This is from 'ALTERNATIVE ROCK - the essential
listening companion' by DAVE
THOMPSON - an American
publication published by Third Ear
PHILIP
JEAYS
BORN 6/24/62 (Taunton, England)
Singer-songwriter Jeays
was living in France when he
discovered Jacques Brel - just the latest in a
long
line of introspective troubadours to have fallen under
the Belgian
songwriter's spell in the years since
Scott Walker snatched his muse back
from the likes of
Rod McKuen and re-invented Brel for the
English-speaking
doom-pop crowd. David Bowie, Alex
Harvey, Marc Almond, and Momus have all
acknowledged
Brel's impact on their work, as both writer and
performer.
But only the pioneering Walker ever
suceeded in truly translating homage into
his own
words, turning in a fourth album (1969's Scott 4)
loaded with
distinctly Brel-ian, but uniquely
personal, self compositions.
Jeays' debt
to Brel, too, is heavy; like Walker,
however, it would swiftly be amply
repaid with a
series of songs which, again, echoed but rarely aped
the
master's. After some years spent gigging around
the southern English club
circuit, Jeays' one man show
erupted into mainstream consciousness in 1996,
when he
appeared at the Edinburgh Festival in Scotland. (He
would make
triumphant returns there in 1998 and 1999.)
There the Scotsman newspaper
raved, "Jeays has an
avid, charismatic cabaret style all of his own,
dipped
in theatricality. Alternatively casting himself as
romantic fool,
sneering devil, and irony streaked
sinner, Jeays produces a neat, hour-long
set mixing
wisdom and sarcasm, self-reflection
and
self-dramatization."
Other press was swift to follow. Comparisons
with
Bowie, Tom Waits, and even Stephen Sondheim, aside
from the
inevitable Brel and Walker, prompted The
Morning Star to enthuse, "Jeays
writes his own songs
in a style quite unlike any other British
songsmith
I've heard. They are superbly crafted, written with
poetic
sensibility that is imbued with bitter irony
and mordant wit. They can be
funny and touching
simultaneously and often carry in their subtext
serious
comment on human nature."
1997 saw Jeays make a similar impression at both
the
Salisbury Festival and the Canadian Vancouver Comedy
Festival. Two
years later, with a band comprising
David Harrod (piano), John Peacock
(guitar), William
George Q (bass), and Ditton Pye (drums), he released
his
now much-anticipated debut album, October, backing
it up with a series of
live shows climaxing at the
Talk of London in early 2000. Summer then saw
the
release of Jeays' second album, Cupid Is A Drunkard,
launched during
the Edinburgh Festival in August.
Philip Jeays LPs
October (DPR -
UK) 1999 A staggering achievement, even
once you know what's coming next. Ten
songs range from
the droll "Madame" to the shattered "Remember me to
the
Roses", a rollercoaster of emotions which trips
blithely from savage betrayal
to unquestioning
adoration, and still finds time to laugh at its
own
maudlinity.
Cupid Is A Drunkard (DPR - UK) 2000 The title track
is
reprised from October ; otherwise, more of the moody,
maudlin,
marvelous same.