Paul Morricone

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Paul Morricone
Born (1973-11-08) 8 November 1973 (age 50)
Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, England
OriginWeston-super-Mare, Somerset, England[1]
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • singer
  • songwriter
  • record producer
  • video director[7][8]
Instrument(s)
Years active1988–present
LabelsWrath Records
Member of
Formerly of
  • Being 747
  • Roger's Trout Farm
  • Supersaurus
  • Spawnmate
Websitehttps://paulmorricone.com/

Paul Morricone is an English musician, songwriter and video director. Best known as one of the two frontmen of The Scaramanga Six, he has also played with Being 747, and is currently also pursuing a solo career.

History[edit]

Early years and bands[edit]

Paul Morricone was born in Weston-super-Mare, UK in 1973, half of a pair of musically inclined fraternal twin brothers (the other being Steve Morricone).[9] The brothers began their musical careers as teenagers in 1988, both of them singing and playing saxophones in The Phobia, which developed into the deliberately eccentric rock band Roger's Trout Farm (also featuring future Spearmint guitarist James Parsons, whom the Morricones would also briefly work with in Supersaurus).[1][10][11] Having switched from saxophone to guitar for Roger's Trout Farm, Paul rapidly developed as a songwriter, with Parsons noting in retrospect that "Paul... developed the envious skill of being able to place the listener in the song, making them feel connected, like they (were) being sung to."[12]

The Scaramanga Six, The Disclaimers, Being 747[edit]

In 1995,[13] the Morricone brothers regrouped in Huddersfield to form The Scaramanga Six with another teenaged musical cohort, Julia Arnez (whom they'd played with in the Spawnmate project). The band has continued to the present day with the Morricones and Arnez as consistent members despite multiple personnel changes. With the two Morricone brothers as frontmen, Paul is responsible for writing and singing "about three-quarters of the songs" (the band's more melodious/crooner-type material). Although he is a multi-instrumentalist, he usually concentrates on voice and guitar.[9][14]

Noted for their aggressive live act and their flamboyant and theatrical songs, the Scaramanga Six have released ten studio albums to date, plus multiple singles, EPs and live releases. Musically, the band has drawn diverse comparisons including "the Sex Pistols crossed with Queen";[3]The Stranglers;[2] Sonic Youth, Burt Bacharach and The Carpenters;[15] Buffalo Tom, Hüsker Dü, The Dead Kennedys, Cardiacs, XTC, King Crimson, The Knack and Abba;[16] Rainbow and Queens of the Stone Age.[17] They've been described as "cinematic art-rock that combines thrashing guitars with orchestral and distinctly non-rock instruments to create something individual and that has instant replay value",[18] as "riff-heavy, ballsy heavy rock (that) still throws in enough musical and lyrical curveballs to lift it out of the ordinary",[17] and as delivering "instantly memorable riffs with many-layered lush vocals and a lot of heart."[19] Entirely self-managed and self-releasing (via their own Wrath Records label), their independent business practices and active promotion of other artists has also seen them hailed as "the closest we'll see to a British answer to Fugazi"[20] and described as "working entirely outside the indie scene, let alone the actual industry."[7][21][22]

In between Scaramanga Six commitments, the Morricone brothers have also occasionally played as an acoustic duo called The Disclaimers and involved themselves in Being 747, a collaborative project with former Landspeed Loungers songwriter Dave Cooke. Being 747 divided its time between writing and performing pop songs, and writing and performing schools educational projects using songs to teach children about natural history, evolution and cosmology.[13]

Solo career[edit]

Initial steps[edit]

In mid-2009, Paul Morricone began performing intermittent solo acoustic sets of Scaramanga Six songs – one of which was released on Bandcamp as Paul Morricone Live @ All Hallows, Leeds 05/12/13[23] – but did not take this any further for another decade.

