Bryan Ferry: Back in style- -'The Independent' - Sat 12th Aug
Bryan Ferry: Back in style- -'The Independent'
12 August 2006
Bryan Ferry: Back in style
At 60, the enduring 'face' of Roxy Music provides an object lesson in growing old elegantly
By Guy Adams for
'The Independent'
Published: 12 August 2006
Bryan Ferry enjoys playing the role of "coolest living Englishman".
He's even won awards for it. Women swoon at his lounge lizard suits;
they rejoice at his floppy fringe and broad shoulders. At 60, the
enduring "face" of Roxy Music provides an object lesson in the art of
growing old elegantly.
So it goes that Marks & Spencer this week unveiled Ferry as the
star of its autumn advertising campaign. In a series of David Bailey
posters, he will endorse the high-street retailer's upmarket range of
Autograph suits and shirts. That brooding forehead is coming soon to a
billboard near you.
Like most of Ferry's work, the M&S gig will divide public opinion.
To some, it can only underline his status as the epitome of raffish
urban chic. As the press release puts it: "He's a real British style
icon and looks amazing... What man wouldn't want to look as cool as
Bryan Ferry."
Others aren't so sure. For Ferry's critics, his commercial relationship
with M&S is about as rock'n'roll as the socks and Y-fronts the
retailer sells to middle-class hordes of a Saturday afternoon. The old
crooner stands accused of selling out.
It shouldn't be like this. Ferry is one of a select generation of
rock'n'roll survivors. His career spans 30 years, and accounts for some
of the greatest songs of modern music. He's entitled to be called one
of the greats.
Without Bryan Ferry and Roxy Music, there would be no "Virginia Plain",
Avalon, "More than This". We wouldn't have "Love Is the Drug", "Do the
Strand" or "Let's Stick Together". Neither could Roxy Music's 1973 hit
"A Song for Europe" have managed, in the words of one pundit, to make
whistling cool.
Yet since the 1980s, Ferry and his bandmates have struggled to reach
their former heights. They have endured more unlikely comebacks than
Lazarus. Only last year, Roxy Music re-formed again; 2007 brings their
first new album since 1982.
Today, Roxy Music tend to pop up on the country house rock circuit, or
at lucrative corporate gigs. In July, they performed at a pavilion
erected outside London's ExCel Centre for the duration of the motor
show. Critics snobbishly noted that the trade fair crowd comprised
several hundred stressed-out owners of Hyundai dealerships.
In truth, it's Ferry's private life, rather than his music, that
generates the real headlines nowadays. Being a style icon takes hard
work, and glossy magazines are rarely short of pictures of him striding
effortlessly up the red carpet towards another upmarket bash.
"Bryan is very keen on upper-class people, in a way that perhaps only
Mick Jagger has been, among other rock stars," says an acquaintance.
"If you like, he's moved full circle from café society to proper
society. His diaries would be utterly fantastic, if he's ever kept any."
Ferry's man-about-town status was boosted in 2002 when it was revealed
that Lucy Helmore, his wife of 20 years, had filed for divorce. Shortly
afterwards, he was photographed with a 21-year-old backing singer,
Katie Turner. She remains his "significant other," but it's been an
on-off relationship, and other reported squeezes have included style
journalist Rita Konig, and a 26-year-old socialite, Lady Emily Compton.
"Bryan can be a real charmer," says another friend. "His humour is very
arch and arid, and that gets lost on a lot of people. They think he's
rude, or brooding, but for all the pretentiousness, in fact he's quite
a joker, and likes a laugh. It's just very dry, that's all."
Away from the choppy waters of his love life, Ferry owes many of his
recent appearances on the news pages to the antics of the eldest of his
four children, Otis, who dropped out of Marlborough College aged 16 to
become a Master of Foxhounds.
