Chew Lips

Chew Lips was a dance-pop duo, formed in spring of 2008.[1] They consisted of singer 'Tigs' and multi-instrumentalist James Watkins.[2]

Chew Lips
Chew Lips performing live in 2011
Background information
OriginEast London, UK
GenresElectro, synthpop, drone, dance-punk
Years active2008–2014
LabelsFamily
Websitewww.chew-lips.com
Members'Tigs' (Alicia Huertas), James Watkins
Past membersWill Sanderson

Career

2008–2009: First Steps

Formed in London as a 3 piece band in the summer of 2008, Tigs, James & Will armed themselves with a slew of electro-pop hooks and set about establishing Chew Lips as one of the most exciting new acts in the capital.

With Tigs developing into a charismatic whirlwind of a front woman who it was impossible to take your eyes off, Chew Lips increasingly compelling live performances grabbed the attention of uber-cool French label Kitsuné who insisted on putting out the band's debut single, "Solo".

Released in March 2009, "Solo" sold out almost instantly, causing a storm in the blogosphere and beyond, with Pitchfork calling the track "….classic, pristine,"[3] and The Fly magazine labelling it "one of the most magnificent debuts of the year".

2009–2010: Second Kitsuné Single and Unicorn

A relentless schedule of touring followed into 2009 as Chew Lips honed their sound into a sleek, sophisticated beast.

Kitsuné released a second sold out single, "Salt Air" in July 2009 – NME called it "an addictive slice of heart-wrenching disco-pop" – before the band begun work in summer '09 on their full-length debut with Bat For Lashes collaborator David Kosten.

The fruits of their labour came with the self-released album Unicorn in January 2010, such a giant leap forward for their sound that they were confident enough to leave off both of the previous singles. It was easy to see why – in the likes of "Play Together", "Karen" and "Slick", they'd outdone themselves. The press agreed: the BBC called it "startling", NME "mesmeric", whilst a 4/5 review in The Guardian said it "drags you straight in."

Another stretch of intense touring followed and by the time the European festival season came round and after a scene-stealing appearance at SXSW in Texas (Elle US described them as the best new act at the festival), Chew Lips were on top of their game. Topping off their tour they headlined the packed BBC Introducing Stage at Glastonbury Festival.

Other touring highlights include support slots with The Killers, Delphic, We Are Scientists, The Virgins, Joy Formidable, Howling Bells, 3 sold out UK Tours and a sold out European tour in 2011.

Split

Tigs announced on Twitter in 2015 that she was now only writing material for other artists,[4] implying that Chew Lips were no more.

Discography

Studio albums

Album Details Release Date Label
Unicorn 25 January 2010 Family

Singles and EPs

Release Details Release Date Label
Solo January 2009 Kitsuné
Salt Air 6 July 2009 Kitsuné
Play Together 18 January 2010 Family
Karen 28 March 2010 Family
Do You Chew? 4 May 2012 Sony
Hurricane 3 September 2012 Sony

Chew Lips remixing

Chew Lips remixes

Solo

  • David E Sugar
  • Tepr (Yelle)

Salt Air

Play Together

  • WaWa

Karen

  • Analogue People in a Digital World
  • Mark Otten
  • Netsky
  • We Are Enfant Terrible

Slick

Soundtracks and Syncs

Live Appearances

UK Highlights

US

European Festivals

Press

Unicorn

  • "4/5 – an accomplished first offering"Q
  • "4/5 – sharp-edged, sharp-witted electro rock...success looks like an open goal"Mojo
  • "4/5 – a spine tinglingly awesome debut" – Time Out
  • "4.5/5 – it deserves to be massive...make it so"The Fly
  • "4/5 – brilliant...a record that gets better over time"MusicOMH
  • "4/5 – Synth heaven!" New!
  • "Beautiful...clattering electronic pop with big melodies"The Independent
  • "Wistful, discoid confections... like Blondie backed by Simian Mobile Disco"The Observer
  • "A band to look out for this year… absolutely superb"Sunday Mail
  • "Our new favourite"NME
  • "An utterly peerless work; ten tracks to completely lose yourself in"NME.com[5]
  • "Catchy electro tunes...you'll love 'em"Grazia
  • "Unicorn is that rarest of things; a record imbued with genuine talent and emotion which wipes the floor with the majority of its makers' contemporaries... quite startling"BBC
  • "Chew Lips confidently reveal their crossover potential... the rhythms are edgy and the songwriting is something you can really get your teeth into"Metro
  • "Chew Lips' blending of electronic punk ala 'Yeah Yeah Yeahs go 8-bit' is so infective it's dangerous" – Super Super
gollark: They lose mass too fast to become red supergiants and still retain high temperature.
gollark: Extremely large stars (>40 solar masses) apparently don't become red giants!
gollark: Aha, good news!
gollark: That doesn't even makes ense.
gollark: Lasers would be impractical, but I suppose your idea has merit.

References

  1. "Q Radio – Chew Lips introduction page". Ash Meikle, Q. Retrieved 26 July 2011.
  2. "The Guardian – New band of the day". Paul Lester, The Guardian. Retrieved 26 July 2011.
  3. "Pitchfork – Chew Lips 'Solo' Review". Jonathan Garrett, Pitchfork. Retrieved 26 July 2011.
  4. @tiggington (24 November 2015). "i write for other artists now!" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  5. "NME.com – 'Unicorn' First Listen". Camilla Pia, NME. Archived from the original on 22 October 2012. Retrieved 26 July 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.