The Dissolving Man[edit]

In 2019, Paul began a full solo project under his own name, exploring the dark-pop aspects of Scaramanga work rather than the hard rock/rockabilly elements. The first evidence of this was the "Estranged" single, released on 10 June 2019. On his BBC Radio 6 show, Tom Robinson described the song as follows: "If there’d ever been a dream collaboration between Scott Walker and Massive Attack this is what it might have sounded like... so dense and ambitious: a huge widescreen soundscape where the harmonic surprises never stop coming."[24][25]

21 July 2019 saw the release of Paul Morricone's self-produced debut solo album The Dissolving Man. The album was recorded with a live rhythm section of bass player Mitch Cockman and former Scaramanga Six drummer Anthony Sargeant, with TV/soundtrack composer Spike Scott taking Paul's original music loops and GarageBand programming and "recreat(ing) the string arrangements with a lot more whistles and bells on" for six of the album's tracks.[13] In a review in Three Songs & Out, Andrew Forcer hailed Paul for "(having) mastered the disappearing art of songwriting" and described the album as "epic, cinematic, orchestral and very listenable... each song could be easily used in movie soundtracks, James Bond and the likes... If you like The Scaramanga Six, The Divine Comedy, Scott Walker, Sensational Alex Harvey Band or indeed good music, then The Dissolving Man by Paul Morricone is for you! It’s gotta be five stars from me."[4]

Regarding the song contents, Paul commented (in an interview with The Sound of Fighting Dogs), "I’m a middle-aged man and things are falling off already. As you get older, you carry more baggage and life experiences with you. It is always good to incorporate things you observe from other people’s lives too. I mentioned that a lot of this was autobiographical but only as a reference to creating much more exaggerated stories to listen to. It is all a work of fiction but like any good crime writer, there has to be some element of darkness already in the mind to conceive of things."[13]

Later in 2019 Paul also collaborated with Eureka Machines guitarist Dave "Davros" Archbold (as "The Paul Morricone and Davros Show") for a standalone single called "Nature Boy" released on 5 September 2019. A solo EP proper, December followed at the end of the year, on 1 December 2019. Dedicated "to anyone, anywhere who find themselves far away from the ones they love", it featured further orchestral arrangements by Spike Scott.[26] Paul created a promotional clip for the title track, described as "a festive music video filled with twinkly lights and chocolate box visuals", with the confession "a simple trick for foreground interest – buy a load of coloured bottles with fairy lights in them from a pound shop and place them in front of the camera."[27]

Cruel Designs[edit]

Almost exactly a year later (on 4 December 2020), Paul followed up The Dissolving Man with a second solo album Cruel Designs, which he described as "a cornucopial journey through the dark wanderings of the sub-conscious mind."[28][29]

Reviewing, the Nite Songs webzine described Cruel Designs as "every bit as much of a dark and disturbing tour de force as those who are familiar with his day job band will expect... Easy listening Cruel Designs very much isn't, but there's definitely something about the sheer scope of it which makes it an engagingly dark listen with the mix of yearning vocals, lush orchestration and downright creepiness therein combining well to make something pretty good. Well worth a listen for those long dark nights of the soul."[30]

Cruel Designs, in turn, spawned the Dreamfinder Remixes EP in July 2021, featuring contributions from Benbow, Debugger and Strss.

Go Sanction Yourself[edit]

Paul's third solo album Go Sanction Yourself (produced by Stephen Gilchrist at Brixton Hill Studios)[11] was released on 19 April 2024. Promoting the album, Paul commented "this collection of songs is deeply cinematic and full of dark stories but with a pronounced stance on current affairs. I’ve found myself branching out into a more freely soulful mix of orchestration, dark dance and wonky beats."[31][32]

Regarding the album content, Paul commented (in an interview with Just Listen to This) "I think I'm probably happy, angry and reflective at some point in every song. It's fair to say there are some very angry songs on this album though, many of which are explicitly about the passive acceptance of the state of our country. "I've Got You in the Palm of My Hand" pretty much sets this out from the start, which is a protest song about people giving up their right to protest. The album is called Go Sanction Yourself and is so called because sanction is a contronym – to approve of something whilst also to condemn it."[11]

