Graham Coxon (born Graham Leslie Coxon on 12 March 1969, in Rinteln, West Germany) is best known as the former guitarist in the English band Blur. He contributed to the band's first seven albums, from 1991's Leisure to the 2002 sessions for the following year's Think Tank, though he only features in the last of its 13 tracks.
Coxon is a gifted musician, capable of playing many instruments. He has released six solo records (half of them while still a member of Blur) - where in a McCartney, Beckish-style he performs nearly all of the instruments. He also appears to have earned the respect of his peers. Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood - himself considered one of Britain's most innovative and accomplished musicians - praised Coxon's musicality and talent: "Anything that has more of Graham's guitar playing, I'm bound to like."
Damon said that he just can't understand why there is such a tension, as they have known each other for twenty years and when they are in the same room everything's perfect. He explained that there is a horrible hole in the sound and acknowledged Graham as a vastly superior guitarist to himself. In 2005, Albarn said that he felt quite sad about the situation and he really wants Graham to return, so they can start properly working again on Blur albums. However, Coxon is apparently adamant, so Blur as a three-piece are now recording a new album, described by Albarn as a "basic stupid record", due to his own limited perceptions of himself as a guitarist.
After going solo full time, he released The Kiss of Morning in 2002. The album proved to be his most accessible to date and was promoted with the single "Escape Song" which proved to be an interesting hybrid of Syd Barrett's "Octopus" and progressive rock trail-blazers The Nice. In 2004, Coxon released his fifth solo album Happiness in Magazines, produced by ex-Blur and The Smiths producer Stephen Street. This proved to be his most successful album to date, and he received the NME Award for 'Best Solo Artist' in 2005.
Apart from being a musician, Coxon is also a gifted artist, and he designs all of his album sleeves. He studied fine art at Goldsmiths College for around a year in 1988, leaving to pursue his musical career with Blur. In his time there he mixed with upcoming talents such as Damien Hirst, Michael Landy, Sam Taylor-Wood, and Abigail Lane, some of the future leading lights of the Britart movement.
In March 2006 he released his sixth solo album, called Love Travels at Illegal Speeds, produced by Stephen Street again. As hinted by the title, the album is inspired by Coxon's current on-going romance with a model agent. It marks Coxon's first album away from his now-defunct indie label 'Transcopic'. The LP was preceded by the singles "Standing On My Own Again" on February 27 and "You and I". Coxon embarked on a tour of the UK, starting in March 20 at Newcastle University.
| Title | Release date | Album | Peak chart positions |
|---|---|---|---|
| UK | |||
| "Thank God for the Rain" / "You Will Never Be" | 30 July 2001 | Crow Sit on Blood Tree | 92 |
| "Escape Song" / "Mountain of Regret" | 14 October 2002 | The Kiss of Morning | 96 |
| "Freakin' Out" | 8 March 2004 | Happiness in Magazines | 37 |
| "Bittersweet Bundle of Misery" | 3 May 2004 | Happiness in Magazines | 22 |
| "Spectacular" | 26 July 2004 | Happiness in Magazines | 32 |
| "Freakin' Out" / "All Over Me" | 26 October 2004 | Happiness in Magazines | 19 |
| "Standing on My Own Again" | 27 February 2006 | Love Travels at Illegal Speeds | 20 |
| "You & I" | 8 May 2006 | Love Travels at Illegal Speeds | 39 |
| "I Can't Look at Your Skin" / "What's He Got?" | 17 July 2006 | Love Travels at Illegal Speeds | ? |
1969 births | Alumni of Goldsmiths College | Peel Sessions artists | Blur | English guitarists | English male singers | English songwriters | English painters | Living people
Graham Coxon | Graham Coxon | Graham Coxon | גראהם קוקסון | Graham Coxon | Graham Coxon | Graham Coxon
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