John Cunningham

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  • Born: Liverpool, Lancashire, England
  • Years Active: 1990s, 2000s

Albums

Biography All Music Guide Wikipedia

All Music Guide:

Although John Cunningham is British, he lives and works in France. Like his fellow musical expatriate Bill Pritchard (or for that matter, Prefab Sprout or the High Llamas), Cunningham's elegant brand of pop music owes a certain debt to smooth pre-rock classic pop of the Cole Porter school, mixed with a touch of Bacharach, Wilson, McCartney, and Costello. Unlike those artists, however, Cunningham infuses his music with an almost Nick Drake-like acoustic vibe that suits his delicate yet melodic compositions beautifully. (This John Cunningham is, of course, not to be confused with the Scottish fiddle player who was a member of Silly Wizard and other folk groups.)

Born in Liverpool, England, in 1969, Cunningham attended school in the East Sussex town of Brighton, where he quickly fell in with the city's thriving artistic and musical community. After a brief and apparently unsatisfying tenure in the Curtain Twitchers alongside Jane Fox of Marine Girls fame in the mid-'80s, Cunningham decided that a solo career was more suitable for him. A demo cassette landed him at the tiny indie La-Di-Da, which released Cunningham's debut EP, Backwards Steps, in 1989. Produced by ex-Housemartins guitarist Stan Cullimore, Backwards Steps owes rather a lot to that band, and while the EP is entertaining, it's not particularly representative of Cunningham's later work.

Cunningham's first full album, 1991's Shankly Gates, is much more stripped down and intimate than Backwards Steps, with jazzy piano and subtle trumpet and oboe accents. It was rapturously received by the French press, which compared Cunningham to artists like Robert Wyatt and late-period Talk Talk, but as would be the case throughout Cunningham's career, sales did not match the critical reaction. Cunningham's third release, 1994's Bringing in the Blue, is even more refined and elegant, but it continued the trend of ecstatic reviews on the Continent, little notice in Great Britain, and total invisibility in the United States, with sales figures to match.

Cunningham dropped out of sight for nearly five years after Bringing in the Blue, finally reappearing in late 1998 with the sublime Homeless House. By far Cunningham's best work, Homeless House is a sweetly melodic and gentle album with an even more stripped-down sound than his two previous albums, sounding at times like a more upbeat version of Drake's Bryter Layter.

After the release of Homeless House, Cunningham began collaborating with Mehdi Zannad of the French pop group Fugu. Cunningham mixed Fugu's debut, 2000's Fugu1, and Zannad wrote the orchestral arrangements for Cunningham's follow-up to Homeless House.

Wikipedia:

John Cunningham or Jack Cunningham may refer to:

Athletes

John Cunningham (Australian rules footballer) (born 1940), Hawthorn premiership playerJohn Cunningham (Northern Ireland footballer), football coach and former football playerJohn Cunningham (Scottish footballer) (1868–?), Scottish footballerJohn Cunningham (rugby league), rugby league footballer of the 1970s, for England, and BarrowJohn Cunningham (climber) (1927–1980), Scottish mountaineer

Clergy

John Francis Cunningham (1842–1919), Irish-born prelate of the Roman Catholic ChurchJohn Cunningham (bishop) (born 1938), Roman Catholic bishop of Galloway, Scotland

Military

John Cunningham (RAF officer) (1917–2002), Group Captain, RAF Night fighter AceJohn Cunningham (VC 1916) (1897–1941), East Yorkshire RegimentJohn Cunningham (VC 1917) (1890–1917), Prince of Wales's Leinster RegimentJohn Cunningham (Royal Navy officer) (1885–1962), RN, First Sea LordJohn Cunningham, 15th Earl of Glencairn (1749–1796), Scottish nobleman, cavalry officer, and priest

Politicians

Jack Cunningham, Baron Cunningham of Felling (born 1939), UK politicianJohn E. Cunningham (born 1931), U.S. Representative from WashingtonJohn F. Cunningham (died 1954), Irish surgeon and member of the 7th Seanad of IrelandJohn Cunningham (Nova Scotia judge), judge and politician in Nova ScotiaJohn Cunningham (Nova Scotia politician) (1776–1847), farmer, official and politician in Nova Scotia

Writers

John Cunningham (poet and dramatist) (1729–1773), Irish pastoral poet and dramatistJohn Cunningham (journalist), (died 2012), Irish newspaper editorJohn T. Cunningham (born 1915), journalist, writer, historianJohn W. Cunningham (1915–2002), author of Western novels and storiesJack Cunningham (screenwriter) (1882–1941), American screenwriter

Other people

Johnny Cunningham (1957–2003), Scottish folk musicianJohn Cunningham (physician), physician to the Queen of the United KingdomJohn Cunningham (explorer) (c. 1575–1651), Scottish explorer for Denmark