| Posted on January 10, 2012 at 8:35 AM |
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Not only is he very busy at the FML but he told me he's off to Las Vegas in two weeks time.
Dave McGuire (McGuire programme) asked Greame if he could assist him in Las Vegas for the McGuire stammering course there. Of course Graeme was delighted to be asked and a free trip to Las Vegas isn't to bad :). He's flying out on the 24th and coming back on the 30th.
He won't have much time to do some Las Vegas site seeing as the course is 5 days, and with traveling, there won't be much time left. I did give him some tips what to see, if he has a few hours off, as I was there last year :).
Also he's going to do all the Graeme Clark solo gigs and looking very forward to that. All the information and how to purchase tickets are under "calendar" .
| Posted on September 24, 2011 at 4:25 PM |
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Sep 22 2011 by Leona Greenan, Hamilton Advertiser
TWO HND Music students from Motherwell College are hoping to chart when their debut single is released this week.
Danielle Tonner and John Muir, both from Motherwell, make up the band Till This Night, and will release their single ‘Runaway’ tomorrow (Friday, September 23).
Having studied music at NQ level, then progressing to HNC and now HND in Rock and Pop, the pair work with producer Graeme Duffin of Wet Wet Wet.
Graeme helps run the Foundry Music Lab which has a strong partnership with Motherwell College, facilitating some of the more practical side of the music courses.
Danielle explained: “The advantage that we have being on the music course, is that a lot of the stuff we previously had dreamed about doing in music we get to do on a day to day basis by being at the college. To think we are in a position of releasing a single and going on our own UK tour as part of our coursework makes us feel very fortunate.”
The music courses at Motherwell College have gained a lot of press attention over the past year, having had guest lecturers such as Dave McGeehan and Dave Corbit who manage DF Concerts which run T in The park, music journalist Billy Sloan, and marketing expert Michelle Mone.
Last week the course was named music course of the year at the Scottish New Music Awards, and HND music student and ‘Till This Night’ member John was delighted with the achievement.
He said: “To be honest every single one of us feel the sense of achievement, our lecturers and fellow students have all been part of winning that award. We take our work very seriously and unless you are part of it, it is hard to explain how good an atmosphere there is on the music course.”
Till This Night start their college project/UK tour at the HMV Picture House in Edinburgh on Saturday, September 24, 2011.
Their single Runaway is available from Friday as a download from
www.soundcloud.com/tillthisnight and www.facebook.com/tillthisnight
| Posted on July 13, 2011 at 3:43 AM |
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Radio Scotland - Tom Morton Show 5th July 2011
Hi Friends
Back to the 'Old Country' again and a big thanks to Tom Morton for having me on his show, a live radio session.
Tom's an old friend of the band and 27 years ago he did an interview with us for 'Melody Maker'. During that interview I told him we were looking for a guitarist and he said, "Graeme Duffin - he's your man."
So, GD appeared at the audition in a geography teacher's long, green trench coat topped with a Tom Baker Doctor Who scarf. At that point we were questioning Tom's judgement - that's the polite version.
Then he played. We were speechless. The rest is history.
Graeme made a huge contribution to the sound of our beloved band and I'm glad to say that 27 years later I am about to take to the stage with him yet again. He's also made a substantial contribution to my new album 'MR UNDERSTANDING'.
Anyway, back to Tom Morton. It was great speaking with him again. He asks questions you hadn't quite anticipated -just like he did all these years ago. All my bullet points were a waste of time but I did manage to plug the gig - 15th July, if you've forgotten.
It also good to get Tom's support. He has carved out his own musical niche in the radio world and is highly respected.
I forget how nerve wracking live radio is. Singing and playing the guitar brings another dynamic to the party. To confuse things more, TM does his show in Shetland, the production is in Aberdeen and I was in a studio in Glasgow. How the world has changed but in a good way. You can be anywhere in the world and still communicate your message.
I am grateful to all of you for the support you guys give me. The feedback is always welcome, so keep it coming.
It really means a lot to me, and everyone at GC HQ.
| Posted on June 17, 2011 at 8:07 AM |
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Wet Wet Wet star Graeme Clark: It took me fifteen years to sober up
Jun 17 2011 John Dingwall
Wet Wet Wet star Graeme Clark is making a comeback as a solo artist - after winning a booze and drugs battle.
Clark, 46, wrote Wets classics such as Goodnight Girl, Angel Eyes and Wishing I Was Lucky.
But last July, he announced on Twitter that he had quit the million-selling group he formed with pals Marti Pellow, Tommy Cunningham and Neil Mitchell.
Now he plans to release a solo album, Mr Understanding, and is putting together a tour, which includes Glasgow's Oran Mor on July 15.
And Clark also wants to reform Wet Wet Wet, the Clydebank band he shot to fame with in 1987, for a new album and tour in 2012.
