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Julianne Regan
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Key Information
Julianne Regan (born 30 June 1962) is an English/Irish singer, songwriter, and musician. She was the lead singer and songwriter of the band All About Eve, which had four top-50 albums in the late 1980s and early 1990s. AllMusic describes Regan as "certainly one of the more talented singers of the late eighties British goth rock scene".[1]
Early life (1962–1981)
[edit]At the age of 15, Julianne Regan was given a Woolworths electric guitar by a cousin and taught herself to play.[2]
All About Eve (first era) (1985–1992)
[edit]The first line-up recorded the single "D For Desire" in 1985, but, following disagreements around artistic direction between Zwingmann and Regan, the former left the band. Soon after this, Andy Cousin replaced Jackson on bass, thus creating the first well-known All About Eve line-up of Bricheno, Cousin and Regan, plus a drum machine. The group recorded demos and played several gigs.
In 1986, Regan met ex-The Sisters of Mercy guitarist Wayne Hussey. Hussey was then recording the first Mission album God's Own Medicine and was so impressed with Regan's voice that he asked her to contribute backing vocals to the song "Severina". This started a close collaboration between the two bands that continues to this day, and at the time got All About Eve signed to the Mission's record label (on the back of them being support to the Mission's first tour and Regan appearing on several TV programmes with the Mission for performances of "Severina"). Regan also provides backing vocals on The Mission songs "Beyond The Pale," "Tomorrow Never Knows," "Black Mountain Mist," and "Wishing Well", which appears on the US version of their early-songs collection album The First Chapter. A full-time drummer Mark Price was recruited to All About Eve in 1987.
Following an appearance on the BBC television music programme Top of the Pops in August 1988, All About Eve soon had success with the first album and the single "Martha's Harbour" peaking within the top ten of the UK Albums Chart and UK Singles Chart respectively, along with four other top-forty hits on the latter chart between the summers of 1988 and 1989.
Bricheno left the band at the end of 1990 (and joined The Sisters of Mercy), to be replaced by Church guitarist Marty Willson-Piper for All About Eve's third album, Touched by Jesus, for which David Gilmour from Pink Floyd also contributed guitar work on two songs.
Touched By Jesus was less successful than the first two albums and All About Eve subsequently changed record labels to MCA in 1992. They recorded their fourth and final studio album Ultraviolet, which had a more psychedelic sound. This alienated fans, and the record did not make the Top 40. MCA dropped the band from their contract.[citation needed]
Other projects (1993–1995)
[edit]Regan and the rest of the band parted company during the writing sessions for what might have been All About Eve's fifth album. Cousin, Price and Willson-Piper completed it without her, and it eventually saw the light of day under the group name and title of Seeing Stars. Under the group name The Harmony Ambulance, Regan did release one single very soon after the All About Eve split for Geoff Travis' Rough Trade label. The double A-side, "Nature's Way" and "All This And Heaven". Regan turned down an offer to work full-time with that band. She also recorded vocals for the Schaft track "Broken English". [citation needed]
Regan also occasionally performed live with Fairport Convention, singing some of the lead vocals on "Who Knows Where the Time Goes", "Blackwaterside", and "After Halloween". Some of these tracks can be found on the albums Circle Dance – The Hokey Pokey Charity Compilation, Fairport Convention: 25th Anniversary Concert, and Cropredy Capers – 25 Years of the Festival.
Regan then dropped off the public radar. A collaboration with Suede's Bernard Butler failed when the two fell out during the recording session. She later said "I don't really know why it exploded the way it did, but it did. It was a small thing that turned into a big thing, that turned into an enormous thing." [citation needed]
Mice (1995–1997)
[edit]Revolving around a central core of Regan, Tim McTighe, former Levitation member Christian Hayes (aka 'Bic') and, for studio recordings, the original All About Eve drummer Mark Price, Mice released their first single, "Mat's Prozac", in November 1995, which charted in the UK.[3] This was followed by a second UK charting EP single "The Milkman" released in April 1996 with the Lynsey De Paul song Martian Man.[4] Countrywide touring followed as did an album Because I Can recorded for indie label Permanent Records. Many collaborators took part in this band, including both Marty Willson-Piper and Andy Cousin which led to people questioning why the band was not launched as another incarnation of All About Eve. Regan said that this was deliberate as she had wanted the new band to be musically different. Because I Can reached the Indie Top Ten, but Permanent Records went out of business in 1997, leaving the album and the three singles "Mat's Prozac", "The Milkman" and "Dear Sir" available in the shops but without promotion or replacement. [citation needed]
Jules et Jim (1999–2001)
[edit]Jules et Jim is a collaboration between Regan and Jean-Marc Lederman (formerly of The Weathermen and Gene Loves Jezebel). In 1999 they released a single, "Swimming", followed by a six-track EP, Subtitles in 2002. Regan also featured on Lederman's soundtracks for the computer games Fairies and Mystic Inn by Funpause, and Rock Legend by Positech; and also vocals on a number of tracks on Lederman's La Femme Verte album project.
