Sharleen Spiteri

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
All The Times I Cried 00:00 Tools
It Was You 00:00 Tools
Don't Keep Me Waiting 00:00 Tools
Melody 00:00 Tools
I Wonder 00:00 Tools
I'm Going To Haunt You 00:00 Tools
Where Did It Go Wrong 00:00 Tools
You Let Me Down 00:00 Tools
Day Tripping 00:00 Tools
Stop I Don't Love You Anymore 00:00 Tools
Francoise 00:00 Tools
Stop, I Don't Love You Anymore 00:00 Tools
Xanadu 03:31 Tools
The Sound Of Silence 03:21 Tools
If I Can't Have You 02:38 Tools
Between The Bars 00:00 Tools
The Windmills Of Your Mind 00:00 Tools
God Bless The Child 00:00 Tools
Oh, Pretty Woman 02:19 Tools
Many Rivers To Cross 03:55 Tools
Cat People (Putting Out Fire) 00:00 Tools
What's New Pussycat? 00:00 Tools
Take My Breath Away 03:30 Tools
Take Me With You 00:00 Tools
Françoise 00:00 Tools
This One's From The Heart 00:00 Tools
That Was A Lie 00:00 Tools
Don't Look Back 00:00 Tools
When Did You Leave Heaven? 00:00 Tools
Cat People (Putting Out Fire) - Demo version 00:00 Tools
All The Times I Cried - Live on Later with Jools Holland 00:00 Tools
All These Things That I've Done 00:00 Tools
All The Times I Cried (Live on Later With Jools Holland) 00:00 Tools
All the times I cried (eazy Remix) 00:00 Tools
Should I Stay or Should I Go 03:10 Tools
Streets Of Philadelphia 00:00 Tools
Inner Smile 00:00 Tools
Xanadu (Single Version) 00:00 Tools
All The Times I Cried - Video 00:00 Tools
Sharleen Spiteri - All The Times I Cried 00:00 Tools
this ones from the heart 00:00 Tools
Cat People 00:00 Tools
Stop, I Don't Love You Anymore (Ken Bruce Maida Vale Session) 00:00 Tools
It Was You (Live acoustic version) 00:00 Tools
Like Lovers (Holding On) 00:00 Tools
All The Times I Cried - Official 00:00 Tools
Stop, I Don't Love You Anymore [Single Version] 00:00 Tools
Across 110th St Rough 00:00 Tools
Stop, I Don't Love You Anymore (Shar's Place) 00:00 Tools
All The Times I Crie 00:00 Tools
Theme From Mahogany (Do You Know Where You're Going To) 00:00 Tools
Movie Songbook Mix 00:00 Tools
Sharleen Spiteri - Melody 00:00 Tools
It Was You - Live/Acoustic version 00:00 Tools
Stop (I Don't Love You Anymore) 00:00 Tools
Sharleen Spiteri - It Was You 00:00 Tools
It Was You (Live from Ken Bruce Session) 00:00 Tools
Between the Bars (Eliott Smith cover) 00:00 Tools
02 - All The Times I Cried 00:00 Tools
Sharleen Spiteri - I Wonder 00:00 Tools
01 - It Was You 00:00 Tools
Sharleen Spiteri - Stop I Don't Love You Anymore 00:00 Tools
05 - I Wonder 00:00 Tools
Sharleen Spiteri - I'm Going To Haunt You 00:00 Tools
All The Times I Cried - Live/Acoustic version (behind the scenes at photo session) 00:00 Tools
Oh Pretty Woman 00:00 Tools
03 - Stop I Don't Love You Anymore 00:00 Tools
10 - Day Tripping 00:00 Tools
I'm Going To Hunt You 00:00 Tools
08 - You Let Me Down 00:00 Tools
09 - Where Did It Go Wrong 00:00 Tools
ALL THE TIMES I CRIED (LIVE) 00:00 Tools
Sharleen Spiteri - Francoise 00:00 Tools
Stirb Nicht Vor Mir (Don't Die Before I Do) 00:00 Tools
All These Things That I've Done (killers) 00:00 Tools
Stop, I Don't Love You Anymore (Eazy Remix) 00:00 Tools
All The Times I Cried (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
06 - I'm Going To Haunt You 00:00 Tools
04 - Melody 00:00 Tools
07 - Don't Keep Me Waiting 00:00 Tools
Sharleen Spiteri - Where Did It Go Wrong 00:00 Tools
Stop, I Don't Love You 00:00 Tools
Sharleen Spiteri - Day Tripping 00:00 Tools
Sharleen Spiteri - Don't Keep Me Waiting 00:00 Tools
The Sounds Of Silence 00:00 Tools
Cat People (Putting Out Fire) (Demo version) 00:00 Tools
How Deep Is Your Love 00:00 Tools
Stop, I Don't Love You Anyone 00:00 Tools
When Did You Leave Heaven 00:00 Tools
Cat People (Putting Out The Fire) (cover David Bowie) 00:00 Tools
Sharleen Spiteri - You Let Me Down 00:00 Tools
Cat People (Putting Out Fire) [Demo Version] 00:00 Tools
Stop 00:00 Tools
This One's From The Heart (cover Tom Waits & Crystal Gayle) 00:00 Tools
All the times I cryed 00:00 Tools
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“I’m a firm believer that every time you sit down to write a song you should try and write a hit record.” So says Sharleen Spiteri, a singer and songwriter who already knows more than a thing or two about hit records as the frontwoman of Texas. Formed in Glasgow in 1986, Texas were one of the great success stories of ‘90s pop, selling over one and a half million copies of their 1996 album White On Blonde in the UK alone. In a decade dominated by male guitar bands, Spiteri was a welcome female alternative, blessed with a smooth, soulful voice but unafraid to strap on her black 1967 Telecaster guitar and rock out with the best of them. By 2005, Texas could boast a staggering 15 platinum discs (six-a-piece for White On Blonde and 2000’s Greatest Hits, another three for 1999’s The Hush) and 13 top ten hits including such modern pop classics as ‘Say What You Want’, ‘Summer Son’ and their bluesy 1989 debut, ‘I Don’t Want A Lover’. “Texas are my family and they’ll always be there,” says Sharleen. “But after the last record, everybody decided they wanted to do different things and different projects. I had to think about what I wanted to do with my life, on top of which my life was going through some big personal changes. So I just decided, that’s it. I need to make a solo record and step up to the challenge. When I told the boys in Texas, they just said, ‘Great. You go for it.’ So I did.” The result is Melody - the stunning solo debut from the face and voice of one of the biggest British bands of recent times. Not only did Sharleen write the whole album, she also produced it, taking complete artistic control of its every sonic nuance. Steeped in the sound and textures of ‘60s soul, ‘50s rock’n’roll and doo-wop, it’s an album that’s vintage in flavour yet utterly contemporary in spirit. Beside the new generation of retro-obsessed UK songbirds such as Amy Winehouse, Duffy and Adele, it’s a timely reminder that Sharleen was already dabbling in similar influences over a decade ago, be it Tamla Motown (‘Black Eyed Boy’), Marvin Gaye (‘Say What You Want’) or Elvis Presley (cross-dressing up as The King for 2001’s ‘Inner Smile’ video). Going solo has allowed her the freedom to indulge in such consuming passions even further, creating an album that proudly wears its influences on its sleeve. “I’ve always wanted to make a Nancy Sinatra record,” she explains. “That was never going to happen with Texas, but being on my own meant I could take complete control and make the kind of album I’ve always dreamed of. That’s what Melody is all about. It’s my dream Nancy and Lee Hazlewood record, but with Johnny Cash, Motown, Elvis, The Righteous Brothers, all these things thrown in. That’s what it boils down to. My ultimate personal fantasy record.” From the very first note of ‘It Was You’, Melody announces itself as a musically stylish, lyrically powerful journey in which Sharleen exorcises her personal heartbreak to a classic pop soundtrack. “It’s a very strong female record,” she agrees. “I recently found myself in a situation where the ten year relationship with the father of my child had ended, so I was alone, just myself and my daughter. Things come along in life which you’re not prepared for and you have to learn how to deal with them, however sad. A lot of the lyrics are very personal about things that happened, but the whole process of making this album was really my way of moving on and starting a new chapter. You just gotta pick yourself up, put your heels on and get on with it.” True to her ethos of writing every song like it’s a hit, Melody boasts a blinding array of pop gems; the infectious ‘It Was You’, the sad but sumptuous ‘All The Times I Cried’, the ‘50s flavoured ‘Don’t Keep Me Waiting’ and her most Motown moment yet, ‘Stop I Don’t Love You Anymore’. It also sees Sharleen revel in her love of John Barry soundtracks with its sweeping cinematic string arrangements, as well as homages to her Gallic pop heroes Serge Gainsbourg and Francoise Hardy. “You can go a bit mad making your own record,” she laughs. “But I’m a real geek when it comes to music and knowing the exact sounds I want, the exact feel I’m going for. Even if that means telling musicians to ‘Play the tambourine like you’re having the best sex you’ve ever had.’ Whatever it takes to get it right.” Melody was recorded in various studios in Glasgow and London (including Sharleen’s home), as well as Spain. “I wanted to go on holiday but I didn’t want to stop recording,” she explains. “So I hired a villa and invited my band to come out and bring the equipment. Breakfast in the sun, then making music, relaxing afterwards with some wine. It was a brilliant way of making an album.” Its collaborators include co-producer Bernard Butler, who worked with Sharleen on ‘It Was You’. “We did that at Edwyn Collins’ studio, West Heath, in London,” she says. “An amazing place, full of vintage equipment and mad stuff. It was completely the right vibe.” The album’s twangier moments such as the campy ‘I’m Gonna Haunt You’ come courtesy of Kaiser George, guitarist with retro rockers The Kaisers and Los Straitjackets. “George was perfect as well,” says Sharleen. “Nothing exists for him after 1963. He likes The Beatles, but only until 1962. He looks like Buddy Holly and always dresses immaculately in a suit and tie. He’s a one-off but he completely understood the sounds I was after.” Arguably the biggest unsung hero in the creation of Melody was Mr Spiteri - Sharleen’s dad. “I got him to paint the garage with high gloss paint so it would create a reverb chamber,” she explains. “But - poor dad - I nearly killed him. He was near suffocating on these fumes. He painted it in twenty minute bursts, taking breaks to stop himself from getting high!” The finished album more than justifies Spiteri’s decision to bravely go it alone - a dynamic pop record which, more so than ever before, highlights the voice, soul and spirit which have already made Sharleen Spiteri one of the most successful women in British music of the last 25 years. “I’m still really excited by music,” she concludes. “Maybe the fact I’ve been doing this 20 years means I should be thinking about stepping aside, but I can’t help it. I love pop music, I’ve always loved pop music and with Melody I feel I’m being honest to myself about who I am and the music I want to make. At the end of the day, this is me.” Catchy, tender, sexy, soulful, frisky and once heard never forgotten. Melody is most definitely Sharleen Spiteri to the core. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.