Green Man is the debut solo album from English singer-songwriter
Mark Owen. The album was released through
RCA and
BMG on 2 December 1996, months after the official split of his former boyband,
Take That. The album was recorded at
Abbey Road Studios in
London. Three singles were released from the album: "Child", "Clementine" and "I Am What I Am". The album peaked at number 33 on the
UK Albums Chart. The album was re-released in 2003 following the release of his second studio album, In Your Own Time which had been released earlier that year. Green Man has been certified gold by the
British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for shipments of 100,000 copies in the United Kingdom.
Green Man was written entirely by Mark Owen himself (except for two tracks): "The easiest option for Mark Owen who came out of Take That was to get some other people to write some nice catchy pop tunes, and maybe I could have done that for a couple of years. Then I probably would have been hated by everybody and fell by the wayside. But there wouldn’t have been an album unless I’d written it and it had come from me and I felt like it was my album. That’s all I was interested in."[3]
Unlike the
dance-pop music of his former group Take That, Green Man sees Owen develop a sound influenced by
Britpop and other forms of
alternative rock. Working with alternative rock producer
John Leckie, the album has been described as having an "attractive sheen" that "sounds like a cross between
Radiohead and
the Stone Roses", two bands that Leckie had worked with.[4] The album has also been described as an
indie pop album.[5] Owen's former Take That bandmate
Robbie Williams would also pursue a Britpop-influenced direction on his debut album Life thru a Lens (1997).[6]
Green Man is the debut solo album from English singer-songwriter
Mark Owen. The album was released through
RCA and
BMG on 2 December 1996, months after the official split of his former boyband,
Take That. The album was recorded at
Abbey Road Studios in
London. Three singles were released from the album: "Child", "Clementine" and "I Am What I Am". The album peaked at number 33 on the
UK Albums Chart. The album was re-released in 2003 following the release of his second studio album, In Your Own Time which had been released earlier that year. Green Man has been certified gold by the
British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for shipments of 100,000 copies in the United Kingdom.
Green Man was written entirely by Mark Owen himself (except for two tracks): "The easiest option for Mark Owen who came out of Take That was to get some other people to write some nice catchy pop tunes, and maybe I could have done that for a couple of years. Then I probably would have been hated by everybody and fell by the wayside. But there wouldn’t have been an album unless I’d written it and it had come from me and I felt like it was my album. That’s all I was interested in."[3]
Unlike the
dance-pop music of his former group Take That, Green Man sees Owen develop a sound influenced by
Britpop and other forms of
alternative rock. Working with alternative rock producer
John Leckie, the album has been described as having an "attractive sheen" that "sounds like a cross between
Radiohead and
the Stone Roses", two bands that Leckie had worked with.[4] The album has also been described as an
indie pop album.[5] Owen's former Take That bandmate
Robbie Williams would also pursue a Britpop-influenced direction on his debut album Life thru a Lens (1997).[6]