As one of the most traditional pop bands of the new wave,
Squeeze provided one of the links between classic British guitar pop and post-punk. Inspired heavily by
the Beatles and
the Kinks,
Squeeze were the vehicle for the songwriting of
Chris Difford and
Glenn Tilbrook, who were hailed as the heirs to
Lennon and
McCartney's throne during their heyday in the early '80s. Unlike
Lennon and
McCartney, the partnership between
Difford and
Tilbrook was a genuine collaboration, with the former writing the lyrics and the latter providing the music.
Squeeze never came close to matching the popularity of
the Beatles, but the reason for that is part of their charm.
Difford and
Tilbrook were wry, subtle songwriters that subscribed to traditional pop songwriting values, but subverted them with literate lyrics and clever musical references. While their native Britain warmed to
Squeeze immediately, sending singles like "Take Me I'm Yours" and "Up the Junction" into the Top Ten, the band had a difficult time gaining a foothold in the States; they didn't have a U.S. Top 40 hit until 1987, nearly a decade after their debut album. Even if the group never had a hit in the U.S.,
Squeeze built a dedicated following that stayed with them into the late '90s, and many of their songs -- "Another Nail in My Heart," "Pulling Mussels (From the Shell)," "Tempted," "Black Coffee in Bed" -- became pop classics of the new wave era, as the platinum status of their compilation
Singles 45's and Under indicates.
Chris Difford (b. April 11, 1954; guitar, vocals) and
Glenn Tilbrook (b. August 31, 1957; vocals, guitar) formed
Squeeze in 1974.
Tilbrook answered an advertisement
Difford had placed in a store window, and the pair began writing songs. By the spring of 1974, the duo had recruited pianist
Jools Holland (b. Julian
Holland, January 24, 1958) and drummer Paul Gunn, and had named themselves
Squeeze, after the disowned
Velvet Underground album that featured none of the group's original members.
Squeeze began playing the thriving pub rock circuit, although their songs were quirkier and more pop-oriented than many of their peers. By 1976, the band had added bassist
Harry Kakoulli and replaced Gunn with
Gilson Lavis (b. June 27, 1951), a former tour manager and drummer for
Chuck Berry. They had also signed a contract with Miles Copeland's burgeoning BTM record label and management company.
Squeeze had already recorded several tracks for RCA, including two cuts with
Muff Winwood, that the label rejected. BTM went bankrupt before it could release the band's debut single, "Take Me I'm Yours" in early 1977, but
Squeeze were able to work with
John Cale on their debut EP, due to a contract Copeland had arranged with
Cale.
Squeeze released their debut EP, Packet of Three, on Deptford Fun City Records, in the summer of 1977 and soon arranged an international contract with A&M Records, becoming the label's first new wave act since their disastrous signing of
the Sex Pistols. The band entered the studio with producer
Cale later that year to work on their debut album, provisionally titled Gay Guys by the group's producer.
Cale had the group throw out most of their standard material, forcing them to write new material; consequently, the record wasn't necessarily a good representation of the band's early sound. By the time the album was released in the spring of 1978, the group and A&M had abandoned the record's working title, and it was released as
Squeeze. In America, the band and album had to change their name to
UK Squeeze in order to avoid confusion with an American band called Tight Squeeze; by the end of the year, they had reverted back to
Squeeze in the U.S.. Preceded by the hit single "Take Me I'm Yours," the album became a moderate success, but the group's true British breakthrough arrived in 1979, when they released their second album,
Cool for Cats. More representative of the band's sound than their debut,
Cool for Cats generated two number two singles in the title track and "Up the Junction." Later in 1978, the EP 6 Squeeze Songs Crammed Into One Ten-Inch Record EP was released.
Squeeze tried for a seasonal hit that year with "Christmas Day," but the single failed to chart.
Kakoulli was fired from the band after the release of
Cool for Cats and was replaced by
John Bentley.