All About Eve (second era) (1999–2006)
[edit]In late 1999 a Mission re-launch was underway and lead singer Hussey – in a repeat of the first time All About Eve had become successful – again asked Regan if she would like to support him on tour. Although she was already involved with Jules et Jim (who had put out an EP called Swimming earlier that year), Regan acquiesced, rounded up Price, Cousin and Wilson-Piper, and All About Eve were back.
When asked in 2001 why she had had a change of heart in terms of resurrecting All About Eve and their music, she replied:
I think I just really needed a break from it. It had lost its magic for me. Totally. Also, for some reason, I had to have a bit of a rebellion against AAE. Maybe it's something along the lines of why teenagers fall out with their parents and find everything about them embarrassing... Then they grow up a bit and realise that their Mum and Dad aren't too bad at all.
All About Eve became dormant again in mid-2004 following a disagreement between Regan and Cousin, but 2006 saw this rift temporarily healed upon the release of Keepsakes – an anthology of the group's recordings. This record saw the songwriting partnership between Regan and Bricheno rekindled, as they collaborated for a new song entitled "Raindrops".
Later musical projects
[edit]Regan's official website states that she is "currently working on several music projects".[5]
- Tim Bricheno – with whom she wrote and recorded the song "Raindrops", which appeared on the All About Eve retrospective collection Keepsakes. In 2008, the duo recorded a new version of "Ophelia", a song which had originally been demo-ed for the All About Eve album Scarlet and Other Stories, but was never released. The re-recording was made especially for inclusion on a charity record, 'Let There Be Life',[6] released to raise funds for research into ovarian cancer. Regan also contributed a solo song, "The Angel's Share", to the same album. Their composition, Pale Blue Earth, was aired on YouTube on 20 July 2019, to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the first Moon landing. Subsequent compositions by the pair have appeared on Regan's YouTube channel. Regan & Bricheno released an album "Apparitions" on 3 May 2024 on Bandcamp.
- The Drowning Man – In July 2023, Regan contributed a cover of The Cure song 'The Drowning Man' for a charity album, with proceeds going to the mental health charity Mind. The album is called Pictures of You – A compilation of covers of songs by The Cure
- The Dadaists – Regan, with unnamed musicians / collaborators, uploaded a number of songs to YouTube under this name. The project features both male and female vocals.
- Wayne Hussey – Regan and Hussey co-wrote the song "Madam G" from the album Candlelight and Razorblades.
- The Mission – Regan sang backing vocals on the 2007 album God is a Bullet and on the album Another Fall from Grace.
- Le Cygne Noir – Regan sings backing vocals on several releases.
- All Living Fear – Regan contributed backing vocals on the track "Home Too Soon" from the 2007 album Fifteen Years After.
- The Eden House – A collaborative project, initiated by Tony Pettitt (formerly of Fields of the Nephilim) and Steve Carey (formerly of This Burning Effigy) and involving a collection of guest musicians and vocalists. The album, Smoke & Mirrors, featuring Regan on three tracks, was released April 2009. A further track featuring Regan was released on the EP The Looking Glass.
- Judy Dyble – Regan contributed vocals to the tracks "C'est la Vie" and "Harp Song", which feature on Dyble's 2009 album Talking with Strangers. Dyble and Regan co-wrote the song "Headful of Stars", with Dyble providing the lyrics, and this appears on Dyble's album '"Flow and Change".
- La Femme Verte – A new cover version project by Jean-Marc Lederman, the album Small Distortions features Regan contributing vocals and instruments alongside Gene Loves Jezebel's Jay Aston and others to a number of tracks including Nine Inch Nails' "Hurt", Angelo Badalamenti/Julee Cruise's "Falling", the Rolling Stones track "Moonlight Mile", the Pet Shop Boys' "Being Boring", and The Mamas & the Papas' "Monday Monday".
- Leader of the Starry Skies – A tribute album for Tim Smith of Cardiacs, on which Regan contributes a cover version of the Sea Nymphs track "Shaping the River".[7]
- The Curator – Regan performed vocals on "On the Great North Road" and the title track from the album Sometime Soon.[8]
- Vocals on tracks "Before We Fall" and "Change Me Once Again" on the Memories of Machines album Warm Winter.
