The Story
 
The Proclaimers : The Story
 

THE PROCLAIMERS   May  09

The Proclaimers return with their eighth studio album Notes & Rhymes (W14/Universal) released in the UK on 15th June. This is preceded with the single Love Can Move Mountains available as digital download from 8th June. Together with their band, Craig and Charlie hit the road with tour dates in UK and North America for the rest of the 2009, see section The Gigs.

Strikingly individual, twin brothers Craig and Charlie Reid have over the years enjoyed huge success across the globe as the emotional honesty, political fire, wit and sing-along raucousness of their songs and their extensive touring has enlightened and entertained fans new and old. The Proclaimers have carved out a niche for themselves in the netherworld where pop, folk, new wave and punk collide. In the process they have enjoyed Gold and Platinum singles and albums in UK, USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

After a rapid writing period in the second half of 2008, Craig and Charlie Reid headed back to the legendary Rockfield Studios in February with producer Steve Evans (Robert Plant, Siouxsie) to record a new album ‘Notes & Rhymes’ (W14/Universal) for release on 15th June. Craig and Charlie then went over to Austin, Texas to make their debut at SXSW where they performed a series of seven acoustic showcases, including a one-off Scottish extravaganza, sharing a bill with Glasvegas and Primal Scream.

2008 saw The Proclaimers bring a 129 date, yearlong World tour to a triumphant conclusion with 2 final shows July 19/20 in front of 15,000 fans at Edinburgh Castle and a big top at Bught Park, Inverness. Craig and Charlie then got down to writing new songs for the remainder of the year.

March 2008 had seen The Proclaimers tour across Europe before heading off to USA & Canada for a 2 month coast to coast tour. They followed that with a variety of shows from Muscat to Bermuda, alongside English seaside resort gigs and European festivals including their fourth Glastonbury appearance.

September 2007 had seen The Proclaimers release their seventh studio album ‘Life With You’ (W14/Universal) in the UK to fantastic critical acclaim and great commercial success. October then saw The Proclaimers kick off their biggest ever UK & Ireland tour, 44 dates to over 100,000 fans. In Scotland, they sold more gig tickets than any other single act in 2007. The summer saw them play at a number of festivals, including 2 exhilarating main stage performances at V Festivals.

Earlier in 2007 they topped the UK singles chart in March with a rousing new rendition of their classic anthem I'm Going to Be (500 Miles), a collaboration with comedians Peter Kay and Matt Lucas for Comic Relief, raising over a million pounds in the process. EMI relaunched their 2002 Best Of collection, re-entering the Album Charts at No 5 with sales soaring beyond platinum.

Born in Leith in 1962, Craig and Charlie Reid grew up in Edinburgh, Cornwall and Auchtermuchty in Fife. At home, they listened to early rock 'n' roll and country greats such as Jerry Lee Lewis, Merle Haggard and Hank Williams. At school they played in punk bands and formed The Proclaimers in 1983. With a fervent live following growing in Scotland, particularly in Inverness where they performed regularly, their first big break came late in 1986 when they were invited to tour with The Housemartins. Then in January 1987 they made a now seminal appearance on the Channel 4 pop programme The Tube, performing Letter From America & Throw The ‘R’ Away. Singing in regional accents about Scotland - its emigration and its politics - they were a far cry from the mid-Eighties playlist staples of Rick Astley and Sinitta, and became a phenomenon almost overnight, signing to Chrysalis within a month and recording their debut album acoustically, This Is The Story, a week later, produced by the man who also signed them to Chrysalis, John Williams.  Voted NME Readers Best New Band that year, they toured the UK extensively and a new ‘band’ version of Letter From America, produced by Gerry Rafferty went Top 3 in November.

