Joe Jackson
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Joe Jackson Biography
In his 1999 memoir, A Cure for Gravity: A Musical Pilgrimage,
Joe Jackson writes approvingly of George Gershwin as a musician who
kept one foot in the popular and one in the classical realms of music.
Like Gershwin, Jackson possesses a restless musical imagination that
has found him straddling musical genres unapologetically, disinclined
to pick one style and stick to it. The word chameleon often crops up
in descriptions of him, but Jackson prefers to be though of as
eclectic. Is he the Joe Jackson he appeared to be upon his popular
emergence in 1979, a new wave singer/songwriter with a belligerent
attitude derisively asking, Is She Really Going Out With Him? The
reggae-influenced Joe Jackson of 1980's Beat Crazy? The jump blues
revivalist of 1981's Joe Jackson's Jumpin' Jive? The New York
salsa-styled singer of 1982's Steppin' Out ? The
R&B/jazz-inflected Jackson of 1984's Body & Soul? Or is he
David Ian Jackson, L.R.A.M. (Licentiate of the Royal Academy of Music),
who composes and conducts instrumental albums of contemporary classical
music such as 1987's Will Power and 1999's Grammy-winning Symphony No.
1? He is all of these, Jackson himself no doubt would reply, and a few
others besides.
The roots of that eclecticism lie in the conflicts of his youth. He was
born David Ian Jackson on August 11, 1954 (not 1955, as some references
mistakenly state) in Burton-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, England. His
parents had met when his father was in the Navy and his mother was
working in her family's pub in Portsmouth on the south coast of
England. They initially settled in his father's hometown, Swadlincote,
on the border of Staffordshire and Derbyshire, but when Jackson was a
year old, they moved back to his mother's hometown, and he was raised
in Portsmouth and nearby Gosport. His father, Ronald Jackson, became a
plasterer.
Growing up in working-class poverty, Jackson was a sickly child,
afflicted with asthma, first diagnosed when he was three and producing
attacks that lasted into his twenties. Prevented from playing sports,
he turned to books and eventually music. At 11, he began taking violin
lessons, later studying timpani and oboe at school. His parents got him
a secondhand piano when he was in his early teens, and he began taking
lessons, soon deciding that he wanted to be a composer when he grew up.
He played percussion in a citywide student orchestra. But his social
milieu was more accepting of different forms of popular music than it
was of the classics, and he developed a taste for that, too. Becoming
interested in jazz, he formed a trio and, at the age of 16, began
playing piano in a pub, his first professional gig.
By the early '70s, Jackson, who had paid little attention to rock
before, became a fan of progressive rock, notably such British groups
as the Soft Machine. Meanwhile, in 1972, he passed an advanced S
level exam in music that entitled him to a grant to study music, and he
was accepted at the Royal Academy of Music in London. Rather than
moving to the city, he spent his grant money on equipment and commuted
several days a week to attend classes while continuing to live at home
and play pop music locally. He switched from writing classical
compositions to pop songs. Invited to join an established band called
the Misty Set, he sang his first lead vocal on-stage. He moved to
another established band called Edward Bear (the name taken from a
character in Winnie the Pooh; not to be confused with the Canadian band
of the same name that recorded for Capitol Records in the early '70s).
Deciding that he resembled the title character on a television puppet
show called Joe 90, his bandmates began calling him Joe, and it
stuck. After six months, the two principals in Edward Bear decided to
retire from music, and with their permission he took over the name and
the group's bookings and brought in a couple of his friends, lead
singer/guitarist Mark Andrews (later of Mark Andrews & the Gents)
and bassist Graham Maby.
