Rhythm Guitars, Harmonica Piano
Prior to Oasis Gem played rhythm guitar for Heavy Stereo, he also produced, wrote and sang songs for the band.
Gem joined Oasis in November 1999 as a rhythm guitarist to replace Paul 'Bonehead' Arthurs. His name comes from a nickname he's had since a child. Archie Gemill was a famous Scotish soccer player in the 1970's and it was he that Gem got the name from. (By the way, it is pronounced GEM, as in goat or god, not as in jem stone)
He has various roles with Oasis. His main title is rhythm guitarist but when Noel wants to focus on singing, Gem takes over the lead role. He's also written the song 'Hung In a Bad Place' for the upcoming album. So far, it has rave reviews by fans and critics.
Name: Colin Murray Archer
Birthday: December 7, 1966
Birthplace: Hunwich, County Durham
Married: To Louise with two children, a son Joel, and a daughter, Libby
Fave Films: The Godfather, Jaws, Unforgiven, Serpico and Toy Story
Q Special Edition Biography by Michael Odell:
Back in 1987 Colin Murray "Gem" Archer didn't know it but he was having a prophetic experience. Living in North London, he was trying to recruit a drummer for his band, Whirlpool. In his notepad he had 40 or 50 names. As auditions progressed, most promising of all was a 15-year-old drumming prodigy named Alan White.
"He came down and just blew us all away," remembers Archer. "I thought he was mega but the others were worried what a 15-years-old kid on the road and on the lager would be like. I rang his dad and told him, Sorry. But don't worry he's fantastic. He'll go all the way. And he did. It was the weirdest day when he welcomed me to Oasis. And he hasn't let me forget it."
Of course it would take fate another 12 years to unite Archer and White in Oasis. In the meantime Whirlpool folded and Archer moved on to form Heavy Stereo, a four-piece glam rock outfit.
The band's debut album, Déjà Voodoo, received a lukewarm response in 1997, but two years later Heavy Stereo's future was looking brighter, Singer and guitarist Archer had been demoing some new material and, impressed by their contribution to The Jam tribute album, Fire And Skill, they suddenly won new friends.
"We'd got a Paul Weller tour and our new music was our best ever," says Archer. "I thought '99 really might be a good year for us."
But things were put on hold when Gem's mother fell seriously ill at home in the North-East. She eventually recovered but this dark hour in Archer's life is where his Oasis odyssey begins.
"I was in Newcastle, I'd been there for months because my mum was seriously ill. I was laying in front of the fire at her house and it was on the Big Breakfast news that Bonehead had left. I thought, Shit! They'll split now. I was a real fan, and I'm not just saying that.
For me, Oasis had breathed life back into rock 'n' roll.
"What I didn't know was that Noel had rung my place in London where it was my son's birthday party. His auntie answered the phone and was going, Soyou reckon you're Noel Gallagher. Eventually he spoke to my wife and then rang me at my mum's. I told him I had to stay near my mum but he invited me down afterwards to Olympic Studios, where they were mixing Standing On The Shoulder Of Giants, to hang out. And I've been hanging out ever since
"We went to the pub and I couldn't stand not knowing if I was a part of the band. After less than half a pint of Guinness I said, What does Liam say? And Noel said, It's my fucking band. I'll have who I want. I said, I won't let you down, and he said let's have it then"
A matter of weeks later Archer was earning £ 85 a week as the new Oasis rhythm guitarist (having been recruited after sessions for Standing On The Shoulder Of Giants, he wasn't due any royalties) and played his first chords at a session for alternative radio in Chicago. All of which begs the question, how did Heavy Stereo react to Archer departing for a major league act just when things were looking up?
"Oasis was the only band I would have left Heavy Stereo for," asserts Archer. "When Oasis came along the guys in the band said, You've got to do it. You've got a couple of kids. Go for it. They didn't have to do that, they were so cool. They're good people."
Noel Gallagher was aware of Heavy Stereo because they were Creation label-mates. They had also been touted among a slew of Oasis-influenced rockers. But that wasn't the reason he was chosen.
"Believe me, I know a lot of blokes in bands," says Noel. "And as well as someone who can play really well you want guys who aren't going to go nuts three dates into a six-month tour. You want people who can keep their heads. That's Gem. He's a great musician and he's solid as a rock. And since we've had him we've been 100 per cent better as a band."
Archer was the beneficiary of predecessor Paul "Bonehead" Arthurs's decision to visit Liam Gallagher with a bottle of wine at 5 am one morning while the band were recording Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants in France in 1999.
Noel Gallagher had ordered that Liam be kept away from alcohol during recording. Arthurs broke the embargo by breaking down his door and in the ensuing argument quit the band. So, the wide availability of cheap wine in France gave Gem Archer his big break?
"Ha ha! If I'd joined Oasis at 24 maybe I would have gone, Right! The rock 'n' roll world is my oyster!" he says.
"But now that's so not the case. I love my music but I don't feel I need the crazy rock 'n' roll lifestyle to go with it. I like a drink and a laugh but I don't like doing stuff that you remember three days later and feel terrible about. Basically I think Bonehead had had enough. And from I hear he's a lot happier now."
So too Noel Gallagher. The high-rolling Oasis years of the late '90s followed by Gallagher's self-imposed moratorium on hard drugs meant he required a different sort of Oasis personnel.
Archer feels that having got the "glam rock" bug out of his system he was perfect for the job.
"I know why he chose me," he shrugs . "Because I'm a boring studio boffin! I bring an appreciation of recording hardware which Noel likes. When I'm rattling on about some dodgy Limiter, Noel eyes light up. We recorder the Proud Mary album together - a band signed to Noel's Sour Mash label - and I saw a different side of him. He really loves getting the best out of people. He likes having someone to go through the fine points of the recording process with."
Oasis bass player Andy Bell agrees, "Think about it: Oasis has completely evolved. Noel's old mates left, he's been divorced and really changed his own life around. He still has Liam but his relationship with Liam is different - It's more tempestuous. He needs a less extreme mate and Gem's it. Gem chills Noel out. And that makes Oasis a more stable ship."
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