Otis has since made a name for himself as a prominent opponent of the
Government's plans to outlaw hunting. In 2002, he was arrested for
plastering Tony Blair's Sedgefield constituency home in protest
posters. Two years later, he gained notoriety after breaking into the
House of Commons chamber while MPs debated the issue.
Yesterday, the 23-year-old was back in trouble. He appeared at Stroud
magistrates' court in Gloucestershire to plead guilty to a
drink-driving charge.
Bryan Ferry has supported his wayward son all the way, despite
opprobrium from the rest of the music industry. In 2004, he was booed
at the Q Awards in London, for dedicating a gong to "my brave son".
This summer, he fronted a Countryside Alliance fundraising gig at
Highclere Castle in Berkshire.
Those upper-crust circles are a world away from Ferry's humble
background. Born in 1945, in the village of Washington, Tyne and Wear,
he was one of three children who grew up in a terraced home with an
outside lavatory, and a tin bath that hung on the wall.
Ferry's mother Mary is said to have spoiled him because he was the only
boy. His father Frederick was a miner who grew prize-winning
vegetables. "We were poor, in that we didn't have a car, or a
telephone, or things like that," he once recalled.
The young Bryan's big break, so to speak, came after he was accepted on
a four-year course at Newcastle University, studying art. He took up
music, dabbled in a few local soul bands, and made a name among
contemporaries as an able student who took an almost obsessive interest
in visual arts. He graduated in 1968.
Soon afterwards, Ferry moved to London and started writing songs.
Graham Simpson, a former colleague from a student group called the Gas
Board, helped to form Roxy Music, a six-piece outfit fronted by the
dynamic Ferry, and his bizarrely attired, synthesiser-playing bandmate
Brian Eno.
They hit pay dirt in 1972, with a self-titled debut album that remains
a quintessential record of the early 1970s. Michael Bracewell, whose
history of Roxy Music, Re-Make/Re-Model, comes out next year,
attributes the group's runaway success to its revolutionary marriage of
conflicting musical styles.
"Bryan was very much the author of the idea of Roxy Music. He had a
very specific idea of the band he wanted to create, and invited people
into it to fill the roles he had in mind," says Bracewell. "The thing
that then made them so extraordinarily successful was this collage of
elements that shouldn't really have gone together.
"You had a white soul singer (Ferry), avant garde electronics (Eno),
French chanson, and a sort of rockabilly element. They resolved this
into an montage of styles that completely blew people away."
Both on and off stage, it was the start of a turbulent period. Ferry
and Eno enjoyed what are traditionally described as "creative
differences". In 1973, Ferry stormed out of a gig vowing never to work
with Eno again, after his lyrics were drowned out by an electronic wall
of synthesiser sound.
"There were two huge heightened creative imaginations, with very
distinct voices, and they found it impossible to co-exist," recalls one
insider. "People forget that Brian Eno is more than just a musician.
He's an artist and a producer, and was always going to want to move on."
Either way, Eno left the band after two albums, missing their biggest
commercial hit, 1982's Avalon. After a 20-year feud, Eno recently
returned to Roxy Music and will appear on their forthcoming album. He
and Ferry appear to be reconciled.
The same cannot be said of Ferry and Jerry Hall, his girlfriend for
much of the 1970s. She appeared in several of Roxy Music's videos, only
to leave him for Mick Jagger after almost three years. Hall later
chronicled the affair in her autobiography Tall Tales; Ferry, for his
part, has refused to discuss it.
Despite his colourful social life, those who know Ferry best describe
him as a guarded, inward-looking character. His attitude towards music
mirrors this element of his personality, according to people who have
worked with him.
"The great thing about Bryan Ferry, which you wouldn't think given the
social life he needs, is the fact that he is incredibly fastidious,"
says on acquaintance.
"People say he's shy, but in fact he's just utterly, utterly
fastidious. If he doesn't get something right, then he'll go on and on
and on trying to perfect it. You can see it in his choice of clothes,
but it's actually most obvious in Bryan's music. It can take him years
to finish an album. As a result, he's never made as much money as he
might have."
