Steve Alexander (drummer)

Steve Alexander (born 20 November 1962) is a Welsh drummer. Starting out with the Irish band Shook Up!, he earned a living as a session drummer, working regularly in London's recording studios on film, TV and commercial sessions and playing with the BBC Radio Orchestra. He became a permanent member of Brother Beyond following the departure of Eg White in 1986.

Steve Alexander
Birth nameSteve Alexander
Born (1962-11-20) 20 November 1962
Penrhos, Wales
Occupation(s)Musician
InstrumentsDrums
Years active1980–present
Associated actsShook Up!, Brother Beyond, Duran Duran, Jeff Beck, The Fabulous Lampshades, Flashman

Biography

In 1995, Alexander was hired by Duran Duran[1] and continued to work with them for 6 years following the departure of their previous drummers Roger Taylor, Steve Ferrone, Terry Bozzio and Vinnie Colaiuta. During these years he contributed to the Thank You, Medazzaland and Pop Trash albums, also working with Melle Mel and Grandmaster Flash on the track "White Lines" which led to live work with these founders of rap.

Alexander resumed his freelance career, working with a wide variety of artists from Jeff Lorber, Warren Cuccurullo, Boy George and recording the award winning Voyegeur album with Zaire's Papa Wemba. In 1998, Alexander started working with Jeff Beck, recording the Who Else album and toured for 18 months in the USA, Japan, South America and Europe. He also continued recording for his solo Flashman projects.

In May 2011, a film called Killing Bono saw a major cinematic release, based around the story of Alexander's first band and their rivalry with U2. It featured archive footage of Shook Up![2] performing live in Ireland, and Alexander was invited to attend the London premiere.

As of June 2011, Alexander currently plays with The Fabulous Lampshades, who regularly perform charity gigs in London in aid of the Teenage Cancer Trust.

gollark: Specifically, music file metadata parsing (I'm using an old binding to `taglib` for that).
gollark: Libraries for the specific random stuff I need are already scarce in Rust. I don't want to use what's probably a less supported language.
gollark: What are good Rust web frameworks these days? I'm rewriting my project in Rust (the backend part is only 50 lines, so it should be easy) but don't really know the current state of things.
gollark: They're completely different except that the name is mildly similar
gollark: Turns out nodejs packages *really* love compiling C(++) dependencies from source. So now `npm` is doing that, on my *phone* CPU.

References

  1. "Steve Alexander on DrummerWorld". Drummerworld. Retrieved on June 16, 2011.
  2. "Shook Up! Original Footage". The Official Killing Bono Blog. Retrieved on June 16, 2011.
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