- Backing vocals on the track "Under My Skin" on the charity single released by The Last Cry.[9]
- Co-wrote and sang on "Starstruck Eyes" for Mark Thwaite's album Volumes.
Personal life
[edit]Regan graduated in 2014 from Bath Spa University in Bath, Somerset, with a master's degree in songwriting.[10] From September 2015 to December 2022, she was a lecturer on the BA degree Commercial Music programme, and MA degree Songwriting at the university's College of Liberal Arts.[11]
In a March 2008 BBC News Magazine article regarding gender stereotypes too often influencing which musical instrument schoolchildren learn, the electric guitar is still seen as a male's instrument, despite great female exponents in recent years,[2] according to Regan. Based on her own experiences, she said: "There was no opportunity to learn anything other than traditional orchestral instruments at school and so I muddled along on my own and felt quite isolated as I went to an all-girl school and none of my peers seemed to have any interest in electric guitar. It seemed like a freakish thing for me to be interested in. I was quite popular at school and had a load of friends, but this was just seen as 'one of my little quirks'."[2]
Writing
[edit]In 2020, Regan had the chapter "Three Pronged Attack: The pincer movement of gender allies, tempered radicals and pioneers", published in the Routledge title Gender in Music Production.[12] In 2023, she had a chapter published by Equinox in the book Venue Stories: From Back Room to Rave Room, from the Toilet Circuit to the Town Hall.[13] Regan's official website states that she is "currently writing a book".[14] Regan is also a contributor to Louder Than War where she has an author profile.
Album discography
[edit]Guest appearances on other artists' albums not shown.
with All About Eve
[edit]- All About Eve (1988)
- Scarlet and Other Stories (1989)
- Touched by Jesus (1991)
- Ultraviolet (1992)
- Winter Words (1992)
- Fairy Light Nights I (2000)
- Fairy Light Nights II (2001)
- Live and Electric at the Union Chapel (2001)
- Return to Eden, Vol. 1: The Early Recordings (2002)
- Iceland (2002)
- Cinemasonic (2003)
- Keepsakes (2006)
with Mice
[edit]- ...Because I Can (1996)
- New and Improved (2001)
with Jules et Jim
[edit]- Swimming (1999)
- Subtitles (2002)
with Hussey-Regan
[edit]- Curios (2011)
with Regan & Bricheno
[edit]- Apparitions (2024)
References
[edit]- ^ True, Chris. "Julianne Regan Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 19 July 2015.
- ^ a b c Geoghehan, Tom (11 April 2008). "Why don't girls play guitar?". BBC News Magazine.
- ^ "MICE STARRING JULIANNE REGAN | full Official Chart History | Official Charts Company". Officialcharts.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
- ^ "the+milkman | full Official Chart History | Official Charts Company". Officialcharts.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
- ^ "All About Eve". Julianneregan.co.uk. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
- ^ "Various – Let There Be Life", Discogs. Accessed 12 February 2019.
- ^ "Leader of the Starry Skies – A Tribute To Tim Smith. Songbook 1 – Various Artists". Thegenepool.co.uk. 13 December 2010. Archived from the original on 31 July 2014. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
- ^ "Sometime Soon". Cromerzone.co.uk. Archived from the original on 14 March 2012. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
- ^ "All About Eve singer teams up with Tenek and The Last Cry to record a Sophie Lancaster Foundation charity single". Side-line.com. 24 August 2007. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
- ^ "Singer Songwriter, Musicians, Professional Songwriters". Julianne Regan. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
- ^ "Julianne Regan". Bath Spa University. Archived from the original on 14 January 2016. Retrieved 17 September 2019.
