Michael Weston King

Michael Weston King

Michael Weston King performing at the SXSW festival in Austin in 2013
Background information
Born (1961-11-11) 11 November 1961
Derbyshire, England
Genres Alt Country, Country Music,
Occupation(s) Musician, songwriter, producer
Instruments Vocals, guitar
Years active 1984–present
Website www.michaelwestonking.com

Michael Weston King (born November 11, 1961)[1] is an English singer and songwriter who formed the British country music duo My Darling Clementine and was formerly the leader of Alt Country band The Good Sons.

Life and career

Early career (1970s - 1991)

Michael Weston King was born in Derbyshire in 1961 but was raised in the Lancastrian seaside town of Southport.[2] King left school when he was 16 and moved to nearby Liverpool to build for himself a musical career. He played guitar as a member of various bands on the edge of the late 70’s/early 80’s Liverpool post punk scene, most notably with the band he formed with Chas Cole, Fragile Friends, performing at the famed Eric's club just prior to its closure, and leaving two singles and one cassette only album.

By the mid '80s, inspired by the latest wave of overseas bands such as R.E.M., Green On Red, The Dream Syndicate and The Triffids, whose influences mirrored his own newly found interest in Gram Parsons, Hank Williams, The Byrds, as well as the new wave of country acts such as Lyle Lovett, Dwight Yoakam and Nanci Griffith, King joined the country rock band Gary Hall and The Stormkeepers. They played together until the band disintegrated in 1991.

The Good Sons

Taking their name from the Nick Cave album, The Good Son, King formed The Good Sons[3][4] in 1992 as an authentic British alternative to the burgeoning Alt Country movement.

In 1995 they signed to the German label Glitterhouse Records who released their debut album, "Singing The Glory Down", which earned a good reception from both critics and the British alt-country scene of the time. The album featured a guest appearance by Townes Van Zandt[5] with whom Michael had toured Europe in 1994 and 1995, singing together "Riding on the Range" as a duet. The band went on to open for the likes of Joe Ely, Blue Rodeo and Joe Henry. In 1996 they released the album "The Kings Highway", and then in 1997 "Wines, Lines and Valentines".

The Good Sons had ceased to perform in 1999 and King chose to record his debut solo album, "God Shaped Hole".[3] The album got released in October 1999, on Glitterhouse Records. The album included the Phil Ochs song "No More Songs", and a tribute to the now late Townes Van Zandt "Lay Me Down".

Following a series of solo tours around Europe, King reconvened the Good Sons to record their fourth album "Happiness" in early 2001.[6] The relative failure of the album led to a more permanent break-up of the band.[3]

Solo career

Michael Weston King performing on stage in The Netherlands.

In 2002, and after 200 solo shows across Europe and America, King released "Live...In Dinky Town", a collection of live and solo performances gathered shows in Hamburg, Austin, Amsterdam, Bilbao and Manchester. The album also featured contributions from Jackie Leven and Andy White.

The follow up album "A Decent Man"[7] produced by Jackie Leven featured guests, including former Icicle Works front man, Ian McNabb.

2004 saw the release of "Cosmic Fireworks-The Best of The Good Sons (1994–2001)",[8] on the German label Phantasmagoria.

In 2005, Michael Weston King released the album "The Tender Place: A Collection 1999-2005", which put together his best solo creations from "A Decent Man" and "God Shaped Hole" albums.[9]

The end of 2008 saw the release of a third live album, "Crawling Through The USA", recorded during his 2007 and 2008 tours of North America, while work on a pure 'country duets' album, with singer Lou Dalgleish, under the name of My Darling Clementine.

The songbook "Beautiful Lies - The Songs of Michael Weston King" was published in 2005. A collaboration with the Irish writer Brian Richmond resulted in a play entitled "Happy Infidels", which features 12 songs by King and is based around the lives and loves, hopes and fears, and personal disasters of a young aspiring English musician and a road weary, alcoholic American musician touring across Europe. King wrote and appeared in "They Call Her Natasha", with his wife Lou Dalgleish, a musical play, based around the songs of Elvis Costello which was performed at the Edinburgh Festival, and various theaters around the UK.

My Darling Clementine

In 2011, the album he had made in 2009, under the band name My Darling Clementine saw its UK release. Entitled "How Do You Plead?" it was hailed by Country Music People as the "greatest country album ever by a British artist". Produced by Neil Brockbank (Nick Lowe), it featured Geraint Watkins and Martin Belmont. The debut single, "100,000 Words" became a BBC Radio 2 hit, and the album was voted album of the year by CMP, Maverick, & 3rd Coast Music Texas, while the British Country Music Association (BCMA) awarded the band “Americana Band of the Year”.[10]

My Darling Clementine's second release "The Reconciliation?" [11][12][13] was recorded at the Sheffield studio, Yellow Arch Studios and was produced by Colin Elliot (Richard Hawley, Duane Eddy) and features a guest appearances from Kinky Friedman, The Brodsky Quartet & The Richard Hawley band.

Social activism

2010 saw the release of King's latest solo album, a collection of protest songs entitled "I Didn't Raise My Boy To Be A Soldier",[14] which addressed the serious issues facing everyday people in such difficult modern times. In the 12 months following its release, King appeared at many public protests, political rallies and human rights events in the UK, Germany, Scandinavia, North America and by May 2011 played his first live shows in China.

Discography

With The Good Sons

Solo

With My Darling Clementine

References

External links

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