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Eddi Reader

Sadenia "Eddi" Reader MBE (born 29 August 1959)[1] is a Scottish singer-songwriter, known for her work as the lead vocalist of the folk and soft rock band Fairground Attraction, and for an enduring solo career. She is the recipient of three Brit Awards. In 2003, she showcased the works of Scotland's national poet, Robert Burns.

Eddi Reader
Reader at the Costa del Folk festival in Mallorca, 2016
Background information
Birth nameSadenia Reader
Born (1959-08-29) 29 August 1959 (age 64)
OriginGlasgow, Scotland
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Singer
  • songwriter
  • musician
  • record producer
Instrument(s)
Years active1984–present
Labels
Websiteeddireader.co.uk

Early career edit

Reader was born in Glasgow, Scotland, the daughter of a welder, and the eldest of seven children;[2] her brother Francis is vocalist with the band Trashcan Sinatras, and her grandmother Sadie Smith was a leading Scottish footballer.[3] She was nicknamed Edna by her parents. Living at first in the district of Anderston, in a tenement slum demolished in 1965, the young Reader family moved to a two-bedroomed flat in the estate of Arden.[4]

In 1976, due to overcrowding, the family was re-housed 25 miles from Glasgow, in a council development in Irvine, North Ayrshire. However, Reader returned to Glasgow (where she lived with her grandmother in Pollok) to finish her compulsory schooling.[4][5] She began playing the guitar at the age of ten, and started her musical career busking, first in Glasgow's Sauchiehall Street, then in the early 1980s in London and around Europe (where she also worked with circus and performance artists).

Back in Scotland, while finding factory work in Irvine and working part-time in Sirocco Recording Studio in Kilmarnock, she answered an advert in the music press and travelled to London to audition and join the post-punk band Gang of Four, who needed a backing vocalist for their appearance on British television music show The Old Grey Whistle Test and for their UK tour. This led to her first US tour with the band. After returning to the UK and leaving the band, she started working as a session vocalist in London, picking up work singing jingles for radio advertisements and singing with such acts as Eurythmics, The Waterboys, Billy Mackenzie of the Associates, John Foxx of Ultravox and Alison Moyet.[6]

Fairground Attraction edit

In 1984, Reader returned to the UK from Paris, where she had been working as a singer for the Romanian composer Vladimir Cosma. Through her contact with the brass section session musicians Kick Horns in London, she signed a recording contract with EMI, and recorded two singles with the disco group Outbar Squeek. Around the same time, she met and asked Mark E. Nevin, a guitarist and songwriter from the band Jane Aire and the Belvederes to write for her and they recorded two songs as 'The Academy of Fine Popular Music'. They subsequently formed Fairground Attraction, together with Simon Edwards (guitarrón – a Mexican acoustic bass guitar) and Roy Dodds (drums and percussion). In 1988, the band signed to the RCA and BMG labels and released their first single, "Perfect", which became a UK number one,[7] winning best single at the 1989 Brit Awards. Their debut studio album, The First of a Million Kisses, was also a success, reaching number two in the UK Albums Chart, and winning best album at the 1989 Brits.

This success was short-lived, however. In November 1989, after a break, during which Reader had her first child, Charlie, with her French-Algerian partner Milou, arguments arose within the group, and Nevin abandoned a recording session for their second studio album, which eventually led to the break-up of the band.[7] A makeshift second album, a collection of B-sides and live tracks, Ay Fond Kiss, was rushed out the following year.

Solo career edit

 
Reader performing live in 2006

Mirmama and Eddi Reader (1992–1994) edit

Reader returned to Scotland, but before she embarked on her solo career she took a temporary detour into acting. She played Jolene Jowett, a singer and accordionist, in John Byrne's Your Cheatin' Heart, a comedy-drama series for BBC Television, set in the country music scene in Scotland. In 1993, Reader was the presenter of BBC Scotland's No Stilettos,[8] a music performance programme recorded in Glasgow. Her other acting credits include playing the part of Joy 3 from the Michael Boyd (artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Company) production of Janice Galloway's The Trick Is to Keep Breathing.[7] This was a BBC Radio 4 production in 1996 and also a Tron Theatre production the same year.

Returning to London, Reader worked on new material with a backing band calling itself the Patron Saints of Imperfection (made up of Roy Dodds, Neill and Calum MacColl, and Phil Steriopoulos).[7] This became her debut solo studio album, recorded for RCA Records: 1992's Mirmama.[7] She met Geoff Travis who signed her to Warner Bros. subsidiary label, Blanco y Negro.[7] The managing director Rob Dickens executively produced her second solo studio album Eddi Reader (1994), which won her the "Best Female Singer" Brit Award that year, followed by Candyfloss and Medicine (1996), and Angels & Electricity (1998).[7] She parted ways with Warner Bros. and continued her work on Geoff Travis' Rough Trade label when she recorded Simple Soul (2001) and Driftwood (2002) – a "homegrown" release of songs recorded during the Simple Soul sessions. During this time, Reader also recorded the song "Ocean Love" for the soundtrack of the animated Danish film Help! I'm a Fish (2001).[citation needed] Reader also contributed backing vocals to one of Big Country's final singles before Stuart Adamson's death, "Fragile Thing".

