Product Code Database
Example Keywords: games -data $84
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Gary Barnacle
Tag Wiki 'Gary Barnacle'.
Tag

Gary Barnacle (born 1959) is an English , , , , and . Barnacle is primarily noted for his and , including various Prince's Trust concerts at , the Royal Albert Hall and the National Exhibition Centre in . He performed at the Nelson Mandela 70th Birthday Tribute at Wembley Stadium in 1988, and appeared on television and in during the 1980s and 1990s with many acts. He was also in an duo called from 1982 to 1983 with ex- singer Ross Middleton.


Biography and career

The early years (1977–1980)
Gary Barnacle was born in , England in 1959.

Barnacle played the on several songs and albums by ; he played on their album Sandinista! released on 12 December 1980 as a triple album, the single "This Is Radio Clash" released on 20 November 1981, and released on 14 May 1982. He was introduced to The Clash through their , a school friend of Barnacle’s and reportedly became involved in The Clash's infamous 1978 "pigeon shooting" incident.

Barnacle, trumpeter Luke Tunney, and trombonist played together on many sessions from 1979 to 1982, alongside Pete Thoms on trombone. Barnacle collaborated with on their first two albums, both on : and Grin & Bear It. After their , Malcolm Owen, was found dead from a on 14 July 1980, the band continued with Barnacle as Ruts D.C. (where "D.C." stands for the Italian term ) in a different musical vein. They released the album: Animal Now in May 1981 on Virgin Records, before Barnacle departed following disagreements with the original Ruts, to be replaced by Dave Winthrop on Rhythm Collision released in July 1982 on Bohemian Records. Ruts D.C. split in 1983. During 1979–1980 he also contributed to M's debut album, New York • London • Paris • Munich, released in 1979 and to , released by in 1980.


The 1980s (1981–1989)
In 1981, Barnacle contributed to the debut albums by : Heart of Darkness and Stray Cats. He also contributed to In Trance as Mission by , "Power and the Passion" by , and played saxophone on 's 1984. That year he also played saxophone on Black Snake Diamond Röle by former frontman . From 1990 to 1994 Barnacle toured with Level 42 and recorded two of the band's albums: Guaranteed and Forever Now. The he formed for Level 42, with British and player , was known as The Hen Pecked Horns. Since then, Barnacle and Thirkell have provided the horn section for many recordings. Along with Thoms, they formed The Phantom Horns, one of the UK's horn sections which appear on a number of recordings from 1987 onwards.

In 1982, he and ex-Positive Noise singer Ross Middleton formed a duo called . The band released four singles on the Epic label: two in 1982 ("Love Cascade" and "A Way You'll Never Be", which featured Mark King and Phil Gould of Level 42), and two in 1983 ("Cashflow" and "Anxiety"). All four singles were produced by . In 1982, Barnacle also collaborated on 's Femmes, Indiscrétion, Blasphème, 's Acting Very Strange, Marius Müller-Westernhagen's Das Herz eines Boxers, and with Visage's The Anvil. In 1984, his brother Steve was already in the band and Billy Currie and Dave Formula left; Barnacle and Andy Barnett replaced them for what would become Visage's album, which was released in September 1984 and yielded two singles, "" and "Beat Boy". A decision to make Visage a live band instead of a strictly studio-based project failed and the band subsequently split in 1985.

In 1983, he contributed to Catch as Catch Can by singer, (whom he dated in the mid-1980s) and also to In Strict Tempo by Dave Ball and by . Barnacle later toured in Europe with Turner and participated in the recording sessions of her 1989 album Foreign Affair. He also appeared on the 1983 edition of Drama of Exile by , where he also played the drums, "Right Now" by 's second band − , Dalek I Love You's eponymous album, Jerky Versions of the Dream by , Secret by , Vocabulary by The Europeans, C'est C Bon by , and Working with Fire and Steel by , a collaboration that was repeated later in 1986 with the release of What Price Paradise. The year ended with the publication of the for Educating Rita.

In 1984, Barnacle contributed to the recording sessions for This Is What You Want... This Is What You Get by Public Image Ltd, In the Long Grass by The Boomtown Rats, All the Rage by , This Last Night in Sodom by , and Vermin in Ermine by . He also performed on Olympia by Hong Kong Syndikat, Bite Black and Blues by Raoul and The Ruined, In on the off Beat by Hey! Elastica and , a solo album by Mark King of Level 42. Barnacle began a long collaboration with , for whom he provided saxophone for Goodbye Cruel World. He also appears on many of Costello's compilation albums.

In 1985, Barnacle played in No Jacket Required, a solo album by , which sold over 25 million copies worldwide; he also played in Phantasmagoria by The Damned, by Lloyd Cole and the Commotions, Some People by , The Dream Academy's eponymous debut album, Knights Like This by and Mad Not Mad by Madness.

In 1986, he appeared on Writing on the Wall by Bucks Fizz, Stop Start by Modern English, Dancing in my Sleep by Dave Adams, by , 's debut album, the UK number one album Silk and Steel by , Sooner or Later by , the debut album by Erasure, Into the Light by Chris de Burgh, a solo album released by former frontman , Press to Play by , and 1st Down & Ten by Keep It Dark. Barnacle played saxophone on Suburbia by Pet Shop Boys, and he also appeared on Absolute Beginners: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, playing on tracks by , , , Working Week and .

