Joan Armatrading
Joan Armatrading's entry onto the U.K. charts in 1976 heralded the arrival of a distinctive artist whose uncompromising attitude would propel her throughout a career of remarkable consistency that has traversed multiple genres from rock to jazz and blues. Initially coming out of the folk-oriented singer/songwriter scene of the early '70s, she enjoyed a period of mainstream success on the back of her Glyn Johns-produced hit "Love and Affection." Reinventing herself in the early '80s as a hard-edged new wave and pop act, she remained a chart staple with rock hits like "My Myself I" and "Drop the Pilot." An increasing self-reliance as a producer, engineer, and multi-instrumentalist eventually led to yet another career resurgence in the 2000s as she delivered albums like 2007's Grammy-nominated Into the Blues and 2021's Consequences out of her home studio. Born in 1950 on the island of St. Kitts in the West Indies, Armatrading moved to England at the age of seven, settling with her family in Birmingham where she taught herself to play a piano that her mother had purchased simply as a piece of furniture. Graduating to a £3 guitar her mother picked up from a local pawn shop, she began writing songs and playing in local bands. In 1970, while working on a production of the musical Hair, she met a lyricist named Pam Nestor and the two formed a short-lived songwriting partnership which yielded the material for Armatrading's 1972 Cube Records debut, Whatever's for Us. Helmed by Elton John's producer Gus Dudgeon and rooted in the folk-oriented singer/songwriter movement, it served to introduce the fledgling singer to the greater public, though it had little to do with the distinctive folk-jazz-rock hybrid that would bring her fame in the middle of the decade. After a period spent disentangling herself from her Cube Records contract, Armatrading signed with A&M to release her 1975 follow-up, Back to the Night, a transitional record that offered glimpses of the higher quality material that was soon to come. A year later, A&M relaunched Armatrading to the public, pairing her with producer Glyn Johns to help shape a more muscular, rock-inspired sound on her eponymous third record. Behind the Top Ten hit "Love and Affection," the album was both a critical and commercial success, going gold in the U.K., breaking her into the mainstream, and marking the first of several career high points. Johns remained on board for both Show Some Emotion (1977) and To the Limit (1978), as Armatrading further established her reputation, adding jazz, disco, and reggae influences into what was still at its core a confessional singer/songwriter style. By decade's end, she was riding a wave of success that was reinforced by a Grammy nomination for her 1979 EP How Cruel. With the release of 1980's highly regarded Me Myself I, Armatrading's music took a stylistic shift toward a more hard-edged rock and new wave sound and subsequently became her best-selling album to date in both the U.K. and U.S. Produced by Steve Lillywhite, the more synth-heavy offerings, Walk Under Ladders (1981) and The Key (1983), were nearly as successful, with the latter supplying another of her best-known songs in "Drop the Pilot" and earning her a second Grammy nomination. Having successfully transitioned into a reliable mainstream pop artist, A&M compiled Armatrading's first best-of anthology in 1983's Track Record. Having become increasingly self-reliant in the studio, 1985's Secret Secrets would be the last time Armatrading worked with a producer. More of a collaborative affair with the aid of Mike Howlett, the album was embraced by fans, reaching the Top 20 in spite of delivering no hits, and was also notable for its cover, shot by iconic New York photographer Robert Mapplethorpe. For the remainder of her tenure at A&M, Armatrading was a consistent presence, delivering four more albums -- Sleight of Hand (1986), The Shouting Stage (1988), Hearts and Flowers (1990), and Square the Circle -- each of which charted in the U.K. Top 40 and were self-produced at her own home-built Bumpkin Studios. While she continued to employ various mixing engineers and guest musicians (Steve Lillywhite, Phil Palmer, Mark Knopfler, Mick Karn, Dave Mattacks), this trend toward self-sufficiency would continue throughout her career. Having left A&M in 1992, Armatrading had another go as a major-label act, signing with RCA for 1995's What's Inside which, while failing on a commercial level, won her an Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Contemporary Song Collection. While a proper follow-up solo album wouldn't arrive for some time, she spearheaded a 1998 compilation, Lullabies with a Difference, inviting friends like Tina Turner, Mark Knopfler, and Melissa Etheridge to contribute songs to support the charity PACES, which benefitted children with cerebral palsy. Now fully independent and in complete creative control, Armatrading returned in 2003 with Lovers Speak, another career high point that saw her handling not only production and arrangements, but performing all of the instruments except for drums. Captured during the album's tour, Live: All the Way from America, appeared the following year. Moving into yet another ambitious phase, Armatrading embarked on a three-album trilogy of all-original material, with each release stylistically focused on a specific genre of music. Employing the same multi-instrumentalist approach from the Lovers Speak album, she invited her sole guest musician, drummer Miles Bould, to join her at Bumpkin Studio to record 2007's Into the Blues. Putting her own distinctive stamp on electric blues music, Armatrading managed to debut at number one on Billboard's Blues Chart, earning yet another Grammy nomination and flashing some sterling guitar work in the process. The success of Into the Blues reignited interest in her back catalog as well, and she made television appearances on Live from Abbey Road and Later… With Jools Holland, performing both new and old material. The second themed album, This Charming Life, was geared toward rock, and while not quite as successful as her blues outing, was another quality release. Her jazz entry, Starlight, closed out the trilogy in 2012. Beginning in 2014, Armatrading set out on a major solo world tour which she billed not as a farewell to performing, but as her last extensive tour. It was documented on the 2016 DVD and album Me Myself I World Tour. That same year, she composed a set of songs for an all-female production of William Shakespeare's The Tempest, which was released as The Tempest Songs. With 2018's Not Too Far Away, she returned to the major-label system, signing with BMG and releasing her first unthemed studio album since Lovers Speak. Similar to her late-period releases, it was self-produced, self-recorded, and performed entirely by herself. Her second LP for BMG, 2021's Consequences, was a collection of songs about love and relationships, most celebratory and some acknowledging the difficulties of staying together.© Timothy Monger /TiVo Read more
Joan Armatrading's entry onto the U.K. charts in 1976 heralded the arrival of a distinctive artist whose uncompromising attitude would propel her throughout a career of remarkable consistency that has traversed multiple genres from rock to jazz and blues. Initially coming out of the folk-oriented singer/songwriter scene of the early '70s, she enjoyed a period of mainstream success on the back of her Glyn Johns-produced hit "Love and Affection." Reinventing herself in the early '80s as a hard-edged new wave and pop act, she remained a chart staple with rock hits like "My Myself I" and "Drop the Pilot." An increasing self-reliance as a producer, engineer, and multi-instrumentalist eventually led to yet another career resurgence in the 2000s as she delivered albums like 2007's Grammy-nominated Into the Blues and 2021's Consequences out of her home studio.
Born in 1950 on the island of St. Kitts in the West Indies, Armatrading moved to England at the age of seven, settling with her family in Birmingham where she taught herself to play a piano that her mother had purchased simply as a piece of furniture. Graduating to a £3 guitar her mother picked up from a local pawn shop, she began writing songs and playing in local bands. In 1970, while working on a production of the musical Hair, she met a lyricist named Pam Nestor and the two formed a short-lived songwriting partnership which yielded the material for Armatrading's 1972 Cube Records debut, Whatever's for Us. Helmed by Elton John's producer Gus Dudgeon and rooted in the folk-oriented singer/songwriter movement, it served to introduce the fledgling singer to the greater public, though it had little to do with the distinctive folk-jazz-rock hybrid that would bring her fame in the middle of the decade. After a period spent disentangling herself from her Cube Records contract, Armatrading signed with A&M to release her 1975 follow-up, Back to the Night, a transitional record that offered glimpses of the higher quality material that was soon to come. A year later, A&M relaunched Armatrading to the public, pairing her with producer Glyn Johns to help shape a more muscular, rock-inspired sound on her eponymous third record. Behind the Top Ten hit "Love and Affection," the album was both a critical and commercial success, going gold in the U.K., breaking her into the mainstream, and marking the first of several career high points. Johns remained on board for both Show Some Emotion (1977) and To the Limit (1978), as Armatrading further established her reputation, adding jazz, disco, and reggae influences into what was still at its core a confessional singer/songwriter style. By decade's end, she was riding a wave of success that was reinforced by a Grammy nomination for her 1979 EP How Cruel.
