James Lascelles Explained

Honorific Prefix:The Honourable
James Lascelles
Birth Name:James Edward Lascelles
Landscape:yes
Birth Date:5 October 1953
Birth Place:Bayswater, London, England
Occupation:Musician
Children:4

James Edward Lascelles (born 5 October 1953) is a British musician and the second son of the 7th Earl of Harewood and his first wife, Marion. Lascelles is a second cousin to King Charles III.

Music

When young, Lascelles had classical piano and drum lessons, and claims that "John Tavener 'taught' him to improvise" by performing duets on a church organ.[1]

He then became interested in jazz, blues, and rock and roll.

Global Village Trucking Company

Lascelles was a co-founder of the Global Village Trucking Company, known to its fans as "The Globs", in the early 1970s. The band, the road crew and their families all lived together in a commune in an old farmhouse in Sotherton, Suffolk,[2] [3] and undertook numerous benefit concerts and free festivals, playing extended free-form jams,[4] making them a well known UK live act. The band shunned record companies, but played on the Greasy Truckers Live at Dingwalls Dance Hall benefit album at Dingwalls in 1973, and in November 1974 they recorded an eponymous album at Rockfield Studios, Monmouth, Wales.

In 1973 the BBC made a documentary about Global Village Trucking Company, their communal living and their aim to make it without a record company. The BBC updated the documentary for the What Happened Next series, shown in May 2008, which included their first gig in 30 years.[5] This re-union led to other Global Village gigs at Glastonbury 2008 and other festivals.

Later career

Lascelles then became a session musician, until in 1980 he joined The Breakfast Band, a jazz/funk band, which released two albums, Dolphin Ride and Waters Edge, and had a dance hit, "L.A. 14".

He then took an interest in world music, recording tribal music in North Africa and New Mexico, and releasing this on his own label, Tribal Music International. He also started composing music for theatre, The Footsbarn Travelling Theatre Company and Tiata Fahodzi,[6] and film. Lascelles played keyboards, synthesisers, and percussion for Cockney Rebel between 2000 and 2023, and continues to perform this role with his own world music band, Talking Spirits, as of 2024. Lascelles also works with disaffected inner-city children.As of 2011 Lascelles was appearing with Mike Storey as "The Ivory Brothers".[7]

Personal life

Lascelles has been married three times. First, on 4 April 1973 in Wortham, to Frederica Ann Duhrssen (born 12 June 1954, Newport, Maine). They had two children before divorcing in 1985:

Secondly, on 4 May 1985 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, to Lori "Shadow" Susan Lee (29 August 1954, Albuquerque – 29 June 2001). They had two children:

James and Lori divorced in 1996. Thirdly, Lascelles married Joy Elias-Rilwan. The Hon. Mrs. Lascelles is an actress and is actively involved in efforts to combat AIDS. She has four children of her own, and is a member of the Elias family of Yoruba chieftains in Lagos.

Lascelles' younger brother Jeremy Lascelles is a prominent British music industry executive, who played percussion for the Global Village Trucking Company.

Discography

Global Village Trucking Company

The Breakfast Band

Solo

Mandyleigh Storm

Notes and sources

  1. Web site: James Lascelles biography. jameslascelles.com. 25 November 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080828101214/http://www.jameslascelles.com/biography.html. 28 August 2008.
  2. Web site: Pop Group Settle For Commune In The Country. East Anglian Film Archive - UEA. 21 January 2018.
  3. Web site: My children grew up in a commune. The Guardian. Dinah. Jefferies. 14 June 2014. 16 May 2018.
  4. Dave Thompson, [{{Allmusic|class=album|id=r39002|pure_url=yes}} Allmusic review] of Global Village Trucking Company. Retrieved 25 November 2008.
  5. Web site: What Happened Next: Global Village Trucking Co. BBC Four. 15 May 2008. 25 November 2008.
  6. http://www.tiatafahodzi.com/2007/04/tiata-delights-07/ Tiata Fahodzi programme 2007
  7. Web site: Barsham and Albion Fairs Revisited. Diss Cornhall. 16 August 2011.

External links