Nick's talent and energy entranced Roy's fans and it was
inevitable that he would begin touring and recording in
his own right. The 1994 EP Light at the End of the Kennel
was swiftly followed by his powerful 1995 debut long player
Seed prompting The Independent to describe him as "hugely
talented".
In 1996 Nick met Squeeze frontman and songwriter Glenn
Tilbrook. Tilbrook was so impressed that he offered Nick
a job playing with and supporting Squeeze and promptly signed
Nick to his own label, Quixotic Records. Following tours
in the UK, USA and Japan, Nick recorded the 1998 album Smithereens
with Tilbrook as producer. This album and subsequent 40
date solo tour, including dates in New York and Glastonbury,
confirmed Nick as a formidable talent in his own right.
"If imagination, energy and bags of talent were the
only factors in making a successful pop career, few would
deny that Squeeze man Glenn Tilbrook has backed a winner
in Nick Harper…Splendid stuff" - MOJO magazine.
He teamed up with Tilbrook again on 2000's highly acclaimed
album Harperspace. This is the album that confirmed his
position at the forefront of a new generation of British
Acoustic Performers. "Nick Harper has a quality that
stands head and shoulders above anything else you are likely
to encounter…The Verse Time Forgot from the new album
'Harperspace' is as close to a perfect song as you are likely
to get." Edinburgh Evening News
To call Nick a superlative singer/songwriter could put
his highly lauded guitar talent in the shade, and to call
him a guitarist's guitarist might slight his distinctive,
soulful voice and passionate songs. Not forgetting the wild
ride that is one of his live shows - from personal introspection
to biting political satire via a charmingly caustic wit
that would make Groucho Marx proud. He often segues from
his own compositions to well-loved covers he makes his own
- he takes on Presley, Zappa, Jeff Buckley, Led Zeppelin,
Monty Python and Public Enemy (yes, on an acoustic guitar).
He also has the alarming ability to break guitar strings
almost by sheer force of will… and then change them
without dropping a beat. For over a decade, he has been
dazzling audiences and reviewers alike with this heady mix
of virtuosity, boyish charm, showmanship and sheer bravado.
His talent and showmanship were recognised in 2003 with
a (Glasgow) Herald Fringe Angel award for excellence in
live music during his Edinburgh Festival run. "Harper
has so much musicianship in him that it just leaks out all
over the place." The Times
After 4 studio albums, a double live CD and 2 EPs (including
Instrumental, a stunning display of his guitar talents),
Nick's work is still as fresh and vital as that of his first
solo release in 1994. The soon to be released fifth studio
album, Treasure Island, takes on subjects as diverse as
the seven ages of man in the infectious melody of 'By My
Rocket Comes Fire' and a positive, uplifting look at Britain
in the title track (in contrast to recent pre-election bickering).
But, as with his highly personal 2004 "family album"
Blood Songs, he still has time to sing about the most important
things in his world - family, friends, love, life.
Between solo albums, Nick tours with a vengeance. In the
first 8 months of 2005 alone, he'd traversed the UK from
Devon to the most northerly point in Scotland, along with
2 dates in Holland and acclaimed sets at Glastonbury, Beautiful
Days (with his band Sleeper Cell), Oysterband's Big Session
and other festivals including 2 tsunami benefit gigs in
Thailand.