Jackson continued to attend the Royal Academy, where he studied
composition, orchestration, and piano while majoring in percussion. He
also occasionally played piano in the National Youth Jazz Orchestra. He
graduated from the academy after three years in 1975. By then, Edward
Bear (forced to change its name to Edwin Bear because of the more
successful Canadian band, and then to Arms & Legs) was attracting
more attention and acquired management, which in turn signed the band
to MAM Records. In April 1976, MAM released the first Arms & Legs
single, with Andrews' Janie on the A-side and Jackson's She'll
Surprise You on the B-side. Second and third singles followed in
August and February 1977, but the records did not sell. Meanwhile, in
October 1976, Jackson quit the band to become pianist and musical
director at the Playboy Club in Portsmouth. He was determined to save
enough money to record his own album and release it himself. In August
1977, he played his first gigs as the leader of the Joe Jackson Band,
singing and playing keyboards, backed by Andrews (sitting in
temporarily and soon replaced by Gary Sanford), Maby, and drummer Dave
Houghton. At the same time, he quit the Playboy Club job to become
pianist/musical director for a cabaret act, Koffee 'n' Kream, that was
beginning a national tour in the wake of their triumph on the TV
amateur show Opportunity Knocks.
Jackson toured with Koffee 'n' Kream from the fall of 1977 to the
spring of 1978, and the money he made enabled him to move to London in
January 1978 and continue recording his album in a Portsmouth studio.
He began shopping demo tapes to record labels in London without success
until he was heard by American producer David Kershenbaum. Kershenbaum
was scouting for talent on behalf of A&M Records, and he arranged
for Jackson to be signed to A&M on August 9, 1978, after which they
immediately re-recorded Jackson's album. They completed it quickly, and
at the end of the month the Joe Jackson Band embarked on an extensive
national tour.
Despite his classical education and background playing many types of
pop music in pubs and clubs, Jackson had become genuinely enamored of
the punk/new wave movement of the late '70s in England, especially
attracted by the energy and simplicity of the music and the angry,
aggressive tone of the lyrics. He had no trouble incorporating these
elements into his own music, and if he was, to an extent, using the new
wave label as a flag of convenience, the style nevertheless was a valid
vehicle of expression for him. Of course, first impressions can be
lasting, and to many people he would, ever after, be an angry new wave
singer/songwriter, no matter what else he did.
In October 1978, A&M released the first Joe Jackson single, Is She
Really Going Out With Him?, a rhythmic ballad in which the singer
ponders why pretty women are attracted to gorillas and worries
about his own inadequacy. The record failed to chart, but Jackson and
his band continued to tour around the U.K. and began to attract press
attention. Look Sharp!, his debut album, followed in January 1979,
again, to no significant sales at first. The LP contained more songs in
the vein of Is She Really Going Out With Him?, many of them uptempo
rockers with strong melodies and lyrics full of romantic disappointment
and social criticism, bitterly expressed and with more than a touch of
self-deprecation. (One, Got the Time, was sufficiently raucous to be
covered by heavy metal band Anthrax in essentially the same arrangement
on its Persistence of Time album in 1990.) A&M released Sunday
Papers, an attack on the salaciousness of tabloid newspapers, as a
single in February, again without reaction. But in March, Look Sharp!
finally broke into the charts, eventually peaking at the bottom of the
Top 40. The same month, A&M released the album in the U.S., and it
quickly charted, reaching the Top 20 after Is She Really Going Out
With Him? was released as a single in May (while Jackson toured North
America) and became a Top 40 hit; in September, the LP was certified
gold in the U.S. In the U.K., Is She Really Going Out With Him? was
re-released in July and charted in August, making the Top 20. Jackson
was nominated for a 1979 Grammy Award for Best Rock Vocal Performance,
Male, for the single.
Meanwhile, Jackson toured more or less continually, playing dates in
Continental Europe in June and then back in the U.K. through August
before returning to North America. But he had found the time and
inspiration to craft a quick follow-up to Look Sharp!, and his second
LP, I'm the Man, was released on October 5. That was a little too soon
for the U.S. market, where Look Sharp! had not yet exhausted its run,
and while the album made the Top 40, it was a relative sales
disappointment, with the single It's Different for Girls failing to
enter the Hot 100. The story was different in the U.K., however, where
I'm the Man made the Top 20 and It's Different for Girls reached the
Top Five. Critically, the album was considered a continuation of Look
Sharp!, an opinion shared by Jackson himself. The first blush of his
emergence fading, Jackson was beginning to be viewed by critics as the
third in a line of angry British singer/songwriters starting with
Graham Parker and continuing with Elvis Costello, and his commercial
success created resentment, especially because he was not as
forthcoming with the media as the garrulous Costello.