- ^ "Gender in Music Production". Routledge & CRC Press. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
- ^ "Venue Stories; From Backroom to Rave Room, from the Toilet Circuit to the Town Hall; Mann; Edgar; Pleasance". Equinox Publishing. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
- ^ "All About Eve". Julianneregan.co.uk. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
External links
[edit]Julianne Regan
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Childhood in Coventry and family background
Julianne Regan was born Julie-Ann Regan on 30 June 1962 in Coventry, Warwickshire, England, where she spent her childhood and early adolescence.[6][7] She grew up in the city's working-class environment during the post-industrial era, amid the decline of manufacturing that characterized the Midlands region. At age 19, in 1981, she relocated to London to study and pursue opportunities in music journalism.[8][9] Regan has a younger sister, Lise, who later married Mark Price, drummer for All About Eve during the band's mid-1990s lineup.[8]Education and entry into music journalism
Regan attended Barr's Hill School in Coventry during her secondary education.[10] At the age of 19 in 1981, she relocated to London with aspirations of becoming a music journalist, initially aiming for a position at New Musical Express (NME) but instead securing work at the independent music publication ZigZag.[9][11] Concurrently, she enrolled at the London College of Fashion but departed after six months in 1982 to focus on emerging musical pursuits.[12][8] In her role at ZigZag, Regan contributed gig reviews and record critiques, which provided early exposure to the post-punk and gothic scenes and facilitated interviews with emerging bands.[12][8] This journalistic foothold marked her initial professional immersion in the music industry, bridging her writing ambitions with performance opportunities.[9]Pre-All About Eve musical endeavors
Involvement with Zig Zag and The Swarm (1982–1984)
In 1982, following her relocation to London at age 19, Julianne Regan briefly pursued studies before obtaining a position as a music journalist at ZigZag magazine, where she contributed reviews and interviews amid the publication's focus on alternative and independent scenes.[8] Her inaugural feature involved interviewing Gene Loves Jezebel, a goth-influenced band, during which rapport developed sufficiently for them to invite her to join as bassist, marking her transition from writing to performing.[8][1] Regan contributed bass to Gene Loves Jezebel's early output, including their May 1982 demo single "Shavin' My Neck," released via Situation Two label, before departing the group after roughly ten months, in early 1983, as lineup shifts occurred amid the band's evolving sound.[13][8] The closure of ZigZag magazine around this period ended her journalistic stint, prompting temporary employment at a London bookshop while she navigated post-band opportunities.[8] Subsequently, Regan co-formed The Swarm in late 1983 or early 1984, a short-lived ensemble comprising herself on vocals and bass alongside guitarist Tim Bricheno and bassist Andy Cousin—members who would later anchor All About Eve.[2][8] The group produced demo tapes featuring tracks such as "D For Desire" and "This Isn't Heaven," reflecting proto-gothic rock elements with Regan's emerging vocal style, though no commercial releases materialized before its dissolution into the foundations of her subsequent project.[14] This phase underscored Regan's instrumental versatility and network-building in London's underground music circuit, bridging her media background to sustained artistic involvement.[2]All About Eve: Formation and breakthrough
Band origins and debut album (1985–1988)
All About Eve formed in 1985 in London from the remnants of Julianne Regan's prior project, The Swarm, with Regan on vocals and Tim Bricheno on guitar continuing as the core duo.[8] Bassist Andy Cousin, a longtime associate of Bricheno from earlier bands, joined shortly thereafter, while the group initially relied on a drum machine for percussion before incorporating live drums.[8] The band's early sound drew from gothic and alternative rock influences, reflecting Regan's background in music journalism and her brief stint as bassist for Gene Loves Jezebel.[15] The group's independent phase began with the release of their debut single "D for Desire" in July 1985 on the small Eden label, limited to 12-inch vinyl format.[16] This was followed by their first live performance on September 5, 1985, at the Pindar of Wakefield pub in London, supporting the band Chatshow.[8] In February 1986, they recorded their second single, "In the Clouds," which was released later that year, helping to build a modest underground following in the UK goth scene.[8][17] By April 16, 1987, All About Eve secured a major label deal with Phonogram Records for £100,000, enabling professional production and wider distribution.[8] Session drummer Mark Price contributed to recordings around this time and became a full member afterward. The self-titled debut album was recorded that summer at Ridge Farm Studios and The Manor Studio, produced by Paul Samwell-Smith, formerly of the Yardbirds.[8] Released on February 15, 1988, the album featured tracks like "Flowers in Our Hair" and "Martha's Harbour," peaking at number 7 on the UK Albums Chart and eventually achieving gold certification with over 100,000 units sold.[18][19] The release was supported by an extensive European tour, including dates opening for The Mission.[8]Commercial peak and stylistic evolution (1989–1992)
