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Jools Holland parlayed his considerable skill as a boogie-woogie pianist into superstardom as a television host, a gig so popular in his British homeland he was awarded an OBE. It was an unlikely journey for a keyboardist who first came to fame as a founding member of
Squeeze, one of the leading New Wave bands of the 1970s and 1980s.
Holland left
Squeeze just prior to their greatest commercial success, winding up co-presenting The Tube with Paula Yates.
Holland would later return to
Squeeze for a spell, forming his jump blues outfit the Jools Holland Big Band along the way, but television turned out to be his calling. In 1992, he launched Later…With Jools Holland, a live music program that became a British institution in the ensuing decades, staying on the air into the 2020s. While Later remained on the air,
Holland continued recording and touring with the Jools Holland Big Band, also embarking on such side projects as duet albums with
Jose Felicano and
Marc Almond.
Julian Miles Holland was born on January 24, 1958, in London. Even as a young boy, he showed a flair for the piano, learning the rudiments of boogie-woogie piano from an uncle at the age of eight. And though never possessed of a classic singing voice, young
Jools quickly learned to adapt his somewhat reedy, nasal tone into an enthusiastic, cockney-ish singing style that complemented his rollicking, joyous piano playing perfectly. By his teens, he was playing for pay in clubs and pubs in South London and in London's East End. Then in 1974, while still only 16,
Holland became the keyboardist for the original lineup of
Squeeze, who released their first record in 1977 (the EP Packet of Three), and their first full-length album the following year. Almost immediately, the band vaulted into the upper reaches of the U.K. charts with the new wave hits "Take Me I'm Yours" and "Bang Bang" (both 1978), both of which were penned by
Squeeze leaders
Chris Difford and
Glenn Tilbrook.
That same year,
Holland released his solo debut, a 7" five-song EP called Boogie Woogie '78, which showcased his penchant for boogie-woogie, R&B, and jazz far more effectively than any of
Squeeze's much more pop-oriented recordings. However,
Holland stayed with
Squeeze through 1980, playing keyboards on a series of classic
Difford- and
Tilbrook-composed hit singles, including "Cool for Cats," "Up the Junction," "Another Nail in My Heart," and "Pulling Mussels (From the Shell)" (in which he laid down a memorable piano solo).
Holland's occasional contributions as a composer/frontman for
Squeeze were limited exclusively to B-sides or album tracks.
Finally, in 1980
Holland announced that he was leaving
Squeeze on amicable terms for a full-time solo career. He emerged in 1981 as leader of Jools Holland & His Millionaires, a guitar-less sextet that included
Jools on "lead vocals, keys and good ideas," as well as
Pino Palladino (bass), Martin T. Deegan (drums),
Mike Paice (sax), and the Fabulous Wealthy Tarts (Kim Lesley and Maz Roberts) on backing vocals. Their lone self-titled album, however, was a flop, despite production by
Glyn Johns (
the Rolling Stones,
the Eagles,
the Who, etc.) and lyrical help from
Squeeze's
Chris Difford. Soon after the album's release, the Millionaires disbanded, although
Jools would continue to work with all of them individually throughout the rest of his solo career.
For the next few years,
Holland then busied himself musically with session work for the likes of
the The, and with a couple of U.K. solo singles that were eventually collected as part of the excellent U.S.-only release Jools Holland Meets Rock-a-Boogie Billy (1984). Perhaps more importantly, though, around this time
Holland also secured a job as host of the seminal British music series The Tube, which presented both established stars and cutting-edge musical acts every week. A critical and popular success from the word go, The Tube made the effervescent, enthusiastic South Londoner a household name in Great Britain, and introduced a lot of great music to the rest of the world.
Then, unexpectedly,
Squeeze stalwarts
Difford and
Tilbrook decided to re-form their band in 1985, and asked
Holland to return. (
Squeeze had continued for two years after
Holland's departure before packing it in at the end of 1982.)
Holland accepted, and by the end of 1985, a new
Squeeze record called
Cosi Fan Tutti Frutti was in the shops, featuring the keyboards of "
Julian Holland" (as he then billed himself). For the next five years, TV personality
Holland was again largely a sideman on
Squeeze's records, although his piano was unquestionably a vital component in the poppy, vaguely
Beatlesque mid-'80s
Squeeze sound. It was during this phase of their career that
Squeeze had their biggest U.S. success, the Top 20 "Hourglass," and
Holland got to play Madison Square Garden with his bandmates. His musical success in the U.S. was also at least partly responsible for helping
Holland to land a gig as the co-host of NBC's Night Music, a live-in-the-studio jazz, blues, and pop music program that had a strong cult following for the few years it was on the air. It later became the blueprint for such popular music shows as Sessions at West 54th.
