Clive Parker | |
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Background information | |
Also known as | CP, CP Snare |
Born | 1960 (age 63–64) Windlesham, Surrey |
Origin | Camberley, Surrey |
Labels |
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Clive Parker (born 1960) also known as Clive Parker-Sharp, is an English drummer, active in the punk, post-punk and new wave genres. He was a member of the bands The Members, Spizzenergi/Athletico Spizz 80, Big Country, and Scary Thieves. He went on to play with John Moore (Jesus and Mary Chain) [5] in The Expressway. [6]
Parker had his own bands The Planets, Lopez & the Waveriders, Kingfishers Catch Fire, Holy Trinity, Barra (Sony-ATV/English Garden Records), [7] and electronic guitar duo Marshall Star. [8] He went on to production and management, forming his own small record label (Furry Records UK)
In 1992, Parker had a minor dance hit with UK soul singer, Kasie Sharp, co-writing as part of the pop dance production team One Horse Man, who were also released by Arcade Records in Europe. [9] [10]
Parker was born in Windlesham, Surrey. He lives in East Sussex. He is now also a writer & published author, [11] and plays guitar and keyboards.
From the age of nine, Parker played in local show bands and working men's club's (Frimley Green;Camberley). He also joined punk rock groups in Camberley, the Home Counties, and West London circuits, often as an opening act to groups like The Members, Eddie and the Hot Rods, and others who performed at The Moonlight Club in Hampstead, and Nashville Rooms in West Kensington. [12]
In 1980, as Athletico Spizz 80, Parker played on the album, Do a Runner, which spent five weeks on the UK Albums Chart, peaking at number 27. [13]
In 1980, the group appeared at the Futurama Festival, along with Gary Glitter [14] and The Psychedelic Furs. [15]
In 1980, after signing with A&M Records, the band toured the United States with 999. During the tour, and with Solar, Spizz and Lu Edmonds from The Damned as the line up, they played the Palladium in New York City as support band to Siouxsie and the Banshees. [16]
Parker toured with Spizz, extensively in Europe and the United States, in support of The Clash, The Only Ones, and the Human League. Support bands for Spizz tours included Tenpole Tudor, Altered Images, Department S, and The Mo-dettes. The band played a week of sold-out shows at London's Marquee Club, with a matinee for younger fans. [17]
Parker toured with Big Country, playing at the Dunfermline Glen Pavilion (first ever BC gig), and dates with Alice Cooper Armed Forces tour. [18]
Parker toured the UK with Scary Thieves and Nik Kershaw. [19]
Parker toured the UK with John Moore and Pop Will Eat Itself, Crazyhead, and Living Colour. Dates in the United States, in addition to solo appearances, included performances with My Bloody Valentine. [20]
Kingfishers Catch Fire played support to Deacon Blue, and toured the UK college circuit after a favourable showing in Melody Maker , by writer Helen Fitzgerald. [21]
2013–2014; Parker toured his show, "Sex Drugs & Music-Hall", the adaptation of his book The Box, which took a skewed view of UK cultural populist history; Bingo, and Music-Hall, using spoken-word, drama, and music, with Parker playing guitar, keyboards, and wood-blocks. This was played in unusual venues, such as Museums, Libraries, Almshouses, and some Theatres. [27] [28]
2020 on: Parker tours his ConeBoy show; musical, dramatic and spoken-word adaptations of the ConeBoy novel. [29] [30]
Athletico Spizz 80, BBC John Peel session, 30 April 1980 [37] Athletico Spizz 80, BBC Mike Read session, 2 October 1980 [38]
[46] 15-track Soundtrack album to ConeBoy shows released 2020, FURRY RECORDS UK, CAT No. KCF119; "The Shape of Things to Come", "Flame Hair Girl", "Down from the Mountain", "It's Christmas – Ring The Bells", "Home", "Send Delete", "Something Happened Along The Way", "Hells Angel", "She is From The City", "One in a Million", "Days of Wonder", "Not so Funny Now", "The Narcissist", "Love is All", "Down From The Mountain – Reprise"
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