Released in the spring of 1980,
Argybargy received the strongest reviews of any
Squeeze album to date, and produced moderate U.K. hits with "Another Nail in My Heart" and "Pulling Mussels (From the Shell)." Both songs, plus "If I Didn't Love You," became hits on college radio and new wave clubs in America, increasing the band's profile considerably; it was the first
Squeeze album to chart in America, reaching number 71.
Jools Holland, whose fascination with boogie-woogie piano was beginning to sit uncomfortably with
Difford and
Tilbrook's increasingly sophisticated compositions, left the band in late 1980 to form the Millionaires; he was replaced by
Paul Carrack, formerly of the pub rock band
Ace. Following
Argybargy, critics in both the U.K. and U.S. were calling
Difford and
Tilbrook "the new
Lennon and
McCartney," and in order to consolidate their growing reputation,
Squeeze made an attempt at their own
Sgt. Pepper's with 1981's
East Side Story. Initially, the album was to be produced by
Dave Edmunds, but the group scrapped those sessions to work with
Elvis Costello and
Roger Bechirian. Upon its summer release,
East Side Story was hailed with excellent reviews, but it didn't become a huge hit as expected. Nevertheless, it found an audience, peaking at number 19 in the U.K. and number 44 on the U.S. charts. The soulful,
Carrack-sung "Tempted" failed to reach the U.K. Top 40, but it did become the group's first charting U.S. single, reaching the Top 50. The country-tinged "Labeled with Love" became the group's third, and last, British Top Ten hit that fall.
Carrack left at the end of 1981 to join
Carlene Carter's backing band; he was replaced with
Don Snow, a classically trained pianist who formerly played with
the Sinceros.
Ever since the release of their debut,
Squeeze had been touring and recording without break, and signs of weariness were evident on
Sweets from a Stranger. Though it was the group's highest-charting U.S. album, reaching number 32 shortly after its spring release,
Sweets from a Stranger was uneven. In the U.K., it was a considerable disappointment, reaching number 37, with its single "Black Coffee in Bed" stalling at number 51. Nevertheless, the band had earned a considerable fan base, and were able to play Madison Square Garden that summer. Tired of touring and its frustrating commercial fortunes,
Difford and
Tilbrook decided to disband
Squeeze late in 1982, releasing the compilation
Singles 45's and Under, shortly after its announcement. Ironically,
Singles peaked at number three on the British charts; it would later go platinum in the U.S.
Though they had disbanded
Squeeze,
Difford and
Tilbrook had no intention of ending their collaboration -- they simply wanted to pursue other projects. In particular, they saw themselves as songwriters in the classic tradition of Tin Pan Alley or the Brill Building, and began writing for
Helen Shapiro, Paul Young,
Billy Bremner and
Jools Holland. They also worked on Labelled with Love, a musical based on their songs, which played briefly in Deptford, England early in 1983. The duo released an eponymous album in the summer of 1984, showcasing a sophisticated new sound, as well as long, flowing haircuts and coats. The record was a moderate success, but the duo were already thinking of re-forming
Squeeze. Early in 1985, the band reunited to play a charity gig, which prompted
Difford,
Tilbrook,
Holland, and
Lavis (who had been driving a cab) to permanently re-form, adding bassist
Keith Wilkinson.
Cosi Fan Tutti Frutti was released in the fall of 1985 to positive reviews and moderately successful sales. During 1986,
Andy Metcalfe, a member of
Robyn Hitchcock & the Egyptians, joined the band as a second keyboardist.
Babylon and On followed in the fall of 1987, and the album became a surprise hit, reaching number 14 in the U.K. and generating their biggest American hits -- "Hourglass," which reached number 15 on the strength of MTV's heavy rotation of the song's inventive video, and the Top 40 "853-5937." After completing an international tour, which featured another concert at Madison Square Garden and a headlining spot at the Reading Festival,
Metcalfe left the band, and he was not replaced.
Babylon and On may have been a hit, but
Squeeze's renewed success wasn't long-lasting. The group's next album,
Frank, was released in the fall of 1989 and it wasn't given much a promotional push by A&M. Consequently, it flopped in both the U.S. and the U.K. During the supporting tour for
Frank, A&M dropped
Squeeze, leaving the band in the cold. Following the tour,
Holland left the band to concentrate on his career as a recording artist, as well as a television host for the BBC.
