Neil Hannon

Singer-songwriter

Birthday November 7, 1970

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Derry, Northern Ireland

Age 53 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#32422 Most Popular

1930

Hannon composed the music for a stage adaptation of Arthur Ransome's novel Swallows and Amazons (1930), which premiered in December 2010 at the Bristol Old Vic, with book and lyrics by Helen Edmundson.

1970

Edward Neil Anthony Hannon (born 7 November 1970) is a singer and songwriter from Northern Ireland.

1980

In the late 1980s he developed a fondness of the electric guitar, becoming an "indie kid".

1982

He spent some of his youth in Fivemiletown before moving with his family to Enniskillen, in County Fermanagh, in 1982.

While there, he attended Portora Royal School.

Hannon enjoyed synthesizer-based music as a youngster; he has identified the Human League and Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD) as "the first music that really excited [him]".

1989

He is the founder and frontman of the chamber pop group the Divine Comedy, and is the band's only constant member since its inception in 1989.

Hannon wrote the theme tunes for the television sitcoms Father Ted and The IT Crowd, as well as the original songs for the musical film Wonka (2023).

Hannon was born in Derry, Northern Ireland, the son of Brian Hannon, a Church of Ireland minister in the Diocese of Derry and Raphoe and later Bishop of Clogher.

1990

Hannon is founder and mainstay of the Divine Comedy, a band which achieved their biggest commercial success in the mid- to late-1990s with the albums Casanova (1996), A Short Album About Love (1997), and Fin de Siècle (1998).

2000

In 2000, he and Joby Talbot contributed four tracks to Ute Lemper's collaboration album, Punishing Kiss.

Hannon composed the theme music for the sitcoms Father Ted and The IT Crowd, the former theme composed for the show and later reworked into "Songs of Love", a track on the Divine Comedy's breakthrough album Casanova.

Both shows were created or co-created by Graham Linehan.

For the Father Ted episode, "A Song for Europe", Hannon co-wrote and sang "My Lovely Horse", the song Ted and Dougal enter in Eurosong (a parody of the Eurovision Song Contest).

For the same episode, Hannon wrote "The Miracle Is Mine", the 'typical' Eurovision ballad sung by Ted's nemesis, Father Dick Byrne.

A dream sequence in the episode shows Ted and Dougal in the song's pop video, with Hannon providing vocals.

Hannon also wrote and performed "My Lovely Mayo Mammy", sung by Eoin McLove in the episode "Night of the Nearly Dead", and wrote "Big Men in Frocks", sung by Niamh Connolly (played by Clare Grogan) in "Rock-a-Hula Ted".

When a raffle is held in order to raise funds to repair the roof of the parochial house, the Kraftwerk-esque quartet of priests enlisted to perform play an electronic piece of music composed and performed by him.

Both of the advertisements for telephone numbers; in The IT Crowd (the new emergency number) and Father Ted (Priest Chatback) have jingles composed by Hannon.

In the episode "A Christmassy Ted", his name is mentioned by Mrs Doyle while she attempts to guess that of the mysterious guest.

2004

In 2004, Hannon performed alongside the Ulster Orchestra for the opening event of the Belfast Festival at Queen's.

2005

In 2005, he contributed vocals to Talbot's soundtrack for the movie version of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

2006

In 2006, it was announced that Hannon was to lend vocals to the Doctor Who soundtrack CD release, recording two songs – "Love Don't Roam", for the 2006 Christmas special "The Runaway Bride"; and a new version of "Song for Ten", which originally appeared in 2005's "The Christmas Invasion".

This song had been originally written for and sung by Charlotte Gainsbourg on her 2006 album 5:55.

2007

On 12 January 2007, The Guardian website's "Media Monkey" diary column reported that Doctor Who fans from the discussion forum on the fan website Outpost Gallifrey were attempting to organise mass downloads of the Hannon-sung "Love Don't Roam", which was available as a single release in the UK iTunes Store.

This was in order to attempt to exploit the new UK Singles Chart download rules, and get the song featured in the Top 40 releases.

The same year, Hannon sang and wrote the lyrics for the song "Somewhere Between Waking and Sleeping" on the Air album Pocket Symphony, released in the United States on 6 March 2007.

Though it was not included on its 2006 European release, it was added as a bonus track to its American release on 24 April 2007.

Hannon won the 2007 Choice Music Prize for his 2006 album, Victory for the Comic Muse.

It was announced the following day that he had left EMI by 'mutual consent'.

When the band Keane played at the O2 Arena in London that July, "A Bad Dream" was introduced by Hannon, who read the poem "An Irish Airman Foresees His Death" by W. B. Yeats, upon which the song is based.

2009

In 2009, Hannon collaborated with Thomas Walsh from the Irish band Pugwash to create a cricket-themed pop album, under the name the Duckworth Lewis Method.

The first single, "The Age of Revolution", was released in June 2009, and was followed by an eponymous full-length album the week after.

2010

A new Divine Comedy album, Bang Goes the Knighthood, was released in May 2010.

2012

On 20 April 2012, Hannon's first opera commission, Sevastopol, was performed by the Royal Opera House in London.

The piece was part of a program called OperaShots, which invites musicians not typically working within the opera medium to create an opera, and was based upon Leo Tolstoy's Sevastopol Sketches.

2013

The group's second album, Sticky Wickets, came out in 2013.

Hannon's second opera for which he composed the music, In May (with book by Frank Alva Buecheler and English translations by Tim Clarke), premiered at Lancaster University's Nuffield Theatre in May 2013.

2014

In 2013, Hannon was commissioned by the Southbank Centre to compose a piece for the Royal Festival Hall's refurbished organ: To Our Fathers in Distress, "a kind of oratorio" for chorus, strings and organ, premiered at the Hall in London on 22 March 2014, as part of the Pull Out All the Stop Festival, and was inspired by Hannon's father, the Rt Rev Brian Hannon, who had suffered from Alzheimer's disease before his death in 2022.

2019

Hannon continues to release albums under the Divine Comedy name, the most recent being Office Politics (2019).