The release of Scarlet and Other Stories on 16 October 1989 marked All About Eve's commercial zenith, peaking at number 9 on the UK Albums Chart and earning gold certification for sales exceeding 100,000 units.[20] Three singles from the album—"December", "Scarlet", and "Road to Your Soul"—each reached the UK Top 40, with "December" climbing to number 29, driven by radio play and tours supporting Siouxsie and the Banshees.[20] Stylistically, the album diverged from the debut's ethereal goth rock toward a darker, more introspective folk-infused alternative rock, emphasizing Julianne Regan's layered vocals over Tim Bricheno's dynamic guitar work and producer Paul Samwell-Smith's polished arrangements, which incorporated Celtic motifs and orchestral elements for a richer, narrative-driven sound.[21][22] Guitarist Tim Bricheno's departure in 1990, amid reported creative tensions, prompted a reconfiguration, with Marty Willson-Piper of The Church joining for Touched by Jesus, released on 23 September 1991.[23] This third album introduced a more experimental edge, blending psychedelic textures and acoustic introspection while retaining goth undertones, though it charted lower at number 27 in the UK, reflecting waning momentum.[20][24] Singles like "Farewell Mr Sorrow" (number 36) and "Strange Way" underscored Regan's evolving lyrical focus on melancholy and redemption, supported by Willson-Piper's jangly, Byrds-influenced riffs that softened the band's heavier inclinations.[20] Ultraviolet, issued on 31 August 1992, further evolved the sound into hazy dream pop with folk-rock leanings, featuring reverb-drenched guitars and Regan's ethereal delivery on tracks like "King of Lies", but it stalled at number 36 on the UK charts, yielding modest single performance from "Fever" (number 61).[20][25] The album's atmospheric production by Tim Palmer aimed for accessibility amid grunge's rise, yet internal strains and label shifts to MCA contributed to its underperformance, culminating in the band's dissolution by early 1993.[26] This period encapsulated All About Eve's pivot from goth accessibility to introspective experimentation, prioritizing artistic depth over sustained pop appeal.[8]Hiatus and exploratory projects
Wilderness period and Mice (1993–1997)
Following the disbandment of All About Eve in early 1993 after the release of their album Ultraviolet, Julianne Regan entered a phase of diminished public visibility and commercial activity in music, characterized by personal withdrawal from the industry and temporary employment in non-musical day jobs.[27][1] This interlude, retrospectively described as a "wilderness period," allowed Regan to step away from the pressures of band dynamics and major-label expectations that had defined her work since the late 1980s.[1] Amid this hiatus, Regan began developing material for a new outlet called Mice, a project she initiated around 1993 by writing songs that diverged from All About Eve's ethereal, folk-infused gothic rock.[28] Some tracks, such as "Battersea," originated during the Ultraviolet sessions but were repurposed for Mice, reflecting an intentional stylistic shift toward concise, pop-oriented structures—typically three-minute songs with prominent choruses—influenced by early works of Ultravox and Japan.[28] Regan conceived Mice as a semi-solo endeavor, handling production and much of the instrumentation herself, in collaboration with Tim McTighe, to explore simpler, less mystical themes unburdened by the band's prior imagery.[11][28] Mice gained initial attention through media coverage, including a 1994 photo session and interview for Germany's Zillo magazine, which highlighted Regan's creative reinvention.[29] The project's debut album, ...Because I Can, was released on August 5, 1996, via Permanent Records, featuring Regan on vocals, guitars, keyboards, and production alongside McTighe.[30] The record emphasized direct, chorus-driven compositions over All About Eve's layered mysticism, though it received limited distribution and was soon deleted from catalogs, contributing to Mice's obscurity.[31] A follow-up interview in Norwich on April 25, 1996, underscored Regan's motivation for the project: a desire to reclaim songwriting autonomy after All About Eve's internal tensions and to avoid repeating past aesthetic tropes, opting instead for a name like "Mice" drawn from personal dreams for its unpretentious simplicity.[28] By 1997, Mice remained a low-profile venture, with no extensive touring or major promotional efforts, aligning with Regan's broader retreat from mainstream music circuits during this era.[23]Jules et Jim collaboration (1999–2001)