Today, Ferry lives mostly in rural Sussex, where he devotes a decent
portion of time to collecting Bloomsbury art, playing the country gent
and looking after his four sons. His recreations in Who's Who are
listed as "tennis, reading, shooting".
Maintaining his status as England's foremost style icon remains an
important part of his raison d'être. Former photographers describe
Ferry as "very fussy", and say he insists on choosing his own venues
for photo shoots.
Yet friends report that he has entered his seventh decade in a state of
only mild contentment. "He's actually a private and complex character,
and utterly obsessive about music," says one friend. "He really is far
more of a complete and troubled artist than most people think."
Either way, it's difficult to escape the feeling that the clothes horse
in Bryan Ferry most defines the man. A few years back, he came within a
whisker of death when a deranged passenger burst into the cockpit of a
Boeing 747 in which he was flying to Kenya, and caused it to plummet
10,000 feet.
Asked shortly afterwards if he'd sensed trouble brewing, Ferry replied
soberly that he'd always known something was wrong with the assailant.
"I didn't like the look of his socks," he said.
A Life in Brief
BORN 26 Sept 1945 in Washington, Tyne and Wear, to Frederick Charles and Mary Ann Ferry.
EDUCATION Newcastle University (1964-68) BA Hons in fine art.
FAMILY Married Lucy Helmore (1982; divorced 2003). Four children: Otis, Isaac, Tara and Merlin.
CAREER Founded Roxy Music in 1971. Debut album (Roxy Music, 1972)
followed by more than 22 solo and group recordings (including For Your
Pleasure, 1973; Country Life, 1974; Avalon, 1982). New Roxy Music album
(currently untitled) due out early next year.
AWARDS Q magazine lifetime achievement award, 2004; GQ magazine; lifetime achievement award, 2005.
HE SAYS "I think I am often regarded as a bit aloof, rather snooty, serious and humourless. Which is a shame."
THEY SAY "You can't really regret things but I must say he has aged
beautifully. He is one of the all-time great crooners." Jerry Hall,
former girlfriend
Bryan Ferry enjoys playing the role of "coolest living Englishman".
He's even won awards for it. Women swoon at his lounge lizard suits;
they rejoice at his floppy fringe and broad shoulders. At 60, the
enduring "face" of Roxy Music provides an object lesson in the art of
growing old elegantly.
So it goes that Marks & Spencer this week unveiled Ferry as the
star of its autumn advertising campaign. In a series of David Bailey
posters, he will endorse the high-street retailer's upmarket range of
Autograph suits and shirts. That brooding forehead is coming soon to a
billboard near you.
Like most of Ferry's work, the M&S gig will divide public opinion.
To some, it can only underline his status as the epitome of raffish
urban chic. As the press release puts it: "He's a real British style
icon and looks amazing... What man wouldn't want to look as cool as
Bryan Ferry."
Others aren't so sure. For Ferry's critics, his commercial relationship
with M&S is about as rock'n'roll as the socks and Y-fronts the
retailer sells to middle-class hordes of a Saturday afternoon. The old
crooner stands accused of selling out.
It shouldn't be like this. Ferry is one of a select generation of
rock'n'roll survivors. His career spans 30 years, and accounts for some
of the greatest songs of modern music. He's entitled to be called one
of the greats.
Without Bryan Ferry and Roxy Music, there would be no "Virginia Plain",
Avalon, "More than This". We wouldn't have "Love Is the Drug", "Do the
Strand" or "Let's Stick Together". Neither could Roxy Music's 1973 hit
"A Song for Europe" have managed, in the words of one pundit, to make
whistling cool.
Yet since the 1980s, Ferry and his bandmates have struggled to reach
their former heights. They have endured more unlikely comebacks than
Lazarus. Only last year, Roxy Music re-formed again; 2007 brings their
first new album since 1982.