Complementing their raw, stripped down delivery with the greater musical scope of a full band, they then embraced country and rock on their second album, 1988's Sunshine On Leith produced by Pete Wingfield, which also saw them form their first full live band and go on a 9 month World tour. In addition to the deeply moving classic title track which has gone on to be an anthem for Hibs fans, the album featured hit singles, the raucous, euphoric I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles) and I'm On My Way, The latter track subsequently accompanied one of the pivotal scenes in the hit movie Shrek (2001) while in 1989 I'm Gonna Be spent 6 weeks at number 1 in Australia and a was a top 10 college radio hit in USA. The song went on to soar to No. 3 during a 6-month reign in the US Billboard Singles Chart in 1993 after appearing on the soundtrack of the Johnny Depp film Benny And Joon. Previously in 1990 The Proclaimers had a huge UK & European hit with their King Of The Road ep. The Proclaimers returned with 1994's Hit The Highway, an album that featured a three-piece brass section yielding the hit Let’s Get Married. A longer than intended break then ensued before a fourth album, 2001's Persevere, was cut in Minneapolis. Produced by Chris Kimsey with an all star American musician line up, another fantastic collection of Reid/Reid songs re-established The Proclaimers as they went back on another mammoth year long World tour.

Since then, the band have barely stood still, following the 2002 release of their Best Of with two more acclaimed studio albums, 2003's Edwyn Collins produced Born Innocent and 2005's more soul orientated Mark Wallis/David Ruffy produced Restless Soul. In addition, they have been extremely active on the live front, touring constantly and wowing festival crowds at the likes of Glastonbury, T In The Park, V Festival, Isle Of Wight and Womad, while also opening the bill at the 2005 Live 8 concert at Murrayfield Stadium. Another, rather more unusual show saw them perform on the pitch at Hampden Park to over a billion TV viewers before the 2002 UEFA Champions League Final between Real Madrid and Bayer Leverkusen. 2006 also saw a notable appearance in an episode of Family Guy.

Their songs, too, have provided the inspiration behind an enormously successful, highly acclaimed, award winning new musical, Sunshine On Leith, put together by the Dundee Rep Theatre. Written by Stephen Greenhorn. The drama follows the highs and lows of 2 soldiers returning home from Afghanistan. Families, relationships and life in Leith are not all plain sailing in this exceptional love story about every day life in Scotland. Directed by James Brining, the musical first toured Scotland in Spring 07, returning in November 08 for a 4 month run that took in Dundee Rep Theatre, Edinburgh Festival Theatre, Inverness Eden Court, Aberdeen His Majesty's, Glasgow's Kings Theatre and its first foray into England at Coventry's Belgrade Theatre. With over 140,000 people having seen the show so far, the success of the show ensures the musical will run again in 2010 not only in Scotland but likely to tour in England and abroad.

Matt Lucas is a huge fan and in the sleeve notes of their Best Of compilation he writes of Scotland's finest Celtic soul brothers: 'I find it hard to put into words quite how the music of The Proclaimers makes me feel. It makes me laugh. It makes me cry. It just makes me generally euphoric … Sunshine On Leith says more to me about my life and the way I feel than anything Morrissey or Cobain ever wrote.'

 

Full biography and j-pegs at www.proclaimers.co.uk in section ‘The Media’

 

THE PROCLAIMERS  UK  2007

YEAR END REVIEWS

 

The List - Top Ten Scots Of 2007
Sometimes things just go right. The Proclaimers stock has been on the rise again over the last few years but 2007 saw their profile go through the roof. Firstly the Reid twins re-recorded a version of ‘I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles)’ with Matt Lucas and Peter Kay as the official Comic Relief single. A massive hit re-launched the band internationally onto a bigger stage, just at a time when they were inking a major label deal after having to self-release their last three records. Life With You confirmed that Craig and Charlie have lost none of their impeccable songwriting prowess. Meanwhile the Dundee Rep put on Sunshine On Leith, a musical based on their back catalogue, which turned out to be a huge success, further adding to the band’s kudos, ensuring that they’re now firmly ensconced as Scottish national folk heroes.

Scotland On Sunday - Top Scots 2007–The people who have inspired the nation.  Musicians Of The Year
Strange that The Proclaimers should feature in Scots Of The Year two decades after they first came to prominence. You might expect performers who smoulder with such righteous anger and rapturous energy to have burned themselves out by now. Instead they marked their anniversary with Life With You, arguably the best album to have come out of Scotland this year. It is also timely. Back in 1987, to sing in your native accent seemed a novelty; now it’s clear that Craig and Charlie Reid have laid the foundations for a Scottish sound that is authentic but not parochial.
The release of such a great album is not the only reason that 2007 was remarkable for The Proclaimers. This was also the year they went mainstream and finally received the artistic credit they long deserved. In March, ‘I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles)’ went to number one, re-released as the official Comic Relief single, and was played at Hampden to rally the fans and the national team. The songs ascendancy also coincided with the brothers’ beloved Hibs winning the CIS Cup.
We were talking in their studio as part of a story I was writing about Sunshine On Leith, Dundee rep’s musical based on the band’s songs. Stephen Greenhorn came up with the script by listening to their back catalogue, allowing the lyrics to suggest theme, plot and character. The result was a play about two Scottish soldiers coming home from war, and showed just how rich those songs are.

