10/1/23
"NOTHING LEFT TO LOSE", EVERYTHING BUT THE GIRL 2023
26/12/22
EVERYTHING BUT THE GIRL: ¿DE DÓNDE VIENE SU NOMBRE? / Where does their name come from?
Cuando Tracey Thorn y Ben Watt, Everything But The Girl, han anunciado recientemente su regreso con un nuevo disco en 2023, os descubrimos de dónde viene su curioso nombre. Ambos se conocieron estudiando en la universidad de (Kingston upon) Hull, allí empezaron a cantar juntos y el nombre viene de un eslogan publicitario de una tienda de muebles Turner's de esa ciudad que decía que montaban todo tu dormitorio, excepto la chica. La tienda estaba situada en Beveryley Road, pero ahora alberga la Cámara de Comercio de la ciudad. Mientras tanto, esperamos su nueva música...
When Tracey Thorn & Ben Watt, Everything But The Girl, have recently announced their comeback with a new record in 2023, we tell you where their curious name comes from. They both meet as students at (Kingston upon) Hull's university, where they started to sing together. The band's curious name comes from an advertisement slogan of Turner's furniture shop in that city which said they'd set up all your bedroom with everything, but the girl. The shop was situated on Beverley road, but it now houses the city's Chamber of Commerce. Meanwhile, waiting for their new music...
1/3/18
TRACEY THORN'S "SISTER", VIDEO
18/1/18
EL REGRESO DE TRACEY THORN's comeback: "RECORD" & "QUEEN"
6/12/16
BEN WATT, 54
21/2/16
GRANDES VOCES / Big voices
Tracey Thorn está a punto de editar un libro, cuya portada veis, pero hoy publica un artículo en la prensa británica sobre las grandes voces femeninas. Enlaces más abajo.
8/9/15
TRACEY THORN: "SOLO"
Hi everyone - right, let me see if I can get this right this time - *clears throat* - I am very happy to announce the forthcoming release of a new compilation called Solo: Songs and Collaborations 1982 - 2015, out on October 23rd. As you might expect from the title, it’s a gathering together of tracks which represent on one hand the moments when I was working as an individual, outside the constraints and democracy of a band, and on the other hand, those times when I guested with other bands or producers, performing as a featured solo singer, moonlighting from my regular job. The album gives a snapshot of my career, and vividly highlights the contrast between the introspective, acoustic songs, and the more outgoing, electronic music which saw me soundtracking nights on the dancefloor. The Bedsit side of me sitting happily alongside the Disco Queen. I’ve worn both those hats, and though some of you may prefer one over the other, personally I love them both and never want to throw either away. It’s the combination of those two elements - warmth with chill, softness with steel - which works for me, and I hope for you too. Love, Tracey x
25/1/15
CYNDI LAUPER'S "TIME AFTER TIME" @ EVERYTHING BUT THE GIRL STYLE
10/12/12
VIDEO TRACEY THORN'S "JOY"
1/12/12
TRACEY THORN: THE MAKING OF "TINSEL & LIGHTS"
9/10/12
TRACEY THORN, "IN THE COLD NIGHT" AVANCE / Preview
3/8/12
"TINSEL & LIGHT": EL DISCO NAVIDEÑO DE TRACEY THORN's Christmas album
By Evan Minsker on August 2, 2012 @ Pitchfork.com
“I've always wanted to make a Christmas record. Every year, when the Christmas albums start appearing in November, I get jealous and wish I had one coming out. Last year, I made a resolution to get recording in January to be ready for the following Christmas. And so that's just what I did. They're not all strictly Christmas songs, but if they mentioned winter or snow or even just being cold, that was good enough for me.”
02 Hard Candy Christmas [Dolly Parton cover]
03 Like a Snowman [written by Stephin Merritt]
04 Maybe This Christmas [Ron Sexsmith cover]
05 In the Cold, Cold Night [White Stipes cover]
06 Snow [written by Randy Newman]
07 Snow in Sun [written by Green Gartside of Scritti Politti]
08 Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas
09 Tinsel and Lights [written by Tracey Thorn]
10 River [Joni Mitchell cover]
11 Taking Down the Tree [ft. Green Gartside] [Low cover]
12 Sister Winter [Sufjan Stevens cover]
13 25th December [Everything But the Girl] (U.S. LP bonus track)
24/10/11
TRACEY THORN: NOCTURNO / Night time

7/12/10
TRACEY THORN, "WITHOUT ME": NUEVA COLABORACIÓN / New collaboration


2/6/10
TRACEY THORN & BEN WATT: ENTREVISTADOS POR "THE GUARDIAN" / Interviewed for "The Guardian"

