendrix, for whom Nelson
wrote "Crying to the Sky," a Be
Bop Deluxe song.
He went through a relatively normal process of education at Wakefield schools,
eventually attending the Wakefield College of Art, where he was able to pursue
his painting and graphics interests, as well as his fascination with Jean
Cocteau. On the musical side of his life, he was involved with several
unrecorded bands. The first known Nelson
recordings are of a three-piece band called Global Village, who cut three covers
for an EP and dissolved in 1968. Nelson
also played on sessions at the Holyground recording studio, various of which
have surfaced again in recent years, though Nelson
is dismissive of his participation. Around this time he married for the first
time, becoming a Pentecostal Christian and joining a church group called the
Messengers, who later changed their name to Gentle Revolution. The marriage
resulted in the 1970 birth of Julia Nelson.
Nelson's
career began in earnest with the recording and release of a solo album, Northern
Dream, which was financed by the owner of the Record Bar, a local Wakefield
record store. The initial pressing was limited to 250 copies (it has since been
reissued several times, much to Nelson's
frustration; he has never received royalties from the record), one of which
found its way to BBC disc jockey John
Peel, whose late-night Radio One shows were a constant influence on British
rock music. Peel
took an immediate liking to the record, playing cuts from it on a regular basis,
with the result that executives from EMI's Harvest label contacted Nelson
with the intention of having him record for the label, possibly with a remake of
Northern
Dream.
Nelson
had different ideas by this point, however, and had assembled the first version
of Be
Bop Deluxe, featuring fellow Gentle Revolution member Richard
Brown (keyboards), Ian
Parkin (guitar), Rob Bryan (bass) and Nicholas
Chatterton-Dew (drums). Brown left before the band went into the studio. A
single, "Teenage Archangel"/"Jets at Dawn," was recorded and
sold at concerts just before the EMI deal was finalized. Nelson
broke the band up after the recording of 1974's Axe
Victim, after EMI expressed dissatisfaction with the abilities of the other
members. Nelson
briefly worked with Paul
Jeffreys and Milton Reame-James, formerly of Cockney
Rebel, and bringing drummer Simon
Fox into the band. Bassist Charles
Tumahai was the next addition, with the trio going on to record Futurama.
Keyboardist Andy
Clark was the final addition to the band, which remained together until the
recording of Drastic
Plastic in 1978, by which time the mantle of guitar hero was beginning to
weight heavy on Nelson,
who was intent on expanding his horizons. The band had quickly developed a
reputation for quirky songs and musical pyrotechnics, facets demonstrated both
in the studio and in a live context -- Live! In the Air Age remains a brilliant
document of a great live band. During this period Nelson
divorced his first wife, Shirley, and married his second, Jan, for whom he wrote
a great deal of music; he also used her as a model for much of his art.
Red
Noise was the next phase of Nelson's
plan for life, originally intended to begin with Drastic
Plastic -- never the same thing twice, in either musicians or styles. Sound
on Sound was a fluid, expert document that demonstrated Nelson's
ability to experiment, though at the cost of jarring both the audience and the
record company -- EMI, looking for moneymakers and easy understanding, dropped Nelson.
A second Red
Noise album had been finished, but was never released in its original form.
Abandoning the Red
Noise experiment, Nelson
reworked the album and released Quit Dreaming and Get On the Beam via Mercury
Records. In its original format, the album came with a bonus disc -- a
full-length album of ambient sketches recorded in his home studio, released as
Sounding the Ritual Echo (the album has subsequently been issued by itself).
Quit Dreaming and Get On the Beam went into the Top Ten in the U.K. This was
repeated with The Love That Whirls (Diary of a Thinking Heart), which also
included a bonus album (this time La
Belle Et La Bete, a theatre soundtrack recording) and the single
"Flaming Desire." This period proved to be the commercial peak of Nelson's
career, unfortunately -- Chimera,
an EP, failed to generate much interest (it was released with additional cuts in
the U.S., under the title of Vistamix)
and a subsequent deal with CBS/Epic led only to strained relations and a
confused release; the U.K. Getting the Holy Ghost Across was altered,
resequenced and released in the U.S. as On a Blue Wing. For Nelson,
the main advantage of the deal was that he was able to completely rebuild his
home studio, providing him with the facility to experiment more and more,
resulting in the release of the first Orchestra Arcana album, which combined
synthesized soundscapes with sound bites and tape loops. The name originated as
a result of a clause in Nelson's
CBS contract that forbade him to release his experimental material under his own
name.
