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 Foreigner
Born and raised in England, Mick Jones began his musical career as
the "24th guitar player" in Nero
and the Gladiators. He wrote songs and played sessions for
French pop idol Johnny Hallyday and recorded with such artists as George
Harrison and Peter Frampton.
Jones formed Wonderwheel with Gary Wright and they eventually
reformed Spooky Tooth. In 1974, he moved to New York; Spooky Tooth
broke up, and Jones went on to serve as A&R rep for a British
record company.
Foreigner formed in 1976 when Mick Jones met Ian McDonald
(ex-King Crimson) at a session in New York. The pair recruited one
more Englishman and three Americans (hence the bands name). The
Gramm/Jones writing chemistry clicked immediately, with the
driving Cold As Ice becoming the first of their hit
collaborations. Their self-titled debut album was released in 1977
and went on to cross the quadruple platinum sales mark.

During its two year run on the national charts, the hits kept
coming, beginning with Feels Like The First Time and
continuing with Cold As Ice and Long, Long Way From
Home. The next year the band road-tested a verse and chorus
of Hot Blooded in front of a few hundred thousand close
friends at the Cal Jam II Festival. Their enthusiastic response
assured its place on the next album, Double Vision, which
was released in 1978 and surpassed its predecessor with more than
five million albums sold in the US alone. It remained in the Top
Ten for six months and became the Number 1 selling rock & roll
album of the year. Two gold-selling singles were released from Double
Vision - Hot Blooded and the album title track.
Foreigner released their third album, Head Games, in
1979. Again, it was a multi-platinum success, producing the hit
singles, Dirty White Boy and Head Games. The
album also marked the band's first personnel change, when Rick
Wills (ex-Peter Frampton and Roxy Music, among many others) became
Foreigner's new bassist.
With the help of producer Mutt Lange and synth-meister Thomas
Dolby, the group entered their second "fertile" period
with 4, which found the band streamlined to the quartet
of Jones, Gramm, Elliot and Wills.
The album was highlighted by Jukebox Hero and the
churning, futuristic hyper-funk of Urgent - which
included the critically acclaimed soaring sax solo of Junior
Walker.
1984 marked the release of their next album of new material, Agent
Provocateur which debuted one of Foreigner's gargantuan
ballads. Mick Jones went through a period of earnest
soul-searching about his life and relationships that resulted in
the words and music to I Want to Know What Love Is.
In 1985, Foreigner embarked on a nine-month world tour.
Wrapping up two years of virtual non-stop activity, they took a
break in 1986 during which Mick Jones co-produced Van Halen's
smash, 5150 album and served as executive producer of the
re-formed Bad Company's Fame and Fortune project. Lou
Gramm also released his debut solo album, Ready Or Not,
in 1987, which featured the hit single, Midnight Blue.
In 1987 Foreigner returned to the studio to record Inside
Information , marking the first album to be produced solely
by Mick Jones. The album delivered two hits for the group, Say
You Will and I Don't Want To Live Without You. By
then, the band shifted its musical focus from up tempo rockers to
more commercial "power ballads."
His solo album yielded a Top 10 hit, but Gramm was not able to
actively tour as a solo act because of the continual demands of
Foreigner. When Gramm saw this change in direction, and the
restrictions on his own career, problems within the group began.
Gramm's solo career was perceived as a threat to the band and he
and Jones began arguing and, in 1989, Gramm left the group to form
another band called Shadow King. Foreigner, in turn, replaced
Gramm with an unknown singer and carried on. Neither band,
however, saw much commercial success and both groups broke up in
1991.
During the Los Angeles riots in the spring of 1992, while one
war was breaking out in the streets of America's largest city,
another war was ending. Inside the confines of the Sunset Marquis
hotel in downtown LA, singer Lou Gramm and guitarist Mick Jones
were sequestered due to a city curfew. They decided to use their
time together putting a two year feud to rest and resurrecting
their platinum act, Foreigner.
"I flew to Los Angeles, during the riots," says Gramm.
"We got flown to John Wayne airport instead of LAX because
they were shooting at the planes. Mick and I were holed up in the
Sunset Marquis in LA, with armed security guards walking around on
the roof. It was a little weird, to say the least." Gramm and
Jones decided to bury the hatchet and revive one of the world's
best loved rock'n'roll bands. They went back on the road, had a
blast and sold out everywhere and decided it was time get the band
back in the studio, and in 1994, Foreigner proved what a great
rock and roll band can do with a few years downtime and some
creative reassessment.
Plunging back into the rock arena with Mr. Moonlight
(the band's first album reuniting guitarist Mick Jones and
vocalist Lou Gramm since 1987) they decided to bring fresh blood
into the band and came up with a formidable line-up of backing
musicians - Bass player Bruce Turgon and keyboardist Jeff Jacobs.
Lead singer Lou Gramm was diagnosed in April 1997, with a
benign brain tumour (just one day before the band was set to leave
for a tour of Japan). The tumour was removed by surgery, which was
followed by a year of rehabilitation at his home and a
concentrated period of radiation treatment at Boston's Brigham
& Woman's Hospital.
"My tumour was non-cancerous," says Lou, "but it
was certainly life threatening. It was growing adjacent to my
optic nerve in the base of my brain and it was blocking the
signals my brain was sending out to my body. I was losing my
memory, getting headaches and seeing with double vision.
Fortunately, everything turned out OK, and I'm back to work with
the band. I'm very grateful to the Lord, my wife and family, and
all my friends, who got me through this difficult time."
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Lou Gramm
Vocals
Mick Jones
Guitar/Piano/Vocals
Ian McDonald
Guitar, keyboards
Ed Gagliari
Bass
Al Greenwood
Keyboards
Dennis Elliott
Drums
Rick Wills
Bass
Bruce Turgon
Bass
Jeff Jacobs
Keyboards
Mark Schulman
Drums |
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