Alex Kapranos

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Alex Kapranos

Alex Kapranos (Greek: Άλεξ Καπράνος; born Alexander Paul Kapranos Huntley, March 20, 1972 in Almondsbury, Gloucestershire) is the lead singer and guitarist of the Glasgow band Franz Ferdinand.[1]

Early life

Alex Kapranos was born in Almondsbury, England to an English mother and Greek father [2] . He moved to the North East of England when he was three months old, spending his early childhood in Sunderland and South Shields,[citation needed] his mother's home town, and spent most summers in his father's native Greece. Huntley is the name his father adopted from his father's aunt.

In 1980, he moved with his family to Edinburgh, then to Glasgow in 1984. At the age of seventeen, Kapranos attended the University of Aberdeen to study theology. After dropping out, he continued his studies at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow where he studied English and Catering, eventually gaining a BA. He worked as a chef, barman, music promoter, driver, welder and lecturer prior to finding fame with Franz Ferdinand. [3]

Music Before Franz Ferdinand

From the early 1990s, he was a fixture of the Glasgow music scene, running live nights at the 13th Note, most notably The Kazoo Club.[citation needed] While working as a chef, bartender, lecturer in IT at the city's Anniesland College, and other various jobs, he played in some of Glasgow's popular bands, including The Blisters (later known as The Karelia), long-standing ska stalwarts The Amphetameanies and The Yummy Fur. He is also known to have contributed to Urusei Yatsura and Lungleg. recordings.[4]

Franz Ferdinand

After dropping "Huntley" from his name, he formed Franz Ferdinand in 2001. The band comprises Kapranos, Nick McCarthy (guitar, keyboard, backup vocals), Paul Thomson (drums, backup vocals, sometimes guitar) and Bob Hardy (bass). The band saw chart success after their second single "Take Me Out (released 12 January 2004)[5] reached #3 in the UK Charts[6] followed by their debut album Franz Ferdinand (released 9 February 2004)[7] which debuted on the UK album chart at #3[8]. The band went on to win the 2004 Mercury Music Prize[9] and two BRIT Awards in 2005[10] for Best British Group and Best British Rock Act.

Instruments

In Franz Ferdinand, Kapranos can be seen playing original 1973 Fender Telecaster Deluxes. It is known that he has two (if not more) models. Most notably a black one and a brown one that has had it's finish worn away. During the You Could Have It So Much Better tour, his second guitar is an original Gibson Les Paul Junior with the doublecut body style. These seem to be his most played guitars although he has been sighted playing a Gibson SG, Fender Jazzmaster, Burns 12 string Marquee, Fender 1952 Telecaster and as of recently he has been seen playing a Gibson ES-355 with a Bigsby tremolo. He has also been sighted playing fellow band member Nicholas McCarthy's blue sparkle Hagstrom Sweetone. Acoustically his guitars range. He has played a Gibson Hummingbird as well as other various acoustic guitars (including a twelve string) that are sometimes played at special acoustic performances.

Writing

In September 2005, Kapranos began Soundbites[1], a weekly food column for G2 in the Guardian newspaper, which detailed his culinary adventures as Franz Ferdinand traversed the globe on their world tour. Sound Bites: Eating on Tour with Franz Ferdinand, a book of the column and unreleased material illustrated by Andy Knowles was released in 2006.

Sound Bites: Eating on Tour with Franz Ferdinand was read by Alex Kapranos on BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week for 4-8 December 2006, described as "his account about what he ate while touring the world." [2]

Production

Kapranos produced "Men's Needs, Women's Needs, Whatever" - the third album by British indie rock group The Cribs in Vancouver BC, released in May 14 2007. He also produced their single only track Don't You Wanna Be Relevant? which was featured with Our Bovine Public (from Men's Needs, Women's Needs, Whatever) as a Double A side.

Kapranos makes a cameo appearance in the video for Our Bovine Public.[11]

Alex Kapranos playing with Franz Ferdinand


References

External links