Nick Laird-Clowes | |
---|---|
Born | London, England | 5 February 1957
Instruments | Vocals, guitar |
Formerly of | The Dream Academy |
Nick Laird-Clowes (born 5 February 1957, in London, England)[ citation needed] is an English musician and composer, best known as the singer, guitarist, and primary songwriter for The Dream Academy.
Laird-Clowes was a member of Alfalpha and The Act [1] before forming The Dream Academy. He was also a presenter for the first series of the Channel 4 music show The Tube. [2]
The Dream Academy formed in 1983. [3] [4] Laird-Clowes sang and played guitar for the band [5] and was its primary songwriter. [6] The band's other members were multi-instrumentalist Kate St John and keyboardist Gilbert Gabriel. [4] The Dream Academy is most noted for their 1985 hit single, " Life in a Northern Town" (1985), [7] [8] which was a worldwide success and a sizeable hit in the U.S. [3] The band released three albums: The Dream Academy (1985), Remembrance Days (1987) [9] and A Different Kind Of Weather (1990). [7] The Dream Academy disbanded in 1991. [10]
Laird-Clowes released a solo album, Mona Lisa Overdrive, under the name Trashmonk in 1999. [11]
A friend of David Gilmour, with whom he co-produced both The Dream Academy and A Different Kind of Weather albums, [12] Laird-Clowes contributed lyrics to two songs on Pink Floyd's album The Division Bell. [13]
In the 2000s, Laird-Clowes was involved in film and documentary soundtracks. He produced the score for The Invisible Circus (2001), directed by Adam Brooks and starring Cameron Diaz, [14] and was the musical consultant for Bernardo Bertolucci's The Dreamers (2003). [15] Laird-Clowes composed the music for Fierce People (2005), which was directed by Griffin Dunne and starred Diane Lane and Donald Sutherland, [16] and for Wit Licht (2008), directed by Jean van de Velde. [17] [18] Nick Broomfield's film Battle for Haditha, which premiered at the London Film Festival in 2007, also had a Laird-Clowes soundtrack. [19] [20] [21] In June 2009, he scored Broomfield's agitprop documentary for Greenpeace, A Time Comes, featuring the single "Mayday". [22]
In May 2007, Laird-Clowes and Joe Boyd produced a Syd Barrett memorial concert, "The Madcap's Last Laugh", at the Barbican Centre in London; the concert also featured both Pink Floyd and Roger Waters. [23]
In 2013, Laird-Clowes worked as both composer and music consultant for the Richard Curtis directed film, About Time. [21][ better source needed] In 2014, The Dream Academy released a compilation album entitled The Morning Lasted All Day: A Retrospective; it was compiled, annotated, and remastered by Laird-Clowes. [24]
In 2017, Laird-Clowes composed the music for the feature documentary, Whitney: Can I Be Me, directed by Nick Broomfield. [25] In 2019 (and also for Broomfield), he composed the score for the acclaimed Universal film about Leonard Cohen, Marianne & Leonard: Words Of Love. [26]