Early career Creme and Kevin Godley formed the white R&B combo
the Sabres (the Magic Lanterns),
Hotlegs and other bands together. After recording a one-off single under the name of 'Yellow Bellow Room Boom' for UK CBS in 1967 ("Seeing Things Green" b/w "Still Life"), the pair began their professional music career together in 1969, performing pop music in
Strawberry Studios at
Stockport near
Manchester with
Eric Stewart and
Graham Gouldman. The duo also released a single in 1969, "I'm Beside Myself" b/w "Animal Song", under the name Frabjoy & Runcible Spoon after being signed on to
Marmalade Records directly by label head
Giorgio Gomelsky. A 7-song LP was slated for a late 1969 release on Marmalade; however, the label collapsed financially before the end of the year, and the LP was shelved until its release in the 2022 compilation
Frabjous Days: The Secret World of Godley & Creme 1967–1969 on Grapefruit Records.
10cc and Godley & Creme Godley and Creme most significantly performed, wrote and produced with
10cc, an art rock group the duo formed with
Graham Gouldman and
Eric Stewart, who had both been in the band
The Mindbenders (formerly fronted by
Wayne Fontana). in 1974From 1972 to 1978, 10cc had five consecutive UK top-ten albums:
Sheet Music (1974),
The Original Soundtrack (1975),
How Dare You! (1976),
Deceptive Bends (1977) and
Bloody Tourists (1978). 10cc also had twelve singles reach the UK Top 40, three of which were the chart-toppers "
Rubber Bullets" (1973), "
I'm Not in Love" (1975) and "
Dreadlock Holiday" (1978). "I'm Not in Love" was their breakthrough worldwide hit, and is known for its innovative backing track. Godley & Creme wrote many songs for 10cc, including: "
Donna" (no. 2 in UK), "
Rubber Bullets" (no. 1 in UK), "
The Dean and I" (no. 4 in UK), "
Silly Love" (no. 24 in UK), and "
Life Is a Minestrone" (no. 7 in UK). In 1976, Lol Creme and Kevin Godley left 10cc to record as Creme & Godley (later
Godley & Creme). In 1977, they released their first album project –
Consequences – a concept album demonstration piece for the "Gizmo" a device that enabled an electric guitar to mimic orchestral instruments the pair had begun developing early on in 10cc years. Consequences is basically a story about meek Walter Stapleton divorcing his French playgirl wife, with English comedian and satirist Peter Cook voicing the parts of two solicitors, the irascible Pepperman and the alcoholic Haig, and Haigs' downstairs resident and reclusive musician, Mr Blint, who constantly interrupts them and confuses the proceedings, and singer Sarah Vaughan. The album was released as a 3 LP box set. Consequences attained a niche following and had one single released from it, "Five O'clock in the Morning". However, despite the creativity, innovation and imagination involved, it was a commercial flop. The pair later became music video directors, working with bands including
Yes. In 1979, they directed their first music video for their single "
An Englishman in New York". After this, they became involved in the production of videos for artists such as
Ultravox,
the Police,
Yes,
Duran Duran,
Frankie Goes to Hollywood,
Huey Lewis and the News and
Wang Chung, as well as directing the groundbreaking video for their 1985 single "
Cry". In 1988, Godley & Creme parted ways: "What happened was in '89, certainly in '88, maybe before, Kevin changed, I think his priorities in life changed. He'd had enough, he'd simply had enough of me and the way we worked, the things we did, the priorities we had. And the fact that we were a priority, for example. Our working relationship dominated our...lives, you know. It was time for a shift in all that and he was obviously right. When I see him, which is not regularly, but I do see him occasionally, he seems well. I thinks he wants to be lazy and just hang. And God bless him, you know."
Later work After cutting ties with Godley, Creme moved to Los Angeles, California, and worked as a director in his own right. Creme directed the 1991 Jamaican comedy film
The Lunatic, starring
Paul Campbell. After his move to the United States, Creme began experimenting with
digital art and
oil painting. ==Family==