Hailing Paul Morricone as a "modern day Bryan Ferry" and Go Sanction Yourself as "an exceptional and accomplished album from a person who seems very much at the height of his power", Joyzine magazine noted that the album's "production, musical arrangements and playing throughout are exceptional" and observed that "Paul's main talent, apart from his suave good looks and rich velvety voice of course, is his ability to combine the classic with the unusual... to fuse classic influences with the avant-garde to create something unusual and unique... In amongst the strident piano and ascending bass lines there are creepy whispers and almost Penderecki style strings screaming, and a brass section and atonal sax from a Bernard Hermann noir thriller. Take also the frantic/frenetic textures of "People in My Way", with its nervous fast paced drumming and constant falling strings... There is also the spirit of Barry Adamson contained within, from his work with Magazine and The Bad Seeds, right through to his soundtrack and solo works, there is the similar combination between the orchestral and the avant-garde."[33]

Reviewing the album for God is in the TV, Humphrey Fordham commented on "elements of baroque pop evoking a young and beautiful, well-dressed non-hippy couple cruising down a European boulevard circa 1969... While the album will inevitably make any (Scott) Walker fans sit up and take mental notes, there is a sense, on first listen, that this is a well-thought-out album that has its distinct mood festooned with krautrock and electronica... Go Sanction Yourself has a well-produced sense of universal appeal, and will generate enough enthusiasm to explore its prime influences as well as Paul’s previous work. A sense of poetic drama runs all the way through: a narrative by way of a multi-faceted aesthetic with superlatives in abundance."[34]

A single, "People in My Way" was released on 5 February 2024, with a self-directed video based on the art of Gilbert & George.[11][24][32][35] The in-house review at Juno Download commented "Paul Morricone is clearly in no mood to suffer fools gladly here. With his powerful lungs turned up to eleven he lambasts anyone "standing still/or stopping suddenly" with just a hint of mischief and irony, we suspect. With a bed of Barry-esque strings and shit-kicking backbeats, everything from an unhinged sax solo to the occasional outburst of guitar and a piano outro to put Liberace to shame makes an appearance somewhere, making this an embarrassment of unexpected musical riches."[36]

Paul himself commented "many times, people have come up to me and said "hey, you reckon you’re a crooner? Well, why don't you sing "My Way"?"... So here it is. My version of "My Way". Only it's about people in my way. It started with moulding a synth bass to sound like something out of the John Barry theme to On Her Majesty's Secret Service, then making the line plod around atonally like a meandering member of the public... As I'm getting older, I'm getting more impatient too. I’ve never been known to suffer fools, but these days you get two kinds of idiot in your way. Those who are oblivious who are a danger to themselves and those who know what they are doing and are a danger to everyone else. Perhaps this song is about someone other than me, who just sees other people as something in their path to be swept aside. You decide."[37]

A second single and video, "Laughing At You", was released on 3 April 2024. In a Joyzine interview, Paul revealed "the full title to this song is actually ‘They’re Laughing at You, Not Laughing with You’ and is a message to anyone who thinks that a privileged Etonian is "just like one of us". You’ll be waiting a very, very long time for the rewards of their trickle-down economics, especially in places like Keighley and Dewsbury who got fooled by patriotic promises. Musically, I was trying to simplify things by writing over only a bass line. I was thinking along the lines of new wave electro bands like Blancmange or early Depeche Mode to inspire me for the LinnDrum programming. We wanted the organic drums to resemble the pots and pans that people have become accustomed to banging whenever they are told to celebrate something. The rest is a foray into eighties synths and funk minimalism you can clap outside your houses to. I’ve left room in some of these songs for the odd sax solo – always the baritone for me."[33]

Work in video[edit]

