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Initially formed of Orlando Weeks (guitar/vocals), Hugo and Felix White (guitars/backing vocals), Rupert Jarvis (bass) and Robert Dylan Thomas (drums), the band released their debut single, "X-Ray," on Promise Records, which caught the attention of XFM-Radio, gaining substantial airplay. This led to The Maccabees being chosen as the support slot for an Arctic Monkeys tour. The Maccabees moved to Fierce Panda Records to release their second single, "Latchmere," which was to be a success, bolstered by the support of Radio 1 DJ Steve Lamacq. The accompanying video became popular on YouTube and also received significant airplay on MTV2.
The band then moved to major label, Fiction Records, to release their debut album, "Colour It In," which came out in May 2007. The album was a success, receiving widespread positive acclaim, charting at number 24. Their first single off the album, "First Love," entered the Top 40 in the UK. Their second, "About Your Dress," also breached the Top 40, peaking at number 33 in the UK charts. They then embarked on a US tour with Bloc Party and performed a sold-out show at the Roundhouse in London, UK.
Thomas left the band in 2008, being replaced by Sam Doyle on drums. In 2009, "Wall of Arms" was released, produced by Arcade Fire's Markus Dravs. The album built on the success of their debut, reaching number 13 in the UK Albums chart, receiving high praise from music critics, with Artrocker magazine naming it joint number one album of the year in 2009, alongside Yeah Yeah Yeah's "It's Blitz."
The band's popularity was displayed by their selection for main stage slots at Reading and Leeds Festival in the UK. After touring in support of their second album, The Maccabees spent two years writing and recording for their third offering, "Given to the Wild," released in 2012, featuring the lead single, "Pelican." The album received a Mercury Award nomination for album of the year.
For their fourth studio album, the band naturally found themselves taking a more introspective approach. Hiding themselves away in an anonymous two-storey building in Elephant & Castle, South London, and focussing on a more stripped-back band dynamic, they later sought an outside perspective in the form of much-admired producer Laurie Latham (Ian Dury & the Blockheads amongst others). The resulting LP Marks to Prove It was released on 31st July 2015 and shot straight to No. 1 in the UK album chart. Following another busy summer of festivals, the band will soon embark on an extensive US tour before returning to the UK in November.
The accepted norm when it comes to music is that if you want to do it yourself, you start the band first, before you start the label. Damon Gough turned that all on its head when he put together his Twisted Nerve Records with his friend Andy Votel in 1995, and after putting out a couple of other artists' records over the next two years, Gough debuted as Badly Drawn Boy with “EP1”, a limited release kept to only 500 copies in circulation, despite the fact it was one of the most critically acclaimed debut releases of the year. The EP and Gough's first singles put him on the radar of the hip-hop project UNKLE, who had him feature on their 1997 album “Psyence Fiction”, and due to that exposure, Gough's 1999 single “Once Around The Block” found its way on to the UK charts soon after its release.
Because of this, XL Recordings got in contact and signed Gough, releasing his debut album “The Hour Of The Bewilderbeast” a year later. The album was a huge critical success, which turned into a similarly huge commercial hit when it won the 2000 Mercury Music Award. The follow up to this album was an esoteric move, but one that was no less successful as a result. The directors of the film adaptation of Nick Hornby's About A Boy got in touch while Gough was enjoying some downtime from music and asked him to score the film. The resulting soundtrack album was another critical hit, and ever since then, Gough has remained one of the most fascinating and talented songwriters that this country has produced in a very long time. For that, he comes highly recommended.
Based in the very middle of England in what some would called the second city of England – Birmingham, Editors have made such a name for themselves over the course of their career, cementing their status as a successful indie rock band. It all began when the band crossed paths studying Music Technology at Staffordshire University, but decided very quickly after their formation that their degrees weren’t the most relevant career choices for them and continued to perform around the Midlands and the surrounding areas. At this point in their career they were known as Pilot, which was great and, a memorable name to spread the name of the band but a Scottish band unfortunately already took it, so they changed it to The Pride and continued to build up their fan base, featuring in Fused Magazine, and releasing a six-track EP. Through word of mouth, they became such a successful unsigned band, and then had the opportunity to play at the Birmingham O2 Academy, which thirty A&R reps attended. It really was the start of something new fore this outfit.
After signing to a label based in Newcastle, everything began to take shape with the band playing on the festival circuits, and then releasing their full-length debut album “The Back Room”, which became a Platinum selling album, featuring all six songs from their six-track EP, such as “Munich”, “Blood” and “Lights”. It’s no wonder that Editors keep doing what they’re doing. They truly are a pride of the Midlands, UK.
