* En anglais uniquement
One of the sharpest and most prolific British songwriters of his generation,
Luke Haines -- who began modestly enough in a string of obscure '80s bands, including
the Servants -- helmed the glam noir of
the Auteurs, the broken funk of
Baader Meinhof, and the (mostly) downbeat pop of
Black Box Recorder, in addition to releasing material under his own name. During the last seven years of the '90s,
Haines issued six albums that ranged from fine to spectacular, from the Mercury Prize-nominated
New Wave (1993) to the sleek, bleak
How I Learned to Love the Bootboys (1999). After the release of
Black Box Recorder's second album, 2000's The Facts of Life (the title track hit the upper reaches of the U.K. singles chart),
Haines embarked on a prolific and predictably esoteric solo career, averaging a full-length release per year -- the majority of which were concept albums -- and applying his caustic wit to a wide spectrum of styles and subject matters that included tall tales of Dickensian villainy (Oliver Twist Manifesto), the heyday of British wrestling (9 1/2 Psychedelic Meditations on British Wrestling of the 1970s and Early '80s), Atomic Age ephemera (
British Nuclear Bunkers), and post-Brexit unease (
Setting the Dogs on the Post-Punk Postman).
Christie Malry's Own Double Entry and The Oliver Twist Manifesto were released within a couple months of each other in mid-2001 -- the former a soundtrack to the darkly comic film of the same name, and the latter a surprisingly effective fusion of
Haines' typically snide and downcast melodies over springy hip-hop-oriented production. (The week the disc was released,
Haines called for a week-long National Pop Strike, a period in which any musician could turn in his or her wares and receive amnesty for any and all "crimes" committed against pop.) Two years later,
Haines sidestepped a typical best-of release with
Das Capital, a set of
Auteurs material recorded with orchestral backing. Luke Haines Is Dead (2005), however, summarized
Haines' career up to that point across a wide span of three CDs containing highlights, B-sides, and radio sessions.
Haines' second proper solo album, Off My Rocker at the Art School Bop, came in 2006. A year later, he published Bad Vibes: Britpop and My Part in Its Downfall, a book that rankled former colleagues (he referred to
Auteurs member
James Banbury only as "the cellist") and longtime enemies alike. In 2012,
Haines released the typically idiosyncratic (and self-explanatory) 9 1/2 Psychedelic Meditations on British Wrestling of the 1970s and Early '80s and the career overview Outsider/In: The Collection, followed in 2013 by the conceptual adult fairy tale
Rock and Roll Animals and, a year later, by
New York in the 70's, another ambitious concept album. In the summer of 2014, he collaborated on a theatrical piece with artist Scott King called Adventures in Dementia: A Micro Opera, whose story centered around a
Mark E. Smith (lead singer of
the Fall) impersonator's caravan holiday. The brief six-song soundtrack was released in January 2015, with the electronics-driven conceptual full-length
British Nuclear Bunkers arriving that October. His sixth album in seven years, 2016's
Smash the System found
Haines ditching the conceptual architecture of past outings in favor of a more singles-oriented, though no less idiosyncratic, set of new material. In 2017,
Haines released his first-ever solo career retrospective, Is Alive & Well & Living in Buenos Aires: Heavy Frenz the Soloanthology 2001-2017. 2018's
I Sometimes Dream of Glue saw
Haines returning to more narrative-driven material, delivering a surreal 14-song set about a rural English settlement populated by 2" tall mutants with a taste for solvents. For his next project,
Haines joined forces with another cult hero, former
R.E.M. guitarist
Peter Buck, to write and record 2020's
Beat Poetry for Survivalists.
Buck also made a guest appearance on 2021's
Setting the Dogs on the Post-Punk Postman, a set full of edgy wit that reflected the mood of post-Brexit, mid-lockdown Britain; Julian Barratt of the Mighty Boosh also appeared on the album. ~ Andy Kellman