Squeeze released a live album, A Round & a Bout, on IRS Records in the spring of 1990. Early in 1991, the band signed with
Reprise Records and began recording a new album, hiring
Steve Nieve,
Bruce Hornsby and
Matt Irving as session keyboardists. The resulting album,
Play, was released in the fall of 1991 to little attention, partially because it received no support from the label. During the
Play tour, the band hired
Don Snow and
Carol Isaacs as keyboardists. Over the course of 1992,
Difford and
Tilbrook began to play the occasional acoustic concert, as
Squeeze revamped its touring lineup again, hiring
Steve Nieve as their touring keyboardist. Longtime drummer
Gilson Lavis left the band later that year to play in
Jools Holland's big band; he was replaced by
Pete Thomas who, like
Nieve, was a member of
the Attractions.
Squeeze resigned from A&M Records in early 1993 and recorded their new album,
Some Fantastic Place, with
Thomas on drums and
Paul Carrack on keyboards. Released in the September of 1993, the album became a moderate British hit, debuting at number 26; it was ignored in the U.S.. During 1994,
Thomas left the band to join the reunited
Attractions; by the end of the year, the group had replaced him with
Andy Newmark. Prior to the recording of 1995's Ridiculous,
Kevin Wilkinson -- no relation to bassist
Keith Wilkinson -- became the group's drummer. Released in the U.K. in the fall of 1995, Ridiculous became a moderate hit, generating the hits "This Summer" and "Electric Trains." The album was released in America in the spring of 1996 on IRS. Under the name
John Savannah,
Don Snow contributed keyboards on Ridiculous and the album's supporting tour.
During 1996,
Squeeze released two compilations, the single-disc Piccadilly Collection in the U.S. and the double-disc Excess Moderation in the U.K.. The following year, A&M U.K. issued the box set Six of One..., which contained remastered versions of their first six albums, plus two bonus tracks on each disc. A second box, covering the second six albums, was scheduled for release in 1998, but it was canceled after the label folded. By that time,
Squeeze had finished their contractual obligation for new studio albums with the label. They signed with independent Quixotic Records, releasing a new album,
Domino, in November of 1998.
Domino was recorded with a new lineup, featuring
Difford and
Tilbrook, plus
Jools Holland's brother
Chris Holland on keyboards, bassist
Hilaire Penda, and drummer
Ashley Soan, a former member of
Del Amitri. Following the supporting tour,
Squeeze went their separate ways again at the close of 1999.
Difford and
Tilbrook pursued solo projects during the course of the 2000s, contributing to some
Squeeze-related projects -- notably the excellent 2004 book by
Jim Drury, Squeeze: Song by Song -- but they didn't reunite the band, not even when they were goaded by VH1's Band Reunited program in 2004.
Squeeze started to lurch back into activity in 2007, as Universal reissued a deluxe edition of
Argybargy and a new hits collection;
Difford and
Tilbrook formed a new version of the band, largely relying on players from
Glenn's Fluffers, for a U.S. tour later captured on the live album 5 Live: On Tour in America. From that point on
Squeeze toured fairly regularly, with the band announcing in 2010 that
Difford and
Tilbrook were working on new songs, but before that album was released came
Spot the Difference, a 2010 record where the band re-recorded many of its biggest hits.
Over the next five years,
Difford and
Tilbrook worked steadily on new songs while touring with a lineup consisting of
John Bentley,
Stephen Large, and
Simon Hanson;
Bentley was swapped out for
Lucy Shaw in 2015.
Squeeze finally unveiled their new studio album,
Cradle to the Grave -- their first album in 17 years -- in the autumn of 2015. After its release,
Shaw left the band and was replaced by
Yolanda Charles; Steve Smith, formerly of
Dirty Vegas, also joined the group as a percussionist. This lineup debuted on
The Knowledge, which appeared in October 2017. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine