But it is apposite: this year marks the 400th
anniversary of William Shakespeare’s death and it’s entirely right that we
should do our own little bit to celebrate that fact. Let’s kill him off all
over again, to a ‘5am in Ibiza’ beat. There’s the rub, the rub, the rub, the
rhuuuuubbbb!
Richard E Grant, star of the ultimate slacker movie Withnail
and I, recorded To Be Or Not To Be in
1997 – around the same time that he was filming Spice Girls: the Movie. The single finds Richard reciting the well-known
soliloquy from Hamlet over a
house track from Orpheus, as well as singing during the choruses. To Be Or
Not To Be was intended to launch a whole album of Shakespeare
readings, featuring a number of actors including Kenneth Branagh, Ralph Fiennes
and Alan Rickman – although that project seems not to have seen the light of
day. Presumably because this turned out to be such a dead duck.
‘I told them I couldn’t sing!’, Grant told the Melody
Maker. ‘It just shows that anything goes,
anything can happen if somebody thinks it’s daft enough to buy. I don’t expect
anybody to take it any more seriously than I did.’
The ‘them’ in this case is anonymous musical collective
Orpheus. Ken Gibson (who co-wrote and produced the song) is better known for
his work with John Dankworth and Cleo Laine, although he has also worked as an arranger
with Alison Moyet, Craig David and Neil Hannon. He is also the producer for the
singer Nancy Nova, backing vocalist on To Be Or Not To Be.
‘They said, “Do it straight and then we can do stuff, muck
about with it.” Then they asked me to sing this chorus and I did it full-pelt,
but they didn’t want that. They wanted it to be as melancholic as possible. And
they made a dance track out of it.
‘This all happened by accident. It was not my intention at
all to set myself up as a serious pop star. I’m not trying to give Oasis
sleepless nights about this. My eight-year-old daughter thought it was
danceable…. I just laughed. I thought, “Oh my God, I’ll never get a job as a
serious Shakespearean actor at the RSC having done this!”’
He was even more revealing in the NME, admitting that ‘I
suppose I should bullshit you that I’m a great singer, but I approached this
with a large, leviathan tongue in my left cheek. I can’t be serious about it.
But if this could constitute me as some aging Spice Boy, then great.’ A video,
featuring Virgin Radio DJ’s Russ & Jono dressed as Shakespearian fools, was
filmed but has yet to finds its’ way to YouTube.
The CD single contained four versions of this nonsense. Here
are two of them.
Why four versions - one is bad enough!
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