David Ball (British musician)

David James Ball (born 3 May 1959) is an English producer and electronic musician, who has played in bands such as Soft Cell and The Grid, and collaborated with other producers including Ingo Vauk and Chris Braide. He is usually called Dave Ball on record sleeves.

Dave Ball
Birth nameDavid James Ball
Born (1959-05-03) 3 May 1959
Chester, Cheshire, England
OriginBlackpool, Lancashire, England
GenresSynthpop, new wave
InstrumentsKeyboards, synthesiser, guitar, bass guitar, percussion, vocals
Years active1977–present
LabelsSome Bizzare
Associated actsSoft Cell
The Grid
Nitewreckage
English Boy On The Loveranch
Other People

Life and career

Ball was born in Chester, Cheshire, England, later adopted and growing up in Blackpool.[1] He studied at Arnold School before studying art at Leeds Polytechnic, where he met Marc Almond;[2] they formed the synthpop duo Soft Cell in 1978, the band lasting until 1984.[3] In 1983, while with the group, he released a solo album, In Strict Tempo, which featured Gavin Friday, Genesis P-Orridge and Virginia Astley.[3][4] Later he collaborated with P-Orridge on soundtrack for West German film Decoder, which also featured other Some Bizzare artists.

After Soft Cell disbanded Ball formed a new band, Other People with his then-wife Gini Hewes[5] (who previously worked with Almond in Marc and the Mambas) and Andy Astle, but they released only one single "Have A Nice Day".[6] In late 80s he formed another short lived band English Boy On The Loveranch, with Nick Sanderson and Jamie Jones, releasing two Hi-NRG singles "The Man In Your Life" and "Sex Vigilante."[7] He also was part of Psychic TV, working on the compilation albums Jack the Tab and Tekno Acid Beat, where he met Richard Norris (they recorded the track "Meet Every Situation Head On" together as M.E.S.H.) and with whom he later formed The Grid.[8][9]

Ball reunited with Almond in Soft Cell in 2001, releasing new album Cruelty Without Beauty.[2][10] In 2010, he formed the band Nitewreckage with Celine Hispiche, Rick Mulhall and Terry Neale. Their debut album, Take Your Money and Run, was released on Alaska Sounds on 6 June 2011, with the single "Solarcoaster" preceding it. The album was co-produced and mixed by Martin Rushent. In 2016 Ball and classical pianist Jon Savage collaborated on experimental electronic album Photosynthesis.[11] In 2018 Soft Cell saw another reunion for final live show, celebrating 40th anniversary since duo was formed.[12]

Dave Ball also worked as a producer, with Vicious Pink Phenomena (who started as backing duo for early Soft Cell), The Virgin Prunes and Rose McDowall side-project Ornamental in the 1980s,[4] and later with Kylie Minogue, Gavin Friday and Anni Hogan,[11][13] and a remixer for artists and bands such as David Bowie),[14], Vanessa-Mae and Erasure (many remixes were also made with Norris as The Grid). Ball also worked with Friday on a cover of Suicide's "Ghost Rider" for the Alan Vega 70th Birthday Limited Edition EP Series.[15]

Ball lives in Kennington, south London.[1]

Discography

gollark: Both, really.
gollark: Yes. It would be preferable if they did *not* do such things. But I don't think the average random soldier can be reasonably expected not to.
gollark: If everyone around you seems to be fine with it and you fear that if you seem *not* fine with it you'll be punished in some way, you'll just rationalize all the way to beeland.
gollark: The issue with "not doing it" is that humans have the whole ridiculous conformity thing going on.
gollark: Yes, they are BOTH mean.

References

  1. Soho Radio - Back to the Phuture, interview with David Ball (12 September 2018), Mixcloud
  2. Rimmer, Dave (2003) New Romantics: The Look, Omnibus Press, ISBN 978-0-7119-9396-9, p. 110
  3. Ruhlmann, William "Dave Ball Biography", Allmusic, retrieved 22 January 2010
  4. Neal, Charles (1987) Tape delay: confessions from the eighties underground, SAF, ISBN 978-0-946719-02-0
  5. "Blue Pyramid" by Virginia, Bandcamp
  6. Smash Hits, 6 December 1984, "Like Punk Never Happened - a Smash Hits archive" by Brian McCloskey, Flickr
  7. English Boy On The Loveranch - Discography, Discogs
  8. "Richard Norris," by Jim Ottewill, prsformusic.com (15 July 2014)
  9. Images for Soft Cell - Non Stop Ecstatic Dancing (images of CD booklet), Discogs
  10. Flick, Larry (2002) "Almond's Joy", The Advocate, 29 October 2002, p. 64
  11. Interview with David Ball about PHOTOSYNTHESIS, by By Bob Gourley, Chaos Control (13 November 2016)
  12. Soft Cell to reunite for last ever show, The Guardian (21 February 2018)
  13. "Anni Hogan: the super solo collaborationist," by Robert Gourley, PleaseKillMe.com (11 November 2019)
  14. Hoffman, Wayne (2002) "After Nearly 20 years, Soft Cell Returns With a New Set on SpinArt", Billboard, 12 October 2002, p. 13
  15. Gavin Friday and Dave Ball single ‘Ghostrider’ – download now – Gavin Friday – Official Site
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