Richard Ashcroft

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Richard Paul Ashcroft, born September 11, 1971, in Billinge Maternity Hospital in Higher End, Lancashire (now part of the Metropolitan Borough of Wigan, Greater Manchester) is an English singer-songwriter. He is best known as the lead singer of The Verve, an English rock band that he helped form in 1989. After that band's demise in 1999, Ashcroft embarked on a successful solo career. He grew up in the town of Skelmersdale, Lancashire.

Ashcroft's father died when Richard was 11. Ashcroft soon fell under the influence of his stepfather, who belonged to the ancient secular order of the Rosicrucians.

He is good friends with Oasis' Noel Gallagher and Coldplay's Chris Martin (whom Ashcroft once thanked for "letting me be myself again"), and occasionally plays as support at Oasis and Coldplay concerts, including the European and second UK legs of Coldplay's 'Twisted Logic Tour'. He recently described himself as "the best support act you'll ever see." The Oasis track "Cast No Shadow" is dedicated to him, and it is believed that Ashcroft dedicated The Verve's 1995 song "Northern Soul" to Noel Gallagher. Martin introduced him as "the best singer in the world" when he performed "Bitter Sweet Symphony" (which Martin called "probably the best song ever written") with Coldplay at the London Live 8 concert in 2005. On his second album, Human Conditions, Beach Boys founder Brian Wilson performs on the song "Nature is the Law". Ashcroft is married to Kate Radley, the former keyboard player for British shoegaze band Spiritualized. Together, they have two sons: Sonny, born in 2000, and Cassius, born in 2004.

Ashcroft's third solo album, Keys to the World, was recorded with the co-operation of the London Metropolitan Orchestra, and released on January 23, 2006, by Parlophone. The first single from the album, "Break the Night with Colour", was released on January 9, 2006, and entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3. Around the time of the album's release, Ashcroft announced his largest UK tour for years for May 2006, culminating in three nights at London's Brixton Academy. He opened for the second half of Coldplay's tour, starting March 14, 2006, in Ottawa. The second single released from Keys To The World was "Music Is Power", which charted at number 20. The next single, "Words Just Get in the Way", charted even lower, barely making it into the Top 40 at the number 40 position after receiving barely any promotion or airplay.

Contents

Notes

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  • While in Skelmersdale, Ashcroft was an avid football player, and he still closely follows his favourite team, Manchester United. He has also admitted to cheering for the Wigan football club, since he actually played for the youth team when he was young.
  • Ashcroft's sometimes-sharp tongue and "famous fingers" (Ashcroft would often raise both of his middle fingers to the camera in photographs) earned him the nickname "Mad Richard" from the UK press.
  • In 2006, Ashcroft confessed to taking Prozac to help him with depression, but said that they didn't help, referring to the pills as "very, very synthetic." Ashcroft has said that he's always been "a depressive, someone who suffers from depression", and that music and creativity help him cope with his illness. [1]
  • Ashcroft was arrested in Wiltshire on June 19 2006 after coming into a youth centre and asking to work with the teenagers present at the club. He refused to leave and employees called police, resulting in Ashcroft being arrested and fined £80 for disorderly conduct. [2]

Songwriting style and controversy

On more than one occasion, Ashcroft and his bandmates have run into trouble by borrowing words and ideas from other artists. The most notable of these conflicts spawned from The Verve's biggest hit, "Bitter Sweet Symphony" which uses the Andrew Oldham Orchestra recording of The Rolling Stones' 1965 song "The Last Time" as its foundation. In a well-publicized legal decision, the Rolling Stones' record company was awarded 100% of the royalties from "Bitter Sweet Symphony", and Mick Jagger and Keith Richards were given songwriting credits along with Ashcroft. Legal ownership of the song created further controversy when Jagger and Richards gave Nike license to use the song in one of its TV commercials, against The Verve's wishes.

Another of Ashcroft's more well-known adaptations is found in the song "History". The first two verses of "History" are closely based on the first two stanzas of William Blake's poem "London". However, unlike "Bitter Sweet Symphony," this song did not generate any lawsuits for the band.

Other songs of Ashcroft's that have been noted for their resemblance to others' musical stylings include The Verve's "On Your Own" and "Make It Till Monday".

Discography

Studio albums

Singles

From Alone With Everybody

From Human Conditions

From Keys to the World

Cameos

See also

External links

es:Richard Ashcroft fr:Richard Ashcroft it:Richard Ashcroft nl:Richard Ashcroft ja:リチャード・アシュクロフト no:Richard Ashcroft pl:Richard Ashcroft pt:Richard Ashcroft ru:Эшкрофт, Ричард fi:Richard Ashcroft sv:Richard Ashcroft

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