Today, Roxy Music tend to pop up on the country house rock circuit, or
at lucrative corporate gigs. In July, they performed at a pavilion
erected outside London's ExCel Centre for the duration of the motor
show. Critics snobbishly noted that the trade fair crowd comprised
several hundred stressed-out owners of Hyundai dealerships.
In truth, it's Ferry's private life, rather than his music, that
generates the real headlines nowadays. Being a style icon takes hard
work, and glossy magazines are rarely short of pictures of him striding
effortlessly up the red carpet towards another upmarket bash.
"Bryan is very keen on upper-class people, in a way that perhaps only
Mick Jagger has been, among other rock stars," says an acquaintance.
"If you like, he's moved full circle from café society to proper
society. His diaries would be utterly fantastic, if he's ever kept any."
Ferry's man-about-town status was boosted in 2002 when it was revealed
that Lucy Helmore, his wife of 20 years, had filed for divorce. Shortly
afterwards, he was photographed with a 21-year-old backing singer,
Katie Turner. She remains his "significant other," but it's been an
on-off relationship, and other reported squeezes have included style
journalist Rita Konig, and a 26-year-old socialite, Lady Emily Compton.
"Bryan can be a real charmer," says another friend. "His humour is very
arch and arid, and that gets lost on a lot of people. They think he's
rude, or brooding, but for all the pretentiousness, in fact he's quite
a joker, and likes a laugh. It's just very dry, that's all."
Away from the choppy waters of his love life, Ferry owes many of his
recent appearances on the news pages to the antics of the eldest of his
four children, Otis, who dropped out of Marlborough College aged 16 to
become a Master of Foxhounds.
Otis has since made a name for himself as a prominent opponent of the
Government's plans to outlaw hunting. In 2002, he was arrested for
plastering Tony Blair's Sedgefield constituency home in protest
posters. Two years later, he gained notoriety after breaking into the
House of Commons chamber while MPs debated the issue.
Yesterday, the 23-year-old was back in trouble. He appeared at Stroud
magistrates' court in Gloucestershire to plead guilty to a
drink-driving charge.
Bryan Ferry has supported his wayward son all the way, despite
opprobrium from the rest of the music industry. In 2004, he was booed
at the Q Awards in London, for dedicating a gong to "my brave son".
This summer, he fronted a Countryside Alliance fundraising gig at
Highclere Castle in Berkshire.
Those upper-crust circles are a world away from Ferry's humble
background. Born in 1945, in the village of Washington, Tyne and Wear,
he was one of three children who grew up in a terraced home with an
outside lavatory, and a tin bath that hung on the wall.
Ferry's mother Mary is said to have spoiled him because he was the only
boy. His father Frederick was a miner who grew prize-winning
vegetables. "We were poor, in that we didn't have a car, or a
telephone, or things like that," he once recalled.
The young Bryan's big break, so to speak, came after he was accepted on
a four-year course at Newcastle University, studying art. He took up
music, dabbled in a few local soul bands, and made a name among
contemporaries as an able student who took an almost obsessive interest
in visual arts. He graduated in 1968.
Soon afterwards, Ferry moved to London and started writing songs.
Graham Simpson, a former colleague from a student group called the Gas
Board, helped to form Roxy Music, a six-piece outfit fronted by the
dynamic Ferry, and his bizarrely attired, synthesiser-playing bandmate
Brian Eno.
They hit pay dirt in 1972, with a self-titled debut album that remains
a quintessential record of the early 1970s. Michael Bracewell, whose
history of Roxy Music, Re-Make/Re-Model, comes out next year,
attributes the group's runaway success to its revolutionary marriage of
conflicting musical styles.
"Bryan was very much the author of the idea of Roxy Music. He had a
very specific idea of the band he wanted to create, and invited people
into it to fill the roles he had in mind," says Bracewell. "The thing
that then made them so extraordinarily successful was this collage of
elements that shouldn't really have gone together.