Sings the Songs of Robert Burns (1994–2007) edit

Reader continued to tour (England, Scotland, Japan, Australia, Spain, the United States, and Ireland). In 2003, she recorded her album of material by Robert Burns, with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, leading to good reviews and an international resurgence in interest in Scotland's "bard".[9][10]

In 2004, Reader sang at the re-opening of the new Scottish Parliament building, where she was presented to Queen Elizabeth II.[11] She has described the experience: "I was honoured to sing at the opening of the parliament although I almost didn’t get to. I wanted to sing ‘Auld Lang Syne' as I thought that would have been perfect for the politicians with everyone shaking hands but they wanted me to sing it in 'F’ key and that wasn't the key for me so I told them I wasn't doing it. It was only at the last minute that I eventually agreed."[12]

She spent April 2006 touring Australia with Boo Hewerdine and Alan Kelly, following the release of St Clare's Night Out: Live at The Basement, with Australian acts such as David Hosking invited to open the concerts.

Reader's eighth studio album, Peacetime, was released in 2007 on the Rough Trade record label. Produced by fellow Scottish folk musician, John McCusker, the album features a few Burns composed songs, alongside original material with long-time collaborator Boo Hewerdine and the Trash Can Sinatras' John Douglas.

Love Is the Way (2008–2010) edit

In spring 2008, Reader was a special guest at the Hotel Cafe Tour hosted by Tom McRae. In 2009, she performed in period drama film Me and Orson Welles,[13] directed by Richard Linklater and starring Zac Efron, Christian McKay and Claire Danes.[14] Reader performed re-arranged 1930s standards, with Jools Holland, with whom she had previously collaborated on the single "Waiting Game".

To commemorate the 250th anniversary of Robert Burns' birth, Reader released The Songs of Robert Burns Deluxe Edition in January 2009. The new release brought together the original Burns album with seven additional songs, two from the original 2003 sessions ("Green Grow the Rashes O", "Of A' the Airts"), three from 2007's Peacetime ("Ye banks and Braes", "Aye Waukin O" and "Leezie Lindsay") the unreleased "Dainty Davie", also from that session, and a brand new recording, "Comin' Thro the Rye/Dram Behind the Curtain". The new album was promoted, like the original release, with two sold-out shows at the annual Celtic Connections festival in Glasgow.

In 2009, Reader released her ninth studio album, Love Is the Way, which was self-produced. In a special arrangement with record label Rough Trade she sold an exclusive, pre-released and minimally-packaged version of the disc on her 19-date autumn 2008 UK tour.[15]

Vagabond and recent work (2010–present) edit

In early 2010, Reader appeared on the Irish language album Ceol '10 Súil Siar, singing an Irish language version of the Fairground Attraction song "Perfect" called "Foirfe". In December she released a live album on her own label and sold exclusively via her online store, Live in Japan. Recorded from the sound desk at her Japan shows in September 2009, it was mastered and mixed by Mark Freegard who had worked on the Reader's ninth solo studio album Love Is the Way.

Personal life edit

In 2013, Reader married John Douglas, a songwriter and member of Trashcan Sinatras alongside her brother Frank.

Political views edit

No decent English human being can fail to see how this 'union' is flawed from the English side. There is a distinct difference between walking... side by side... arm in arm. Or being as ignored as the lint in the back pocket of English psyche. I saw it, heard it, watched it... experienced it. – Eddi Reader, 25 February 2013[16]

Reader has been an advocate for the Yes Scotland movement, campaigning for a Yes vote in the referendum for Scottish independence from the United Kingdom.[17] Her 2013 appearance on the British TV programme Question Time was publicly criticised,[18] with one viewer threatening on Twitter to cut her tongue out.[19] Reader has said she is "an egalitarian who believes in the autonomy of small nations, it's unconscionable that those who call people 'nationalists' for wanting their country to manage its own wealth, do not recognise the 'nationalistic' choice of supporting a 'BRITISH nation'". Reader said that, in reprisal for her advocacy for Scottish independence, Lord Steel of Aikwood said in a debate on Scottish independence in the House of Lords that Reader's work on Robert Burns was "murdering Burns' simple melodies". Reader also said that the newspaper The Scotsman, in reprisal for Reader choosing to advocate a Yes vote, had published a story mischaracterising her political views and misrepresenting her great-uncle as a Nazi and leader in the Irish Republican Army (IRA),[20] stating: "there’s people out there in Scotland, especially in the Press, and especially at The Scotsman — which is a very wrong name for that paper, because they don’t believe in Scotland at all; they believe in London management — who believe that Scots do not deserve the vote. I don’t want to be in that team."[21] She issued a formal appeal to the Press Complaints Commission (PCC), saying that: "The article was trying to portray ALL people wanting to have Scots running Scotland and independence voters as having links with the early Fascists. The journalist scrapped around and tried to attach my great-uncle, who supported independence, to a 'Nazi' group and a terrorist organisation, creating hateful responses and threats to my family."[22] The PCC ruled in May 2013 that the image in the story, accompanied by the headline ‘Klan Alba’, did not breach the Editor’s Code of Practice.[22]

