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  1. www.youtube.com › user › andywickettAndy Wickett - YouTube

    110 subscribers ‧ 19 videos. Andy Wickett holds the reputation of being one of the finest performers and songwriters in the Midlands. He started his career in the 80s singing and playing in TV...

  2. 9 mar 2018 · Track List: 1. Border Song. 2. Make It. 3. Kingdom. 4. The Good Die Young. 5. Darleen. 6. Evidently. 7. Ain't No One. 8. Children Of The Night. 9. Creatures Of Love. 10. Preacher Man. 11. Take Me To The C. Includes unlimited streaming of Creatures Of Love via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.

  3. 30 set 2020 · Band & Musician NR, News Releases. October 23, 2020. by Administrator. Los Angeles, CA - Fans of British new wave icons Duran Duran got the treat of a lifetime when Andy Wickett, the original vocalist of the group who was eventually replaced by Simon LeBon, released Girls On Film - 1979 Demo, a collection of early recordings of the ...

    • Overview
    • Biography
    • TV Eye
    • Duran Duran
    • The Xpertz
    • World Service
    • MAU61
    • Links

    Andy Wickett (once known as Fane in the 1970s) is a singer-songwriter from the Birmingham area, who was a member of Duran Duran from the Summer of 1979.

    Wickett wrote most of Girls on Film and Rio before leaving Duran Duran; both of which he rerecorded with Ray Bronner the guitarist for Blues legends John Lee Hooker and Freddie Roulette.

    Andy's career started in 1976, singing and playing in the band TV Eye, followed by Duran Duran, The Xpertz and World Service. He has played concerts supporting The Clash, U2, Culture Club, Duran Duran, Burning Spear and Gregory Isaacs, also producing and writing albums with Asian artists Nusrat Ali Fateh Khan and DCS.

    In 1976, Andy Wickett, Eamon Duffy and Dave Kusworth left Moseley Art School in Birmingham and formed TV Eye, a band named after an Iggy and the Stooges song. Performing as the singer in his first band, Andy's music and flamboyant dress sense was influenced by the New York Dolls.

    TV Eye started to hang around the Birmingham punk scene, at nightclubs including Barbarella's, Rebbecca's and Romulus. The band for a period were the darlings of the local music scene in Birmingham and influenced other local bands such as Duran Duran.

    In the future months Andy, Dave and new guitarist Paul Adams moved into a house in the industrial part of Digbeth, Birmingham on a street called Cheapside. They cut a single called "Stevie's Radio Station" but didn't release it because they felt the drums were too fast. This song would eventually form Duran Duran's "Rio", when its familiar E-B-D-A chord progression was used for the chorus and was mated to verses matching the distinctive chords and tempo of the early Duran Duran song "See Me Repeat Me".

    “The original members of Duran Duran were big fans of TV Eye, and Nick Rhodes used to go and watch the band rehearse, taking his tape recorder with him. They became friends at this point. Later Andy left TV Eye and Duran Duran's vocalist Stephen Duffy took his place. Andy was then enlisted to front Duran Duran by Nick Rhodes and John Taylor in 1979.

    Personnel:

    TV Eye were:

    During the late 1970s, Andy rehearsed with Duran Duran and Vision Collision in his room at Cheapside, Birmingham, whilst Stephen Duffy's band "The Hawks rehearsed downstairs in the veranda. Nick Rhodes described Andy's singing as "having a little bit of Iggy Pop in him".

    "Rio":

    At rehearsals Andy would perform "Stevie's Radio Station" with Duran Duran, which was their favorite TV Eye song. The band continued to use the song after Andy had left, changing the name "Stevie" to "Rio".

    "Girls on Film":

    Andy worked the night shift at the nearby Cadburys chocolate factory in Bournville, Birmingham, where he would read books and write songs to kill time working on the conveyor belt, watching chocolates go by. When he wasn't working during the day he would try out his new ideas with Duran Duran. One night he wrote the melody to "Girls on Film". Whilst he sang a lyric from his notebook "girls in film they look better, girls in film always smile". John Taylor suggested that he change it to girls 'on' film. Andy told Nick Rhodes to introduce the song by playing the melody on his string machine and the song was born. They recorded the song along with: "See Me Repeat Me", "Reincarnation", and "Working the Steel" as part of their first demo, the 1979 Demo at Bob Lamb's studio (home of the band UB40) in Moseley, Birmingham. Nick Rhodes's father took Nick and John Taylor to see the London record companies. Andy phoned Nick from the factory and was overjoyed to hear that EMI and A&M loved his voice and would sign the band if they could produce more songs like Girls on Film.

    However Andy left the band for personal reasons to join the local reggae outfit The Xpertz, asking for payment relating to the song and was offered £600 on condition that he signed a waiver. His solicitor advised him to sign the waver as it could be used as evidence that he had been involved in writing their songs. Andy signed the document collecting £600 in £50 notes, buying a keyboard with the payment, but later found that his solicitor no longer thought that he could fight a case for royalties against EMI in court.

    The Xpertz built up a large following in the early eighties and were among the first bands to merge electronica and dub. They played many high profile gigs supported The Clash, U2, Burning Spear, Culture Club, Orange Juice and Gregory Issacs on his British tour. They attracted interest from major record companies and their single "My Valentine" became record of the week on the John Peel BBC Radio 1 show.

    Personnel:

    The Xpertz were:

    •Ron Cook - vocals, percussion

    Andy Wickett - keyboard, harmonica, percussion

    •Aleem Panwar - bass

    In 1988, Andy was approached by local session musicians to record at the BBC, this resulted in the formation of his band World Service. They were the first British band to tour North Africa and the Sahara regions picking up music and cultural influences on the way. They toured with Duran Duran in the 1990s, after meeting them back stage at Duran's N.I.A. concert in Birmingham, UK.

    Personnel:

    World Service were:

    Andy Wickett - vocals, guitar, harmonica

    •Roger Cornforth - bass

    •Nils Hagstrom - bass

    Andy Wickett has recently formed a new band called Mau61 which has performed in local clubs and pubs in the past six months. The band toured Germany and USA in spring 2012. If you want to know more please don't hesitate to visit www.mau61.com

    Andy Wickett's official website

    •Fame again for former Duran Duran singer (2006 interview)

  4. 30 mar 2018 · A dedicated singer-songwriter, Birmingham, England’s Wickett has been in the game for forty years, spending time with his band TV Eye, later with World Service, and even fronting Duran Duran!

    • Andy Wickett1
    • Andy Wickett2
    • Andy Wickett3
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  5. 2 nov 2023 · In July 2006, though, we celebrated our first anniversary with an interview with Andy Wickett, one of the original singers of Duran Duran. (Listen to the full show here.) Andy talked about the Birmingham music scene in the late ’70s and early ’80s, the time and setting where Duran Duran got its start.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Duran_DuranDuran Duran - Wikipedia

    Taylor and Rhodes then recruited lead vocalist Andy Wickett (formerly frontman of TV Eye) and decided that they needed a live drummer. They hired Roger Taylor , a former member of various local bands (most recently The Scent Organs who also played at Barbarella's), while John Taylor switched to bass guitar.