The U.S. tour ran into November, followed by more shows in the U.K. in
November and December. Jackson went back on the road in February 1980
with a few U.S. dates, followed by some U.K. shows and a European tour
that ran from March to May. Like other punk/new wave acts, he had used
reggae rhythms on occasion, notably on Fools in Love on Look Sharp!
and Geraldine and John on I'm the Man. In May, he released an EP in
the U.K. including a cover of Jimmy Cliff's The Harder They Come. In
acknowledgement of his group's importance to his sound, the disc was
billed to the Joe Jackson Band. After dates in the U.K. in May and
June, the group returned to North America for a tour that lasted into
August; they finally took a break after a few more shows at the end of
the month.
Beat Crazy, released in October, also was billed to the Joe Jackson
Band. The album featured less of the frantic punk sound of its
predecessors, instead absorbing the dub-reggae and ska influences that
were topping the British charts just then in the music of bands like
the Specials and the English Beat. But it was a relative disappointment
commercially, peaking in the 40s in both the U.S. and U.K., with its
singles failing to chart. One reason for the reduced sales in America
may have been that the group did not tour to support it there. The Joe
Jackson Band played a monthlong tour from October to November in the
U.K., followed by a month in Europe from November to December, after
which it split up, according to Jackson because Houghton no longer
wanted to tour. Sanford became a session musician, while Maby stuck
with Jackson.
Jackson, in ill health following more than two years of continual
touring, retreated to his family home, where he became increasingly
immersed in the jump blues of 1940s star Louis Jordan. He organized a
new band in the style of Jordan's Tympany 5 featuring three horn
players (Pete Thomas on alto saxophone, Raul Oliveria on trumpet, and
David Bitelli on tenor saxophone and clarinet) along with pianist Nick
Weldon and drummer Larry Tolfree, plus Maby and Jackson himself, who
played vibes and sang. The group, dubbed Joe Jackson's Jumpin' Jive,
played a collection of swing and jump blues standards such as Jumpin'
With Symphony Sid, Is You Is or Is You Ain't My Baby, and Tuxedo
Junction. The resulting Joe Jackson's Jumpin' Jive LP, released in
June 1981, was a hit in Britain, where it reached the Top 20. In the
U.S., the album was not so much 35 years behind the times as 15 years
ahead of them; had it appeared in the mid-'90s, it would have fit right
in with releases by the Brian Setzer Orchestra and Big Bad Voodoo Daddy
as part of the neo-swing movement. As it was, America circa 1981 was
baffled, but Jackson's core audience was sufficiently curious to push
the album into the Top 50 while he toured the country with the band in
July in between British dates in June and from August to September.
Jackson went through more personal changes over the next year. He and
his wife divorced, and he moved to New York City, where, true to form,
he began to immerse himself in new musical genres, particularly
attracted to salsa and the classic songwriting styles of Gershwin and
Cole Porter. The result was Night and Day, released in June 1982,
Jackson's first album to put his keyboard playing at the center of his
music, with percussionist Sue Hadjopoulas also given prominence.
Jackson seemed to have abandoned new wave rock for a catchy
pop-jazz-salsa-dance hybrid, and he backed the release with a yearlong
world tour as A&M put considerable promotional muscle behind the
LP. Steppin' Out became a multi-format hit, earning airplay on
album-oriented rock (AOR) radio before spreading to the pop and adult
contemporary charts, placing in the Top Ten all around and eventually
earning Grammy nominations for Record of the Year and Best Pop Vocal
Performance, Male. With that stimulus, the album reached the Top Ten
and went gold, spawning a second Top 20 single in Breaking Us in Two.