Reader is writing a book for publication about her great-uncle Seamus (or James) Reader, based on his extensive diaries.[23] He was head of the Scottish Brigade of the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB), when the Irish War of Independence broke out in 1919, later becoming a founder of the abortive Scottish Republican Army, which attempted to replicate the Irish struggle in Scotland between the wars.[21] On Facebook, she posted that he: "was in command of 4,000 Scots involved in the Irish Rising build-up and the Irish war against The British state. In telling the story I felt my ancestor was passing the baton to me to tell the truthful story of this time".[20]

Awards edit

The Robert Burns project saw Reader awarded an MBE for outstanding contributions to the arts in the New Year's honours list of 2006.[24]

In May 2007, she was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Strathclyde.[25] Later that year she was recognised for her contributions to music and to the education and encouragement of young musicians with an honorary doctorate and a Doctor of Letters from Glasgow Caledonian University.[26] In June 2008, she received another doctorate for her musical work, this time from the University of Stirling,[27] and in 2013 she received an honorary doctor of music award from the University of Edinburgh.[28]

Year Awards Work Category Result
1989 Brit Awards "Perfect" Best British Single Won
The First of a Million Kisses Best British Album Won
1995 Ivor Novello Awards "Patience of Angels" Best Song Musically & Lyrically Nominated
Ivor Novello Awards "Dear John" Best Song Musically & Lyrically Nominated
Brit Awards Herself Best British Female Won
1997 Nominated
2016 Boisdale Music Awards Great Scot Music Award[29] Won

Discography edit

Albums edit

List of albums, with selected chart positions and certifications
Title Details Peak chart positions Certifications
UK
[30]
Mirmama
  • Released: 12 October 1992
  • Label: RCA
34
Eddi Reader 4
Candyfloss and Medicine 24
Angels & Electricity 49
Simple Soul 92
Driftwood
Sings the Songs of Robert Burns 86
Peacetime 93
Love Is the Way 109
Vagabond
  • Released: 13 April 2009
  • Label: Reveal
93
Cavalier
  • Released: 28 September 2018
  • Label: Reveal
Light Is in the Horizon

Singles edit

Title Year Peak chart positions Album
UK
[30]
"All or Nothing" 1991 Mirmama
"What You Do with What You've Got" 1992
"Patience of Angels" 1994 33 Eddi Reader
"Joke (I'm Laughing)" 42
"Dear John" 48
"Nobody Lives Without Love" 1995 84 Batman Forever
"Town Without Pity" 1996 26 Candyfloss and Medicine
"Medicine" 100
"Waiting Game" (with Jools Holland) Sex & Jazz & Rock & Roll
"Prayer Wheel" 1998 Angels & Electricity
"Fragile Thing" (with Big Country) 1999 69 Driving to Damascus
"Usual Things" (with Little Tempo & Linton Kwesi Johnson) Non-album single
"The Girl Who Fell in Love with the Moon" 2001 Simple Soul
"Prodigal Daughter"/"Simple Soul"
"Holiday" 2002 Driftwood
"May You Never" (with David Knopfler) Wishbones
"Auld Lang Syne"/"Wild Mountainside" 2003 Sings the Songs of Robert Burns
"My Love Is Like a Red, Red Rose"/"Jamie Come Try Me"
"Muddy Water" 2007 Peacetime
"Roses" 2009 Love Is the Way
"Dragonflies"
"Baby's Boat" 2013 Vagabond
"Back the Dogs (Dancing Down Rock)" 2014
"Starlight" 2018 Cavalier
"—" denotes an album that did not chart or was not released in that territory.

