Labi Siffre

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Labi Siffre
Birth name Claudius Afolabi Siffre
Born (1945-06-25) 25 June 1945 (age 79)
Hammersmith, London, England
Genres Soft rock, soul, Jazz, funk
Occupation(s) Musician, singer-songwriter,
poet and writer
Years active 1970–
Labels EMI/Pye/China
Website Official site

Claudius Afolabi 'Labi' Siffre (born 25 June 1945) is a British singer, songwriter, musician and poet. Siffre released six albums between 1970 and 1975, and four between 1988 and 1998. He has published essays, the stage and TV play Deathwrite and three volumes of poetry - Nigger, Blood On The Page and Monument.

Early life and education

Born the fourth of five children, at Queen Charlotte's Hospital in Hammersmith, London to a British mother of BarbadianBelgian descent and a Nigerian father, Siffre was brought up in Bayswater and Hampstead and educated at a Catholic independent day school, St Benedict's School, in Ealing, west London.[1] Despite his Catholic education Siffre has stated that he has always been an atheist.[2]

Musical career

Siffre played jazz guitar at Annie Ross's jazz club in Soho in the 1960s as part of a Hammond organ, guitar, drums house band. [2]

He released six albums between 1970 and 1975. In the 1970s he released 16 singles,[citation needed] three of which became hits: "It Must Be Love" (No. 14, 1971) (later covered by and a No. 4 hit for Madness, for which Siffre himself appeared in the video); "Crying Laughing Loving Lying" (No. 11, 1972); and "Watch Me" (No. 29, 1972).[3] In 1978, Siffre took part in the UK heats of the Eurovision Song Contest. He performed his own composition "Solid Love", which placed fifth of the twelve songs up for consideration at the A Song for Europe contest. Additionally, he co-wrote the song "We Got It Bad" performed by Bob James, which came tenth.

Siffre came out of self-imposed retirement from music in 1985, when he saw a television film from South Africa showing a white soldier shooting at black children.[4] He wrote "(Something Inside) So Strong" (No. 4, 1987)[3] and released four more albums between 1988 and 1998.

The 1975 track "I Got The" was released as a single in 2006, having been sampled in the Eminem track My Name Is in 1998.

Personal life

Siffre met Peter John Carver Lloyd in July 1964. They remained together until Lloyd's death in 2013,[5] having entered a Civil Partnership in 2005, as soon as this was possible in the UK.[6]

Discography

Singles which reached the UK charts

Studio albums

Live albums

  • The Last Songs (Re-mastered)" (2006)

Cover versions

Bibliography

Poetry

  • Nigger (Xavier Books 1993)
  • Blood on the Page (Xavier Books 1995)
  • Monument (Xavier Books 1997)

Plays

  • DeathWrite (Xavier Books 1997)

Essays

  • Choosing the Stick They Beat You With (Penguin 2000)

References

  1. Larkin, Colin (2002) The Virgin Encyclopedia of 70s Music p.398. Virgin, 2002, ISBN 978-1852279479
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  5. reviews-and-ramblings.dreamwidth.org
  6. newhumanist.org.uk
  7. [1] Archived 13 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine

External links