The Divine Comedy are a alcove pop bandage from Northern Ireland formed in 1989 and fronted by Neil Hannon. Hannon has been the alone connected affiliate of the group, playing, in some instances, all of the non-orchestral chart besides drums. To date, ten flat albums accept been appear beneath the Divine Comedy name. The accumulation accomplished their greatest bartering success in the years 1996–99, during which they had nine singles that fabricated the UK Top 40, including the top ten hit "National Express". The tenth Divine Comedy album, Bang Goes the Knighthood, was appear on 31 May 2010.
The beginning and early success (Fanfare to Promenade)
Neil Hannon has been the only ever-present member of the band, being its founder in 1989 when he was joined by John McCullagh and Kevin Traynor. Their first album, the heavily R.E.M.-influenced and now-deleted Fanfare for the Comic Muse, enjoyed little success. A couple of equally unsuccessful EPs – Timewatch (1991); Europop (1992) – were to follow, with newly-recruited member John Allen handling lead vocals on some tracks. After the commercial failure of the Europop EP, this line-up soon fell apart.
Hannon, however, was not deterred in his efforts and re-appeared in 1993 with Liberation. Featuring a fairly diverse musical outlook that goes from the tongue-in-cheek synth pop of 'Europop' (nearly unrecognisable from the previously-released version) to the classical stylings of 'Timewatching', it is also characterised by a plethora of literary references: 'Bernice Bobs Her Hair' recalls a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald; 'Three Sisters' draws upon the play by Anton Chekhov; and 'Lucy' is essentially three William Wordsworth poems abridged to music. This led to a degree of critical acclaim, but commercial success still proved elusive.
Indeed, it was only some minor success in France that really enabled Hannon to proceed to his second effort Promenade. Released in 1994, this was heavily driven by classical influences, with Michael Nyman's stylings clearly an influence. Hannon himself acknowledged this when he apparently sent a copy of his new album to the composer, jokingly asking him not to sue. Essentially, a concept albumabout a day spent by two lovers, it also received similar critical acclaim to that which Liberation was afforded. Commercial success, though, was not forthcoming despite some of Hannon's best songwriting to date, including "Don't Look Down", "The Summerhouse" and subsequent live favourite "Tonight We Fly". Soon after the release of the album the Divine Comedy went on tour with Tori Amos, supporting her during her European dates.
At around the same time, Hannon also wrote and performed the theme music for the sitcom Father Ted (which would subsequently be incorporated into the song "Songs of Love" on the album Casanova), and later wrote the music for the deliberately bad mock-Eurovisionsong "My Lovely Horse" for one episode. Hannon resisted widespread requests from fans to release the track as a single for the Christmas market, but it was eventually released in 1999 as the third track on the CD-single "Gin Soaked Boy". This would not be the only time they would be responsible for a TV theme, as "In Pursuit of Happiness" was also used by the BBC science and technology show, Tomorrow's World. Hannon also recently composed the music for the comedy series "The IT Crowd", written by Father Ted co-writer Graham Linehan.
Post-Setanta & recent activity (Regeneration to present)
The 2001 album Regeneration attempted to remove the band still further from its association with comedy. Hannon hired famous producer Nigel Godrich to "remake" the band. Neil ditched the suit and donned a Britrock band image. The album was a greater critical than commercial success, and soon after its release it was announced that The Divine Comedy were splitting up. However, within a year Hannon was touring again with a revised band line-up, playing a series of joint-headline gigs in the United States, United Kingdom and Ireland featuring both The Divine Comedy and Ben Folds, who would cover The Divine Comedy's "Songs of Love" on his Sunny 16EP.
Eventually a new album surfaced in the form of 2004's Absent Friends. Striking a balance between the occasionally earnest sound of the band's later material and the lighter tone of the more popular releases, it encapsulated the essence of The Divine Comedy. 2004 saw two dates of particularly acclaimed performances, one at the London Palladium (which was later released as a live DVD) and one at the Royal Albert Hall.
In January 2005, Hannon announced that he had acquired the worldwide copyrights to all of his recorded output with his former record label, Setanta Records. He declared on the band's official website that he would be launching his own record label Divine Comedy Records in order to re-release his 1990s output.
Hannon's ninth album under the Divine Comedy moniker, Victory for the Comic Muse, was released in June 2006. The bulk of the record was recorded in just two weeks, much of it live rather than multi-tracked, hence the more spontaneous sound, and features appearances from Travis bass player Dougie Payne.
Neil Hannon also provided vocals for songs on the soundtrack for the film of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy released in 2005, working with Joby Talbot, the composer for the film and former Divine Comedy band member. This sci-fi connection continued in late 2006, when he contributed vocals to two tracks – "Song For Ten" and "Love Don't Roam" – on the Doctor Who: Original Television Soundtrack album. In an interview with Bullz-Eye.com, Hannon explained that, "literally, I was asked to add my vocal by the composer of the songs, who writes for the show. And I didn’t feel that I could say no, simply because I spent my childhood watching this programme. It would be just plain wrong to not do it."
Hannon also lent his vocals to "Aliens", the last track on the Irish charity album The Cake Sale in 2006, organised by Brian Crosby ofBell X1 and featuring a variety of mainly Irish musicians.