Live albums edit

  • Eddi Reader Live (2001)
  • Eddi Reader Live: Edinburgh (2003)
  • Eddi Reader Live: Newcastle (2003)
  • Eddi Reader Live: Leeds (2003)
  • Eddi Reader Live: London (2003)
  • St Clare's Night Out: Live at The Basement (2006)
  • Port Fairy Folk Festival (2008)
  • Live in Japan (2010)

Fairground Attraction edit

Film soundtracks edit

Collections edit

  • The Blanco y Negro Years (2015)
  • The Best of Eddi Reader (2016)

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 November 2009. Retrieved 28 August 2009.
  2. ^ O'Rourke, Lynn (1 April 2007). "Q & A with Eddi Reader". The Scotsman. Retrieved 18 April 2009.
  3. ^ "Football was 'quite unsuitable' for women… or so they said". STV News. 3 December 2021. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  4. ^ a b My Schooldays: Eddie Reader, The Scotsman, 22 May 2002
  5. ^ (PDF). 12 May 2003. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 November 2008. Retrieved 18 April 2009.
  6. ^ . NME. Archived from the original on 21 November 2009.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Colin Larkin, ed. (1997). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.). Virgin Books. p. 999. ISBN 1-85227-745-9.
  8. ^ "Rock makes a point with No Stilettos". HeraldScotland. 12 April 1993. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
  9. ^ Hodgkinson, Will (16 May 2003). "Life performers". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 April 2009.
  10. ^ White, Bill (3 February 2004). "'Songs of Robert Burns' a magnificent gift from the heart of Scotland". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved 4 April 2009.
  11. ^ "Building Opens". The Scottish Parliament. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  12. ^ Biagi, Marco (26 November 2013). "Eddi Reader chats to The Edinburgh Reporter ahead of Usher Hall concert". The Edinburgh Reporter. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  13. ^ "Filmography by year for Eddi Reader". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 18 February 2012.
  14. ^ "Me and Orson Welles von Eddi Reader bei Myspace". Archive.today. Archived from the original on 2 December 2012. Retrieved 3 October 2019.
  15. ^ "LOVE IS THE WAY – PRE-RELEASE EXCLUSIVE FOR UPCOMING TOUR! von Eddi Reader bei Myspace". Archive.today. Archived from the original on 5 December 2012. Retrieved 3 October 2019.
  16. ^ "Eddi Reader: Here's To A New 'Union' Between Two New Independent Countries". National Collective. 25 February 2013. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  17. ^ Small, Mike (7 January 2014). "Who better to convince Scots to reject independence than English celebrities?". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  18. ^ McCartney, Jenny (30 November 2013). "Scottish independence: There's a kind of magic in our united kingdom". The Telegraph. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  19. ^ Martin, Kate (11 December 2013). "Why is the Scottish independence debate dominated by men?". New Statesman. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  20. ^ a b Peterkin, Tom (29 September 2013). "Eddi Reader reveals great-uncle's life as IRA chief". The Scotsman. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  21. ^ a b "Eddi Reader: still going for the Burns". The Belfast Telegraph. 24 January 2014. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  22. ^ a b . Newsnet Scotland. 3 October 2013. Archived from the original on 7 October 2013. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  23. ^ Roy, David (1 February 2020). "Eddi Reader on music, her spiritual home in Ireland and the last throes of empire". The Irish News. Retrieved 17 March 2022.
  24. ^ "Queen honours star-studded Scots". News.bbc.co.uk. 31 December 2005. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 June 2011.
  26. ^ "Nicola's degree of success". Evening Times. 28 November 2007. Retrieved 25 April 2009.
  27. ^ "Honorary Graduates-About - University of Stirling". University of Stirling. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
  28. ^ Honorary graduates. Those awarded honorary degrees between 1 August 2012 and 31 July 2013 University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 28 December 2023
  29. ^ "The Boisdale Music Awards 2016". Boisdale.co.uk. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  30. ^ a b "Eddi Reader | full Official Chart History". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
  31. ^ a b "British certifications – Eddi Reader". British Phonographic Industry. Retrieved 10 August 2022. Type Eddi Reader in the "Search BPI Awards" field and then press Enter.
  32. ^ "Soundtracks for Batman Forever (1995)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 18 February 2012.
  33. ^ "Soundtracks for Bed of Roses (1996)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 18 February 2012.
  34. ^ "Soundtracks for Love & Sex (2000)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 18 February 2012.
  35. ^ "Soundtracks for My First Mister (2001)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 18 February 2012.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Video of 3 tracks from the Auld Lang Syne concert on BBC's Celtic Connections site – live performance – January 2009
  • Eddi Reader at AllMusic
  • Eddi Reader discography at Discogs  
  • Eddi Reader at IMDb
  • Eddi Reader at TED  

