Iconic Glasgow band share heartbreaking news just months before Hydro shows
An iconic Glasgow band has shared heartbreaking news with fans, revealing that one of their founding members is "seriously ill" just months before their scheduled hometown shows.
Deacon Blue announced on social media that keyboardist Jim Prime has been hospitalised after falling unwell.
The 64-year-old musician helped form the band in 1985 alongside Ricky Ross, Lorraine McIntosh, Dougie Vipond, Ewen Vernal, and the late Graeme Kelling.
READ MORE: Ricky Ross shared adorable picture of wife in touching post
Details about Prime's condition have not been released, but the band confirmed he has given them his blessing to continue with their scheduled tour, which concludes with two nights at Glasgow's OVO Hydro this October.
In a heartfelt statement, the band wrote: "Dear friends,
"We want to share some news with you about our brother Jim.
"Unfortunately, he is seriously ill and undergoing care in hospital. We would like you to join us in wishing him well and to share your love with him.
"We spoke to Jim yesterday about Deacon Blue's plans for the rest of the year, and he encouraged us to continue with love in our hearts and with his full blessing that the shows go ahead even if it means replacing the irreplacable Jame Miller Prime for the time being.
"Together with Jim's family, we want to thank all nurses, doctors and ICU staff for their ongoing care, professionalism and comapssion.
"With love, Ricky, Lorraine, Dougie, Gregor, Lewis and Tom."
Fans flooded the comment section following the sad update sharing their well wishes for Jim.
One fan wrote: "Wishing Jim a speedy recovery and you all safe travels on your musical journeys."
Another commented: "Oh Jim! Guys, I'm praying for him and for you all during this horribly uncertain time. Jim = legend."
A third added: "Sending prayers and healing wishes to you, Jim.
"Stay positive and do as the medical staff tells you! We look forward to seeing you tinkling the ivories when you're ready."
The Glasgow-based band will perform two major shows at the OVO Hydro on Friday and Saturday, October 10 and 11, 2025, as part of their Deacon Blue: The Great Western Road Trip tour.
Tickets are available now, ranging from £45 to £75.
READ MORE:
Last year, the Glasgow Times reported that the band's latest album will pay tribute to the city's iconic Great Western Road.
Founding members Ricky Ross and Lorraine McIntosh discussed the project during an appearance on the Zoe Ball Breakfast Show on BBC Radio 2.
Ricky, 66, said: "We are in the middle of making a record. We will be bringing it out on March 21, 2025 (and it) is called The Great Western Road.
"Great Western Road leads from the city centre through the West End of Glasgow, which is a really cool and trendy part - and I always thought that for a certain time we owned that. It was the place we wanted to be and we seemed part of it for about two months in 1987.
"The band would meet at a bar called Chimmy Chungas, and it was the gang headquarters of Deacon Blue - that's what Great Western Road was for me."
At the time, the duo also shared that Deacon Blue will perform a mix of intimate theatre shows and larger arena dates across the UK.
When Zoe Ball asked about the difference between theatres and big venues, Lorraine joked: 'Yes, they are terrifying.'
Tickets for the Glasgow shows will go on general sale at 10am on November 29, 2024.