In 1999, Julianne Regan formed the electronic music duo Jules et Jim with Belgian producer Jean-Marc Lederman, formerly of The Weathermen, following initial tape exchanges that began in 1996 during Regan's exploratory phase after All About Eve's initial disbandment.[8] The project marked a departure from her gothic rock roots, embracing electropop with sampling and electronic production techniques facilitated by early digital collaboration tools.[8][32] The duo's debut single, "Swimming," was released in June 1999 on the Belgian independent label Wilson Music (catalog WIL 005), available in two CD formats.[14] The primary version included "Swimming (Single Edit)," "Only a Fool (Radio Mix)," "Swimming (Plastic Boat)," and "Only a Fool (Underwater Mix)," blending Regan's ethereal vocals with Lederman's atmospheric synths and beats.[14] This release highlighted the pair's remote working method, with Regan contributing lyrics and melodies from the UK while Lederman handled instrumentation from Brussels.[32] Jules et Jim followed with the six-track EP Subtitles in 2001 on the Jamtart label (catalog aaevp2), expanding their sound into trip hop and drum and bass elements.[14] The EP comprised "If Life Were a Movie," "What Are the Chances?," "I Only Have Eyes for You," "It's a Beautiful World," "Sylvia," and "Queen Kerosene," mixed by Gilles Martin, and received limited distribution amid the duo's experimental focus rather than commercial promotion.[14][32] The collaboration effectively ended by 2001, though archival material from this era, including unreleased tracks, was later compiled on the 2019 digital release Synchronised, underscoring Jules et Jim's role as a creative outlet for Regan amid her band's uncertainty.[32] Despite modest output, the project demonstrated Regan's versatility in electronic genres, predating broader adoption of software-based remote production.[32]All About Eve reformation
Second era and final disbandment (1999–2006)
In late 1999, All About Eve reformed primarily to support The Mission on their short Resurrection tour, marking the band's return after a six-year hiatus. The lineup featured core members Julianne Regan on vocals, Andy Cousin on bass, and Marty Willson-Piper on guitar, with Ric Carter added on guitar. The reunion culminated in three performances in November 1999, drawing enthusiastic responses from fans.[27][17] The second era emphasized live performances and archival material rather than new studio recordings. The band toured extensively in 2000 and 2001, capturing performances for releases such as Live & Electric at the Union Chapel, recorded during shows in January and February 2000 and issued on October 8, 2001, via JamTart Records. An unplugged set followed in 2001, highlighting acoustic interpretations of their catalog. In 2002, they released Return to Eden, Vol. 1: The Early Recordings on July 8, a 17-track compilation of pre-debut demos and rarities sold primarily at gigs, spanning 68 minutes and featuring tracks like "Flowers in Our Hair" in early forms.[33][34][35] Tensions resurfaced, leading to the band's effective disbandment by mid-2004 amid disagreements between Regan and Cousin. No new studio album materialized from sessions attempted during this period. A partial reconciliation enabled the 2006 release of Keepsakes, a retrospective collection issued on March 13 that included hits, live tracks, and BBC sessions, accompanied by an e-single of the title track on March 6. This marked the final output under the All About Eve name until later sporadic activity, confirming the end of the band's organized era.[17][36]Later career developments
Writing and non-musical pursuits
Regan has engaged in academic writing, contributing chapters to edited volumes on cultural and music-related themes. In the chapter "The Idyllic Horrific Field, Farm, Garden, Forest, and Machine," published in The Routledge Companion to Folk Horror by Routledge on 9 October 2023, she analyzes distorted representations of rural idylls in folk horror, incorporating elements of song and visual arts.[37][38] Her essay "Kings Cross, Kentish Town and Kensington Gore via Gallowgate: In Search of the Goldilocks Zone" appears in Venue Stories, an Equinox Publishing anthology on small music venues, exploring personal experiences in live music spaces.[37][39] In June 2020, she published "Three Pronged Attack: The Pincer Movement of Gender Allies, Tempered Radicals and Pioneers," which examines gender dynamics and alliances within music production environments.[37] Beyond academia, Regan has written journalistic pieces, including a 7 August 2020 think piece for Louder Than War titled "The Art of the Musical Memoir," discussing ethical challenges and narrative dilemmas in the genre for aging musicians.[40] She operates a Substack newsletter, RUMINATIONS, launched around 2024, featuring essays on memoir, personal reflection, and cultural observations, such as contemplations on poetry publication and literary coincidences.[41] Regan is developing a personal memoir, reported at 57,000 words as of recent updates, blending life writing with sensory and autoethnographic elements.[37] Her pursuits extend to video production, listed among her creative activities alongside journalism and chapter writing.[1] These endeavors reflect a shift toward literary and reflective output, often drawing from but not confined to her musical background.Recent collaborations and solo releases (2007–present)