Jackson finished the Night and Day tour in May 1983. He had been asked
to contribute a song to Mike's Murder, a film written and directed by
James Bridges (The China Syndrome, Urban Cowboy) and starring Debra
Winger (Urban Cowboy, An Officer and a Gentleman). He ended up writing
both a handful of songs and a few instrumental pieces that were
released on a soundtrack album in September. Unfortunately, the film
itself was not ready for release then, since it was the subject of a
dispute between Bridges and the movie studio that had financed it, the
result being reshooting and reediting, such that the film did not open
until March 1984, by which time it had a score by John Barry and only a
little of Jackson's music remaining, and then it earned only one
million dollars during a few weeks of theatrical showings, making it a
disastrous flop. The orphaned soundtrack album, however, managed to get
into the Top 100 and even spawned a chart single in the Jackson
composition Memphis, while Breakdown earned a Grammy nomination for
Best Pop Instrumental Performance.
Jackson returned to the studio and emerged in March 1984 with Body
& Soul, an album with a cover photograph showing him clutching a
saxophone in the style of the 1950s LP covers of Blue Note Records. The
disc inside was a follow-up to Night and Day in style, however, with a
bit more of an R&B tilt, and it was another commercial success, if
a more modest one, reaching the Top 20 and spawning a Top 20 single in
You Can't Get What You Want (Till You Know What You Want). After the
four-month Body & Soul world tour concluded in July 1984, Jackson
retreated. The tour had been, he later wrote, the hardest I ever did;
it came too soon after the last one, and by the end of it I was so
burned out I swore I'd never tour again. He re-emerged after 18 months
in January 1986 for a series of live recording sessions at the
Roundabout Theatre in New York conducted for his next album. Audiences
were invited to attend, but instructed to hold their applause as the
performances were cut direct to a two-track tape recorder. The
resulting album, Big World, released in March, had a one-hour running
time, making it an ideal length for the new CD format, though it had to
be pressed on two LPs with the second side of the second LP left blank.
Press reaction to these two aspects of the album tended to overshadow
consideration of the material, which ranged from politically charged
rockers like Right or Wrong, a direct challenge to the Reagan
administration, to heartfelt ballads like Home Town, a reflection on
memory and loss. Jackson undertook another extensive tour lasting from
May to December (one he reported enjoying much more than the last one),
and the album spent six months in the charts, but only peaked in the
Top 40.
In the winter of 1985, Jackson had been commissioned to write a
20-minute score for a Japanese film, Shijin No Ie (House of the Poet),
and the orchestral piece was recorded with the Tokyo Symphony
Orchestra. He adapted it into Symphony in One Movement and added a
few other instrumental pieces to create his next album, Will Power, his
first disc to reflect his classical background. A&M gave the LP a
surprising promotional push that included releasing the title track as
a single, and Jackson fans were sufficiently intrigued to push the
album into the lower reaches of the pop chart upon release in April
1987. But his increasing desire to include classical elements in his
popular work and to issue outright serious compositions tended to put
him in a no man's land where reviewers were concerned, since rock
critics were for the most part incapable of judging such works and
preferred that he stick to rock-based music, while classical critics
simply ignored him. Had they been paying attention, however, they might
not have approved of what they heard, anyway. An unrepentant Beethoven
fan, Jackson had disliked his exposure to serial music and other
contemporary trends in classical music when he encountered them in
college; his serious compositions tended to reflect his taste for
conventional concert music of the romantic and classical periods.
While staying off the road, Jackson had two albums in release in 1988.
In May, he issued the double-disc set Live 1980/86, chronicling his
tours over the years. It reached the Top 100. In August came his
swing-styled soundtrack to the Francis Ford Coppola film Tucker: The
Man and His Dream, an effort that probably would have attracted more
attention if the film had been more successful (it grossed less than
$20 million). Nevertheless, the album earned a Grammy nomination for
Best Album of Original Instrumental Background Score Written for a
Motion Picture or TV. His next LP, released in April 1989, was Blaze of
Glory, another modest seller with a peak only in the Top 100 despite
radio play for the single Nineteen Forever. Jackson, who felt the
album was one of his best efforts and toured to support it with an
11-piece band in the U.S. and Europe from June to November, was
disappointed with both the commercial reaction and his record company's
lack of support. He parted ways with A&M, which promptly released
the 1990 compilation Steppin' Out: The Very Best of Joe Jackson, a Top
Ten hit in the U.K.