To book tickets, visit: www.gigsinscotland.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Cosmopolitan
an hour ago
- Cosmopolitan
The Sabrina Carpenter Album Cover Controversy, Explained
It has come to my attention that Sabrina Carpenter has once again done something provocative that has, in turn, once again resulted in public shock and scandal, despite the fact that doing a satirical sex thing is pretty much the most Sabrina Carpenter thing Sabrina Carpenter could possibly do. Naturally, the initial outrage from the pearl-clutching set has subsequently generated a rousing round of internet discourse re: female sexuality under patriarchy—on which, as your resident Sabrina Carpenter Sex Things reporter, I feel it is my duty to weigh in. So let's discuss, shall we? On the heels of her latest single/immediate contender for song of the summer, 'Manchild,' (which, banger), Sabrina took to Instagram yesterday to announce her new album, Man's Best Friend, which is coming out August 29. The post featured an image (widely assumed to be the album's cover art) of Sabrina on her hands and knees while a man pulls her by her hair. In other words, it's a sexually submissive pose, one that invokes Dom/sub dynamics including ownership kinks and Master/pet play. (A second slide features an image of a dog collar with the album's title written on the tag, likely a nod to the sub collars often worn by submissive partners in these kinds of kink scenes.) Cue: immediate hand-wringing from the public claiming the (presumed) album art is 'regressive' and 'degrading' to women, with many critics arguing this supposed endorsement of subservience to men is particularly troubling amid a political climate that continues to threaten women's liberation. Instagram comments of note include one user who called the art 'insensitive' in light of the precarious state of women's bodily autonomy under the current administration, while another claimed it 'just set us back about five decades.' Meanwhile, a headline in the Telegraph proclaimed that Sabrina's 'over-sexed, degrading new album cover has gone too far,' while an Instagram post from Glasgow Women's Aid, a Scottish-based organization for women experiencing domestic violence, claimed the art evoked 'tired tropes that reduce women to pets, props, and possessions and promote an element of violence and control.' Woof. (Pun intended.) In response, others defended the imagery as satirical, interpreting the art as a tongue in cheek nod to the exact kind of criticism it did, in fact, generate and to which Sabrina is regularly subjected, which insists on missing the irony and painting her cheeky aesthetic as problematically male-gaze appeasing. While I can't say I'm the world's foremost Sabrina scholar, I think that—based on Sabrina's music, which frequently calls out and subverts the gendered power imbalances women face at the hands of men in heterosexual relationships—this reading of the art as an ironic response to the exact slut-shaming it received is a pretty solid bet! That said, irony or no irony, I think it's worth noting that being submissive in bed—including engaging in forms of consensual kink play involving degradation, ownership, humiliation, subservience, etc.—is not inherently 'degrading' for women (or for anyone of any gender, to be clear). What we do and like in bed—especially in kink—is not necessarily reflective of who really are as people. In fact, sometimes our sexual proclivities represent a subversion of and/or escape from who we are in our day to day lives. Which is to say, women can be sexually submissive without being (or wanting to be) subservient to men in real life. (Yes, we exist!) Moreover, even within a kink scene itself, being submissive isn't about having no autonomy, but rather willingly relinquishing control to a Dominant partner. As certified sex and relationship psychotherapist Gigi Engle, resident intimacy expert at dating app, 3Fun, previously told Cosmo, 'In kink, the sub is not actually powerless. The Dom and sub are both in control because the scene has been negotiated and boundaries have been established. Therefore, you can let go and be a submissive, but ultimately you know you are not, in fact, powerless.' In other words, submission is part of a dynamic exchange of power, not the lack of it. Meanwhile, as others have argued re: the recent discourse, claims that Sabrina's open displays of sexuality are 'regressive' are, in fact, rather regressive themselves. As one Twitter user put it, 'I fear we may have 'stop doing things for the male gaze'd ourselves back into expecting women to be modest and shaming them otherwise.' Quick Feminism 101 refresher: One of the core tenets of patriarchy is the policing and control of female sexuality. Patriarchy does this by shaming and censuring women for engaging with their sexuality outside the societally sanctioned bounds of heterosexual, monogamous relationships, therefore ensuring it remains under male control. When we are shaming Sabrina's sex-forward aesthetic—even on the supposedly 'progressive' grounds that it panders to the male gaze—what are we really doing other than reinforcing male systems of power that encourage women to be modest, chaste, and—dare I say—submissive to men? All of which is to say, whatever it is Sabrina was trying to do with her new album announcement, I think we can all simply agree that she looks fabulous doing it and get on with our day.

