Eddie Argos

Eddie Argos
Background information
Birth name Kevin Macklin
Also known as Eddie Argos
Born (1979-10-25) 25 October 1979
Portland, Dorset
Genres Post-punk, alternative rock, spoken word
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter, musician, artist, writer
Instruments Vocals
Years active 2003–present
Associated acts Glam Chops, Everybody Was In The French Resistance ... Now, Art Goblins, Art Naif, The Donalds

Eddie Argos (born Kevin Macklin[1] 25 October 1979) is the lead singer of English rock band Art Brut, and writer of comics.

Personal life

Born in Weymouth, England, Argos later moved to Poole, Dorset as a young child, and has subsequently written about the Martin Kemp-Welch School there (now St Aldhelm's Academy), in the song "Martin Kemp-Welch Five-A-Side Football Rules!" from the album Brilliant! Tragic!.

Argos lives in Berlin with his partner and their son.

Music

Argos is the lead singer of the rock band Art Brut, and sometimes plays the bass guitar in Keith TOTP. Argos is also the lead singer of the project Everybody Was in the French Resistance...Now!, in which he and multi-instrumentalist Dyan Valdes of The Blood Arm write musical responses to pop songs. Their album "Fixin' the Charts, Volume 1" was recorded in Joshua Tree in summer 2008. In June 2011, Eddie appeared as guest vocalist on Akira The Don's "Living In The Future" single.[2]

According to an interview with Artrocker magazine and the lyrics of 'I Found This Song In The Road',[3] he usually writes them (often on his phone) whilst going for a long walk and/or drunk.

Argos is known for his zany live music performances, where he has played the vacuum, skipped with his microphone wire,[4] escaped from a sack, danced with the audience and stopped songs halfway through a song to tell the audience his thoughts on various topics. Argos is also known for his humorous, frank lyrics which talk mostly about his family, how he has embarrassed himself or his past love interests.

In 2012, Argos wrote an article for DIY magazine as to why he should be the UK's 2013 entry for the Eurovision Song Contest.[5]

Paintings

As well as his musical output, Argos is also an enthusiastic painter. He painted the front cover of Art Brut's debut single, "Formed a Band".[6] According to Argos, the cover represents a fictional demo tape. Argos says, 'Art Bruts first ever recordings, our demos that were intended to be free on our website, became our first single. I've always been proud of the fact the front cover was of a fictional demo tape that I had imagined was in a charity shop in Poole waiting to be picked up by somebody like me'.[6]

His paintings frequently (though not exclusively) make references to Art Brut songs; he has created images for Art Brut songs "Clever, Clever Jazz", "St.Pauli" and "Formed A Band" for example. On his blog, he has said that he intends to 'paint a picture for every song that I've ever written and will ever write'.[6] These pictures are sold online, through the Eddie Argos blog resource [7] and The Eddie Argos Shop. When touring, Argos frequently creates individual postcard themed paintings, commemorating each show on the tour.[8][9] These paintings are also sold online but can also be purchased at shows.

Argos explained his love of painting to Skyscraper Magazine: "I really enjoy painting. I love painting great big thick black lines of acrylic paint on canvas. I don’t paint very complicated things, just simple images and words really. Nothing ever comes out the way I intend it to, probably because of my Dyspraxia, so I’m always surprised at how they turn out".[10]

Writing and comics

Argos writes an occasional column about comic books for PLAYBACK:stl called "Pow! To The People".[11] He has also contributed a cover quote to the collected edition of Jamie McKelvie's 'Phonogram: The Singles Club' graphic novel.[12]

A lifelong comic book enthusiast,[13] Eddie's passion for comic books has already crossed over into Art Brut's music and art work, with Art Brut vs Satan's "DC Comics & Chocolate Milkshake" referencing the legendary publishers of Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, Justice League and Green Lantern. The same album also had artwork designed by acclaimed graphic novelist Jeff Lemire. In 2010, Argos unveiled his comic book themed side project named "Spoiler Alert",[14] whose three track EP featured songs inspired by DC Comics characters Batman, Booster Gold and Blue Beetle.[15] Art Brut's 2011 album, Brilliant! Tragic! was created by acclaimed comic book artist Jamie McKelvie.

