Balloon (band)

Balloon were an early 1990s music duo from London, consisting of Ian Bickerton and David Sheppard. Their first album, Gravity, was released in 1992 by Dedicated Records, a British record label known for neo-psychedelia.[1]

Biography

Bickerton and Sheppard met in 1988. They recorded more than 60 demo tracks before they were signed by Dedicated Records.[2]

Critic Eve Zibart of The Washington Post described the band's music as "a peculiarly soothing mix of Feargal Sharkey, Storyville, white soul, mild social unrest punk and Leonard Cohen."[3] Jae-Ha Kim of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote, "Balloon's music is atmospheric and winsome, with acoustic guitars caressing velvety voices."[4]

Their first album, Gravity, was released in 1992. Produced by Michael Brook, the record featured contributions from Sarah McLachlan (on the track "Tightrope Walker")[1] and James Pinker. Bickerton wrote the music and lyrics, while Sheppard played all sorts of instruments. The album was recorded mostly in New Orleans,[1] at Daniel Lanois' studio. The duo toured the US in 1992,[2] with percussionist James Pinker as a touring member.[5]

Balloon supported Bill Hicks on his final UK tour, including performing at the Tivoli Theatre in Dublin, Ireland, on Dec 1st 1992.

Balloon played a one-off show at the Social, London WC1, in November 2016.

gollark: Hmm. This doesn't actually work.
gollark: ++tel searchrecent <#830829987916414986> bees
gollark: I already read the thing.
gollark: ++help tel searchrecent
gollark: ++help tel

References

  1. Jenkins, Mark. "Balloon Floating On Jazzy 'Gravity'", The Washington Post, 26 June 1992, p. N16.
  2. Lozaw, Tristram. "Balloon bursting on scene with 'station-wagon' tour", Boston Herald, 1992-06-26, p. S16.
  3. Zibart, Eve. "Neil Young Not Growing Old Quietly", The Washington Post, 1992-06-26, p. N21.
  4. Kim, Jae-Ha. "Balloon's History: The First Volume", Chicago Sun-Times, 1992-08-14, p. 5.
  5. Augusto, Troy J. (August 1992). "Sarah Mclachlan; Balloon", Variety review database.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.