Over the course of it’s run, Sunshine On Leith played to 46,000 people. The band themselves are coming to the end of a UK tour, with a final gig tomorrow at Stirling Castle, during which they will have played to twice that number. Next year, they take on America. So are they at ease with their new found mass appeal? “I don’t know,” says Charlie. “There are people who love us, others think we’re a comedy thing, and no doubt there are people who loathe us. In a perverse way. We quite enjoy the negative reaction.”
Craig adds, “Punk was one of the pivotal things in our musical education, so I like that people are against us. It’s mot that we want to provoke, but I know that every time we go on TV, there are people sitting out there whose day we have spoiled. I do enjoy that.”

The Herald Their most recent album Life With You, is just the latest instalment in a remarkable catalogue of soul-tinged Caledonian country music, and fans at forthcoming dates will likely be as word perfect in the new songs as they are in the classics of old. Honest, hardworking with the good grace to be grateful for their continued success, the chaps are role-models to specky middle-ages blokes everywhere. And no havers.

The List – Music Section The Reids are consummate writers of pop anthems, and by ‘pop’ I mean ‘popular’. They have an unerring gift for grafting a universal sentiment to an impeccably soaring melody. Just go to any football match or public gathering, and see how long it takes before a Proclaimers’ song breaks out. The secret of their success lies in the pair’s ability to combine statements of love, loss and camaraderie with an underlying socialist stance, something which makes even their most personal and political songs ring true, a trend which continues impeccably on Life With You.

Sunday Mail - The Proclaimers have shifted more gig tickets in Scotland than any other single act in 2007 shifting a staggering 45.500 briefs for 19 sell out shows.

Daily RecordAlbums Of The Year – The Scots legends celebrated their first UK No.1 this year and also released their best album since 1994’s Hit The Highway. Lead track Life With You was classic Proclaimers – an anthemic love song best belted out at the top of your lungs. Mixing songs about politics with their great love songs, Life With You is a heady mix.

 

 

THE PROCLAIMERS – LIFE WITH YOU

“Tenacious as Jack Russell's on rabbit duty, the Reid twins have been unstoppable lately. Highly politicised, yet leavened with deft vocal harmony and potent melodies, the album drips with passion and thoughtfully targeted ire.” MOJO

“Untouched by any restrictive notions of cool, Life With You throws tasteful soul, country and retro-rock shapes to document very grown up concerns, but also makes room for the trademark spittle-flying rant. Above all true - from that rarest of beasts: a great British soul band.”  THE WORD

“The new single sounds like an instant classic. Easily the best Proclaimers album since 1988's Sunshine On Leith, the twins lyrical brio is undimmed. They're the "heritage" act who sound fresh, vital and now.” THE TELEGRAPH

“Leith's favourite twins return with a cracking album full of instantly loveable tunes. Lyrically it's spot-on and full of wry wit.”  SUNDAY MAIL

Life With You is a glorious celebration of soul - Celtic and otherwise - country, old school rock'n'roll and modern Americana, songs which like The Proclaimers themselves are here for "The Long Haul". SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY

“Their seventh album feels more realised, bigger in scope with classic love songs and stomping aural assaults on everything from war to the honours system.” DAILY RECORD

“The Auchtermuchty twins renaissance continues as Life With You brims with both songwriting confidence and the lovelorn title track notwithstanding, righteous anger.” Q

“The insistent stomp of the title track here is likely to stick inside your head as tenaciously as the chorus of 500 Miles. That and If There's A God are highlights in a filler-free album and the token cover, Wreckless Eric's Whole Wide World, sounds like the next hit.” THE TIMES

