Kevin Godley
Kevin Michael Godley (born 7 October 1945) is an English singer, songwriter, musician and music video director. He is known as the singer and drummer of the art rock band 10cc and later as part of collaboration duo Godley & Creme with Lol Creme.
Kevin Godley | |
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Godley performing live with 10cc in 1976 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Kevin Michael Godley |
Born | Prestwich, Lancashire, England[1] | 7 October 1945
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Years active | 1970–present |
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Website | kevin-godley |
Biography
Kevin Michael Godley was born on 7 October 1945 in Prestwich, Lancashire, England, to a Jewish family, and went to North Cestrian Grammar School in Altrincham.[3] He formed first band named Group 17, which had its origins in the Jewish Lads Brigade.
While attending art college in Manchester Godley met future creative partner Lol Creme. Godley and Creme joined R&B combo The Sabres.[4] They became involved in a number of bands such as The Mockingbirds, Hotlegs and later 10cc. As part of the bands Godley was a songwriter, lead singer, played drums, percussion and keyboards. Godley and Creme recorded four albums with 10cc.[5] In 1977, early in the recording of the album Deceptive Bends, unimpressed with the songs by bandmates Eric Stewart and Graham Gouldman and eager to work on other projects outside of the band, Godley and Creme left.[6]
After leaving 10cc the two became known as Godley & Creme, both as musicians and film directors. They were jointly nominated for a Grammy Award for 'Best Music Video, Long Form', for The Police: Synchronicity Concert in 1986. The duo split in 1988 after their album Goodbye Blue Sky.
In 1990, Godley's charity production One World One Voice was released on CD in the UK. It was a CD that focused on environmental and ecological crises.
Both Godley and Creme briefly 'reunited' with their former 10cc bandmates Stewart and Gouldman on the 1992 album ...Meanwhile. However, Godley claims that their involvement with the project was very limited, as the album was dominated by studio musicians. He performed the lead vocal on "The Stars Didn't Show", the band's tribute to the late Roy Orbison. It was the only song on the album not sung by Stewart. Following ...Meanwhile, Godley and Creme went their separate ways again, having experienced difficulties together as early as 1988.[7]
Godley later again reunited with Gouldman to form the band GG/06. Together they recorded a self-titled EP, which was made available for free via their website.[8] Since then Godley has several times joined Gouldman's iteration of 10cc in concert, and was featured on the live album Clever Clogs.[9]
More recently Godley moved into developing a music platform for the iPad, one that combines audio and video to create a global recording studio in the cloud called "WholeWorldBand".[10] The company was nominated for the "SXSW Music Accelerator Award" in 2013, and was one of eight finalists selected from a pool of over 500.[11]
In 2017, Godley publicly invited musicians to send him music to work on his first solo album, titled Muscle Memory with the idea being that he would take the rough ideas and turn them into a finished song.[12] The album was originally supposed to be released in 2018 through campaign on pledgemusic.com, but due to its closure the release was postponed. In 2021, Kevin Godley's album Muscle Memory was completed and released by The state51 Conspiracy after the project stalled as a PledgeMusic campaign.[13]
In 2018, Godley was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Arts by Staffordshire University.[14]
He currently lives in Dublin, Ireland.[15]
Discography
Studio albums
- Muscle Memory (2020)
Music videos director
After splitting from his long-time working partner Creme, Godley forged a career directing music videos and films on his own.
1989
- Fine Young Cannibals – "Don't Look Back"
- Band Aid 2 – "Do They Know It's Christmas?"
