Early life
De Burgh was born in
Venado Tuerto, Argentina, to
Colonel
Charles Davison, a British diplomat, and Maeve Emily de Burgh, an Irish
secretary. His father had substantial farming interests, and Chris
spent much of his early years in Malta, Nigeria and
Zaire, as he, his mother and brother accompanied Colonel Davison on his diplomatic and engineering work.
The Davisons finally settled in
Bargy Castle,
County Wexford, a twelfth-century castle in Ireland bought by his maternal grandfather,
General Sir Eric de Burgh, a former
Chief of the General Staff in India, who was descended from a distinguished
Hiberno-Norman
family. The castle was converted into a hotel where Chris gained much
early experience performing to the guests, and he later assumed "de
Burgh" as his stage name.
After attending
Marlborough College in Wiltshire, England, de Burgh went on to graduate from
Trinity College, Dublin with a Master of Arts degree in French, English and History.
Musical career
Chris de Burgh signed his first contract with
A&M Records in 1974, and supported
Supertramp on their Crime of the Century tour, building himself a small fan base. His
début album,
Far Beyond These Castle Walls,
was a folk-tinged stab at fantasy in the tradition of the Moody
Blues. It failed to chart upon its release in February 1975. Five
months later, he released a single called "Turning Round" from the
album, released outside the UK and Ireland as "Flying". It failed to
make an impression in the UK, but it stayed on top of the Brazilian
charts for 17 weeks. This became a familiar pattern for the
singer/songwriter, as every one of his '70s albums failed to chart in
the UK or US while they racked up big sales in continental European
and South American countries. In 1981, he had his first UK chart entry
with
Best Moves, a collection culled from his early albums. It set the stage for 1982's
Rupert Hine produced
The Getaway, which reached number 30 in the UK charts and number 43 in the US, thanks to the eerie single "
Don't Pay the Ferryman". Chris de Burgh's follow-up album,
Man on the Line, also performed well, charting at 69 in the US and 11 in the UK.
Chris de Burgh had an across-the-board success with the ballad "
The Lady in Red" in late 1986; the single became a number one hit in the UK (number three in America) and its accompanying album,
Into the Light, reached number two in the UK. (number 25 in the U.S.). That Christmas season, a re-release of de Burgh's 1976 Christmas song "
A Spaceman Came Travelling" became a Top 40 hit in the UK.
Flying Colours, his follow-up to
Into the Light,
entered the British charts at number one upon its 1988 release, yet
it failed to make the American charts. De Burgh never hit the US
charts again and his commercial fortunes began to slide slightly in
Britain in the early 1990s, yet he retained a following around the
world. This is mainly due to inactivity of his previous recording
label
A&M Records UK division in U.S.
In 2007, a concert in Tehran was planned for mid-2008, together with local band
Arian, which would have made Chris de Burgh the first western pop singer to perform in Iran since the
1979 revolution.
However, the concert never went ahead because he had not been given
permission by the Iranian authorities to perform in the country.
Personal life
Chris de Burgh has been married to his wife Diane since 1977 and lives in
Enniskerry,
County Wicklow in Ireland. They have two sons, Hubie and Michael, and a daughter,
Rosanna, a model, who won the
Miss World competition in 2003 for Ireland. He is a distant relative of the 13th-century English nobleman
Hubert de Burgh, who features prominently in
Shakespeare's play
The Life and Death of King John. He is an avid
Liverpool F.C. supporter, as is Rosanna, and they often attend matches at
Anfield.
In 1994, he was found to have had an affair with his children's
19-year-old Irish nanny, Maresa Morgan, who was assisting the family
while de Burgh's wife Diane was recuperating in the hospital from a
broken neck during a horse-riding accident. His daughter Rosanna
indicated during an interview with
The Irish Independent
that she held little sympathy for Morgan, regarding the latter's
portrayal of herself as a victim as "pathetic" and hoped "she pays for
her mistake". She forgave her father for his affair.
In 2011, bottles from DeBurgh's vintage wine cellar sold for over
$500,000, including a world record set for a magnum collection of
postwar vintages.
DeBurgh has a noted interest in war history, especially that of
World War I and
World War II.
His songs contain numerous references to soldiers and battle, and in
2006 he purchased a rare First World War letter written by an unknown
soldier.
De Burgh has pursued and won 16 defamation actions.
The Irish Independent said he has always been a bit prickly about criticism. Peter Crawley, a theatre reviewer at
The Irish Times, received a directed response from de Burgh when he wrote a less than sympathetic review of de Burgh's show in Dublin's
Gaiety Theatre
in September 2009. Crawley noted: "He departs the stage for 'Lady in
Red', invading boxes and draping himself over audience members ...
Certain toes will never uncurl after this experience, but it is almost
admirable how unaltered de Burgh has remained by the flow of time." In a
lengthy, much-publicised reply to the critic, de Burgh made his
feelings known, particularly in the
postscript:
We were wondering by way of explanation and, as you seem to portray
yourself as a bitter and unfulfilled man, were you much teased by your
school chums in the schoolyard and called 'Creepy Crawley'?
AllMusic
critic Greg Prato has stated: "Depending on who you ask, Chris de
Burgh either specializes in pretentious, bombastic art rock disguised
as pop or is a master of penning soaring and majestic compositions."
The
BBC has
said of de Burgh: "To his millions of fans, Chris de Burgh is the
ultimate romantic singer. But to many others he's a figure of fun." When
the staff of
Melody Maker were putting together a lampoon edition of a new arts and music magazine, they chose de Burgh for the cover. His
signature song, "The Lady in Red", has been repeatedly voted one of the public's most disliked songs. Neil Norman, writing for
The Independent,
described de Burgh as "the world's naffest balladeer". In his favour,
Mike DeGagne, writing for AllMusic, has acclaimed de Burgh as "a
genuine master of the soft ballad" and "one of the finest mood-invoking
artists ever".