eddi, reader, sadenia, eddi, reader, born, august, 1959, scottish, singer, songwriter, known, work, lead, vocalist, folk, soft, rock, band, fairground, attraction, enduring, solo, career, recipient, three, brit, awards, 2003, showcased, works, scotland, nation. Sadenia Eddi Reader MBE born 29 August 1959 1 is a Scottish singer songwriter known for her work as the lead vocalist of the folk and soft rock band Fairground Attraction and for an enduring solo career She is the recipient of three Brit Awards In 2003 she showcased the works of Scotland s national poet Robert Burns Eddi ReaderMBEReader at the Costa del Folk festival in Mallorca 2016Background informationBirth nameSadenia ReaderBorn 1959 08 29 29 August 1959 age 64 OriginGlasgow ScotlandGenresPopfolkjazzOccupation s Singersongwritermusicianrecord producerInstrument s Vocalsacoustic guitarconcertinaharmonicapianoukuleleYears active1984 presentLabelsRCABlanco y NegroRough TradeCompassWebsiteeddireader wbr co wbr uk Contents 1 Early career 2 Fairground Attraction 3 Solo career 3 1 Mirmama and Eddi Reader 1992 1994 3 2 Sings the Songs of Robert Burns 1994 2007 3 3 Love Is the Way 2008 2010 3 4 Vagabond and recent work 2010 present 4 Personal life 4 1 Political views 5 Awards 6 Discography 6 1 Albums 6 2 Singles 6 3 Live albums 6 4 Fairground Attraction 6 5 Film soundtracks 6 6 Collections 7 References 8 External linksEarly career editReader was born in Glasgow Scotland the daughter of a welder and the eldest of seven children 2 her brother Francis is vocalist with the band Trashcan Sinatras and her grandmother Sadie Smith was a leading Scottish footballer 3 She was nicknamed Edna by her parents Living at first in the district of Anderston in a tenement slum demolished in 1965 the young Reader family moved to a two bedroomed flat in the estate of Arden 4 In 1976 due to overcrowding the family was re housed 25 miles from Glasgow in a council development in Irvine North Ayrshire However Reader returned to Glasgow where she lived with her grandmother in Pollok to finish her compulsory schooling 4 5 She began playing the guitar at the age of ten and started her musical career busking first in Glasgow s Sauchiehall Street then in the early 1980s in London and around Europe where she also worked with circus and performance artists Back in Scotland while finding factory work in Irvine and working part time in Sirocco Recording Studio in Kilmarnock she answered an advert in the music press and travelled to London to audition and join the post punk band Gang of Four who needed a backing vocalist for their appearance on British television music show The Old Grey Whistle Test and for their UK tour This led to her first US tour with the band After returning to the UK and leaving the band she started working as a session vocalist in London picking up work singing jingles for radio advertisements and singing with such acts as Eurythmics The Waterboys Billy Mackenzie of the Associates John Foxx of Ultravox and Alison Moyet 6 Fairground Attraction editMain article Fairground Attraction In 1984 Reader returned to the UK from Paris where she had been working as a singer for the Romanian composer Vladimir Cosma Through her contact with the brass section session musicians Kick Horns in London she signed a recording contract with EMI and recorded two singles with the disco group Outbar Squeek Around the same time she met and asked Mark E Nevin a guitarist and songwriter from the band Jane Aire and the Belvederes to write for her and they recorded two songs as The Academy of Fine Popular Music They subsequently formed Fairground Attraction together with Simon Edwards guitarron a Mexican acoustic bass guitar and Roy Dodds drums and percussion In 1988 the band signed to the RCA and BMG labels and released their first single Perfect which became a UK number one 7 winning best single at the 1989 Brit Awards Their debut studio album The First of a Million Kisses was also a success reaching number two in the UK Albums Chart and winning best album at the 1989 Brits This success was short lived however In November 1989 after a break during which Reader had her first child Charlie with her French Algerian partner Milou arguments arose within the group and Nevin abandoned a recording session for their second studio album which eventually led to the break up of the band 7 A makeshift second album a collection of B sides and live tracks Ay Fond Kiss was rushed out the following year Solo career edit nbsp Reader performing live in 2006 Mirmama and Eddi Reader 1992 1994 edit Reader returned to Scotland but before she embarked on her solo career she took a temporary detour into acting She played Jolene Jowett a singer and accordionist in John Byrne s Your Cheatin Heart a comedy drama series for BBC Television set in the country music scene in Scotland In 1993 Reader was the presenter of BBC Scotland s No Stilettos 8 a music performance programme recorded in Glasgow Her other acting credits include playing the part of Joy 3 from the Michael Boyd artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Company production of Janice Galloway