The primary singer, guitarist, and songwriter for the beloved British art pop band
XTC,
Andy Partridge was born December 11, 1953, on the island of Malta and raised in Swindon, England. In 1976, he teamed with bassist
Colin Moulding and drummer
Terry Chambers to form Star Park, later re-christened the Helium Kidz; upon adding keyboardist
Barry Andrews and signing to Virgin, the group adopted the name
XTC, issuing its debut
3D EP in the fall of 1977. Despite the band's punk-era origins,
Partridge's early songs also drew enormous influence from the British Invasion period, resulting in a taut, angular pop sound quite distinct from their contemporaries;
XTC's debut album
White Music even cracked the U.K. Top 40. Following
Andrews' exit, the group recruited guitarist/keyboardist
David Gregory before recording their first chart hit, "Life Begins at the Hop"; with the 1979 album
Drums & Wires,
Partridge's songs turned even closer toward traditional pop, and a year later he issued his debut solo LPs,
Take Away and
The Lure of Salvage.
1980's
Black Sea was the first
XTC album to crack the American Top 50, while 1982's
English Settlement yielded their first British Top Ten hit, "Senses Working Overtime." However, during a resulting tour of the States,
Partridge suffered a nervous breakdown brought on by his debilitating stage fright, spending the next year in almost total isolation and announcing the band would never again appear live. When
XTC resurfaced in 1984 with the stunning
Mummer,
Partridge's songs evoked a new pastoral beauty. Its follow-up,
The Big Express, boasted even richer production, while in 1985 the group adopted the pseudonym
the Dukes of Stratosphear to record
25 O'Clock, a tongue-in-cheek (albeit note-perfect) homage to psychedelia.
XTC achieved their greatest commercial and creative success with 1986's
Skylarking, a lush, majestic song cycle produced (much to the group's initial frustration) by
Todd Rundgren; "Dear God," originally left off the album, became a left-field hit, and the album appeared on countless year-end lists.
Oranges & Lemons followed in 1989, generating the minor hit "The Mayor of Simpleton." The next year,
Partridge -- who previously produced records for
Peter Blegvad and
the Woodentops -- helmed sessions for
the Lilac Time and
the Mission U.K. XTC's
Nonsuch appeared in 1992, but would be the band's last new album for seven years; internal difficulties and label battles kept the group from releasing any new material prior to the 1999 release of the much-acclaimed
Apple Venus, Pt. 1. In the interim,
Partridge collaborated with celebrated ambient composer
Harold Budd on 1994's
Through the Hill. That same year, he teamed with fellow British pop eccentric
Martin Newell for
The Greatest Living Englishman. He also composed a number of songs for the 1996 Disney animated feature James and the Giant Peach, which the studio rejected in favor of music by
Randy Newman. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide