One of the most enduring English singer/songwriters since the early '80s,
Tracey Thorn began making music with the all-female quartet
Marine Girls, a minimalist pop group that released a pair of albums --
Beach Party and
Lazy Ways -- inspired by
Young Marble Giants and
the Raincoats. She recorded
A Distant Shore, a relatively moody, if similarly skeletal solo album, for Cherry Red in 1983, and around that time she met
Ben Watt -- who was also signed to Cherry Red -- and formed a partnership as
Everything But the Girl. From 1984 through 1999,
Thorn and
Watt released ten albums that shifted from indie pop to slick sophisti-pop to downtempo club music. Shortly after having twin daughters together, they put
EBTG on ice, as
Watt DJed and operated his Buzzin' Fly label while
Thorn stayed home with the children. (They had a third child, a boy, in 2001.) After several years of inactivity,
Thorn began writing again and recorded her second solo album,
Out of the Woods, which was released in early 2007. Instead of working with
Watt, she collaborated with a number of producers, including
Ewan Pearson,
Charles Webster,
Cagedbaby,
Sasse, and
Martin Wheeler.
Pearson returned as sole producer of her 2010 effort
Love and Its Opposite, an album released by
Watt's Strange Feeling label. Throughout the years, she has guested on songs by a number of groups, including
the Style Council,
the Go-Betweens,
Massive Attack, and
Tiefschwarz. In 2012,
Thorn released Tinsel and Lights, a holiday album featuring songs by contemporary composers.
–
Andy Kellman, Rovi