However, by 1990,
Holland was still only being given the occasional album track in which to showcase his prodigious talents, so he once again left
Squeeze on amicable terms to resume his solo career. That year, he reclaimed the first name "
Jools" and released
World of His Own, which mixed up his boogie-woogie with more contemporary sounds and featured contributions from all of his
Squeeze bandmates, as well as all of the ex-Millionaires and his celebrity pal
Sting. In 1991, the more overtly swing/R&B-themed The Full Complement followed. These albums sold respectably, but generated no hit singles: from this point on,
Holland increasingly became (in the U.K. at least) a television personality who also happened to make records, rather than a recording star who also happened to be on television. And while his recording career could hardly be called stagnant, his television career really took off starting in 1992, when he began hosting Later with Jools Holland. This long-running late-night music show featured a dazzling array of musical talent (absolutely everyone from
Tori Amos to
David Bowie to
Rickie Lee Jones to
B.B. King to
the Verve showed up at one point or another), and it was required viewing for any Brit with even the vaguest pretensions toward musical hipness.
Perhaps to keep from spreading himself too thin, for the next little while
Holland (as a musician) released albums that concentrated solely on his keyboard playing. These included
The A to Z Geographer's Guide to the Piano (1992) and Solo Piano (1994). Also,
Holland compiled three CDs that traced the history of different styles of piano playing: Boogie Woogie Piano, Ragtime Piano, and Solo Piano (all 1995). He also continued to work diligently as a session musician throughout the '90s, appearing on dozens of recordings by artists such as
Dr. John,
Eddi Reader,
Marcella Detroit, and others.
By the mid-'90s, however,
Holland's fame as a television presenter (and his consequent list of celebrity contacts), coupled with his well-earned reputation for top-notch musicianship, meant that he had the clout to tour with (and record big-budget albums with) a full-scale '40s-style big band. Increasingly as the years went by, these albums would also feature big-name guest vocalists. They ran the gamut from swing to boogie-woogie to jump blues to jazz, were credited to
Jools Holland & His Rhythm & Blues Orchestra, and included
Live Performance (1994),
Sex & Jazz & Rock & Roll (1996), and
Lift the Lid (1997), on which
Sam Brown is the featured vocalist on several numbers. In 1998, a Best of Jools Holland compilation appeared, with selections from all of his '90s albums.
Not slowing down at all as one century led into another (he was still touring constantly throughout the U.K., performing an average of two big-band shows a week as well as hosting Later),
Jools then released
Sunset Over London in 1999, which featured guest turns by
Jamiroquai and actor Robbie Coltrane, followed by
Hop the Wag in 2000. In 2001, the U.S.-based Valley label issued a compilation of tracks from all of
Jools' various big-band swing albums called, not unreasonably, The Swing Album; it was his first stateside release in over a decade.
Later that same year,
Holland led his big band through an all-star album that featured contributions from
Steve Winwood,
Paul Weller,
Sting,
Dr. John,
Mark Knopfler, and many, many others. Called
Small World Big Band in the U.K. and Jools Holland's Big Band Rhythm & Blues in the U.S., the record quickly gained attention for containing the last-ever song and performance from
George Harrison, who died shortly after the album's U.K. release. In the U.S., the record came out in early 2002 to generally positive reviews, although the focus of most of the initial critical attention was on
Harrison, not
Holland. Ignoring the splash the record made in the U.S., for the rest of the year
Jools continued to tour in his native U.K. while making frequent radio and television appearances.
The new millennium found
Holland issuing at least one significant album each year and continuing his collaborative projects with the Small World Big Band. Small World Big Band, Vol. 2: More Friends was released in 2002, followed by Small World Big Band Friends, Vol. 3: Jack o the Green in 2003. In 2004,
Holland collaborated with the legendary
Tom Jones (on Tom Jones & Jools Holland) but quickly returned to the "everyone's welcome" big band with two albums in 2005, Beatroute and
Swinging the Blues Dancing the Ska. For 2006,
Holland tackled classic country with his big band and issued Moving Out to the Country, which featured an eclectic mix of artists, from
Mark Knopfler to
Marc Almond. Best of Friends hit shelves in 2007 and was followed by yet another collaboration (this time with British soul singer
Ruby Turner), 2008's The Informer. That same year, a hits anthology was issued (The Collection).
Over the next few years,
Holland remained a staple of British music thanks to his BBC show and he continued to record regularly. He had a new album called Rockinghorse in 2010; two years later, the star-studded
Golden Age of Song appeared just in time for the Christmas season. In 2014,
Holland released Sirens of Song, an album of collaborations with a different female singer featured on every track, which included
Kylie Minogue,
Amy Winehouse,
Joss Stone, and
Eartha Kitt, to name just a few. Also featured on this release was the Jamaican soul singer
Ruby Turner, who had been a part of the
Rhythm & Blues Orchestra since its origins in the early '90s. They came together once again in 2015 for
Jools & Ruby, a joint effort that also celebrated the 20th anniversary of
Jools Holland on Warner Music.
Holland returned in 2016 with a project that explored his long relationship with the piano. The aptly titled
Piano featured eight original compositions and ten pieces by composers he admired. The collection also included a contribution from
Brian Eno, who provided backing vocals for the final track.
Holland continued his track record of collaborative albums; in 2017 he teamed up with
Jose Feliciano for
As You See Me Now, and in 2018
Marc Almond (with whom he had toured on-and-off for several years) on
A Lovely Life to Live.
Holland released another star-studded collaborative album called
Pianola. Piano & Friends in 2022. Among his guests this time were
Trombone Shorty,
David Gilmour,
Dhani Harrison,
Tom Jones, and
David Sanborn. ~ Rudyard Kennedy & J. Scott McClintock