Delores and the Turtle : The Beautiful South : Articles

A Little Turtle (c) David Cutter
[ April 6, 1998 ]
Music News: Stan Cullimore's Birthday

Music News Of The World
You Say It's Your Birthday:
Stan Cullimore Of The Housemartins

Apr 06, 1998
by Frank Tortorici
Edited by Michael Goldberg

Stan Cullimore was an original member of the Housemartins, who formed in 1984 in Hull, England.

Housemartins in an Alley

Today is the 36th birthday of Stan Cullimore, guitarist of the Housemartins, the guitar-pop outfit that came together in 1984 in Hull, England. Songwriter Paul Heaton placed an ad in the window of his home seeking musicians and Cullimore answered it. Hugh Whitaker (drums) and Norman Cook (bass) soon joined them. Billing themselves humorously as "The Fourth-Best Band in Hull," the band updated the sound of the early English beat groups and became a popular and critical U.K. favorite in the mid-'80s. In 1985, the Housemartins issued their debut single, "Flag Day," on the independent Go! Discs. They soon developed a following by spicing up their live shows with off-the-cuff, undisciplined dance routines and by writing songs that highlighted their leftist politics and droll humor.

In 1986, "Happy Hour," a song about sexism, became their first big U.K. hit (the Housemartins never rose above cult status in the U.S.). The song, which spawned a successful video, and the album that it was featured on, London 0, Hull 4, reached the top 5 on the U.K. charts. That same year, they enjoyed another success with an a cappella cover of The Isley Brothers' "Caravan of Love." Their follow-up album -- on which Whitaker was replaced by Dave Hemingway -- was 1987's The People Who Grinned Themselves To Death, which spawned three hit singles, including "Me and The Farmer" and "Five Get Over Excited." At the peak of the band's popularity in 1988, Heaton and Cullimore decided to call it quits, saying that they only intended the Housemartins to have a short life. A retrospective album, Now That's What I Call Quite Good!, was issued in 1988. Cook formed Beats International and then became a remixer; in 1997, he released Better Living Through Chemistry under the name Fatboy Slim. Heaton and Hemingway formed the Beautiful South, which became an even more popular band than the Housemartins. Cullimore is now a writer of children's books and also has written a guide to the music industry.

Other birthdays: Tony Connor (Hot Chocolate), 51, and Michelle Phillips (the Mamas and the Papas), 54.
Delores / Link to Here

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?


The Beautiful South

Articles

Recent Posts
This is Hull: Exton's Beautiful Game

Word: Enters the Greatest Pop Quiz Ever ...

BBC: Plymouth 2004 Review

Hull: Couch at the Grafton

Angloplugging: This Old Skin

This is Hull: Adelphi in Spotlight

Musikexpress: Golddiggas

Netzeitung: Zu viele Popsongs sind einfach nur da

The Observer: Backbeat Q&A

Teletext: Paul Heaton Interview

Archives
February 1990
May 1990
May 1991
June 1992
March 1994
May 1994
January 1995
March 1995
May 1995
October 1995
November 1995
January 1997
September 1997
October 1997
March 1998
April 1998
July 1998
August 1998
October 1998
March 1999
April 1999
May 1999
June 1999
July 1999
August 1999
March 2000
September 2000
October 2000
November 2000
December 2000
June 2001
July 2001
August 2001
September 2001
December 2001
July 2002
September 2003
October 2003
November 2003
December 2003
January 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
January 2005

More Interviews
Audio Interviews

Syndicated Feed
Subscribe to the Articles
 
A Little Turtle

To email Delores, send an email to "delores" at "beautifulsouth.org".
If you're wondering "Why Delores?", lemme tell you.

home | search | site map | what's new

Hosted by Boiling Point Internet
News and Article publishing powered by Blogger, a fabulous tool.