All About Eve - 'Q' - June 1999
Formed in 1985, All About
Eve rapidly outgrew their Goth-rock beginnings after the acoustic ballad Martha's
Harbour reached Number 10 in 1988. Despite two successive Top 10 albums (1987's All
About Eve and 1988's Scarlet & Other Stories), their melodic folk-rock
never spelled long-term success and the group split in 1993. Where are they now?
asks Claire Pring from Bradford. |
Julianne Regan (vocals): "From the outside, we looked
like a merry band of troubadours but the truth was that the band were very up and
down," admits Regan. "The others would be in one room writing and I'd be
in another, watching Neighbours."
The root of the problem was the power struggle
between her and guitarist and songwriting partner Tim Bricheno, who left in 1990, to be
replaced by Marty Willson-Piper. "After that we had a new lease of life. We
thought we could take on the world. Unfortunately, we couldn't." Acid house had
changed consumer tastes. "At that time if you didn't groove you were dead. One minute
you're at the top table with Freddie Mercury at the Phonogram Christmas do, the next
you're out."
Although picked up by MCA, the band was dropped again
after two albums, 1991's Touched By Jesus and 1992's Ultraviolet. They
split the following year. In 1994 Regan was introduced to a post-Suede Bernard
Butler and the pair wrote an album together. Sadly, four days into recording sessions,
they fell out and the project was cancelled. "We were both control freaks and neither
of us was gonna give in."
Undeterred, Regan formed mice with Tim McTighe (later
in Britpop act Powder) and used All About Eve's Mark Price, Andy Cousin and Marty
Willson-Piper as a studio band. Unfortunately, their record company Permanent went
bankrupt just months after their album Because I Can was released in 1995. "It
was the final kick in the teeth," offers Regan. "After that I'd had enough of
the record industry." Although she's spent the last year working in marketing, Regan
is still writing with a Belgian band called Jules Et Jim. "It's more like the
Pet Shop Boys than All About Eve. We're making an album but at the moment its still a case
of don't give up the day job."
Mark Price (drums): "I was a
pretend Goth," says Price. "When I joined I had very short hair but by the end I
looked like Richard Beckinsale." Now Regan's brother-in-law, he remembers All About
Eve as being "a bit serious", so subsequently enjoyed himself with The Cure and
Right Said Fred ("really cool people") before joining Del Amitri two years ago.
"The Dels are more laddish." says Price, who also worked on the Fever Pitch
soundtrack. "I remember the Eves as a bit miserable."
Tim Bricheno (guitar) : In 1990,
Bricheno joined uber-Goths The Sisters of Mercy, playing on the 1990's Vision Thing album.
He then formed the vaguely industrial CNN, who became XC-NN after protests from the US
news channel. After little success, Bricheno established Tin Star with XC-NN's Dave
Tomlinson. Their debut album, Thrill Kisser, was released on V2 in February.
Marty Willson-Piper (guitar):
Only a part-time member of All About Eve, Piper is now a mainstay of Australian Byrds
devotees The Church, whose 1988 album, Starfish, enjoyed minor success in America. A
post-All About Eve song-writing spell with Regan came to nothing. The Church release their
15th album this year.
Andy Cousin
(bass): "Things
got too big too quick," says Cousin. "We all went crazy and ended up believing
we were in Alice In Wonderland. But All About Eve never really split up, we just drifted
apart. Julianne remains my best friend." Immediately after All About Eve,
Cousin recorded with Marty Willson-Piper and Mark Price under the name Seeing Stars then
joined The Mission, playing on 1995's Neverland album. He recently signed to
Madonna's label Maverick as part of new band The Lucy Nation. "It's a cool vibe
thing. A mixture of song, groove, passion and soul."
©Q June 1999
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