Exposed to music at an early age, Calvi developed a love of classical music, much influenced by composers such as Ennio Morricone, Messiaen and Debussy. Yet she was also brought up listening to the eclectic sounds of Captain Beefheart and the Rolling Stones, finding significant inspiration in her guitar playing from artists such as Django Reinhardt and Jimmy Hendrix. Studying violin and guitar at the University of Southampton, UK, achieving a BA in music, Calvi set several years working as a private music teacher, before pursuing a music career in 2010.
Joined by multi-instrumentalist Mally Harpaz and drummer Daniel Madden-wood, she began performing at various venues before caching the attention of Domino Records. Brian Eno also took an interest to the talented Calvi, describing her as “the biggest thing since Patti Smith.” She was invited to support the Arctic Monkeys and Nick Cave’s Grinderman project, helping to gain further exposure.
Her self-titled debut album was released in 2011 to great critical acclaim, entering the UK charts at number 40. She also achieved significant chart success in France, reaching number 17, number 33 in Austria and a chart position of 40 in Switzerland. The album captured her raw talent, creating an almost orchestral sound through her textured and dynamic guitar playing.
Her live performances have been praised for her display of her guitar virtuosity, as well as creating an intense, dark atmosphere, making her a truly captivating performer. Despite being completely against current trends in popular music, she has garnered many accolades, including two Mercury Prize nominations. Her second album, “One Breath,” was released to wide critical acclaim in 2013. Whilst her first album took her six years to complete, her second took only six weeks to record.
Before the earliest incarnation of Ash, vocalist and guitarist Tim Wheeler and bassist Mark Hamilton played in an Iron Maiden cover band entitled Vietnam in 1989. Deciding on the first word they liked in the dictionary, Ash, with the addition of drummer Rick McMurray, created three demo tapes in 1992 with the names “Solar Happy”, “Shed”, and “Home Demo”. Many of the songs which featured on Ash’s debut full-length “Trailer” had previously appeared on earlier demos including “Jack Names the Planets”, “Uncle Pat”, and “Petrol”. The release received limited airplay from BBC Radio 1 and the group subsequently released the breakthrough singles “Kung Fu”, “Girl From Mars”, and “Angel Interceptor”.
After their singles “Jack Names the Planets” and “Kung Fu” appeared on the soundtrack to the film “Angus”, the band earned a wealth of exposure in the U.S. market. The Northern Irish group released their full-length debut “1977” in 1996 on Infectious and Reprise Records. Featuring the singles “Kung Fu”, Girl From Mars” and “Goldfinger” the album was named after the birth year of two of the band members, the year of the first punk albums and the original release of Star Wars. A year later Ash recorded a live album entitled “Live at the Wireless” at the Triple J Studios in Australia.
In 1997 after touring alongside Weezer, the band invited Charlotte Hatherley on board as a second guitarist, who played one of her first gigs at the year’s V Festival. Ahead of the band’s sophomore full-length “Nu-Clear Sounds”, Ash issued the single “Jesus Says”, however years of constant touring and recording were beginning to take their toll on the group. “Nu-Clear Sounds” turned out to be a commercial and critical flop and the band returned to Wheeler’s parents’ house, where the band began, to play and find their roots once again. The trip home worked wonders for the group whose subsequent album “Free All Angels” topped the UK Albums chart in 2001. Spawning the singles “Shining Light”, “Burn Baby Burn”, “Sometimes, and “Candy”, the first of which won the Ivor Novello Award for “Best Contemporary Song”, the album introduced Ash as a staple of Brit-pop.
Continuing the sci-fi theme of “1977”, Ash’s subsequent release, the singles collection “Intergalactic Sonic 7”s” was released in September 2002. After supporting U2 on their world tour, Wheeler and Hamilton moved to New York and embarked on a six month hiatus. A year later Charlotte Hatherley announced she was leaving the group. “Twilight of the Innocents” arrived in 2007 and was claimed to be Ash’s last album, with the band focussing on singles thereafter. In 2009 Ash began the “A-Z Series”, which saw the group released a new single every two weeks for a year, until 26 had been recorded. The same year the band made appearances at Hevy Music Festival in Folkestone, and headlined the John Peel Stage at Glastonbury Festival.
The Maccabees take their name from the traditional Hebrew story, but their music is far from traditional. They take the stage with silent smiles, allowing the emotion in the crowd to build to a crest before launching into the slow opening notes of their first song. They come together slowly, playing their sounds off of each other with their backs to the crowd until one by one they turn to begin.
