Everything But The Girl
Tracey Thorn and Ben Watt first began performing
together when they were students at Hull University, taking their name
from a local furniture shop. Thorn had been a member of The Marine
Girls, and released the acoustic mini-album A Distant Shore,
which was a strong seller in the UK independent charts during 1982.
Watt released the critically acclaimed North Marine
Drive the following year, by which time the duo had made their
recording debut with a gentle and simply produced version of Cole
Porter's Night And Day. They subsequently left Cherry Red
Records and signed to the major-distributed WEA subsidiary Blanco y
Negro label.
They almost immediately struck gold with Each and
Every One (1984) making the UK Top 30 with it's parent album
Eden hitting the Top 20. This jazz-flavoured pop collection
hallmarked the duo's understated compositional skills, displaying a
great leap from the comparative naïveté of their previous offerings.
Subsequent albums revealed a much more gradual growth
in song writing, though many of their older fans contend they have
never surpassed that debut. Their biggest single breakthrough,
meanwhile, came when a cover version of Danny Whitten's I Don't
Want To Talk About It reached UK number 3 in 1988. The attendant
Idlewild enjoyed critical and commercial success. The
Language Of Life, a collection with jazz stylings, found further
critical acclaim, with one track - The Road - featuring Stan
Getz on saxophone.
A more pop-orientated follow-up, World-wide,
was released to mediocre reviews in 1991.
Watt's increasingly busy DJ schedule and Thorn's vocal contributions
to trip-hop pioneers Massive Attack's 1994 opus, Protection,
demonstrated their increasing interest in the UK's dance music scene.
This was reflected in the textures of Amplified Heart, which
featured contributions from Danny Thompson, Dave Mattacks, Richard
Thompson and arranger Harry Robinson. The album was recorded following
Watt's recovery from a life-threatening illness (chronicled in the
quirky Patient: The History Of A Rare Illness). Todd Terry's
remix of the track Missing provided their big breakthrough,
becoming a huge club hit and reaching the UK and US Top 5.
The duo's new approach was confirmed on Walking
Wounded, their Virgin Records debut, which embellished their
acoustic songs with drum 'n' bass and trip-hop rhythms to stunning
effect. The title track and Wrong both reached the UK Top 10.
Watt's involvement in the club scene meant that the follow-up did not
appear until 1999. Temperamental retained some of the low-key
charm of Walking Wounded, although three years on the duo's
work sounded less groundbreaking. |
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