"I can remember the first comic I ever read" Argos said, "it was the Beano, the day I had my tonsils out. I was given it as a treat as I couldn't eat anything. It might have been the only time I've turned down Ice Cream, it blew my tiny 6 year old mind. I loved comic books growing up but always had a fear they might be something I would have to give up as an adult. Then one day somebody, I still don't know who, put some Batman comics through our letter box. These blew my tiny 11-year-old mind. They were pretty full on, nothing at all like the Adam West goofing around show I had seen Saturday morning television. In these stories people were being murdered, they were political, and morally ambiguous. If my mum had known how different they were from the Saturday morning kids show she would have taken them off of me. I loved them though and realised then that they were something that would stay with me into adult life and have spent all my money on comics ever since".[13] Argos has also gone on record stating "Batman is the greatest fictional character of all time. No argument".[10]

To accompany the album Brilliant! Tragic!, Art Brut commissioned a comic book to be released simultaneously. The Brilliant! Tragic! comic book features artwork by a range of artists, including Akira The Don, Bryan Lee O'Malley, Hope Larson, Jamie McKelvie, Jeffrey Brown, Jeffrey Lewis, Let's Be Friends Again, Marc Ellerby, Mikey Georgeson, Sian Superman and Patrick McQuade. Eddie Argos was "over the moon and incredibly flattered that these artists took time out to work" on the comic.[16]

Argos released a book of his lyrics for Art Brut in 2013; and in 2014 a book, Formed A Band of memoirs of his time in Art Brut and his earlier bands the Art Goblins.

2015 saw the release of Argos's first full-length comic, Double D, drawn by Steven Horry and published by Image Comics.[17]

Bands

Discography

Eddie Argos

Art Brut

Everybody Was in the French Resistance...Now!

Spoiler Alert

References

  1. "Gospel Singing". Eddie Argos on Blogger. Retrieved 2009-03-19.
  2. "Living In The Future 2.5". Akira The Don. 26 April 2003.
  3. "Lyrics". Songmeanings.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-02-19.
  4. "Eddie Argos Jump Ropes". YouTube. Retrieved 2008-02-19.
  5. Eddie Argos. "Eddie Argos: Why I Should Write And Perform The Eurovision Entry | Blogs | DIY". Thisisfakediy.co.uk.
  6. 1 2 3 The Eddie Argos Resource (6 October 2008). "Fuck Rock Lets Art: FORMED A BAND". Fuck-rock-lets-art.blogspot.com.
  7. The Eddie Argos Resource (11 March 2008). "The Eddie Argos Resource: Paintings For Sale". The-eddie-argos-resource.blogspot.com.
  8. Eddie, The (17 May 2011). "THE EDDIE ARGOS RESOURCE: European Shows. Postcards". The-eddie-argos-resource.blogspot.com.
  9. The Eddie Argos Resource (16 May 2011). "THE EDDIE ARGOS RESOURCE: The Great Escape Brighton". The-eddie-argos-resource.blogspot.com.
  10. 1 2 "These Are A Few of My Favorite Things: Art Brut". Skyscraper Magazine. 21 June 2011.
  11. Kevin Macklin. "Pow! to the People".
  12. "Jamie McKelvie's Art Brut Album Cover with Exclusive Kieron Gillen Commentary - ComicsAlliance | Comic book culture, news, humor, commentary, and reviews". ComicsAlliance.
  13. 1 2 name="musicblog.merseyblogs.co.uk"/
  14. "Spoiler Alert!". Retrieved 2011-06-06.
  15. "Art Brut release comic as companion to new album Brilliant Tragic". Retrieved 2011-06-05.
  16. name="Brilliant! Tragic! The Comic Book"
  17. Leane, Rob (2015-11-12). "Eddie Argos interview: Double D, Art Brut, comics, hoovers". Den of Geek.
  18. Sullivan, Caroline (2016-04-07). "Cover girls: the Ramonas, Iron Maidens and the rise of the female tribute band". The Guardian.
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