With the release of 1980's highly regarded Me Myself I, Armatrading's music took a stylistic shift toward a more hard-edged rock and new wave sound and subsequently became her best-selling album to date in both the U.K. and U.S. Produced by Steve Lillywhite, the more synth-heavy offerings, Walk Under Ladders (1981) and The Key (1983), were nearly as successful, with the latter supplying another of her best-known songs in "Drop the Pilot" and earning her a second Grammy nomination. Having successfully transitioned into a reliable mainstream pop artist, A&M compiled Armatrading's first best-of anthology in 1983's Track Record. Having become increasingly self-reliant in the studio, 1985's Secret Secrets would be the last time Armatrading worked with a producer. More of a collaborative affair with the aid of Mike Howlett, the album was embraced by fans, reaching the Top 20 in spite of delivering no hits, and was also notable for its cover, shot by iconic New York photographer Robert Mapplethorpe. For the remainder of her tenure at A&M, Armatrading was a consistent presence, delivering four more albums -- Sleight of Hand (1986), The Shouting Stage (1988), Hearts and Flowers (1990), and Square the Circle -- each of which charted in the U.K. Top 40 and were self-produced at her own home-built Bumpkin Studios. While she continued to employ various mixing engineers and guest musicians (Steve Lillywhite, Phil Palmer, Mark Knopfler, Mick Karn, Dave Mattacks), this trend toward self-sufficiency would continue throughout her career. Having left A&M in 1992, Armatrading had another go as a major-label act, signing with RCA for 1995's What's Inside which, while failing on a commercial level, won her an Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Contemporary Song Collection. While a proper follow-up solo album wouldn't arrive for some time, she spearheaded a 1998 compilation, Lullabies with a Difference, inviting friends like Tina Turner, Mark Knopfler, and Melissa Etheridge to contribute songs to support the charity PACES, which benefitted children with cerebral palsy.
Now fully independent and in complete creative control, Armatrading returned in 2003 with Lovers Speak, another career high point that saw her handling not only production and arrangements, but performing all of the instruments except for drums. Captured during the album's tour, Live: All the Way from America, appeared the following year. Moving into yet another ambitious phase, Armatrading embarked on a three-album trilogy of all-original material, with each release stylistically focused on a specific genre of music. Employing the same multi-instrumentalist approach from the Lovers Speak album, she invited her sole guest musician, drummer Miles Bould, to join her at Bumpkin Studio to record 2007's Into the Blues. Putting her own distinctive stamp on electric blues music, Armatrading managed to debut at number one on Billboard's Blues Chart, earning yet another Grammy nomination and flashing some sterling guitar work in the process. The success of Into the Blues reignited interest in her back catalog as well, and she made television appearances on Live from Abbey Road and Later… With Jools Holland, performing both new and old material. The second themed album, This Charming Life, was geared toward rock, and while not quite as successful as her blues outing, was another quality release. Her jazz entry, Starlight, closed out the trilogy in 2012.
Beginning in 2014, Armatrading set out on a major solo world tour which she billed not as a farewell to performing, but as her last extensive tour. It was documented on the 2016 DVD and album Me Myself I World Tour. That same year, she composed a set of songs for an all-female production of William Shakespeare's The Tempest, which was released as The Tempest Songs. With 2018's Not Too Far Away, she returned to the major-label system, signing with BMG and releasing her first unthemed studio album since Lovers Speak. Similar to her late-period releases, it was self-produced, self-recorded, and performed entirely by herself. Her second LP for BMG, 2021's Consequences, was a collection of songs about love and relationships, most celebratory and some acknowledging the difficulties of staying together.