"You had a white soul singer (Ferry), avant garde electronics (Eno),
French chanson, and a sort of rockabilly element. They resolved this
into an montage of styles that completely blew people away."
Both on and off stage, it was the start of a turbulent period. Ferry
and Eno enjoyed what are traditionally described as "creative
differences". In 1973, Ferry stormed out of a gig vowing never to work
with Eno again, after his lyrics were drowned out by an electronic wall
of synthesiser sound.
"There were two huge heightened creative imaginations, with very
distinct voices, and they found it impossible to co-exist," recalls one
insider. "People forget that Brian Eno is more than just a musician.
He's an artist and a producer, and was always going to want to move on."
Either way, Eno left the band after two albums, missing their biggest
commercial hit, 1982's Avalon. After a 20-year feud, Eno recently
returned to Roxy Music and will appear on their forthcoming album. He
and Ferry appear to be reconciled.
The same cannot be said of Ferry and Jerry Hall, his girlfriend for
much of the 1970s. She appeared in several of Roxy Music's videos, only
to leave him for Mick Jagger after almost three years. Hall later
chronicled the affair in her autobiography Tall Tales; Ferry, for his
part, has refused to discuss it.
Despite his colourful social life, those who know Ferry best describe
him as a guarded, inward-looking character. His attitude towards music
mirrors this element of his personality, according to people who have
worked with him.
"The great thing about Bryan Ferry, which you wouldn't think given the
social life he needs, is the fact that he is incredibly fastidious,"
says on acquaintance.
"People say he's shy, but in fact he's just utterly, utterly
fastidious. If he doesn't get something right, then he'll go on and on
and on trying to perfect it. You can see it in his choice of clothes,
but it's actually most obvious in Bryan's music. It can take him years
to finish an album. As a result, he's never made as much money as he
might have."
Today, Ferry lives mostly in rural Sussex, where he devotes a decent
portion of time to collecting Bloomsbury art, playing the country gent
and looking after his four sons. His recreations in Who's Who are
listed as "tennis, reading, shooting".
Maintaining his status as England's foremost style icon remains an
important part of his raison d'être. Former photographers describe
Ferry as "very fussy", and say he insists on choosing his own venues
for photo shoots.
Yet friends report that he has entered his seventh decade in a state of
only mild contentment. "He's actually a private and complex character,
and utterly obsessive about music," says one friend. "He really is far
more of a complete and troubled artist than most people think."
Either way, it's difficult to escape the feeling that the clothes horse
in Bryan Ferry most defines the man. A few years back, he came within a
whisker of death when a deranged passenger burst into the cockpit of a
Boeing 747 in which he was flying to Kenya, and caused it to plummet
10,000 feet.
Asked shortly afterwards if he'd sensed trouble brewing, Ferry replied
soberly that he'd always known something was wrong with the assailant.
"I didn't like the look of his socks," he said.
A Life in Brief
BORN 26 Sept 1945 in Washington, Tyne and Wear, to Frederick Charles and Mary Ann Ferry.
EDUCATION Newcastle University (1964-68) BA Hons in fine art.
FAMILY Married Lucy Helmore (1982; divorced 2003). Four children: Otis, Isaac, Tara and Merlin.
CAREER Founded Roxy Music in 1971. Debut album (Roxy Music, 1972)
followed by more than 22 solo and group recordings (including For Your
Pleasure, 1973; Country Life, 1974; Avalon, 1982). New Roxy Music album
(currently untitled) due out early next year.
AWARDS Q magazine lifetime achievement award, 2004; GQ magazine; lifetime achievement award, 2005.
HE SAYS "I think I am often regarded as a bit aloof, rather snooty, serious and humourless. Which is a shame."
THEY SAY "You can't really regret things but I must say he has aged
beautifully. He is one of the all-time great crooners." Jerry Hall,
former girlfriend