Paul Morricone previously worked as a video director with Poison Pen Films creating video promos for musicians including The Young Knives, The Pigeon Detectives, Graham Coxon, The Holloways, Eureka Machines Larrikin Love, Marvin The Martian, The Whip, The Go! Team, Little Man Tate, iLiKETRAiNS, Cold War Kids, Forward Russia, Gallows and Polytechnic as well as viral animations for The Charlatans. While with Poison Pen, he also created several Scaramanga Six videos.[7][8]

Paul now runs his own full-service video production company, Thunder & Lightning Film Ltd. Clients have including the Universities of Bradford and York, Pizza Hut, Holland & Barrett, and the company has continued Paul's work on videos by The Scaramanga Six and Chris Catalyst.[38]

In 2024, Paul commented "for some of my career I'd made a name for myself as a music video director, though these days have been put behind me for some time. You try working with an industry that wants it cheap, good and now. You can only have two of these three things. Still, I like to direct a music video every so often and I've got a full production company at my disposal."[11]

Influences[edit]

Paul Morricone has previously cited The Stranglers and Tony Bennett as being among his influences, resulting in the discovery that "there was much fun to be had in crooning and shouting in equal measures."[39] In 2024, he expressed admiration for Ella Fitzgerald.[11]

As a singer, he's also been compared to Tom Jones.[40]

Personal life[edit]

Morricone lives in Huddersfield, Yorkshire, England, allegedly because of "Marstons Chicken, Dixon's Milk Ices".[11]

Discography[edit]

as Paul Morricone[edit]

(studio albums)[edit]

  • The Dissolving Man (Wrath Records, 2019)[41]
  • Cruel Designs (Wrath Records, 2020)[42]
  • Go Sanction Yourself (Wrath Records, 2024, forthcoming)[43]

(live albums)[edit]

  • Paul Morricone Live @All Hallows, Leeds 05/12/13 (Wrath Records, 2013)[44]

(singles and EPs)[edit]

  • "Estranged" single (Wrath Records, 2019)[45]
  • December EP (Wrath Records, 2019)[46]
  • Dreamfinder Remix EP (Wrath Records, 2021)[47]
  • "People in My Way" single (Wrath Records, 2024)[24][32]

as The Paul Morricone and Davros Show[edit]

  • "Nature Boy" single (Wrath Records, 2019)[48]

with The Scaramanga Six[edit]

