Chris Collingwood (born October 3, 1967) is an American singer, songwriter, and artist. He is best known as the former lead vocalist and founding member of the power pop band Fountains of Wayne.
Chris Collingwood | |
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Background information | |
Born | United Kingdom | October 3, 1967
Origin | Sellersville, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Genres | Power pop, rock |
Occupation(s) | Guitarist, songwriter, producer |
Instrument(s) | Guitar, vocals, keyboards |
Years active | 1995–present |
Early life and education
editCollingwood was born on October 3, 1967, in Great Britain, and grew up in Sellersville, Pennsylvania.[1]
He graduated from The Hill School in Pottstown, Pennsylvania,[2] and then attended Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts, where he met future Fountains of Wayne bandmate Adam Schlesinger.[3] The two collaborated several times prior to forming Fountains of Wayne in 1995.
Fountains of Wayne
editIn 1995, Collingwood and Schlesinger formed Fountains of Wayne. They recorded one album, Fountains of Wayne, before recruiting Jody Porter and Brian Young in 1997.
Though Collingwood and Schlesinger shared cowriter credit for all original Fountains of Wayne material, for most of their career together, they wrote their songs separately. The band won a Grammy Award for their song "Stacy's Mom", in 2004, which charted at number 21 on the Billboard Hot 100.
In 2006, the band was touring in Tokyo, Japan, when Collingwood experienced a mental breakdown. Prior to his breakdown, he had been experiencing hallucinations for two days, and was sleep deprived and mentally unstable to the point that he did not believe he was actually in Japan. The performance was cancelled, and Collingwood spent time recovering in hospitals in both Japan and the United States. He later recalled the event, saying:[4]
Every town you go to, they want there to be a party and everywhere you go, there's free liquor...You end up turning your entire tour into a party. When we were in Japan in 2006, I hadn't slept in four, five days and started hallucinating in Tokyo. I ended up going to the hospital and they were pumping me full of sedatives to put me to sleep. It happens to meth heads – not sleeping, seeing shadow people and having horrific hallucinations. Nothing ever scared me more than just not being able to control my own brain or trust what I'm seeing, hearing or feeling.
After many years as an alcoholic, Collingwood became sober by 2011. He would become more involved in the production of their album, Sky Full of Holes, although, it would end up being the hardest for the group to make, collectively:[4]
The most recent record was definitely the hardest that we've ever done. I think I'm partly to blame for that. I checked out on the previous record, so when I came back in, I had to assert myself. Every single thing about that record was a fight. It was not this blissful reconciliation that led to the release; it was a brutal thing right up to the end. We'll see what happens if we end up making another record.
The band split up in 2013. Despite departing, the band never issued a statement about their endings, and fans started to speak about the band in past tense by 2016.
Schlesinger died in 2020, and the surviving band members held an online charity event shortly after, which was the first time the band had played with each other since their 2013 split, to help raise funding for the New Jersey Pandemic Relief Fund.
Solo
editCollingwood released his debut album as a solo artist in 2016, under the band name Look Park. The album also included contributions by: Davey Faragher (bass), Mitchell Froom (keyboard/producer), Mike Viola, Flora Reed, and Philip Price (all backing vocals), and was engineered and mixed by David Boucher.[5]
Personal life
editCollingwood currently lives in New England in the Northeastern United States. In 1996, he married Linda Stevenson.
Influences
editCollingwood's major influences are The Beatles, The Zombies, The Hollies, Aztec Camera, Squeeze, and Blue Öyster Cult.[6]
Discography
editWith Fountains Of Wayne
editStudio albums
editTitle | Details |
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Fountains of Wayne |
|
Utopia Parkway |
|
Welcome Interstate Managers |
|
Traffic and Weather |
|
Sky Full of Holes |
Singles
editTitle | Year |
---|---|
"Radiation Vibe" | 1996 |
"Sink to the Bottom" | 1997 |
"Survival Car" | |
"Barbara H." | |
"I Want an Alien for Christmas" | |
"Leave the Biker" | 1998 |
"Denise" | 1999 |
"Red Dragon Tattoo" | |
"Troubled Times" | |
"The Valley of Malls" | 2000 |
"Stacy's Mom" | 2003 |
"Mexican Wine" | 2004 |
"Hey Julie" | |
"Maureen" | 2005 |
"Someone to Love" | 2007 |
"'92 Subaru" | |
"Richie and Ruben" | 2011 |
"Someone's Gonna Break Your Heart" |
Solo
editAlbums
editTitle | Year |
---|---|
Look Park | 2016 |
References
edit- ^ Brian Wise (2004-02-08). "Eclectic Sounds of New Jersey, Echoing From Coast to Coast". New York Times. New Jersey. Retrieved 2014-06-30.
- ^ Tribune, Knight-Ridder (2003-07-21). "Fountains of Wayne gushes". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2024-02-07.
- ^ "Purple with Purpose: Submit Your Song". Alumni. Retrieved 2020-04-29.
- ^ a b Kleinman |, David (2013-03-06). "Fountains of Wayne performs songs from newest release at Sellersville". The Mercury. Retrieved 2023-04-20.
- ^ "Look Park Music". Look Park Music. Retrieved 2023-04-20.
- ^ [1] Archived December 12, 2011, at the Wayback Machine