TONY MORTIMER ARTICALS

Below are some articals i found , This does not mean they are true but an option to read of what east 17/tony mortimer articals are out there. I will occasionaly get the truth on some articals. If you have found an artical thats not here please email me at east17mania@optushome.com.au some articals may be old.

 

No date found: sundaymirror.co.uk

TONY MORTIMER

EAST 17 star Tony Mortimer has told how the band left him "close to self destruction" - before he quit the booze and fags.

Tony, the band's songwriter still worth more than £2million, told me: "When I left the band, I was on the road to self-destruction. Suddenly I had nothing to do every day - so I'd go into my recording studio and be looking at my watch waiting for midday ... when I decided I could have a drink.

"I was drinking Jack Daniels and Coke a lot and could feel I was in danger of becoming an alcoholic, so I knocked it on the head once and for all."

Tony, along with long-term partner Tracey Davies, quit the booze four years ago.

He also listened to selfhelp cassettes from US life coach Tony Robbins.

The East 17 star added: "Now I'm confident alcohol will never touch my lips again."

He was speaking out as he and bandmates Brian Harvey, Terry Coldwell and John Hendy prepare for a comeback gig at Shepherd's Bush Empire on May 30.

Concert photos found: Film magic

Film magic has no artical but pictures of the gig click here to direct link

22/5/2006 found: Timeout.com

Back in the day, Take That weren't the only boyband on the block. East 17 were TT's dirtier Walthamstow cousins. The idea was that while Mark Owen was taking your mum out for tea and cakes, John and Terry would be banging your sisters in an upstairs box room, and while Gary Barlow was discussing shrubs with your dad, East 17's Brian Harvey would be in the other corner of the garden, smashed off his face on super-strength rave drugs, thwacking your Swingball backwards and forwards into the early hours. Take That covered Barry Manilow, East 17 covered Pet Shop Boys' ‘West End Girls', and when Take That launched pillowcases, dolls and special edition boxes of Kellogg's Corn Pops, East 17 sent out kids with stencils and spraycans, graffiti-ing their distinctive imagery everywhere from E17 to W12. Worldwide, East 17 sold more albums than Take That. ‘We're an average bunch of blokes from a town like yours and we make music,' the group trumpeted when they first poked their heads into the world of pop. ‘We sing, we dance. Anyone could be us, we reckon, but they ain't…'

East 17 are back for 2006, too, but you'd be forgiven if their own comeback had passed you by. When I spoke to East 17's songwriter and founding member Tony Mortimer a month ago, tickets for East 17's one show this week at the Shepherd's Bush Empire – capacity 2,000 – were still available. ‘Everyone's a bit older now,' he noted. ‘They're all going for the seated tickets.' While Take That's fans have sprung back to attention over the last five months, the people who bought East 17's records simply seem to have disappeared.

What with the 1990s being a period when teenagers were actually interested in buying pop records, East 17's solitary Number One single doesn't tell the full story of their huge success. Their debut single ‘House Of Love', for example, didn't even enter the Top Five and still shifted the best part of a million copies. Today's pop launches seem to clatter into town with an immediate air of failure and desperation, but East 17's success had immense dignity in its apparent effortlessness. Alongside Mortimer's fierce songwriting talents, East 17 benefited from a collision of creative minds. Tom Watkins, former manager of both Bros and the Pet Shop Boys, found a way to brilliantly bring rentboy chic to the pop charts. Likewise Form, the design powerhouse whose graphics have touched everything from Girls Aloud to Hut Recordings, developed a dazzling style for the group, including the iconic ‘dog' logo.

Unusually for a boyband, East 17's first few singles didn't even feature photographs on their sleeves – the graphics were simply a procession of slightly different cartoon dogs. Likewise songwriters and producers like Stannard and Rowe –who went on to create many of the Spice Girls' number ones – complemented Tony Mortimer's unique writing style, and were instrumental in the band's distinctive sound.

It was a great sound, too. Combining a British rap style with US beats and, frequently, a highly strung techno backdrop – one fallout from the early-1990s chart success of The KLF and The Shamen – East 17 carved their own musical niche. Their over-the-top tunes reached a peak with the stupendous introduction to ‘Let It Rain' – all rainstorms and apocalyptic thunder-claps with Tony, presumably atop a windy hillock, screaming about walking ‘through the corridor of creation… nation against nation… we pray for the unseen to be seen by the eyes of man…'

Hardly ‘It Only Takes A Minute', in other words, and compared with Take That's greatest hits East 17's own singles collection sounds remarkably fresh in 2006. Significantly, though, from the point of view of a comeback, Take That's career had a definite end – with a press conference on February 13 1996 and the final, farewell release of ‘How Deep Is Your Love?' the following month, meaning that they can now trade as a heritage act, manipulating the nostalgic yearnings of their mid-twenties audience. East 17 ended not with a boyband bang, but with the dismal whimper of a messy falling out (Tony left after Brian Harvey boasted of his prodigious drug sprees in a radio interview), followed by the other three rebranding themselves as E-17 and signing to Telstar, the label responsible for non-amazing compilation albums and the chart career of PJ & Duncan, for some terrible R&B-lite meanderings.

If there is anything to be learned from all this by today's pop stars, it is that one must sacrifice the short-term gains of limping forward as a pale imitation of your band's former glories, in order to maximise the potential of an eventual, all-guns-blazing reunion. This advice comes too late for East 17, unfortunately, but their Shepherd's Bush Empire show should still be unmissable, if only for the distant promise of a set-piece involving Brian Harvey and a jacket potato.

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Peter Robinson, Mon May 22

04/05/2006 Found: Metro.co.uk

60 seconds with tony mortimer click link to read more

Tony Mortimer was the songwriter and one of the singers in 1990s pop sensation East 17. At the rougher end of the pop market to wholesome Take That, they scored hits with House Of Love and Tony won an Ivor Novello for Christmas No. 1, Stay Another Day. Tony left East 17 in 1997. The group has reunited for a one-off gig at London's Shepherd's Bush Empire.

04/05/2006 Found: Contact Music

MORTIMER RUBBISHES TAKE THAT

 
EAST 17 frontman TONY MORTIMER has slammed rival boy band TAKE THAT's comeback tour, claiming they exploited speculation about an unlikely reunion with former member ROBBIE WILLIAMS to sell tickets. Take That recently reunited after a ten-year hiatus and began their tour late last month (23APR06), but Mortimer insists the band only received news coverage after cashing in on solo star Williams' success. He says, "They are just a trumped-up VILLAGE PEOPLE tribute band. They covered BARRY MANILOW! "Would there be that much interest in Take That if they hadn't played the Robbie card?" However, East 17 have followed the NEVER FORGET hitmakers' example - they are planning an onstage reunion at London's Shepherd's Bush Empire on 30 May (06).
04/05/2006 13:38

 

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