- Solid Bronze - Great Hits · 1994
- Miaow · 1989
- Welcome to the Beautiful South · 1989
- Blue Is the Colour · 1996
- Welcome to the Beautiful South · 1989
- Choke · 1989
- Quench · 1989
- Blue Is the Colour · 1996
- 0898 Beautiful South · 1989
- 0898 Beautiful South · 1989
- 0898 Beautiful South · 1989
- Solid Bronze - Great Hits · 1989
- Welcome to the Beautiful South · 1989
Albums
- 2006
- 2003
- 2000
- 1996
- 1994
- 1990
Music Videos
- 2006
Artist Playlists
- This offbeat band hides sharp-edged lyrics under sparkling indie-pop hooks.
Compilations
About The Beautiful South
If you never knew you could bop your head to lighthearted songs about murder, well, welcome to The Beautiful South. After politically minded indie pop British outfit The Housemartins went their separate ways in 1988, vocalist Paul Heaton and drummer Dave Hemingway formed The Beautiful South, the name being a glib nod to Southern England from a band with Northern roots. Their first single—a deeply cynical love song called "Song for Whoever”—was released in September of 1989 and laid out the band’s musical framework of pairing darkly tongue-in-cheek lyrics with jazzy piano riffs and sprightly melodies. The band’s first foray climbed to No. 2 on the charts and their equally bitter romp, "You Keep It All In," with vocalist Briana Corrigan providing a sweet counter note, followed suit. A month later, they released their debut, Welcome to the Beautiful South, sharing their caustic musical humor with fans who were in on the joke. Their peppy breakup anthem "A Little Time" from their 1990 album Choke went to No. 1 as fans related to its spurned lover’s revenge theme, and the singles compilation, Carry on Up the Charts, which they released in 1994, was so popular it reportedly could be found in one in every seven UK households. Over the course of the next 10 years, the band released a steady stream of albums that told grim stories and bleak romances all wrapped in jaunty tunes, as well as jazz-pop covers of songs like Pebbles’ “Girlfriend” and Fred Neil’s “Everybody’s Talkin’.” The band broke up in 2007, spinning off into solo acts and other iterations. On their way out the door, they released a statement saying they were splitting up “due to musical similarities”—a fittingly cheeky farewell.
- ORIGIN
- Hull, England
- FORMED
- 1989
- GENRE
- Alternative