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Today we're adding the biography
of one of the best electronic
music producers of all time, Nick
Bracegirdle better known as
'Chicane'. He made himself a name on the
trance and ambient
scene with tunes like Offshore,
Sunstroke, Saltwater
or Autumn Tactics.
He has discovered great voices like Caroline
Lavelle (singer for some of
Art of Trance's tunes), Justine
Suissa, Tracy
Ackerman and also celtic.
Chicane Biography
Like many serious musicians, Chicane
mastermind Nick Bracegirdle
is unhappy with the travesty that is the current UK
chart. "I am fed up with bad dance records
and pop records with no substance just being churned
out one after the other," says the writer/producer/musician,
who most famously deposed Madonna on the way to the
#1 slot with his 1999
classic 'Don't Give Up'.
"That is what drove me with my new album
'Easy To Assemble',"
he continues. "I wanted to create something
that was different - not only to what else is around
at the moment - but also to my previous albums, which
were more conceptual with a beginning, middle and
end. This one is more a collection of vocal songs,
lots of strong melodies. Not too much down-beat stuff,
it's all pretty much up."
 
Amiable, laid-back and passionate about music, Nick's
demeanour is far more diamond geezer than diamond
encrusted pop star. In fact the only thing about Nick
that clearly points towards such a lifestyle is his
collection of sports cars - his garage boasts an Audi
RS4, both monstrously powerful and extremely
rare, as well as a Ferrari
355 which can speed comfortably off into
the distance nearly 200 mph.
With the success of 'Don't
Give Up' (which featured vocals by Nick's
long-term friend Bryan Adams),
Nick found himself
equally lauded by both the dance and pop press whilst
becoming a regular fixture on TV and radio.
He released his second album 'Behind
The Sun', which hit the Top
10 and proved to be a major success across
Europe.
It's been almost three years since
Nick hit the top spot and now he's back
with some of the best new material of his career.
First single 'Love On The
Run', which hit the Top
30 earlier this year, featured D:Ream's
Peter Cunnah on vocals.
"That's probably the most commercial cut
on the album. It's the track that marks the transition
between the last album and this one," says
Nick. "We were looking for someone
to front the song who had a really good voice. Peter
Cunnah was perfect - not only because he has
a strong voice but he's also an excellent performer."
Chicane's previous
live shows have seen them pushing the boundaries
of live performance for a band who have been - rightly
or wrongly - pigeon-holed as a dance act. In the past,
Nick has been
pushing Chicane
towards being a purely live experience, with the band's
live musicianship being matched by a stunning array
of backdrops and visual effects, as well as guest
appearances by the likes of
Bryan Adams and Marie
Brennan.
"This time we're gonna go as live as possible
with the new show," enthuses Nick.
"Much more heavily percussive - we've got
Shovel from
M People involved. I've got two percussionists:
one plays live drums, one plays percussion. We've
got the same array of guitars, flute players and live
musicians. I'm thinking more and more with how things
are in the business, dance is dying, and people wanna
see more live bands and they wanna see it happening.
We're now in the position where we can play a whole
two hour show."
One of the most memorable gigs of Chicane's
live history came with a show in Moscow's
Red Square.
"That was lunacy!" recalls Nick,
"That was great, just nuts. We were in this
200,000 capacity venue, really, really big.
And the audience was cool, I think most of them were
off their heads - a lot of vodka was drunk.... Then
again they were positively sane compared to the crowd
we played to in Manila. They've all completely lost
the plot over there!"
And with his new album, Nick
certainly has the range of material needed to make
such a massive gig a success. A protean blend of real
songs and classic chicanery, licked into shape with
some choice beats, 'Easy
To Assemble' ranges from the mesmerising
'Daylight' to closing string-drenched epic
'Empires'; from
the Indian-influenced forthcoming single
'Locking Down' to pop gem 'East
Side Story', on which
Bryan Adams lends his famed gravelly vocals.
"It's a very different song to 'Don't
Give Up.' It's probably the most 'untrendy'
song on the album," Nick
chuckles. "It's sort of middle of the
road, but it's a fantastic song, probably the best
song I've ever written. Bryan
came up with some lyrics and it was ideal for his
voice so that was that!"
Nick's favourite
track on the album is 'In
Praise Of The Sun.' Having originally co-written
and co-produced the song for
Espiritu in 2001,
Nick has reworked
the song to impressive effect.
'In Praise Of The Sun'
is symbolic of not only the direction of the new material,
but of Nick's
whole new stance on his music, focusing less on dance
and more on strong melodies and strong songs. Furthermore
he says: "I'm not just about being a dance
artist and a DJ, but as much a jobbing-writer/producer.
The fact that I can't DJ to save my life has nothing
to do with it really!"
 
Consequently, Nick
has been moving his musical artistry into other fields,
such as writing and producing tracks on Cher's
'Living Proof'
album and writing music for Playstation's
Formula 1 games. But his real passion is
for film-score composition, with masters such as Ennio
Morriconne, Vangelis
and Jan Hammer
as his inspirations. With the likes of
Luc Besson's 'The
Big Blue' and the Meg
Ryan starring 'City
Of Angels' a couple of his favourites,
what films would Nick
like to work on?
"I love those kind of epic, beautiful pieces
of music which work well. But it could be anything
- a film calls for all sort of things and if you're
doing the score, you're doing things from ridiculously
small incidental bits of music to fast-paced sections.
I suppose nothing too sci-fi-ey or cop-chase, Beverly
Hills Cop type-movies," he laughs before
concluding, "just anything that expresses
the need for any type of mood."
So what's next for Chicane?
"I'd like to do even more song-based material,
less instrumental stuff. I'd love to work with Trevor
Horn or Brian Eno.
And vocally, I'd go for someone folky like Tori
Amos or Suzanne Vega."
Aside from his work, Nick
is now far more likely to be found enjoying
a drink with his friends, rather than spending the
night throwing shapes on the floor. His music reflects
this new maturity. He hasn't of course moved on from
'dance' - he's merely managed to advance his sound
to a position where musos, composers, clubbers and
pop fans alike can appreciate his work in equal measures.
And, to be honest, you can't argue with it.
All the information
has been taken from Chicane's official website
Solotrance
Group
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