Following the final disbandment of All About Eve in 2006, Julianne Regan shifted toward guest appearances and selective collaborations, with no full-length solo albums issued. In 2007, she contributed backing vocals to The Mission's eighth studio album God Is a Bullet, released on May 14 by Cooking Vinyl, appearing on multiple tracks alongside lead vocalist Wayne Hussey, a longtime associate from shared goth rock circles. That same year, Regan provided backing vocals for the track "Home Too Soon" on All Living Fear's retrospective album Fifteen Years After, marking a nod to the band's earlier punk-goth overlap with All About Eve's orbit. Regan's involvement extended to The Eden House, a post-punk supergroup project initiated by former This Burning Effigy drummer Stephen Carey. On their 2009 debut Smoke & Mirrors, released via Jungle Records, she delivered lead vocals for three tracks—"All My Love," "Trashed Treasure," and "The Beauty of Science"—infusing ethereal textures amid contributions from vocalists like Monica Richards of Faith and the Muse. The album, expanded and remastered in 2025 with Regan's performances intact, highlighted her ability to adapt to darker, atmospheric arrangements without a full band commitment.[42] Subsequent years saw sporadic guest spots, including background vocals on The Mission's 2016 single "Another Fall from Grace" from their self-titled album, released September 30 by Metropolis Records, reinforcing ties to Hussey's project amid its return to gothic roots.[43] In 2021, Regan featured prominently on Le Cygne Noir's alternative cover of "Last Christmas," released December 7 as a holiday single by the UK electronic act, blending her signature wistful delivery with synth-driven reinterpretations.[44] A creative resurgence came via reunion with All About Eve co-founder and guitarist Tim Bricheno. The duo issued the digital EP Winter 2023 on Bandcamp, comprising seasonal covers and originals exchanged via email during lockdown, followed by their collaborative album Apparitions on May 3, 2024—self-released digitally with 10 tracks co-written and performed by Regan and Bricheno, including a reimagined "Raindrops" from All About Eve's 2006 compilation.[45] The release, emphasizing dream pop and folk-rock elements, drew acclaim for its intimate production and lyrical depth, available exclusively via Bandcamp without physical formats.[46] In September 2023, Regan also digitally reissued select tracks from her 1990s Mice project as The Julianne Regan Songs from the MICE Project, framing them as standalone archival pieces rather than new material.[47] These efforts underscore a pattern of low-key, vocalist-driven outputs over commercial pursuits.Musical style, influences, and legacy
Core artistic elements and genre contributions
Julianne Regan's vocals are distinguished by an ethereal, haunting quality that emphasizes emotional authenticity and introspection, often shifting between fragile vulnerability and resonant power to evoke dreamlike states.[12] In tracks like "Martha's Harbour" from All About Eve's 1988 debut album, her near-a cappella delivery highlights a folk-derived purity, stripped of heavy instrumentation to focus on raw expressiveness.[48] This approach allowed her to infuse gothic rock with a sense of personal immediacy, prioritizing lyrical connection over stylistic posturing.[12] Her songwriting centers on poetic lyrics exploring escapism, nature, and subtle occult imagery, drawing from personal intuition rather than overt narrative. Themes of cosmic wonder and seasonal melancholy recur, as in evocations of lunar nights or floral symbolism, reflecting influences like hippiedom and white-magic mysticism without descending into cliché.[48] [12] Regan has described this as music for "dreamers," blending folk, blues, and pop sensibilities to create immersive, non-literal soundscapes that resist rigid genre confines.[12] Musically, Regan's contributions emphasize layered acoustics—acoustic guitars, subtle reverb, and dynamic shifts from sparse arrangements to fuller rock textures—merging '80s goth rock's atmospheric tension with folk-rock accessibility.[48] This hybridity, evident in All About Eve's early output, incorporated elements of dream pop through hazy, purposeful melodies and her sensual, reverb-treated delivery.[49] In the gothic scene, her role advanced a softer, mysticism-infused variant, broadening appeal by integrating pastoral and introspective motifs that contrasted the era's more abrasive tendencies, thus influencing subsequent ethereal and alternative acts.[48] [12]Critical reception, achievements, and criticisms
All About Eve's music, fronted by Julianne Regan's distinctive vocals, received praise for blending gothic rock with folk and ethereal elements, distinguishing the band from contemporaries in the late 1980s UK scene. Critics highlighted Regan's voice as a standout, with AllMusic describing her as "certainly one of the more talented singers of the late eighties British goth rock scene."[48] The debut album All About Eve (1988) was lauded for its atmospheric quality, often compared to influences like Cocteau Twins and Siouxsie and the Banshees, earning retrospective acclaim as "outstanding" and resonant in alternative rock.[50] Later works like Scarlet and Other Stories (1989) built on this hybrid sound, though some reviewers noted stylistic shifts in albums such as Touched by Jesus (1991) as experimental gambles that divided opinions.[51] Achievements include commercial peaks with the single "Martha's Harbour" reaching No. 10 on the UK Singles Chart in 1988, marking the band's sole Top 10 hit and contributing to the debut album's No. 7 position on the UK Albums Chart.[4][20] Overall, All About Eve secured four Top 50 albums and nine Top 40 singles in the UK, with Regan co-writing key tracks like "Martha's Harbour."