In 1987, Barnacle was featured on the hit singles "China in Your Hand" by T'Pau, "Roadblock" by Stock, Aitken and Waterman and "Breakout" by . He also contributed to the releases of Red by , Banzai Baby by Sandii & the Sunsetz, and 's Whenever You Need Somebody, which was a collaboration that was repeated with the release of Astley's 1989 album, Hold Me in Your Arms. Barnacle performed on Feelin' Good About It by This Way Up, Can't Wait to See the Movie seventh solo album released by of , Stand Up by , Never Never Land by Simon F, If by and Swing Out Sister's It's Better to Travel and Get in Touch with Yourself.

In 1988, Barnacle worked on Bullet From A Gun by , Human Animal by , and Creeping Up on Jesus by The Big Dish. Barnacle worked with on No Winners, Sound Syndicate, and The Jazzmasters project, in which he was the co-artist and co-writer along with Hardcastle and Helen Rodgers. This was released in 1992. Barnacle also participated in the release of the debut album by group , 's debut album, The Jeremy Days and Circushead (1990) by The Jeremy Days, Monster Jam by Ambassadors of Funk, Union by , Rage by T'Pau, Working Girl OST, Steppin' Out by , No Outsiders by , and 24hrs by Scarlet Fantastic.

In 1989, Barnacle performed in Moss Side Story by , Boomerang by 's second band − , and Here Today, Tomorrow Next Week! by Björk's band . After the band split in 1992, Barnacle contributed to Björk's first two solo albums: Debut, released in 1993, and Post, released in 1995. He also performed in Bass! by Simon Harris, The Beautiful South's debut album and Choke (1990), by , , a solo project by Genesis Tony Banks, Waterfront by Waterfront, and I'm Still Here by .


The 1990s (1990–1999)
In 1990, Barnacle appeared as a session musician on Naked by , Trading Secrets with the Moon by , Dangerous by Andy Taylor, First Time Ever by Joanna Law, Melting Down on Motor Angel by Sunsonic, Running from the Guns by Die Laughing, Stand Strong by , by , and December by Dag Kolsrud, which was followed by December II that was released in 1991. He also appeared on the single "Always The Last To Know" from the album Change Everything by and on A Pocketful of Dreams, the debut album by English Big Fun."You've Got A Friend" by Big Fun and Sonia featuring Gary Barnacle: 1990 Jive Records/Zomba/Chrysalis/PWL/Fast Forward Magazine, cat no. CHILD 90 In 1991, he also worked on Meanwhile by German group Camouflage, Changing Faces by Bros, Black Meaning Good by , Marchand de cailloux from French artist , Let's Get to It by , The Apple by A Man Called Adam, and the eponymous album by Rain Tree Crow, which was the name used by the English new wave band Japan (excluding ) when they briefly reformed for this one-off project.

In 1992, Barnacle collaborated with Soul II Soul on their third studio album, , and he returned in 1995 for . He worked on by Des'ree, Boing!! by Jefferson Airhead, Praise by Praise, and Grass Roots by Takagi Kan.

In 1993, Barnacle helped realize 's debut album and also worked on Guru's Jazzmatazz, Vol. 1 by Guru, To Hell with Humdrum by Kingmaker, and One and All by Supermax. In 1993, he played on 's album (produced by ).

In 1994, he played on 's The Return of the Space Cowboy album. He released his first solo album, Love Will Find a Way and contributed to El pan y la sal by Spanish pop band Presuntos Implicados. He also appeared as the saxophonist in the on the spoof chat show Knowing Me Knowing You with Alan Partridge.

In 1995 he worked on Hold On by , The Tooth Mother by , Love and Respect by , Deadline for My Memories by Billie Ray Martin, Mirror Mirror by 10cc, and Siouxsie and the Banshees song "New Skin" for the movie soundtrack of .

In 1996, Barnacle helped realize Status Quo's Don't Stop and the 's eponymous album featuring . Games by and Feedback by Vargas Blues Band were released in 1997.

In 1997, he played and arranged the brass section for the No.1 single "I Wanna Be The Only One" by Eternal, and played on "Are You Jimmy Ray?" by . In 1999, he appeared as a session musician on When The Good Times Come by Hard Rain.


Recent projects (2000–present)
Barnacle returned to the in 2001 when he, , , Dave Stewart, and recorded a new version of "As Long as He Lies Perfectly Still" by for the compilation Man in a Deaf Corner: Anthology 1963–1970. In 2002, Barnacle released his second solo album, Paradise.

Other acts for whom Barnacle has contributed, live or in session, have included Pet Shop Boys, , and ABC. He worked frequently with Stock Aitken Waterman as a session musician in their PWL . Barnacle is frequently credited as an arranger of woodwinds, , and string instruments on his session work.


Discography

Further reading
Books

Journals and magazines

Records

Web

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time