4 hours ago
Photos of drag queens preparing to attend 'Les Miserables' at Kennedy Center, despite Trump
WASHINGTON -- Mari Con Carne put on their make-up, wig and gown before attending 'Les Miserables' at the Kennedy Center. Along with other Washington-based drag queens Tara Hoot, Ricky Rosé and Vagenesis, they attended the show despite complaints by President Donald Trump that the Kennedy Center had hosted too many drag shows in the past. Trump, who also attended the performance, has replaced the Kennedy Center's president and board with loyalists, had himself named chairman and pledged to overhaul programming he calls 'woke' and too focused on leftist ideology. This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Inside the OceanGate disaster: Netflix's new documentary dives into the tragic descent that killed 5 people
Nearly two years after the OceanGate submersible Titan was presumed to have imploded during its expedition to the wreckage of the Titanic, killing the five people on board, a new documentary offers a fresh look at the disaster — and the man at the center of it. Netflix's Titan: The OceanGate Disaster explores how Stockton Rush, the CEO of OceanGate, did everything in his power to continue his trips to explore the ocean floor, even as it became more and more evident that the submersible was not safe. The film uses footage commissioned by Rush himself, who hired a videographer to document the journey, and shines a light on Rush's hubris, which ultimately had deadly consequences. Here's what to know about OceanGate, Rush and how this tragedy unfolded. Rush was a businessman who was born into a wealthy San Francisco family — and the descendant of two founding fathers, Benjamin Rush and Richard Stockton, per the Seattle Times. In 1986, he married Wendy Weil, who was the great-great-granddaughter of Isidor and Ida Straus, a wealthy couple who died on the Titanic. Rush was passionate about exploration. At 19, he became the youngest pilot in the world to qualify for jet transport rating, per the BBC. He received his undergraduate degree from Princeton University in aerospace engineering before getting an MBA from the University of California, Berkeley. Later, he worked as a flight test engineer on the F-15 program at McDonnell Douglas and later held leadership roles at Remote Control Technologies, Entomo and BlueView Technologies. But despite his aerospace degree and work experience, he eventually turned away from space — and to the ocean instead. In 2009, he cofounded the Bahamas-based OceanGate Expeditions with Argentine-American businessman Guillermo Söhnlein to make ocean exploration more accessible. OceanGate's first submersible, Antipodes, completed around 130 dives between 2010 and 2013, offering underwater trips to clients for prices ranging from an estimated $7,500 to $40,000. In 2015, the company began developing what would become known as the Titan (originally named Cyclops II), a deep-diving submersible built with a carbon fiber hull — an unusual and controversial design choice that received much pushback from experts and employees. It was reported that OceanGate used carbon fiber from Boeing that was past its shelf life for use on airplanes; later it came to light that NASA was supposed to aid in the creation of the Titan but that plans changed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Rush never had the Titan 'classed,' or independently certified to meet strict safety and design rules — choosing to skip the process despite expert warnings. David Lochridge, the company's director of marine operations, raised serious concerns about the submersible design and testing, believing that Rush's main concern was ensuring that the mission continued no matter what, as his focus was on making money. Lochridge testified to the U.S. Coast Guard in 2024 that he expressed these concerns, only to be fired from the company in 2018 and sued for breach of contract. Though Lochridge filed a complaint with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration against OceanGate, he said that they never investigated his concerns. In an email in January 2018 to deep-sea exploration specialist Rob McCallum, Lochridge wrote, per the New Yorker: 'I would consider myself pretty ballsy when it comes to doing things that are dangerous, but that sub is an accident waiting to happen.' But in July 2021, the company made its first successful dive to the Titanic, and by January 2023, the Guardian reported that the company took about 60 paying customers and 15 to 20 researchers to the Titanic in their submersible. In a 2022 interview with CBS Sunday Morning, Rush said, 'At some point, safety just is pure waste. I mean, if you just want to be safe, don't get out of bed, don't get in your car, don't do anything. At some point you're gonna take some risk, and it really is a risk/reward question. I said, 'I think I can do this just as safely by breaking the rules.'' On June 18, 2023, Rush and four other people — British billionaire Hamish Harding; French Titanic expert and former navy diver Paul-Henri Nargeolet; Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood; and his 19-year-old son, Suleman Dawood — left the coast of Newfoundland in the Titan on a mission to explore the wreckage of the Titanic. Each passenger onboard reportedly paid $250,000 for the trip, with Rush as the pilot. But about an hour and 45 minutes into its descent, the Titan lost contact with its support vessel. A large international search and rescue operation began, involving the U.S. Coast Guard, as well as Canadian and French authorities. At the same time, the media — and the world — watched, knowing that the crew only had 96 hours of oxygen at the beginning of their venture. On Thursday, June 22, debris from the Titan was found roughly 1,600 feet from the Titanic's bow. The U.S. Coast Guard confirmed the Titan had suffered a 'catastrophic implosion,' and that all five passengers had died instantly. Investigations later revealed that the vessel's carbon fiber and titanium design had raised serious safety concerns for years. In the aftermath, Rush was accused of eschewing regulations and testing, forging ahead despite all safety issues flagged. 'It comes down to Stockton Rush. The decisions he made led to this,' Mark Monroe, director of the Netflix documentary, told People. 'It was a cult of personality. If you went against him, you were likely to be out.' OceanGate officially suspended all exploration and commercial operations in July 2023. It also removed most of its internet presence. The company has not yet filed for bankruptcy and still exists as a registered business, per Today.