[20] The band's influence persists in goth and folk-rock circles, recognized for pioneering a "unique, folk-rock-influenced take" on the genre.[52] Criticisms centered on inconsistent commercial performance post-debut, with Ultraviolet (1992) peaking at No. 36 despite positive reviews, signaling declining mainstream appeal. Harsh media scores, such as an NME rating of 0/10 for one release, underscored perceptions of artistic missteps amid genre evolution.[53] A notable incident involved a mimed Top of the Pops performance of "Martha's Harbour" in 1988, where Regan and guitarist Tim Bricheno stood silently after audio failure, drawing mockery and highlighting vulnerabilities in live TV formats.[54] Regan's post-band projects, including Mice and Jules et Jim, received niche attention but faced challenges in recapturing earlier momentum, with some outlets viewing stylistic pivots as less impactful.[12] No major awards were secured, reflecting the band's cult rather than blockbuster status.Personal life
Relationships and family
Regan was born on 30 June 1962 in Coventry, England, into a working-class Catholic family of Irish and English descent.[55] She has a younger sister, Lise Regan.[55] [8] In 1988, Mark Price joined All About Eve as its full-time drummer. Price later married Regan's sister Lise, with whom he had a son, Joe, born in 1990; Joe is Regan's nephew.[8] [55] No verified public records exist of Regan entering into marriage or having children, and she has consistently guarded details of her romantic life from media scrutiny.[56]Health challenges and privacy
Regan has disclosed limited details about her health, emphasizing privacy in personal matters. In a 2024 interview, she described leaving her university teaching position in commercial music and songwriting due to burnout, which allowed her to refocus on musical projects like the album Apparitions.[23] She has alluded to an unspecified "condition" that risked worsening through intensive creative work, such as reuniting with former bandmate Tim Bricheno, though she proceeded motivated by artistic potential.[23] Regan maintains discretion over health specifics, consistent with her approach to personal life, where she prioritizes quiet and solitude, particularly avoiding the lack of privacy during band tours in shared vans.[57] In reflections on musical memoirs, she noted altering names and consulting legal review to protect others' privacy, indicating a deliberate boundary around intimate disclosures.[40] This reticence aligns with her broader pattern of shielding family and health from public scrutiny, sharing only through selective Substack ruminations on grief or unrelated personal anecdotes rather than direct medical revelations.[58]Discography
Albums with All About Eve
All About Eve, with Julianne Regan as lead vocalist, released four studio albums between 1988 and 1992.[59]| Title | Release year |
|---|---|
| All About Eve | 1988 |
| Scarlet and Other Stories | 1989 |
| Touched by Jesus | 1991 |
| Ultraviolet | 1992 |
Albums with other projects and solo work
Regan formed the short-lived project band Mice in 1995, releasing the album ...Because I Can in 1996 through Permanent Records.[11] She handled lead vocals and co-production alongside Tim McTighe, with the record shifting toward britpop elements while retaining introspective lyrics.[61] The album included contributions from musicians such as Dominic Luckman on drums and featured singles like "Waiting for Words," though the project disbanded after limited touring and no follow-up full-length materialized.[62] In the late 2000s, Regan launched The Dadaists as a collaborative outlet for experimental and folk-leaning compositions, with key releases including the 2009 track collection Distant Stars.[5] The project emphasized atmospheric soundscapes and Regan's songwriting, yielding sporadic digital singles such as "Buttercup" in its original 2020 form and a revised version with updated vocals and instrumentation issued on September 5, 2025.[63] These outputs remained independent and Bandcamp-focused, prioritizing creative flexibility over commercial structures. Regan has not issued a traditional solo studio album but collaborated extensively, including guest vocals on albums like Warm Winter by Memories of Machines and System Songs by The Nervous System.[55] A 2020s Bandcamp compilation, The Julianne Regan Songs from the MICE Project, gathered nine vocal-led tracks from her Mice tenure, underscoring archival interest in that phase.[47] In 2024, Regan partnered with ex-All About Eve guitarist Tim Bricheno for their eponymous duo, debuting with Apparitions on May 3 via Bandcamp.[45] Self-recorded at Shabbey Road Studios in London and Little Box Studios in Somerset, the 10-track set employs minimalistic folk-rock and dream pop arrangements, highlighting Regan's ethereal delivery against Bricheno's acoustic and electric guitar.[64] Critics noted its emotional restraint and continuity with her earlier ethereal style, though adapted to duo intimacy.[46]| Project | Album/Release | Year | Label/Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mice | ...Because I Can | 1996 | Permanent Records (CD) |
| The Dadaists | Distant Stars | 2009 | Independent (digital) |
| Regan & Bricheno | Apparitions | 2024 | Bandcamp (digital) |
