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Ambrose Reynolds

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English musician and artist

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Ambrose Reynolds
Also known asAmbrose
Born (1960-06-12)12 June 1960 (age 64)
OriginMerseyside, England
GenresNew wave,synthpop,punk rock,post-punk
OccupationMusician
InstrumentBass guitar
Years active1976–1990s
Musical artist

Ambrose Reynolds (born 12 June 1960; credited also as Ambrose) is an English musician and artist who formed part of the 1970s and 1980s musical scene inLiverpool, playing bass in various bands.

Biography

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Reynolds began making music as a chorister atLiverpool Cathedral at the age of 7. A few years later, he teamed up with David Knopov in a street busking band called The O'Boogie Brothers. The O'Boogie Brothers expanded its membership to includeIan Broudie on guitar and Nathan McGough (later to manage theHappy Mondays). With a new 6 piece line-up, they became a proper band after supporting legendary Liverpool bandDeaf School on Christmas Eve 1976 atEric's Club, Mathew St, Liverpool. The O'Boogie Brothers eventually split in 1977. After a short stint playing with various Liverpool bands including the infamousBig in Japan withJayne Casey and Ian Broudie, Reynolds teamed up with David Knopov to put a new band together.

In late 1977, Reynolds and Knopov formed a new band, Ded Byrds, a kind of cabaret punk band featuring Denyse D'arcy (sax & vocals), Dave Wibberley (guitar), Wayne Hussey (guitar) and Jon Moss (drums), with Knopov on vocals. Ded Byrds were hugely successful in the new wave band scene, playing regularly at Eric's Liverpool and The Factory (at the Russell Club), Manchester. Ded Byrds were spotted supportingThe Pretenders by Sire Records boss,Seymour Stein who signed them on the spot to a five-year record contract on the proviso that the band changed its name. In June 1979, Walkie Talkies released one single, "Rich and Nasty" b/w "Summertime in Russia". The band split in November of that year.

In the 1980s, Reynolds was still tied to Sire Records and unable to start a new project so he worked with a close succession of other Liverpool groups. He played with and produced in thePete Burns bandNightmares in Wax, recording one single "Black Leather", and worked with Factory Records to produce the single "We Love The Moon" and the album,The Project withThe Royal Family and the Poor.[1]

In 1980, Reynolds formed a new band, Frankie Goes To Hollywood withHolly Johnson, BF Tin and Steve Lovell. The name is a matter of contention; Johnson wanted to call the band Hollycaust, Reynolds disagreed, Johnson responded "we could call it anything"; his eyes then drifted to a poster on the wall ofFrank Sinatra (from a book calledRock Dreams) as he read out the caption, saying disparagingly, "we could even call it Frankie goes to Hollywood, it doesn't matter", at which point Reynolds said, "yes, that's what we SHOULD call it, it's original and different". The band split up soon after that, and Reynolds continued to work under that name until 1981, when Johnson began using the name for his more successfulband of the same name a few years later.

Reynolds teamed up again withJayne Casey, to form an experimental electronic pop groupPink Industry. Reynolds and Casey also formed their own record company, Zulu Records, releasing many records between 1981 and 1985. Pink Industry releasedFort-Five EP (1981),Low Technology (1982),Who Told You You Were Naked? (1982),What I Wouldn't Give EP (1983),New Beginnings (1984),Cruel Garden EP (1984), andDon't Let Go (1985, produced by Ian Broudie).

Reynolds' Zulu label also releasedThe Zulu Compilation in 1984, featuring an early version of Frankie Goes To Hollywood's "Wish (the lads were here)" entitled "Love Has Got A Gun" and Reynolds' solo albumGreatest Hits, an album of famous political speeches and assassinations from the mid-1960s set to music. In 1985, Pink Industry split up and Reynolds began working in theatre music, touring Europe with various shows.

In 1987, Reynolds formedUrban Strawberry Lunch with BF Tin, specializing in making and playing music on recycled materials. Urban Strawberry Lunch have gone through many line-up changes but Reynolds is still active in the band.

Between 2003 and 2014, Reynolds and Urban Strawberry Lunch worked in Liverpool's "bombed out church", St. Luke's, regenerating the ruined building through the arts, presenting music, exhibitions, poetry, dance, outdoor film screenings and weddings.

Reynolds is married with one daughter.

References

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  1. ^Strong, Martin C. (2003)The Great Indie Discography, Canongate,ISBN 1-84195-335-0, p. 488

External links

[edit]
Authority control databases: ArtistsEdit this at Wikidata
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