“Great to have you back with such resonant new material, lads. The result is original, stirring and catchy also!” MANCHESTER EVENING NEWS

“A masterful new collection” DAILY MAIL
“A very welcome return”  THE EXPRESS
A gold-standard album”  SUNDAY HERALD
“Bellicose Scots twins read the riot act in fine and feisty form, Auchtermuchty’s Craig and Charlie Reid effectively slap you round the face with their latest batch of songs, as if to remind you of the vacuousness of most current pop.” UNCUT

“Listening to Life With You, it’s easy to see why they’ve inspired such devotion.” DUNDEE EVENING TELEGRAPH

“Though the rabble-rousing anthems fit for singing at closing time and football matches are at a premium, Life With You does have that special Reid brothers everyman lyrical wisdom in abundance.” BIG ISSUE

SUNSHINE ON LEITH – THE MUSICAL

 

So here it is, the Scottish jukebox musical and the result is a stunning triumph. Craig and Charlie's lyrics demand no less. There are love songs, of course, but there is so much more than that, from the Highland Clearances to contemporary politics, every line filled up with just being Scottish. And even the love songs have a bite and pathos to them that make them feel as if they have been wrenched straight from the heart in the white heat of the moment. THE TIMES

Abba, Queen, Madness...The Proclaimers? Well, why not? Dundee Rep's much-hyped new 'jukebox' musical lets others discover what we devotees have long argued; that the Reid brothers are the best songwriters in Britain. There is nothing cynical about the enterprise, which honours both the emotional and political forthrightness of The Proclaimers lyrics. THE OBSERVER

The earthy, emotionally immense, often cuttingly witty lyrics of The Proclaimers set it all off stunningly. THE LIST

One of the hottest tickets in recent Scottish theatre, it confirms The Proclaimers as extraordinary poets of Scottish working-class life today. Above all there's the spirit of the show, with it's terrific sense of place (it must be the first true Edinburgh musical of the post-modern age) and the passion with which it evokes the powerful link between the music of The Proclaimers- with all it's sense of political and economic struggle with a rich gratitude for the sweetness of life - and the reality of ordinary Scottish life from the late 1980's to the present day. If I were Craig and Charlie Reid, I would be thrilled by the tremendous tribute to their music implied in this heart-lifting show. And I would also be moved by the tremendous energy everyone involved has clearly drawn from their special genius for giving a voice to modern Scotland: and by the huge popular success that the show, and everyone involved with it, now seems certain to enjoy. THE SCOTSMAN

If ever there was a definition of having the last laugh, it's surely the triumphant return of The Proclaimers. The Leith-born twins have been quietly ascending the credibility ladder again for some years now, especially as a powerhouse live act. The fundamental reason for this is abundant, gloriously clear throughout Dundee Rep's new musical, penned around some 20 Proclaimers tracks by Passing Places/River City author Stephen Greenhorn. Craig and Charlie Reid write truly great songs, lyrically and melodically: songs that touch the heart and fire the spirits and raise the hairs on the back of your neck. METRO

Why did it take 20 years before anyone noticed The Proclaimers were born to be turned into a musical? Not since Willy Russell came up with Blood Brothers has Britain produced such a perfect marriage of music and theatre.  Had playwright and screenwriter Stephen Greenhorn done nothing else, he should be declared a genius for spotting that the songs of Craig and Charlie Reid - with all their emotional honesty, singalong raucousness and political fire - are a true gift to the stage. THE GUARDIAN

Now Proclaimers fans will be astonished not merely at how well their music has been brought into a coherent plot, but how it reflects the moods and atmosphere of the whole story. EVENING NEWS

Call out the riot police. Thursday's premiere of the long anticipated Proclaimers musical was met by a standing ovation in Dundee but when it hits Edinburgh Festival Theatre later this month it's going to be incendiary. And above all stands the power of The Proclaimers music. You already know the songs but in a theatrical context, you hear them anew. Phrases previously overlooked leap out with heart-on-the-sleeve force and much-loved melodies become heart breaking. SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY

It's fitting that Sunshine On Leith, a jukebox musical featuring the songs of The Proclaimers should break so many conventions of the genre. After all, the bespectacled Leith brothers are champions of individuality. ONSTAGE SCOTLAND

 

 

 

 
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