- Wet Wet Wet – "Sweet Surrender"
1990
- Erasure – "Blue Savannah"
- One World One Voice – short movie
1991
- Bryan Adams – "Can't Stop This Thing We Started"
- Bryan Adams – "Thought I'd Died and Gone to Heaven"
- Bryan Adams – "All I Want Is You"
- U2 – "Even Better Than the Real Thing"
1992
- Garland Jeffreys – "The Answer"
- Moodswings & Chrissie Hynde – "Spiritual High"
- U2 – Zoo TV Concert Video
1993
- Frank Sinatra & Bono – "I've Got You Under My Skin"
- Paul McCartney – "C'Mon People"
- Sting – "Fields of Gold"
- U2 – "Numb"
1994
- Blur – "Girls & Boys"
- Bono & Gavin Friday – "In the Name of the Father"
- Dave Stewart – "Heart of Stone"
- East 17 – "Steam"
- Larry Adler & Kate Bush – "The Man I Love"
1995
- Deep Forest – "Deep Forest"
- U2 – "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me"
- Whale – "I'll Do Ya"
1996
- Adam Clayton & Larry Mullen Jr. – "Theme from Mission: Impossible"
- Bryan Adams – "Star"
- Gavin Friday – "You, Me and World War Three"
- Phil Collins – "Dance into the Light"
- The Beatles – "Real Love"
- Tonic – "Soldier's Daughter"
1997
- Forest for the Trees – "Dream"
- Garland Jeffreys – "Sexuality"
- James – "Tomorrow"
- Jean-Michel Jarre – "Oxygène Part 8"
1998
- Boyzone – "When the Going Gets Tough"
- Boyzone – "You Needed Me"
- Eric Clapton – "My Father's Eyes"
- Helicopter Girl – "Subliminal Punk"
- Kele Le Roc – "My Love"
- Phil Collins – "You'll Be in My Heart"
- Sting – "After the Rain Has Fallen"
- The Black Crowes – "By Your Side"
- The Charlatans – "Forever"
- U2 – "Sweetest Thing"
1999
- Ronan Keating – "When You Say Nothing at All"
- Wyclef Jean featuring Bono – "New Day"
2000
- Alabama 3 – "Woke Up This Morning"
- Gabrielle – "Rise"
- Rod Stewart – "Run Back into Your Arms"
2001
- Gabrielle – "Out of Reach"
- HIM – "Pretending"
- Marti Pellow – "Close To You"
- U2 – "Stuck in a Moment You Can't Get Out Of" (version 2)
- Zucchero – "Baila"
- Zucchero – "I'm in Trouble"
2002
- Ronan Keating – "If Tomorrow Never Comes"
- Ronan Keating – "We've Got Tonight"
- Scarface featuring Faith Evans – "Someday"
- The Charlatans – "A Man Needs to Be Told"
2003
- The Rapture – "Sister Saviour"
- Will Young – "Leave Right Now"
2004
- Bryan Adams – "Flying"
- Haven – "Wouldn't Change a Thing"
- Kealer – "Cry"
- Lisa Stansfield – "Treat Me Like a Woman"
- Ronan Keating – "Father and Son"
- The Corrs – "Summer Sunshine"
2005
- Ben Adams – "Sorry"
- Katie Melua – "Nine Million Bicycles"
- Katie Melua – "I Cried for You"
- Jamie Cullum – "Mind Trick"
- Shayne Ward – "That's My Goal"
2006
- Brothermandude – "Automatic"
- Keane – "Is It Any Wonder?"
- Mojo Fury – "The Man"
2008
- Boyzone – "Better"
- Snow Patrol – "Crack the Shutters"
2010
- Katie Melua – "The Flood"
2011
- Gavin Friday – "Able"
2016
- Elbow – "Gentle Storm"
2018
- Hozier - "Better Love"
2019
- Keane - "The Way I Feel"
References
- "Kevin Godley | Songs". AllMusic. 7 October 1945. Retrieved 9 August 2014.
- "Godley & Creme reviews, music, news - sputnikmusic". www.sputnikmusic.com.
- Episode 95-Kevin Godley. Sodajerker Podcast
- Kevin Godley.com, HistoryRetrieved 30 December 2020
- George Tremlett (1976). The 10cc Story. Futura. ISBN 0-86007-378-5.
- Buskin, Richard (June 2005). "Classic Tracks: 10cc – 'I'm Not in Love'". Sound on Sound. Cambridge, England: SOS Publications: 62–69. Retrieved 21 September 2015
- Lol Creme interview, Uncut, December 14, 1997. Archived 20 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
- "GG/06". kevin-godley.com. Retrieved 29 March 2020.
- "The Official 10cc Fan Club/Latest News". The10ccfanclub.com. Retrieved 10 August 2010.
- "WholeWorldBand". WholeWorldBand. Retrieved 9 August 2014.
- "WholeWorldBand: SXSW Accelerator award finalist | Music | News". Hot Press. Retrieved 9 August 2014.
- "Muscle Memory". kevin-godley.com. Retrieved 29 March 2020.
- https://www.superdeluxeedition.com/news/out-this-week-on-29-january-2021/#more-163801
- Guttridge, Richard (6 June 2018). "10cc star to be honoured by Staffordshire University". Express & Star. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
- O'Rourke, Frances. "First encounters: Kevin Godley and Sulinna Ong". The Irish Times. Retrieved 2 January 2019.
- "Hog Fever". kevin-godley.com. Retrieved 29 March 2020.
External links
- Kevin Godley at IMDb