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The Style Council
After calling time on The Jam - arguably the
most successful band in Britain at the time - Paul
Weller unveiled his new group, The Style Council, on 19
February 1983. Weller wanted to incorporate more elements of
soul, R&B, and jazz into his song writing.
"It's just me and Mick," he revealed ('Mick' being
ex-Merton Parkas and Dexy's
Midnight Runners organist Mick Talbot). "He shares a
hatred of the rock myth and rock culture. People will have to
learn to expect nothing and I'll give as much in return as
possible". Other musicians were added according to what
kind of music the duo were performing.

Released in March 1983, The Style Council's first single, Speak
Like A Child, became an immediate hit, reaching number four
on the British charts. Not all Weller's fan were delighted by
his new enthusiasm for tailoring, jazz and cappuccino however, and
at the group's second live appearance - a CND festival at South
London's Brockwell Park on 7 May - they were pelted with mud.
Three months later, The Money-Go-Round peaked at
number 11on the charts as the group was recording an EP, Paris,
which appeared in August. The EP reached number three. Solid
Bond in Your Heart became another hit in November, peaking at
number 11.
The Style Council released their first full-length album, Cafe
Bleu, in March 1984. Two months later, a re-sequenced version
of the record, re-titled My Ever Changing Moods, was
released in America.
Cafe Bleu was Weller's most stylistically ambitious
album to date, drawing from jazz, soul, rap and pop. While it was
musically all over the map, it was their most successful album,
peaking at number five in the UK and number 56 in the US. My
Ever Changing Moods became their first American hit, peaking
at number 29.
In the summer of 1985 The Style Council had another UK Top Ten
hit with Walls Come Tumbling Down. The single was taken
from their Our Favourite Shop LP, which reached
number one on the UK charts (the album was released as Internationalists
in the US). A live album, Home and Abroad, was
released in the spring of 1986 - it peaked at number eight.
With The Style Council, the underlying intellectual pretensions
that ran throughout Weller's music came to the forefront, and
although the music was rooted in American R&B and soul, it was
performed slickly - complete with layers of synthesizers and drum
machines - and filtered through European styles and attitudes.
Weller's lyrics were typically earnest, but his leftist
political leanings became more pronounced. His scathing criticisms
of racism, unemployment, Margaret
Thatcher and sexism sat uneasily beside his burgeoning
obsession with high culture and continental style.
As his pretensions increased, the number of hits The Style
Council had decreased, and by the end of the decade the group was
barely able to crack the British Top 40 and Weller had turned from
a hero into a has-been.
The Style Council had its last Top Ten single with It
Didn't Matter in January 1987. The Cost of Loving,
an album that featured a heavy emphasis on jazz-inspired soul,
followed in February. Although it received reluctant reviews, the
record peaked at number two in the UK. That spring, Waiting became
the group's first single not to enter the British Top 40,
signalling that their popularity was declining.
In July of 1988, The Style Council released their last album, Confessions
of a Pop Group, which featured Weller's most self-important
and pompous music - the second side featured a ten-minute
orchestral suite called The Gardener of Eden. The record
charted fairly well but received terrible reviews.
In March 1989, the group released a compilation, The
Singular Adventures of the Style Council, which reached
number three on the charts. Later that year, Weller delivered a
new Style Council album, which reflected his infatuation with
house and club music. Polydor rejected the album and dropped both
The Style Council and Weller from the label.
Paul Weller and Mick Talbot officially broke up The Style
Council in 1990. In 1991, Weller launched a solo career which
would return him to favour in the mid-'90s.
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| The
Band |
Paul Weller
Vocals, guitar
Mick Talbot
Vocals, keyboards
D C Lee
Vocals
Steve White
Drums
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