Jackson wrote his third movie score for 1991's Queens Logic; no
soundtrack album was issued. Signing to Virgin Records, he released his
next album, Laughter & Lust, in April 1991. Here, he expressed some
of his frustration with the record business in the appropriately
catchy, '60s-styled Hit Single, while the socially conscious Obvious
Song and a percussion-filled cover of Fleetwood Mac's Oh Well
attracted radio attention. But the album continued his gradual sales
decline, failing to reach the Top 100 in the U.S. Another world tour
stretched from May to September, after which Jackson was not heard from
on record for three years. In the interim, he wrote music for two
movies, the interactive film I'm Your Man (1992) and the feature Three
of Hearts (1993), neither of which produced soundtrack albums featuring
his music. He reappeared in record stores in October 1994 with Night
Music, a low-key album that attempted to fuse his pop and classical
styles, including instrumentals and guest vocals by Máire Brennan of
Clannad. The album, which did not chart, was supported with a world
tour that ran from November to May 1995. After it, Jackson left Virgin
and signed to Sony Classical, a label more accepting of his musical
ambitions. In September 1997, it released Heaven & Hell, a song
cycle depicting the seven deadly sins, billed to Joe Jackson &
Friends; the friends included such guest vocalists as folk-pop singers
Jane Siberry and Suzanne Vega and opera singer Dawn Upshaw. The album
reached number three in Billboard's Classical Crossover chart. A tour
ran from November to April 1998.
Jackson worked on two projects in the late '90s, both of which appeared
in October 1999. Sony Classical issued his Symphony No. 1, which was
played not by an orchestra, but by a band of jazz and rock musicians
including guitarist Steve Vai and trumpeter Terence Blanchard, and it
won the 2000 Grammy Award for Best Pop Instrumental Album. And
publishers PublicAffairs came out with Jackson's book, A Cure for
Gravity: A Musical Pilgrimage, in which he wrote about his love of all
kinds of music and recounted his life from his birth up to the point of
his emergence as a public figure in the late '70s. Bringing his story
up to date, he wrote, So I'm still making music, no longer a pop star
-- if I ever really was -- but just a composer, which is what I wanted
to be in the first place.
Having released only semi-classical works on his last three recordings,
Jackson was thought to have abandoned pop/rock music completely, but
that proved not to be true. The early years of the 21st century found
him in a flurry of activity, much of it returning him to the pop music
realm. In June 2000, Sony Classical, through Jackson's imprint,
Manticore, issued Summer in the City: Live in New York, an album drawn
from an August 1999 concert that featured him playing piano and
singing, backed only by Maby and drummer Gary Burke, performing some of
his old songs along with covers of tunes by the Lovin' Spoonful, Duke
Ellington, and the Beatles, among others. Four months later came Night
and Day II, a new set of songs in the spirit of his most popular
recording. Touring to promote the album in Europe and North America
from November to April 2001, Jackson recorded the concert CD Two Rainy
Nights: Live in the Northwest (The Official Bootleg), released in
January 2002 on his own Great Big Island label through his website,
www.joejackson.com. (The album was reissued to retail by Koch in 2004.)
Later in 2002, Jackson surprised longtime fans by reuniting with the
original members of the Joe Jackson Band, Graham Maby, Gary Sanford,
and Dave Houghton, to record a new studio album, Volume 4 (the first
three volumes having been Look Sharp!, I'm the Man, and Beat Crazy),
released by Restless/Rykodisc in March 2003, and go out on a world tour
running through September 2003 that resulted in the live album
Afterlife, issued in March 2004. As he made television appearances to
promote the latter, he insisted that the reunion had been a one-time
thing. Meanwhile, his recording of Steppin' Out was being used in a
television commercial for Lincoln Mercury automobiles, and he was
preparing to score his next film, The Greatest Game Ever Played, for a
2005 release. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
Written by William Ruhlmann