Nelson
started Cocteau Records in 1981, partnering with his then-manager, Mark Rye. The
original intention, soon lost, had been for the label to release Nelson's
instrumental and experimental work, as well as a variety of interesting artists.
Of the people Nelson
worked with, only A Flock of Seagulls amounted to much more than a footnote. In
the end, the focus remained squarely on the release of Nelson's
material across the board -- a sometimes bewildering array of titles, including
the four-LP box set Trial By Intimacy (The Book of Splendours). Nelson
also worked with many others, including Gary
Numan, Yellow
Magic Orchestra and Harold
Budd.
Following the expiration of the CBS deal, Nelson
signed to Enigma Records in the U.S., resulting in the American release of just
about everything in his catalog bar Northern
Dream and the CBS titles, with new titles including the two-LP plus one
7" EP set Chance Encounters in the Garden of Lights, and a highly
entertaining outing under the Orchestra Arcana name, Optimism.
Enigma, however, was in the process of sinking from sight, with the result that
most of the titles received poor distribution and one, Simplex,
never received an official release (at one point, Nelson's
ex-manager was selling copies by mail order). Between 1988 and 1991, Nelson's
life fell apart spectacularly -- he was hit with tax bills, a separation and,
eventually, a divorce, the collapse of Enigma, and a protracted battle with his
ex-manager over the rights to his back catalog.
While the various wrangles somewhat derailed Nelson
personally, nothing seemed to slow him down when it came to productivity; in
fact, it appears that stress improves his output. The separation from his second
wife resulted in the four-disc Demonstrations of Affection, as well as a backlog
of recorded material that is still being released piecemeal on such sets as My
Secret Studio and Confessions of a Hyperdreamer. Nelson
had continued refining his writing and recording process, coming to the point
that entire songs could be composed and recorded in a two-hour session, a speed
of production that rivals that of Steve
Allen. In the course of wooing of his third wife, Emiko, Nelson
wrote and produced between 100 and 150 new songs in the space of a year, sending
them to her on cassette.
Working as hard as ever into the 1990s, Nelson
continued to produce and collaborate with other artists, facilitated by new
management. His solo output became somewhat sporadic, with Luminous
appearing in 1991 and several other albums, each on different labels, appearing
in the years afterwards, though he has recently returned to normal with the
limited-edition releases of My Secret Studio and Confessions of a Hyperdreamer,
totaling six full CDs of songs, instrumentals and sonic experiments. Practically
Wired...Or How I Became Guitarboy is a first guitar instrumental album,
while After the Satellite Sings both experiments with the new territory of drum
'n bass while reflecting the kind of styles Nelson
had eschewed as being too evocative of Be
Bop Deluxe and his guitar-hero days.
He has worked on film, television and video scores, directed a variety of
videos, toured as part of Heroes De Lumiere with his brother Ian, worked with Roger
Eno, Laraaji
and Kate
St. John under the Channel
Light Vessel name, formed a new Be
Bop Deluxe (only to dissolve again when financial backing went away),
performed as part of the Japanese group Culturemix,
married for the third time, to Emiko Takahashi, become a big name in Japan, and
recovered the majority of his work from former manager Mark Rye.
Nelson
has created a new label, Populuxe, which has set up distribution arrangements
with Robert
Fripp's Discipline Global Mobile (DGM) operation. A planned reissue program
should see the majority of Nelson's
solo material available worldwide in revised editions, with new material
interspersed with the reissues. Phenomenally busy, driven by his muse and an
active magician, Nelson
continues to delight and confound, issuing Atom
Shop in 1998. ~ Steven McDonald, All Music Guide
Bill Nelson Website - musician, writer, performer, producer