In 2006, whilst on tour, the band did a Take-Away Show video session shot by Vincent Moon. Most recently, the first ten or so seconds of "Tonight We Fly" was used as the ending tune to BBC7's Digi Radio. The song was also used for an advertisement for theAirbus A340 airliner.
Meanwhile, Neil took part in various projects: he recorded "Perfection as a hipster", included in "God help the girl" soundtrack, a soon-to-be-released musical film by Belle & Sebastian frontman Stuart Murdoch as well as the LP The Duckworth Lewis Method, together with Thomas Walsh of Pugwash.
In March 2007 Neil Hannon's relationship with Parlophone came to an end.
On 31 May 2010 The Divine Comedy released their tenth album entitled Bang Goes the Knighthood on DC Records. As with Victory for the Comic Muse it was recorded in RAK studios in St John's Wood by Guy Massey and the orchestra was conducted by Andrew Skeet who was the arranger on this album. It was the first Divine Comedy album where Neil Hannon did not write the orchestral arrangements himself. The album charted at 20 in the first week of release, making it their highest charting album since Regeneration in 2001. The album itself was preceded by the download-only single "At The Indie Disco" which gained airplay, but failed to chart.
Band members
The line-up of the band has at times consisted only of Neil Hannon, but has also included:
- Bryan Mills
- Chris Worsey
- Charlotte Glasson
- Grant Gordon
- Ivor Talbot
- Joby Talbot
- John Allen
- John McCullagh
- Kevin Traynor
- Miggy Barradas
- Stewart Bartlett
- Natalie Box
- Rob Farrer
- Simon Little
- Stuart 'Pinkie' Bates
- Andrew Skeet
- Lucy Wilkins
- John Evans
The
Divine Comedy discography
|
|
Releases
|
|
↙Studio albums
|
10
|
↙Compilation albums
|
1
|
↙EPs
|
5
|
↙Singles
|
20
|
Studio
albums
Year
|
Title
|
Chart
Positions
|
|||
1990
|
§
Release date: July 1990
§
Label: Setanta
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
1993
|
§
Release date: 16 August 1993
§
Label: Setanta
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
1994
|
§
Release date: 28 March 1994
§
Label: Setanta
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
1996
|
§
Release date: 29 April 1996
§
Label: Setanta
|
–
|
48
|
–
|
–
|
1997
|
§
Release date: 10 February 1997
§
Label: Setanta
|
–
|
13
|
–
|
–
|
1998
|
§
Release date: 31 August 1998
§
Label: Setanta
|
–
|
9
|
23
|
–
|
2001
|
§
Release date: 12 March 2001
§
Label: Parlophone/EMI
|
15
|
14
|
21
|
–
|
2004
|
§
Release date: 29 March 2004
§
Label: Parlophone/EMI
|
6
|
23
|
20
|
–
|
2006
|
§
Release date: 19 June 2006
§
Label: Parlophone
|
22
|
43
|
33
|
83
|
2010
|
§
Release date: 31 May 2010
§
Label: DC Records
|
8
|
20
|
27
|
–
|
Compilation
albums
Year
|
Title
|
Chart
Positions
|
|
1999
|
§
Release date: 30 August 1999
§
Label: Setanta
|
2
|
3
|
Extended
Plays
Year
|
Title
|
1991
|
Timewatch
§
Release date: October 1991
|
1992
|
Europop
§
Release date: January 1992
|
1993
|
Indulgence No.1
§
Release date: 18 October 1993
|
1994
|
Indulgence No.2
§
Release date: July 1994
|
2004
|
Bavarian EP
§
Release date: 25 October 2004, Digital
Download via the official website
|
Singles
Year
|
Title
|
Album
|
Chart
positions
|
|
1993
|
"Lucy"
|
Liberation
|
–
|
–
|
1996
|
Casanova
|
–
|
14
|
|
"Becoming More Like
Alfie"
|
–
|
27
|
||
"Comme Beaucoup De
Messieurs"
§
Released: September 1996
|
—
|
–
|
–
|
|
"The Frog Princess"
|
Casanova
|
–
|
15
|
|
1997
|
"Everybody Knows (Except
You)"
|
A Short Album About Love
|
23
|
14
|
1998
|
–
|
28[8]
|
||
Fin de Siecle
|
24
|
19
|
||
"The Certainty of
Chance"
|
–
|
49
|
||
1999
|
18
|
8
|
||
§
Re-recording of a song from Liberation
|
A Secret History:
|
24
|
17
|
|
–
|
38
|
|||
2001
|
"Love What You Do"
|
Regeneration
|
48
|
26
|
"Bad Ambassador"
|
–
|
34
|
||
"Perfect Lovesong"
|
–
|
42
|
||
2004
|
"Come Home Billy
Bird"
|
Absent Friends
|
34
|
25
|
"Absent Friends"
|
–
|
38
|
||
2006
|
Victory for the Comic
Muse
|
36
|
52
|
|
–
|
67
|
|||
"A Lady of a Certain
Age"
§
Limited 7" vinyl available only from official website
|
–
|
–
|
||
2010
|
"At the Indie Disco"
|
Bang Goes The Knighthood
|
–
|
173
|
"I Like"
|
–
|
–
|
DVDs
§ Live at
the Palladium (2004)