He said: "Until a year ago, there had been plans to make music with Wet Wet Wet but that changed. I decided to wipe the slate clean to make my music.
"Looking back, it wasn't the best thing to tweet that I was leaving Wet Wet Wet but I wanted to make my own music."
Clark, who plays bass, guitar and sings on his solo album, gave The Record an exclusive preview of the songs, which include the touching ballad In Another World and the mid-tempo Kiss Of Life.
They were recorded in his home studio in Surrey, where he lives with wife Beverley and their 18-year-old son, Alexander.
Speaking at home, he said: "In Wet Wet Wet, it would be a tour every five or six years and I realised I could be doing something in between. I have needs to be met. I sound like a girlfriend but I wanted to get out there.
"I did a gig the other day down here and sang Wet Wet Wet songs. People didn't realise who I was.
"They were turning round thinking, 'I know that song'. By the end, they were all singing along. I have to look back at my old songs that Wet Wet Wet did to see if I can sing these.
"The Wets material is sewn inside of me but I'm not Marti interpreting the song because he is a unique singer."
For the album, Clark enlisted the help of fifth Wets member, Graeme Duffin, who contributes some guitar, as well as Iain Duff on accordion and Sandy Jones, who engineered the Wets hit Love Is All Around, on keyboards.
But he ditched Pellow's demo backing vocals. Clark explained: "Marti is such a good singer with such a distinctive voice that the minute he sang on it, he would take over.
"When our voices come together, it's that sound again. You could say I was the voice of Wet Wet Wet because I wrote the songs.
"It means I get control of the content. It was with the blessing of the guys who told me I needed to run with this. I wanted to do it on my own."
Ironically, Clark was only able to get his head together to make his own songs after beating drink and drug addictions that made it impossible for him to help Wets frontman Pellow when he became a heroin addict back in 1999.
Clark realised his problem had reached crisis point when he punched wife Beverley in 2001. He was later fined s200 for the attack.
Clark said: "I was drinking a lot.
If you pour alcohol on me, I'm like firework. I am going to go off.
"Beverley is a powerful, strong woman. That is the big attraction for me. She is very opinionated.
"But the tempestuous aspect of our relationship came from me. It didn't come from Beverley.
"Thankfully, I don't drink any more. That fire has dissipated.
I don't drink at all. I am clean and sober.
"Twenty years ago, I knew I was drinking too much, but my perception of an alcoholic was the guy in the park with string for a belt and drinking meths.
"Once I started drinking, I was at the party myself 10 hours later, thinking where has everybody gone?
"I had this disease of more, more, more. There was nothing we could do about Marti's heroin addiction. I had my own problems.
"We should have taken two years out to get ourselves together."
He added: "I took the decision to stop drinking 20 years ago but it took me 15 years to stop. It is the best present I ever gave myself.
"I drink a little coffee now and that's the closest I get to drugs."
Having sold 20million albums, Wet Wet Wet reunion talks are underway, despite Pellow's starring role in the hit West End musical Jekyll & Hyde.
Clark said: "Everybody is busy. I speak to them once or twice a month. There is an element of the logistics of getting these four people at the same time to decide when to do this.
"Next year, there will be exciting stuff - a new tour and a new Wet Wet Wet album.
"I have put it to the guys and they agreed we have to be seen to be current.
"We don't want to go out there and be Rick Astley, an 80s throwback. People don't look at us as an 80s band like Duran Duran and they don't see us as a 90s band. We have managed to transcend that.
"There has got to be a new album, otherwise it becomes nostalgia. We are looking at dates in the autumn.
"Marti is doing Jekyll & Hyde for the next six months and his own album first. I haven't seen Marti in any of his musicals but I am going to Glasgow this weekend and hoping to see him then.
"Marti actually doesn't know if he is Jekyll or Hyde, but I have the utmost respect that he's doing that because it takes a lot of bottle."
| Posted on April 28, 2011 at 8:00 PM |
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Michelle Mone at Motherwell College
HND Music students at Motherwell College were treated to a very special guest lecture by one of the UK’s top entrepreneurs.
Ultimo boss Michelle Mone paid a visit to the college earlier this month. As part of the music course, the students not only record and perform within bands as part of assessment but they have to study the business side of the music industry.
As well as giving advice in marketing a brand, networking and seeking funding for arts projects, Michelle gave the students business advice on the individual music projects which are currently being assessed.
And she spoke in detail about how to market a product online through social media, how to network at corporate events and manage a budget whilst dealing with overheads.
Course lecturer Scott Cowie said: “We are absolutely delighted that entrepreneurs such as Michelle Mone take the time out of their busy schedules to talk to our music students.
“We can give our students their music education but there is nothing to beat hearing directly on how to succeed, from the big names in business and the music industries.”
Michelle Mone is one of many well-known people to deliver a guest lecture to the music course students. Others include T in the Park promoters Dave McGheachan and Dave Corbitt, top music journalist Billy Sloan, and Wet Wet Wet’s Graeme Clarke.