s The Trick Is to Keep Breathing 7 This was a BBC Radio 4 production in 1996 and also a Tron Theatre production the same year Returning to London Reader worked on new material with a backing band calling itself the Patron Saints of Imperfection made up of Roy Dodds Neill and Calum MacColl and Phil Steriopoulos 7 This became her debut solo studio album recorded for RCA Records 1992 s Mirmama 7 She met Geoff Travis who signed her to Warner Bros subsidiary label Blanco y Negro 7 The managing director Rob Dickens executively produced her second solo studio album Eddi Reader 1994 which won her the Best Female Singer Brit Award that year followed by Candyfloss and Medicine 1996 and Angels amp Electricity 1998 7 She parted ways with Warner Bros and continued her work on Geoff Travis Rough Trade label when she recorded Simple Soul 2001 and Driftwood 2002 a homegrown release of songs recorded during the Simple Soul sessions During this time Reader also recorded the song Ocean Love for the soundtrack of the animated Danish film Help I m a Fish 2001 citation needed Reader also contributed backing vocals to one of Big Country s final singles before Stuart Adamson s death Fragile Thing Sings the Songs of Robert Burns 1994 2007 edit Reader continued to tour England Scotland Japan Australia Spain the United States and Ireland In 2003 she recorded her album of material by Robert Burns with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra leading to good reviews and an international resurgence in interest in Scotland s bard 9 10 In 2004 Reader sang at the re opening of the new Scottish Parliament building where she was presented to Queen Elizabeth II 11 She has described the experience I was honoured to sing at the opening of the parliament although I almost didn t get to I wanted to sing Auld Lang Syne as I thought that would have been perfect for the politicians with everyone shaking hands but they wanted me to sing it in F key and that wasn t the key for me so I told them I wasn t doing it It was only at the last minute that I eventually agreed 12 She spent April 2006 touring Australia with Boo Hewerdine and Alan Kelly following the release of St Clare s Night Out Live at The Basement with Australian acts such as David Hosking invited to open the concerts Reader s eighth studio album Peacetime was released in 2007 on the Rough Trade record label Produced by fellow Scottish folk musician John McCusker the album features a few Burns composed songs alongside original material with long time collaborator Boo Hewerdine and the Trash Can Sinatras John Douglas Love Is the Way 2008 2010 edit In spring 2008 Reader was a special guest at the Hotel Cafe Tour hosted by Tom McRae In 2009 she performed in period drama film Me and Orson Welles 13 directed by Richard Linklater and starring Zac Efron Christian McKay and Claire Danes 14 Reader performed re arranged 1930s standards with Jools Holland with whom she had previously collaborated on the single Waiting Game To commemorate the 250th anniversary of Robert Burns birth Reader released The Songs of Robert Burns Deluxe Edition in January 2009 The new release brought together the original Burns album with seven additional songs two from the original 2003 sessions Green Grow the Rashes O Of A the Airts three from 2007 s Peacetime Ye banks and Braes Aye Waukin O and Leezie Lindsay the unreleased Dainty Davie also from that session and a brand new recording Comin Thro the Rye Dram Behind the Curtain The new album was promoted like the original release with two sold out shows at the annual Celtic Connections festival in Glasgow In 2009 Reader released her ninth studio album Love Is the Way which was self produced In a special arrangement with record label Rough Trade she sold an exclusive pre released and minimally packaged version of the disc on her 19 date autumn 2008 UK tour 15 Vagabond and recent work 2010 present edit In early 2010 Reader appeared on the Irish language album Ceol 10 Suil Siar singing an Irish language version of the Fairground Attraction song Perfect called Foirfe In December she released a live album on her own label and sold exclusively via her online store Live in Japan Recorded from the sound desk at her Japan shows in September 2009 it was mastered and mixed by Mark Freegard who had worked on the Reader s ninth solo studio album Love Is the Way Personal life editIn 2013 Reader married John Douglas a songwriter and member of Trashcan Sinatras alongside her brother Frank Political views edit No decent English human being can fail to see how this union is flawed from the English side There is a distinct difference between walking side by side arm in arm Or being as ignored as the lint in the back pocket of English psyche I saw it heard it watched it experienced it Eddi Reader 25 February 2013 16 Reader has been an advocate for the Yes Scotland movement campaigning for a Yes vote in the referendum for Scottish independence from the United Kingdom 17 Her 2013 appearance on the British TV programme Question Time was publicly criticised 18 with one viewer threatening on Twitter to cut her tongue out 19 