Con la edición del tercer disco de Tracey Thorn en solitario, el ahora matrimonio de Tracey y Ben Watt conceden una entrevista al periódico inglés "The Guardian" en el que repasan su vida personal y profesional en conjunto. La incluimos al completo en inglés.
With the release of Tracey Thorn's third solo-album, the now married-couple of Tracey & Ben Watt give an interview to British newspaper "The Guardian", where they check on their personal and professional life together. We enclose it completely here.
TRACEY THORN & BEN WATT: EVERYTHING BUT THE GRIEF.
[The Guardian - Dorian Lynskey 26/05/2010]
If all you knew of Tracey Thorn was her music, you might think she had spent the last 30 years being squeezed through the emotional wringer. Her voice is an instrument of exquisite dolour, and her acutely observed songs dwell on relationships in their terminal phase, or in the scorched aftermath. On Everything But the Girl's 1995 hit Missing, she sang of haunting a former lover's old address, missing him "like the deserts miss the rain".
And now here she is with her third solo album, Love and Its Opposite, bearing such wrenching vignettes as Oh, the Divorces! and Singles Bar. You have to remind yourself that Thorn is half of one of the most enduring relationships in pop, with her erstwhile bandmate, now husband, Ben Watt.
"It's a parallel fantasy life, in a way," she says, over tea in a north London cafe. "Perhaps because my life has gone through phases of being quite settled, and that's not very rich subject matter, you channel other people's stories. But in a sense you can imagine yourself being there anyway. People are always only an inch away from what might have happened."
Across the table, Watt nods. His independent label, Strange Feeling, is releasing Love and Its Opposite, though the pair haven't worked together as Everything But the Girl since 1999's Temperamental album.
They were a couple before they were a band. Back in 1981, they were signed as solo artists to the indie label Cherry Red (Thorn was also a member of a trio, the Marine Girls) but had never met. When Watt attended Hull University, he heard that Thorn would be there, too, and requested a Tannoy announcement in the student bar on the first night: "Could Tracey Thorn of the Marine Girls please come up to reception now." It was one of those fateful "inches" that Thorn talks about, and here they are, still together at 47.
"I think people have an idealised sense of our life," says Thorn. "Because we've lived and worked together for so many years they think we're skipping hand-in-hand through a hedgerow. I just think, Christ, surely you can imagine that on a day-to-day level it might be a bit fraught?" Her reticent body language – she has the kind of fringe you can hide behind – belies a quick, dry wit that has made her one of the most entertaining musicians on Twitter (as is Watt, who tweets under the name of his dance label, Buzzin' Fly). The couple share not just a sense of humour, but a relaxed frankness. "To be honest, it was never easy," says Watt. "When you throw kids and family into it something has to give. You can't keep all that going at the same time. You'd go mad."
Thorn had twin daughters in 1998 (a son followed three years later) and the couple took them along on the Temperamental tour, their last. "That tour was just weird," says Thorn. "I was putting the kids to bed at the hotel then racing off to soundcheck and I remember thinking, I don't like doing both. I feel like I'm being rubbish at both. So I took a unilateral decision to stop."
For several years, Thorn was a full-time parent, not even jotting down lyrics in her notebook. She was in "a mental mush, and quite happily so. Perhaps it was a relief after years of trying to write detached, considered, intelligent analyses of people's relationships." But she came to miss singing. She wrote a memoir, which reminded her why she had started making music, though it will never see the light of day. "It's not a book because I never came up with a story. It's just like," she slips into a pub-bore drone, "this happened and then this happened . It's just a list of events of marginal interest. . . "
The memoir did at least spur Thorn on to record her first solo album in 25 years, 2007's well-received Out of the Woods – but anyone hoping to hear the new material performed live is in for a long wait. "For a few years I would say I wasn't touring because of the kids. Sometimes people would say, 'Well, you could get a nanny.' And I was like, 'Why did no one tell me there were these things called nannies?' I could be touring, obviously. I just don't want to. It's good fun when you're younger but [now] I would just be lonely and miserable." Are the duo not tempted to join the lucrative high-end nostalgia circuit and perform a classic album — their 1984 debut, Eden, for instance, or 1996's electronic rebirth, Walking Wounded — from beginning to end? "That's terribly offputting," she shudders. "I don't even want to go to those gigs, let alone perform them. I don't understand endlessly recycling the past."
Everything But the Girl were one of a wave of bands who emerged from the post-punk diaspora and found themselves in the shiny new world of 1980s pop. Their music suffered, as did their morale. "The pressures were so stupid and so uncomfortable for people of our generation," says Thorn. "We're regarded as an 80s group but many of our ideals were very 70s – good old-fashioned lefties with a do-it-yourself ethos. And suddenly the pop principles of the 80s were foisted on everyone. It seemed to me that the generation that came after us were much more frivolous."
"It was all Radio 1 A-list and MTV," Watt adds with a grimace. "I would say that period derailed many great bands: Aztec Camera, Prefab Sprout, Scritti Politti, Orange Juice. All of them battled the same thing."
Italy, they say, was the worst, because you always had to mime on TV. "Nothing could be more designed to make you feel like what you were doing was fatuous and unfulfilling," says Thorn. "You feel like a prat." Once, Watt remembers, they were pursued through Florence by fans who had mistaken them for jazz-pop fops Matt Bianco. "We were running down the street and I was shouting over my shoulder, 'We are not fucking Matt Bianco!'"
By the early 90s, the band were in a rut and bored. "I remember looking at Tracey some nights at these pin-drop-silent gigs, just thinking, I wish someone would go, 'Fuck off!'" says Watt. They were jolted by a seismic upheaval: Watt's near-fatal struggle with a rare auto-immune disease, Churg-Strauss syndrome, which he documented in his 1996 memoir, Patient. "How you change without an extreme event intervening is tricky," says Thorn. "It forced a break and sent you a bit nutty for a year." She regards Watt fondly. "In a good way. Positively nutty."
Following Watt's full recovery, the duo took a new electronic direction. Massive Attack asked Thorn to guest on their Protection album, while New York DJ Todd Terry turned Missing from a wee-hours ballad into a global dancefloor smash. Walking Wounded, a masterpiece of dance-savvy melancholia, became their biggest-selling album, leading to Watt's current career as a DJ, promoter and label boss. "The dancefloor never lies; there's a meritocracy. I love the dance scene for those qualities."
Watt's father was jazz bandleader Tommy Watt, so he understands the ambivalent relationship his own children have with their parents' music. "You have to let your kids come to you and take what they want," he says. "It's almost deliberate the extent to which they blank it out," says Thorn, "because it isn't what they want their mum to be." There's a wonderfully moving song on the new album – which is sparser and less electronic than Out of The Woods and the last two Everything But The Girl records – about parenthood and growing older, called Hormones: "Yours are just kicking in, mine are just checking out." "They have listened to it," says Thorn, "but whether they've paid any attention to what it's about I have no idea."
Another new song, the gentle, country-flavoured Long White Dress, was written a while back, but has come back to haunt Thirn because it's about fear of marriage; she and Watt tied the knot last year at Chelsea register office. "Now everybody's throwing it at me: explain yourself, woman! I can't really explain myself. It's all a bit irrational, to be honest."
Why did they marry after 28 years? The question seems to ruffle their natural sense of privacy and they respond with a joke. "It was largely our accountant's idea," says Watt. "We call him Cupid."
"I think we misunderstood him and didn't have to be married at all," says Thorn. She shoots her husband another fond glance. "We should get divorced, shouldn't we?"
20/5/10
"LOVE & ITS OPPOSITE", LO NUEVO DE TRACEY THORN / Tracey Thorn's new album [ACTUALIZADO/Updated]

