Portishead

portishead

Portishead were named after the sleepy port on the south-west coast of England where Geoff Barrow spent his teens. His intentions in forming the band were simple: ‘I just wanted to make interesting music, proper songs with a proper life span and a decent place in people’s record collections.’ Barrow started out as a tape operator, working in a minor capacity with Massive Attack and Neneh Cherry, and also wrote songs for Cherry (‘Somedays’ was included on Home Brew). He recruited jazz guitarist and musical director Adrian Utley, drummer/ programmer Dave and vocalist Beth Gibbons. Together they recorded a soundtrack and film, To Kill A Dead Man, with themselves as actors. At this point they came to the attention of the Go! Discs subsidiary, Go! Beat, who encouraged Barrow to remix Gabrielle’s ‘Dreams’. He was sufficiently impressed with the results to sign the band immediately, despite several other interested parties. The singles ‘Numb’ and ‘Sour Times’ emerged to good press reaction, although the debut album slipped in and out of the charts with little fanfare. There was some problem with marketing the band – both Barrow and Gibbons were reluctant to do interviews, and promotion was largely by word of mouth. With virtually no radio support, the group’s third single, ‘Glory Box’, entered the UK charts at number 13 in January 1995. This arrival was combined with several ‘album of the year’ awards for Dummy from magazines as diverse as Mixmag, ID, The Face and Melody Maker . Mixing torch songs with blues, jazz and hip-hop, their sound became known as ‘trip hop’. The interest also translated to America, where the album sold over 150,000 copies without the band even setting foot there. They were then awarded the Mercury Music Prize for best album of 1995. Following their success, the band were invited to contribute to several soundtracks, including two low-budget art films and Tank Girl. The long-awaited follow-up to Dummy was severely delayed when Barrow, a self-confessed perfectionist, reached a creative impasse that almost destroyed the band. His perseverance paid off, however, when Portishead was released in September 1997 to excellent critical reviews. Although first single ‘All Mine’ had suggested some variation to the Portishead sound, the album covered essentially the same ground as their debut, albeit in an impressively stylish manner.


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