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William Rogue | |
|---|---|
William Rogue performing at the San Francisco Shakespeare Festival 2024. | |
| Background information | |
| Born | Stewart William Allan (1973-11-13)13 November 1973 (age 52) Glasgow, Scotland |
| Instruments | Guitar, harmonica,Melodica |
| Years active | 1992—present |
| Website | williamrogue.com |
Stewart William Allan (born 13 November 1973), more familiar by his stage name,William Rogue, is aScottish musician and actor. He was the frontman, principal songwriter, and lead guitarist of rock bandThe Blimp from 1998 until their breakup in 2007.
Allan was born inGlasgow,Scotland, the second of three children. At the age of four his family moved toJohannesburg, South Africa where his father was employed as an engineeringdraughtsman. In 1981 his father was involved in a serious car accident that led to the family returning to the United Kingdom in 1982, first to England for a short time and then to Scotland.
Allan attendedShawlands Academy secondary school in Glasgow until 1990 when he left to join theRoyal Navy. He served aboardHMS Argyll as a marine engineer for two years.
On leaving theRoyal Navy in 1992 Allan enrolled on a music technology course atStow College in Glasgow. It was here that he met long-time friend and collaborator, Mark Brown. Allan and Brown formed a band called The Bodies, which included Allan's older brother,JD Allan, and James Clifford. Brown and Clifford would later go on to join theCosmic Rough Riders.[1] During the early 1990s The Bodies performed alongside other notableScottish acts of the period includingUrusei Yatsura,The Yummy Fur and Glass Onion (who would later change their name toTravis). The Bodies also made regular appearances at the Kazoo Club hosted byAlex Kapranos.
In 1994 Allan departed The Bodies to form the Caffeine Cake Orchestra with Ray Alexander, Malcolm Scott Mearns and Del Frame (later replaced by Alasdair Fisher). The Bodies continued briefly, bringing in Stephen Fleming to replace Allan on lead guitar. Fleming would eventually go on to form the Cosmic Rough Riders with Daniel Wylie. In early 1995 Allan was joined in the Caffeine Cake Orchestra by his brother,JD Allan. Until the summer of 1997 the Caffeine Cake Orchestra gigged extensively in and around Scotland, including performances alongsideMogwai,Dawn of the Replicants and Black Iron Skyline (who would later change their name toBis), and a live television appearance onSTV music programmeVJ's.
Toward the end of 1998 Allan, Alexander and JD Allan began rehearsing with Mark Brown, Gary Craig and saxophonist Ara McBay. This would constitute the original line up ofThe Blimp. In the spring of 2000 Brown departed to join the Cosmic Rough Riders. George Berry was brought in to replace him soon after. Berry and Craig were former members of Rust, which included Gordon Garrow and Kenny McLeod, subsequently ofEska. At the beginning of 2001 Ara McBay relocated to London and departed the band. In the spring of 2001 The Blimp began recording the first of several sessions with engineer and producer Duncan Cameron, which would be released as their debut album,Square Go,[2][3] the following year.
In the summer of 2001 The Blimp released their debut singleBad Bitch Dog Don't Bite on London basedindependent label Stuntman Recordings.[4] The single was subsequently banned from radio airplay across the capital. The reason stated was the gratuitous use of the word 'bitch' in the lyrics, despite the song clearly being about a dog. Allan's uncompromising lyrical style and use ofGlaswegianvernacular would continue to pose problems for broadcasters throughout his career.
On 13 July 2002 The Blimp hosted and curated theJ in the Dark[5] event inGlasgow as a counter to theT in the Park festival happening the same weekend inBalado,Perth and Kinross. Although the event was intended as a snub to the festival's perceived commercialism the band were criticised for the apparent reference to drug use that the event's title implied.
In the autumn of 2003 The Blimp were asked to support theSensational Alex Harvey Band at renowned Glasgow venue,King Tut's Wah Wah Hut. They would support the band again on their nationwide tour in 2005. The Blimp supported many other acts includingMisty's Big Adventure,Ten Benson andToby Jepson, and were themselves supported by acts who went on to become more widely known, includingThe Law andGlasvegas.[6] In the winter of 2007 The Blimp began work on what would be their last studio album,Easy Listening with the High Commissioner. Released in the summer of the same year, the album's closing number, "Plastic Fuck Machine", was deemed unplayable by radio stations, due in part to the song's title but mostly because of George Berry's effect laden drum solo that dominates the track. The Blimp made their final live appearance at Nice N Sleazy inGlasgow on 14 July 2007.
Allan released his debut solo album,Doodles & Sketches, featuring collaborations with Mark Brown, James Clifford and JD Allan, in late 2007. He continues to write, record and release new material as William Rogue.
Allan is analumnus of theRoyal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama. In his film debut, he featured in theBAFTA award-winning[7][8] short film,Sex & Death.[9][10][11] His theatre work includes roles inWilliam Shakespeare'sMacbeth andCymbeline,[12][13] the lead inChristopher Marlowe'sEdward II, Vladimir inSamuel Beckett'sWaiting For Godot, and a solo performance ofEric Bogosian'sSex, Drugs, Rock & Roll. He has also appeared in several television series, including theBBC'sHamish Macbeth andFeel the Force.[14] In 2017, he appeared in the music video for Chrysta Bell andDavid Lynch's “Beat the Beat”.[15] His film work includes theKodak award-winning[16][17] short film,Stranger Things, andSilver Dogs, winner of SF Indiefest and Santa Cruz Film Festival Best Narrative Short awards.[18][19]
Allan currently lives in San Francisco, California with his wife, the writer Fiona G. Parrott,[20] and their three children.