Orlando Weeks on vocals, sings with a smooth, soft lilt, and his eyes never waver, leaving him with a soul-staring look that matches the melancholy tone of the music. They play with no errors or flaws, a well rehearsed show, on a large outdoor stage to a sea of fans stretched out in front of them.
Despite the enormous volume of the venue, they manage to play soft, quiet and subdued music with a beautiful perfection that can only be accomplished with practice. They don't over utilize stage effects or props, allowing the stage lights to form a gentle background with occasional flares to match the music.
During a melodic breakdown in one song, Orlando takes the opportunity to dance and smile and bob in time with the crowd to the tune of the song, before breaking away to return to the gentle, quiet, and sad final verse of the opening song, which fades into dead silence and then a roar of applause.
Damon Michael Gough better known by his stage name Badly Drawn Boy is becoming a recognisable name on the UK indie scene. It has definitely been a slow burning career as Damon has actually been making music since 1995 unbeknownst to the majority. He does channel the experience into his live performance nowadays though and appears a lot more skilled when most of the attendants think of him as a 'new' artist.
He was once noted for spending excessive time telling the audience stories and just having an overall emphasis on talking however he seems to have addressed this and now the show is far more pacy, giving time for the music which is definitely the defining feature of the show. His older material charted better yet his new stuff has garnered cult like appreciation so Damon treads carefully between his albums in order to cater for everybody tonight and he does a great job with a balanced set culminating in 'Silent Sigh' which receives the largest cheers of the evening.
Last year at Latitude Festival one English rock band from Stafford performed a sub-headline spot that dwarfed all other performers of the Friday in Henham Park. The quintet had been cruelly billed bellow new kids on the block Two Door Cinema Club which seemed unjust as Editors have over a decade of experience working the live circuit and festivals. A short few days before the event TDCC were forced to pull out and the band found themselves opening for controversial pop songstress Lily Allen.
The atmosphere was mixed from the offset as the pop fans gather for their spots whilst the hardcore rock fans huddle around the barrier. In the open air of the Obelisk Arena the band wins over even the most uninterested of bystander with immaculate renditions of their hits including 'All Sparks' and 'Papillon' whilst successfully showcasing new material in the form of 'Nothing' and 'A Ton of Love'. It was a difficult billing at the best of times yet Editors capitalised on the free nature of the festival and their heightened platform to win over the entire event and by the sounds of shouted choruses to 'Smokers Outside the Hospital Doors' it would seem they succeeded.
Anna Calvi at Koko, London, 17 May 2011. As the headline act of the emerge NME radar tour, Anna Calvi took to the stage of London’s Koko on the final night of the tour as if she’d been there 100 times before. Assured, confident and sizzling with fiery energy, her performance plays out like the simmering of a storm.
Dressed in her trademark red, Calvi is a commanding stage presence. The pared down set and minimal backing band makes Calvi and her guitar the sole focus. The intensity of her performance completely absorbs the audience, and this is nowhere more apparent than during "Love Won’t Be Leaving," as Calvi takes the song from it’s moody, subdued beginning to it’s beautiful, rousing finale. Calvi herself describes playing live like "almost going into a trance," and her hypnotic stage presence takes the audience along with her for the ride. The haunting vocals of "Suzanne and I" resonate across the packed room, and it’s hard to believe that this Twickenham-born singer/songwriter was ever afraid of performing live. Her performance could easily come across cold and disengaged, but something about the way Calvi connects with the music means the crowd are right there with her. She doesn’t need to rely on fancy staging or on stage banter - in fact, the lack of distractions make her performance all the more powerful and unforgettable.
Miles Kane , si è presentato vestito alla zoolander , tanto da sembrare Ben Stiller ! Concerto ben suonato con predilezione verso l'ultimo lavoro coupe de grace , sala sold out e pubblico caldo . Un ora e mezza di concerto volato via liscio. Miles preso bene. Invita la cantante, che ha fatto da supporter, Angelica sul palco per eseguire una canzone di Battisti . Bella serata .
20 odd years as a band and still going strong, if not as strong as when they started. Ash have never disappointed in any of the many concerts I have seen them play live.
I think my favourite concert has to be seeing the play the 10 year anniversary tour of Free All Angels at Bristol O2 Academy. Not just because of the return of Charlotte Hatherley, but because it was the first time I'd managed to convince by best friend to attend one of their shows.
The Bristol O2 Academy is typical of the venues Ash know find themselves, a reasonable sized venue, but still intimate enough for the crowd to fully rock out with the band.
There a band that no matter how many times I've seen them live, I can never get bored of seeing live.
Highly recommended to all as you are guaranteed an excellent night out.