Reader has said she is an egalitarian who believes in the autonomy of small nations it s unconscionable that those who call people nationalists for wanting their country to manage its own wealth do not recognise the nationalistic choice of supporting a BRITISH nation Reader said that in reprisal for her advocacy for Scottish independence Lord Steel of Aikwood said in a debate on Scottish independence in the House of Lords that Reader s work on Robert Burns was murdering Burns simple melodies Reader also said that the newspaper The Scotsman in reprisal for Reader choosing to advocate a Yes vote had published a story mischaracterising her political views and misrepresenting her great uncle as a Nazi and leader in the Irish Republican Army IRA 20 stating there s people out there in Scotland especially in the Press and especially at The Scotsman which is a very wrong name for that paper because they don t believe in Scotland at all they believe in London management who believe that Scots do not deserve the vote I don t want to be in that team 21 She issued a formal appeal to the Press Complaints Commission PCC saying that The article was trying to portray ALL people wanting to have Scots running Scotland and independence voters as having links with the early Fascists The journalist scrapped around and tried to attach my great uncle who supported independence to a Nazi group and a terrorist organisation creating hateful responses and threats to my family 22 The PCC ruled in May 2013 that the image in the story accompanied by the headline Klan Alba did not breach the Editor s Code of Practice 22 Reader is writing a book for publication about her great uncle Seamus or James Reader based on his extensive diaries 23 He was head of the Scottish Brigade of the Irish Republican Brotherhood IRB when the Irish War of Independence broke out in 1919 later becoming a founder of the abortive Scottish Republican Army which attempted to replicate the Irish struggle in Scotland between the wars 21 On Facebook she posted that he was in command of 4 000 Scots involved in the Irish Rising build up and the Irish war against The British state In telling the story I felt my ancestor was passing the baton to me to tell the truthful story of this time 20 Awards editThe Robert Burns project saw Reader awarded an MBE for outstanding contributions to the arts in the New Year s honours list of 2006 24 In May 2007 she was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Strathclyde 25 Later that year she was recognised for her contributions to music and to the education and encouragement of young musicians with an honorary doctorate and a Doctor of Letters from Glasgow Caledonian University 26 In June 2008 she received another doctorate for her musical work this time from the University of Stirling 27 and in 2013 she received an honorary doctor of music award from the University of Edinburgh 28 Year Awards Work Category Result 1989 Brit Awards Perfect Best British Single Won The First of a Million Kisses Best British Album Won 1995 Ivor Novello Awards Patience of Angels Best Song Musically amp Lyrically Nominated Ivor Novello Awards Dear John Best Song Musically amp Lyrically Nominated Brit Awards Herself Best British Female Won 1997 Nominated 2016 Boisdale Music Awards Great Scot Music Award 29 WonDiscography editAlbums edit List of albums with selected chart positions and certifications Title Details Peak chart positions Certifications UK 30 Mirmama Released 12 October 1992 Label RCA 34 Eddi Reader Released 20 June 1994 Label Blanco y Negro 4 BPI Gold 31 Candyfloss and Medicine Released 8 July 1996 Label Blanco y Negro 24 Angels amp Electricity Released 11 May 1998 Label Blanco y Negro 49 Simple Soul Released 9 January 2001 Label Rough Trade 92 Driftwood Released 8 October 2001 Label Rough Trade Sings the Songs of Robert Burns Released 12 May 2003 Label Rough Trade 86 BPI Silver 31 Peacetime Released 29 January 2007 Label Rough Trade 93 Love Is the Way Released 13 April 2009 Label Rough Trade 109 Vagabond Released 13 April 2009 Label Reveal 93 Cavalier Released 28 September 2018 Label Reveal Light Is in the Horizon Released 1 April 2022 Label Vertical Singles edit Title Year Peak chart positions Album UK 30 All or Nothing 1991 Mirmama What You Do with What You ve Got 1992 Patience of Angels 1994 33 Eddi Reader Joke I m Laughing 42 Dear John 48 Nobody Lives Without Love 1995 84 Batman Forever Town Without Pity 1996 26 Candyfloss and Medicine Medicine 100 Waiting Game with Jools Holland Sex amp Jazz amp Rock amp Roll Prayer Wheel 1998 Angels amp Electricity Fragile Thing with Big Country 1999 69 Driving to Damascus Usual Things with Little Tempo amp Linton Kwesi Johnson Non album single The Girl Who Fell in Love with the Moon 2001 Simple Soul Prodigal Daughter Simple Soul Holiday 2002 Driftwood May You Never with David Knopfler Wishbones Auld Lang Syne Wild Mountainside 2003 Sings the Songs of Robert Burns My Love Is Like a Red Red Rose Jamie Come Try Me Muddy Water 2007 Peacetime Roses 2009 Love Is the Way Dragonflies Baby s Boat 2013 Vagabond Back the Dogs Dancing Down Rock 2014 