Introduction:
In 1993 Richard Ashcroft, the
lead singer of a Wigan-based four-piece called The Verve, declared that 'History
has a place for us. It may take us three albums, but we will be there.'
Four years later The Verve
recorded their groundbreaking third album, Urban Hymns, and his prediction came
true. The first single from the album, the string-laden epic 'Bitter Sweet
Symphony', entered the charts at Number 2 and became the defining song of Summer
1997. The next single, 'The Drugs Don't Work', a desolately beautiful country-blues
lament, reached Number 1. Urban Hymns is now one of the fastest selling British
albums of all time, garnering The Verve three wins at the BRIT awards, including
Best British Band.
'I think our story is one that
people can relate to because it hasn't been sweet from the start, it hasn't been
overnight . . . We've had our ups and downs, we had our split up, we've had our
this, that and the other. It's life within a band, and at this point in time,
the world's tuned into what we've been doing and saying all along . . .' -
Richard Ashcroft.
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| Long acclaimed among the most
innovative and spellbinding bands on the contemporary British pop scene, the
Verve finally broke through to the mass international audience in 1997 with the
instant classic "Bittersweet Symphony." By no stretch a study in overnight
success, the group's rise was instead the culmination of a long, arduous journey
which began at the dawn of the decade and went on to encompass a major breakup,
multiple lawsuits, and an extensive diet of narcotics; perfecting an oceanic
sound fusing the exploratory vision of '60s-era psychedelia with the shimmering
atmospherics of the shoegazer aesthetic, the Verve languished in relative
obscurity while waiting for the rest of the music world to play catch-up,
creating one of the most complex and rewarding bodies of work in modern rock &
roll long before most listeners even learned of their existence — only to again
fall apart at the peak of their success. |

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Originally known
simply as Verve, the group was formed in the small Northern English town of
Wigan in 1989. Led by the magnetic
Richard Ashcroft
— a swaggering, shamanic figure in the classic rock star mold — the original
lineup also included guitarist Nick McCabe, bassist Simon Jones
and drummer Peter Salisbury. Sharing
a collective fondness for the Beatles, Funkadelic
and Krautrock — as well as a legendary appetite for psychedelics — the quartet
signed to the Hut label within months, debuting in March 1992 with the single "All
in the Mind," the first in a series of indie chart-topping efforts featuring the
eye-catching artwork of designer Brian Cannon. Subsequent
efforts like the brilliant "She's a Superstar" and "Gravity Grave" captured an
original musical identity growing by leaps and bounds, distinguished chiefly by Ashcroft's
elemental vocals and McCabe's
echoing guitar leads. |
| While Verve's long,
liquid jams found favor on the British indie charts, pop radio looked the other
way — their majestic debut LP, 1993's
A
Storm in Heaven, was a critical smash, but
the good reviews failed to translate into strong record sales. The following
summer, Verve appeared on the second stage at Lollapalooza, a tour tempered by a
string of disasters — not only was Salisbury
arrested for destroying a Kansas hotel room, but Ashcroft
was also hospitalized after suffering from severe dehydration. Around that same
time, the American jazz label also dubbed Verve slapped the band with a lawsuit,
forcing the quartet to officially change their name to "the Verve." Sessions for
the 1995 follow-up
A Northern Soul
proved to be the last straw — admittedly recorded under the influence of a
massive intake of Ecstasy, the album's harrowing intensity was met with
disappointing sales and little media recognition, and just three months after
its release, Ashcroft
exited. |

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Although
Ashcroft quickly re-assembled
the Verve a few weeks later, McCabe initially refused
to return, and was replaced by guitarist/keyboardist Simon Tong.
Finally, in early 1997, McCabe came back to the
fold, and as a quintet they recorded
Urban
Hymns, their breakthrough LP. Heralded by
the smash "Bittersweet Symphony" — a single built around a looped sample of a
symphonic recording of the Rolling Stones' "The Last
Time" —
Urban Hymns launched
the Verve among the U.K.'s most popular bands; still, even at their peak, the
curse of their past lingered on, as legal hassles awarded 100 percent of the
song's publishing rights to ABKCO Music, which controls the Stones'
back catalog. The second single from the album, the haunting "The Drugs Don't
Work," became the Verve's first U.K. number one smash; the hits "Lucky Man" and
"Sonnet" soon followed. However, when McCabe
pulled out of the group's 1998 U.S. tour, the group suffered yet another blow,
and after months of rumors they officially split the following spring. |
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Introduction by Martin Clarke. Book: The Verve: Crazed Highs and Horrible
Lows. Plexus Publishing
Biography by Jason Ankeny, allmusic.com
The Verve Biography by bbc.co.uk
The Verve Biography by wikipedia
The Verve biography by little gem (Link
to little gem Website)
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