Richard Hawley

Musician

Birthday January 17, 1967

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Pitsmoor, Sheffield, England

Age 57 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#6683 Most Popular

1967

Richard Willis Hawley (born 17 January 1967) is an English singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer.

1990

After his first band Treebound Story (formed while he was still at school) broke up, Hawley found success as a member of Britpop band Longpigs in the 1990s.

2000

After that group broke up in 2000, he joined the band Pulp, led by his friend Jarvis Cocker, for a short time.

As a solo musician, Hawley has released eight studio albums.

He has been nominated for a Mercury prize twice and once for a Brit Award.

He has collaborated with Lisa Marie Presley, Shakespears Sister, Arctic Monkeys, Manic Street Preachers, Elbow, Duane Eddy and Paul Weller.

Born in Sheffield, Hawley grew up with two sisters in a working-class area of the city.

He was born with a cleft palate, which required numerous operations.

Both his parents were musicians; his father Dave Hawley was a guitarist with a number of local bands (on his death, the Sheffield Star called him a "Sheffield music legend"), and his mother Lynne a singer.

They divorced when he was 16 years old.

He is a lifelong supporter of local football club Sheffield Wednesday.

He noted that "I always wrote songs since childhood" and realising that "you could actually make something up of your own was quite a big one then".

He attended Hucklow Middle School together with future Pulp bassist Steve Mackey, and passed his O-levels.

Hawley briefly worked at the local HMV.

While still at school, Hawley formed the Treebound Story and at the age of 19 recorded a Peel Session together with the band.

As a member of the Longpigs, Hawley released two albums, The Sun Is Often Out and Mobile Home.

After the demise of the band, he joined Pulp as a touring guitarist while also working as a session musician.

During his time with both bands he was able to "quietly hone" his songwriting skills, citing that "I was never really very good about bleating on about being a songwriter".

Impressed by a home demo of his songs, both Cocker and Mackey urged Hawley to record the material.

He used some left-over studio time to demo material and to experiment.

Pointing out that "I just wanted to make something gentle for myself – I never expected it to be released".

He recorded a song per day, recording most of the instruments himself "with a boom mike in the middle so I could walk between instruments – I mixed it in my head".

2001

His eponymous debut was a mini-album that featured seven songs and released in April 2001 through Setanta Records.

It was supported by the single "Coming Home".

While Hawley played "90% of the stuff" he was assisted by former Longpigs drummer Andy Cook and Colin Elliot, who became his long-term producer.

Hawley later commented that "I think with anybody's early stuff you can batter it and take things apart. [With] doing those early records I was trying to get back to a way of being creative with recording rather than taking this dogmatic approach to it".

He admitted that he didn't get "it right every time but I got what I wanted to achieve. It was to try and find something in the song. And also, with those early records, there was no money".

Clash Magazine described it as "a rather brief burst of seven mid-paced, ’50s-flecked moments of jangle. Listening back now, it’s easy to spot the early signs of the grandeur that was to come, especially on standout "Sunlight" amongst these tentative 22 and a half minutes".

The cover of the album was shot in front of a bingo hall in Cleethorpes.

In 2001, Late Night Final, named after the cry of vendors selling the Sheffield Star evening newspaper on the streets of the city, was released to positive reviews from the press.

Hawley later explained that prior to going into the sessions "all I'd got was the riff to "Baby, You're My Light" and that the majority of songs were written during the sessions. As an example he cited "The Nights Are Cold" that was done in one take after Cooke asked "look, we've got a gig tonight, are we doing this or what?". Clash magazine called it "a remarkably assured, often truly gorgeous, collection of warmly evocative lullabies" singling out the songs "Baby, You’re My Light" and "The Nights Are Cold" as "mesmerising". The album was produced by Alan Smythe.

Two years later Hawley released Lowedges, named after a suburb of the city.

2003

The NME called Lowedges the "first great album of 2003" and it topped an end-of-the-year poll held by Virgin Radio.

Of the two albums, he later stated that "as those three records progressed you can see the band thing taking over more and more. By the time you get to Lowedges there's less of me playing everything and there's more of the guys. I was determined for it to be very ragged-arsed and not to be really polished and produced".

2004

After leaving Setanta Records in 2004, Hawley signed to Mute Records, a division of EMI.

2005

Legal wrangling delayed Coles Corner, Hawley's third album, until September 2005.

Again, Hawley mined the theme of his home city, this time referencing the location where courting lovers meet.

2006

Coles Corner eventually gained a nomination for the Mercury Prize in 2006.

Alex Turner of the Arctic Monkeys, whose debut album won the prize, exclaimed "Someone call 999, Richard Hawley's been robbed!"

2007

Hawley's 2007 album Lady's Bridge (again named with a Sheffield reference, after a bridge in the centre of the city) was released in the United Kingdom on 20 August 2007.