The college music courses have a strong partnership with the Foundry Music Lab in which most of the practical and recording sides of the course are delivered.
The Motherwell-based professional recording and rehearsal facility was founded by Graeme Duffin (guitarist with Wet Wet Wet), Ted Blakeway and Sandy Jones. The college has worked with the Foundry since 2006.
| Posted on February 14, 2011 at 7:00 PM |
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Graeme Duffin is a member of Wet Wet Wet. He played lead guitar on that song, did vocals on it and has appeared on Top of the Pops a total of 56 times.
He also runs a successful recording studio in Scotland and has a daughter who was recently invited over to Nashville by the man who produced Neil Young's Harvest album. Graeme also has a stammer. In the interview we talk about his work with aspiring pop idols, his involvement with Wet Wet Wet, Esther, his daughter, and speech difficulties, as highlighted by the movie The King's Speech. We also talk about fame and how much it costs.
WW: Graeme, we’re sitting in this marvellous studio, at the Foundry Music Lab
WW: You have provided a fantastic opportunity for young aspiring musicians..
WW: What do you think motivates people who want to become professional performers?
WW: So you have a balance between musicianship and fame. At this point, which of these two streams is likely to get you in? Can you be a talentless nobody with lots of chutzpah.?
WW: Would Wet Wet Wet have made it today?
WW: You hear about people getting million quid deals and limos and parties..
WW: You are in a position to recognise and nurture new talent, what can you do to help them?
WW: Have you got anyone coming through who you are excited about at the moment?
WW: Wasn’t it about £80 million? – Robbie’s deal?
WW: You mentioned when we were chatting earlier that Esther has a fantastic opportunity coming up in Nashville.
WW: Sorry, what is a “collecting agency”?
WW: What kind of music do you listen to when you are having time off?
WW: To put it another way, who did you pretend to be when you were young? People in my generation wanted to be Elvis and Cliff or maybe Chuck Berry..
WW: Apparently Neil Young of all people was a big Shadows fan and freely admits it, and if you hear his early stuff it is a clone of The Shadows!
WW: What?! Harvest?
WW: What I was getting at was that most players initially start by wanting to emulate a hero.
WW: Of course! Focus!
(At this point Weasel goes off on a flight of fancy and we both start doing cod Dutch accents)
WW: There’s the Jethro Tull..
WW: So, were you into Prog, and are you prepared to talk about it and come out of the closet?
WW: Have you confessed to the boys in the band.. Marti?
WW: Well, I mentioned Marti (Pellow). We have gotta talk about Wet Wet Wet. And we’ve gotta talk about that song..
WW: I do have to say that I listened to it (Love is all Around) last night, possibly for the first time in, erm..
WW: It’s fresh, it sounds great, it’s a wonderful arrangement with a great vocal performance but we all hated it at the time.
WW: You played lead guitar on it..
WW: My first encounter if you like, with the band was at Bristol airport and four or five very cool looking guys got out of a private jet and someone said, “There’s Wet Wet Wet”. They looked the part and I suppose the band is a paradigm of the Rock and Roll life..
WW: Let’s go back a bit to what we began with, which is the pressures and influences in the copybook Rock and Roll story. Why is it that you can take someone who is talented and has what it takes and the industry turns them into a monster, or if not a monster someone who is intent on the path of self-destruction?
WW: That surprises me. You have a hit band, everyone hangs on their every word.
WW: So you quickly acclimatise?
WW: Can we talk about Marti’s Heroin addiction, I mean, what gave him the strength to crawl out of it?
WW: Did he still have friends at that point?
WW: Let’s get more personal now. We have got to talk about the Stammering.
WW: Clearly, these things become flavour of the month, what with The King’s Speech and it has generated a lot of interest in the subject.
WW: I haven’t seen it yet.
WW: This still happens with you?
WW: Worse than being on stage in front of 10,000 people or millions on TV?
GD: Oh that’s easy! The movie was very well cast. I thought Colin Firth did an excellent job. You could see the terror in his eyes and he just would rather have been anywhere else, and that opening scene when he is at Wembley, and you could hear him blocking into the microphone and it was echoing all around the stadium, he must have thought, “What am I doing here, this is not part of the plan”!
WW: Authentic?
(Shortly after this point we formally concluded the interview, but the tape was still running…..)
Graeme has a unique position in the band because, although he always toured and recorded and featured musically with Wet Wet Wet and been on Top of the Pops about 56 times, he was left out of most of the promo work due, he says to the band being marketed at teenagers and him being about ten years older than the rest of the band. But he has a curious and maybe bizarre footnote to this:
(It kind of bears out that cliché about meeting fellow travellers in far flung places in the world and saying, “Oh, you are from England, do you know Cliff Richard?” but is perhaps even more bizarre than that. WW)