with Being 747[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "A Brief History: Everybody Wants to Kill Roger's Trout Farm" – post by Fraser McAlpine on commemorative Roger's Trout Farm blog, 4 March 2010
  2. ^ a b Review of Cabin Fever on Leonard's Lair website, by Jonathan Leonard
  3. ^ a b "The Terrifying Dream" review by Stuart McHugh in The Haverhill Echo – reproduced in Is This Music?, 15 October 2015
  4. ^ a b “Paul Morricone – 'The Dissolving Man' Album Review” – review by Andrew Forcer in ‘’Three Songs and Out’’, 9 July 2019
  5. ^ The Dissolving Man page @ Bandcamp
  6. ^ "Reviews – The Scaramanga Six – Phantom Head' – article by Sean Kitching in [The Quietus], 16 May 2013
  7. ^ a b c "The Scaramanga Six – Fengende galskap" – interview by Eirik in Metal.norge.com, 16 April 2008
  8. ^ a b "The Scaramanga Six: Paul Morricone of ireallylovemusic's fave band The Scaramanga Six! tells us all ‘bout the gore and horror that is the band's new album Cabin Fever" – article in ireallylovemusic e-zine
  9. ^ a b "Personnel – Paul Morricone" – page on Scaramanga Six official website
  10. ^ "Huddersfield, London, Weston-super-Mare: Everybody's talkin' about Trout Music" – post by James Parsons on commemorative Roger's Trout Farm blog, 23 May 2011
  11. ^ a b c d e f g "Paul Morricone Talks New Album, Single And More" - article by Glenn Sargeant in Just Listen to This, 14 April 2024
  12. ^ "Paul Morricone: Saxophone, Vocals and later, Guitar" – post by James Parsons on commemorative Roger's Trout Farm blog, 15 October 2010
  13. ^ a b c d "Interview ::: Paul Morricone" in The Sound of Fighting Dogs, 3 September 2019
  14. ^ "Interviews: The Scaramanga Six – An interview with Steven Morricone" – interview by Steven Reid in Sea of Tranquillity, 5 September 2015
  15. ^ The Terrifying Dream review by Stuart Benjamin in Echoes and Dust, 8 June 2015
  16. ^ Chronica review by Steven Reid in Sea of Tranquillity, 19 November 2017
  17. ^ a b Songs Of Prey reviewed in the Yorkshire Evening Post by Martin Ross, 17 April 2009
  18. ^ Songs Of Prey reviewed in This is Fake DIY e-zine by Lee White, 20 April 2009
  19. ^ The Terrifying Dream review by Sean Kitching in The Quietus, 25 October 2015
  20. ^ CD Times review of "Walking Through Houses" by Theo Graham-Brown, retrieved 11 October 2008
  21. ^ "Wrath of the Mighty" – article/interview in Vibrations.org by Sam Saunders, 6 May 2008
  22. ^ Drowned In Sound review of Strike! Up The Band Archived 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine by Toby Jarvis, retrieved 11 October 2008
  23. ^ Paul Morricone Live @ All Hallows, Leeds 05/12/13 (Bandcamp page
  24. ^ a b c "Stylophone-playing punk crooner in Gilbert And George-inspired video" – article in Electronic Sound, 5 February 2024
  25. ^ The Dissolving Man – posting on Paul Morricone homepage, 8 September 2019
  26. ^ December – out now. – posting on Paul Morricone homepage, 1 December 2019
  27. ^ "Paul Morricone – December" – video page on Thunder and Lightning Films Ltd. homepage
  28. ^ Cruel Designs – new album out 04/12/20 – posting on Paul Morricone homepage, 1 December 2019
  29. ^ Accompanying text on Cruel Designs Bandcamp page
  30. ^ Album Review: Paul Morricone – "Cruel Designs" – review in Nite Songs, 8 February 2021
  31. ^ "2024 – A New Album beckons…" – News post on paulmorricone.com, 10 January 2024
  32. ^ a b c "People In My Way – video premiere" – news post on paulmorricone.com, 5 February 2024
  33. ^ a b "Paul Morricone – Go Sanction Yourself + Track by Track Interview" - review/interview in Joyzine by TinySiren02, 16 April 2024
  34. ^ "Paul Morricone – Go Sanction Yourself" - review by Humphrey Fordham in God is in the TV, 23 April 2024
  35. ^ "One Liners: JULiA LEWiS, Mad Professor, Little Simz + more" – post on Complete Music Update website, 9 February 2024
  36. ^ Paul Morricone – People In My Way – accompanying text on Juno Download page
  37. ^ "NEWS: Paul Morricone shares new video 'People In My Way'" – article in God is in the TV, 15 February 2024
  38. ^ "Our Work" @ Thunder and Lightning homepage
  39. ^ "The Scaramanga Six | Cinematic punk and evil pop makers since 1995". Thescaramangasix.co.uk.
  40. ^ The Scaramanga Six Cabin Fever review by Marty Dodge on getreadytorock.com
  41. ^ The Dissolving Man entry @ Discogs.com
  42. ^ Cruel Designs entry @ Discogs.com
  43. ^ Go Sanction Yourself page @ Bandcamp
  44. ^ Paul Morricone Live @All Hallows, Leeds 05/12/13 entry @ Discogs.com
  45. ^ "Estranged" single page @ Bandcamp
  46. ^ December EP page @ Bandcamp
  47. ^ Dreamfinder Remix EP page @ Bandcamp
  48. ^ "Nature Boy" single page @ Bandcamp

External links[edit]