http://www.strangefeelingrecords.com/ecards/loveanditsopposite_order.html
2 Long White Dress (Vestido blanco largo)
3 Hormones (Hormonas)
4 Kentish Town (Pueblo de Kent)
5 Why Does the Wind? (¿Por qué el viento?)
6 You Are a Lover (Eres un amante)
7 Singles Bar (Bar de solteros)
8 Come on Home to Me (Ven a casa a junto de mi)
9 Late in the Afternoon (A última hora de la tarde)
10 Swimming (Nadando)
Such painfully spare sentiment is echoed in both the lyrics and the pared-down arrangements on Thorn’s latest, on which she’s worked with musicians as disparate as Hot Chip’s Al Doyle, Swedish alt-pop’s Jens Lekman and Nashville singer-songwriter Cortney Tidwell. But the Ewan Pearson-produced, back-to-basics approach does mean those honest lyrics stand out more, and seem even starker. On Singles Bar she asks, “Can you guess my age in this light?” over a simple, swaying twang, before revealing how she “laid on her back for a Hollywood wax”. It might be that it’s simply too honest for some.
But that’s not to say Love and Its Opposite is all over-share. Lee Hazelwood cover Come on Home to Me has swirling atmospherics; there’s a sort of triumphant sweetness to Long White Dress’s acoustic melancholy; 60s handclaps inform the giddier Hormones; and there’s even some bare electro-pop in the pulsing Why Does the Wind. Swimming proves to be the highlight, though, with its provocation to “go on” over a building accompaniment that swirls like the water Thorn’s determined to wade through.
And through it all, there’s That Voice – nobody else sounds like Thorn. When you’re blessed with an instrument this pure, and this suited to melancholy, it’s easy to see how the ex-Marine Girl might be headed for Pop Treasure status. Her enviable clarity of tone and the disarming beauty of her vocals lend Love and Its Opposite a dreamy, if uncomfortable, sort of truth. But blithe, sunny romantics are advised to keep a stiff drink (and a hanky) within very easy reach.
10/7/09
[Gold] EVERYTHING BUT THE GIRL


Audio "I didn't know I was looking for love" ("No sabía que buscaba amor"):
Audio+subtitulos/+subtitles "Missing you" ("Échandote de menos"):
Video "I don't want to talk about it" ("No quiero hablar sobre éso"):
Video "Rollercoaster" ("Montaña rusa"):
9/9/07
TRACEY THORN, DISCO EN SOLITARIO / solo-album

Audio "Here it comes again" ("Aquí viene otra vez"):