© Timothy Monger /TiVo
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Love And Affection: Joan Armatrading Classics (1975-1983)
Joan Armatrading
Pop - Released by A&M on 1 Apr 2003
Gold is a solid, top to bottom look at Joan Armatrading's ambitious, iconoclastic if often under-noticed career between the years 1975 and 1983. The t ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Love And Affection: The Essential Joan Armatrading
Joan Armatrading
Blues - Released by UMC (Universal Music Catalogue) on 31 Mar 2017
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Show Some Emotion
Joan Armatrading
Pop - Released by A&M on 1 Oct 1977
Retaining producer Glyn Johns and some of the same session players from her last record, Show Some Emotion repeated that album's chart success and inc ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
To The Limit
Joan Armatrading
Folk - Released by A&M on 1 Jan 1978
To the Limit is a more fitting follow-up to the self-titled Joan Armatrading, as it returns to that album's catchy melodies and fully fleshed-out arra ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Square The Circle
Joan Armatrading
Pop - Released by A&M on 1 Jan 1992
Joan Armatrading, who has spent the better part of her career demanding greater commitment and fidelity from men than they seem willing to give her, t ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
How Cruel (EP)
Joan Armatrading
Folk - Released by A&M on 1 Nov 1979
How Cruel is a four-song, one-sided, 12-inch EP released, according to the blurb on the cover, because the tunes were "so good they couldn't wait for ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Live: All the Way from America
Joan Armatrading
Rock - Released by BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited on 13 Jul 2004
Joan Armatrading's Live: All the Way from America was recorded on June 25, 2003, in Saratoga, CA. This date features Armatrading on guitars; Gary Foot ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
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Track Record
Joan Armatrading
Pop - Released by A&M on 1 Jan 1983
Track Record was A&M's initial attempt to present Joan Armatrading's best music on a single disc. The label has since released several more compilatio ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Natural Rhythm (Single Mix)
Joan Armatrading
Rock - Released by BMG Rights Management (UK) Ltd on 23 Jul 2021
24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Lovers Speak
Joan Armatrading
Rock - Released by BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited on 25 Mar 2003
When an artist releases something as profoundly moving as Lovers Speak, critical acumen doesn't mean a damned thing. Joan Armatrading's first album pr ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Joan Armatrading
Joan Armatrading
Pop - Released by A&M on 1 Sep 1976
Joan Armatrading's eponymous third album is a charmer, almost single-handedly elevating her into the ranks of rock's leading female artists. Up to thi ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Me Myself I
Joan Armatrading
Pop - Released by EMI on 1 May 1980
On the trio of albums that made her reputation in 1976-1978, Joan Armatrading, Show Some Emotion, and To the Limit, Armatrading relied on the pristine ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Live at the Royal Albert Hall (Live at the Royal Albert Hall)
Joan Armatrading
Rock - Released by BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited on 26 Nov 2010
Joan Armatrading's 2010 album, This Charming Life, was a critical triumph, as the mercurial singer/songwriter dove head on into rock & roll territory. ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Willow:The Joan Armatrading Collection
Joan Armatrading
Pop - Released by UMC (Universal Music Catalogue) on 1 Jan 2007
Willow: The Joan Armatrading Collection, simply put, isn't what it could be. There is no reason a double-disc collection of Joan Armatrading's work sh ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Into the Blues
Joan Armatrading
Blues - Released by BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited on 13 Apr 2007
Recording Into the Blues, writes Joan Armatrading on the back sleeve of her first-ever blues album, "has given me so much pleasure," and that pleasure ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Me Myself I (Digitally Remastered)
Joan Armatrading
Pop - Released by UMC (Universal Music Catalogue) on 1 May 1980
On the trio of albums that made her reputation in 1976-1978, Joan Armatrading, Show Some Emotion, and To the Limit, Armatrading relied on the pristine ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Me Myself I: World Tour Concert (Live)
Joan Armatrading
Rock - Released by BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited on 11 Nov 2016
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Starlight
Joan Armatrading
Rock - Released by BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited on 25 May 2012
Soulful English singer/songwriter Joan Armatrading spent her last two outings, 2007's rootsy, Grammy Award-nominated Into the Blues and 2010's propuls ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Lonely Lady
Joan Armatrading
Pop - Released by Fly Records on 1 Jun 1973
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Tempest Songs
Joan Armatrading
Rock - Released by BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited on 28 Oct 2016
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo