Badly Drawn Boy proudly flying the Union Jack
By Chris Nixon
San Diego Union-Tribune
March 15, 2007
British artist Badly Drawn Boy – aka Damon Gough – engages in a self-dialogue on his latest album's opening track, “Swimming Pool,” pondering the meaning of home and country. It goes something like this:
In the left speaker: “You think it matters where you were born?”
In the right speaker: “No, not really. It only matters that you can be proud of where you came from.”
So starts Badly Drawn Boy's fifth disc, a celebration of his growth from boy to man and the swirling world that surrounded his coming of age in his homeland of Great Britain.
The songs are brimming with British references from his young adulthood: Virginia Wade (the last British woman to win Wimbledon), the Silver Jubilee (in 1977), the Sex Pistols, Iron Lady Margaret Thatcher and the Falklands War. In a nod to his hero Bruce Springsteen (whose music has almost nothing to Gough besides great lyrics), he christened the collection of 13 tracks “Born in the UK.”
Referencing his opening discussion, is Gough proud of where he came from? Throughout the album, the scruffy songwriter notes his own faults along with his country's foibles, but he also manages to find an overwhelmingly positive spin on personal and national stumbling blocks. He still lives in his hometown of Manchester, so you get the sense he's inspired by his native soil.
“I want to stand up and say I'm proud to be English,” says Gough in his press biography. “And it seems that that right's been taken away from us for some reason – being proud of where you're from is part of being a human being.”
In retrospect, the 37-year-old musician's career seems almost effortless leading up to “Born in the UK.” His debut in 2000, “The Hour of Bewilderbeast,” won him the coveted Mercury Prize, and Gough's prowess motivated music geek author Nick Hornby (“High Fidelity”) to tab BDB to score his movie “About a Boy.” Beautiful, lyrical songs flowed from him as he recorded four albums in four years.
After rounding out his contract with his original label XL with the highly personal album “One Plus One Is One” in 2004, Gough signed with EMI and looked to assemble another collection of music. Halfway through recording a new record with producer Stephen Street (The Smiths, Blur), the man in the trademark knit cap scrapped the sessions and all the material.
“Stephen was brilliant, and it's kinda inexplicable how it didn't work,” explains Gough, again from the biography on his Web site www.badlydrawnboy.co.uk. “It's like the stars weren't aligned or something. I blame myself. At the time I was devastated. I had to phone him and say,
'I'm not sure I can continue with this material.' I just wasn't feeling where it was going.”
So Gough went back to the drawing board, toiling over a new set of songs until he met Nick Franglen (one half of electronica duo Lemon Jelly). Gough and Franglen would sculpt “Born in the UK” out of an original set of 25 songs, whittling the album down to 13 after six months in the studio.
While “Born in the UK” doesn't quite reach the orchestral pop heights of his 2002 release, “Have You Fed the Fish?,” or the stripped-down beauty of his debut, “The Hour of Bewilderbeast,” Gough's hard-earned fifth disc proves he is a songwriting talent to keep an eye on down the road.
Chris Nixon is a San Diego music writer.