in 2016
Setanta (2001–2004) Impressed by a home
demo of songs written through the late 1990s, both Jarvis Cocker and Mackey urged Hawley to record the material. He used some left-over studio time to demo material and to experiment. Pointing out that "I just wanted to make something gentle for myself – I never expected it to be released". He recorded a song per day, recording most of the instruments himself "with a boom mike in the middle so I could walk between instruments – I mixed it in my head". His eponymous debut was a mini-album that featured seven songs and released in April 2001 through
Setanta Records. It was supported by the single "Coming Home". While Hawley played "90% of the stuff" he was assisted by former Longpigs drummer Andy Cook and Colin Elliot, who became his long-term producer. Hawley later commented that "I think with anybody's early stuff you can batter it and take things apart. [With] doing those early records I was trying to get back to a way of being creative with recording rather than taking this dogmatic approach to it". He admitted that he did not get "it right every time but I got what I wanted to achieve. It was to try and find something in the song. And also, with those early records, there was no money". was released to positive reviews from the press. Hawley later explained that prior to going into the sessions "all I'd got was the riff to "Baby, You're My Light" and that the majority of songs were written during the sessions. As an example he cited "The Nights Are Cold" that was done in one take after Cooke asked "look, we've got a gig tonight, are we doing this or what?". Two years later Hawley released
Lowedges, named after a suburb of the city. and it topped an end-of-the-year
poll held by
Virgin Radio. Of the two albums, he later stated that "as those three records progressed you can see the band thing taking over more and more. By the time you get to
Lowedges there's less of me playing everything and there's more of the guys. I was determined for it to be very ragged-arsed and not to be really polished and produced". Hawley's 2007 album ''
Lady's Bridge'' (again named with a Sheffield reference, after a bridge in the centre of the city) was released in the United Kingdom on 20 August 2007. He performed a 16-date tour during September 2007 to promote the album. Merchandising on the tour included T-shirts and posters, but also special edition bottles of Sheffield-made
Henderson's Relish. The same year, Hawley's father died after a long illness. He later commented that the release "altered the flow, there's a track on it called 'Troublesome Waters' which is a cover of a Howard Seratt song and it's the only time me and my dad featured together on a published recording. He plays rhythm guitar". Hawley was a headlining act at the 2008
Festival Internacional de Benicàssim in Spain. Hawley produced, with Colin Elliot, and contributed two songs to the album
Made in Sheffield, a compilation of songs by the Sheffield-based songwriters for
Tony Christie. ''
Truelove's Gutter'', Hawley's fifth studio album, was released on Mute Records on 21 September 2009. The album won the
Mojo record of the year. His song "Don't Get Hung Up in Your Soul" was chosen as the
Starbucks iTunes Pick of the Week for 17 November 2009. and "Open Up Your Door" featured as the soundtrack song to the
Häagen-Dazs ice cream TV commercial in the UK. Hawley's track "Tonight The Streets Are Ours" was chosen as the title track for the
Oscar nominated 2010
Banksy film
Exit Through the Gift Shop which premièred at the
Sundance Film Festival on 24 January 2010. This song regained popularity in 2022 when it was featured in an ad for Royal Enfield motorcycles. His 2011 song "There's a Storm Coming" was used at the end of the film
Brighton Rock. "You And I" by Richard Hawley and The Death Ramps (aka
Arctic Monkeys), was released as the B-side of the Arctic Monkeys' single "Black Treacle" on 23 January 2012.
Parlophone (2012–2015) ''
Standing at the Sky's Edge'', the sixth solo album, was released in the UK on 7 May 2012 through
Parlophone. It was supported by the release of four singles, "Leave Your Body Behind You", "Down in the Woods", "Seek It" and "Don't Stare at the Sun". The four singles were collected on vinyl for the
Singles Club box set. During the European tour in support of the album, Hawley broke his leg and had to perform in a wheelchair. Hawley also featured in a BBC6 Music live broadcast with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, which took place at the Magna Science Park, Rotherham. In October 2013 he joined Cocker and
Kami Thompson on the
Bright Phoebus Revisited UK Tour. Hawley also provided vocals for the title track of the
Manic Street Preachers album,
Rewind The Film, released in September 2013. In October 2014, his previous record company, Setanta, re-released the first three albums both on vinyl and CD. He also contributed a number of songs to the soundtrack of the documentary film
Love Is All in 2014. In September 2015, Hawley released his seventh album
Hollow Meadows.
BMG Rights Management (2019–present) On 31 May 2019, Hawley revealed his eighth studio album
Further, released by
BMG Rights Management. A cover version of
Bob Dylan's "
Ballad of a Thin Man" was released as a download alongside three other singles in promotion of this album. A
musical based on the album
Standing at the Sky’s Edge premiered at the Sheffield
Crucible Theatre in March 2019. It moved to London in February 2023 at the
Olivier Theatre and subsequently transferred to the
Gillian Lynne Theatre in the West End in February 2024. It won the
Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Musical for 2023 and Hawley won award for best original score alongside collaborator
Tom Deering. In 2023 a compilation album, Hawley's first, was announced, titled
Now Then. The album was both a 22-track double vinyl and 32-track double CD album featuring Hawley's own selection of key tracks and singles from throughout his solo career, including some songs re-recorded especially for this album. Hawley's tenth studio album
In This City They Call You Love was released in May 2024, and was preceded by three promotional singles: "Two for His Heels", "Heavy Rain", and "Prism in Jeans". , Belgium ==Session work==