Starlight 2018 Cavalier denotes an album that did not chart or was not released in that territory Live albums edit Eddi Reader Live 2001 Eddi Reader Live Edinburgh 2003 Eddi Reader Live Newcastle 2003 Eddi Reader Live Leeds 2003 Eddi Reader Live London 2003 St Clare s Night Out Live at The Basement 2006 Port Fairy Folk Festival 2008 Live in Japan 2010 Fairground Attraction edit The First of a Million Kisses 1988 Ay Fond Kiss 1990 Kawasaki Live in Japan 02 07 89 2003 The Very Best of Fairground Attraction 2004 Film soundtracks edit Batman Forever Music from the Motion Picture 1995 Nobody Lives Without Love 32 Bed of Roses 1996 The Right Place 33 Love amp Sex 2000 Honeychild 34 My First Mister 2001 Bell Book and Candle 1999 35 Collections edit The Blanco y Negro Years 2015 The Best of Eddi Reader 2016 References edit Eddi Reader biography up to 2000 Archived from the original on 5 November 2009 Retrieved 28 August 2009 O Rourke Lynn 1 April 2007 Q amp A with Eddi Reader The Scotsman Retrieved 18 April 2009 Football was quite unsuitable for women or so they said STV News 3 December 2021 Retrieved 3 December 2021 a b My Schooldays Eddie Reader The Scotsman 22 May 2002 Sings the songs of Robert Burns PDF 12 May 2003 Archived from the original PDF on 19 November 2008 Retrieved 18 April 2009 Eddi Reader at NME NME Archived from the original on 21 November 2009 a b c d e f g Colin Larkin ed 1997 The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music Concise ed Virgin Books p 999 ISBN 1 85227 745 9 Rock makes a point with No Stilettos HeraldScotland 12 April 1993 Retrieved 21 May 2018 Hodgkinson Will 16 May 2003 Life performers The Guardian Retrieved 4 April 2009 White Bill 3 February 2004 Songs of Robert Burns a magnificent gift from the heart of Scotland Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved 4 April 2009 Building Opens The Scottish Parliament Retrieved 12 May 2014 Biagi Marco 26 November 2013 Eddi Reader chats to The Edinburgh Reporter ahead of Usher Hall concert The Edinburgh Reporter Retrieved 12 May 2014 Filmography by year for Eddi Reader Internet Movie Database Retrieved 18 February 2012 Me and Orson Welles von Eddi Reader bei Myspace Archive today Archived from the original on 2 December 2012 Retrieved 3 October 2019 LOVE IS THE WAY PRE RELEASE EXCLUSIVE FOR UPCOMING TOUR von Eddi Reader bei Myspace Archive today Archived from the original on 5 December 2012 Retrieved 3 October 2019 Eddi Reader Here s To A New Union Between Two New Independent Countries National Collective 25 February 2013 Retrieved 12 May 2014 Small Mike 7 January 2014 Who better to convince Scots to reject independence than English celebrities The Guardian Retrieved 12 May 2014 McCartney Jenny 30 November 2013 Scottish independence There s a kind of magic in our united kingdom The Telegraph Retrieved 12 May 2014 Martin Kate 11 December 2013 Why is the Scottish independence debate dominated by men New Statesman Retrieved 12 May 2014 a b Peterkin Tom 29 September 2013 Eddi Reader reveals great uncle s life as IRA chief The Scotsman Retrieved 12 May 2014 a b Eddi Reader still going for the Burns The Belfast Telegraph 24 January 2014 Retrieved 12 May 2014 a b Musician s anger at newspaper Swastika Revenge smear Newsnet Scotland 3 October 2013 Archived from the original on 7 October 2013 Retrieved 12 May 2014 Roy David 1 February 2020 Eddi Reader on music her spiritual home in Ireland and the last throes of empire The Irish News Retrieved 17 March 2022 Queen honours star studded Scots News bbc co uk 31 December 2005 Retrieved 21 May 2018 University of Strathclyde Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Nicola s degree of success Evening Times 28 November 2007 Retrieved 25 April 2009 Honorary Graduates About University of Stirling University of Stirling Retrieved 21 May 2018 Honorary graduates Those awarded honorary degrees between 1 August 2012 and 31 July 2013 University of Edinburgh Retrieved 28 December 2023 The Boisdale Music Awards 2016 Boisdale co uk Retrieved 11 December 2023 a b Eddi Reader full Official Chart History Official Charts Company Retrieved 4 May 2022 a b British certifications Eddi Reader British Phonographic Industry Retrieved 10 August 2022 TypeEddi Readerin the Search BPI Awards field and then press Enter Soundtracks for Batman Forever 1995 Internet Movie Database Retrieved 18 February 2012 Soundtracks for Bed of Roses 1996 Internet Movie Database Retrieved 18 February 2012 Soundtracks for Love amp Sex 2000 Internet Movie Database Retrieved 18 February 2012 Soundtracks for My First Mister 2001 Internet Movie Database Retrieved 18 February 2012 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eddi Reader Official website Video of 3 tracks from the Auld Lang Syne concert on BBC s Celtic Connections site live performance January 2009 Eddi Reader at AllMusic Eddi Reader discography at Discogs nbsp Eddi Reader at IMDb Eddi Reader at TED nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eddi Reader amp oldid 1212839086, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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