Eastern Lane

Eastern Lane were an English indie band from Berwick-upon-Tweed, comprising Derek Meins (vocals/guitar), Andrew Lawton (guitar), Stuart Newlands (bass) and Danny Ferguson (drums). Their name was taken from a street in their hometown.[1] The band was formed in 2001.[2]

Eastern Lane
OriginBerwick-upon-Tweed, England, UK
GenresIndie rock
Years active2001–2006
LabelsRough Trade
Websitewww.easternlane.com

The band released two albums: Shades of Black in 2003 and The Article in 2005. Both albums are on the Rough Trade label. Their song, "Feed Your Addiction" was featured in an HSBC advertisement.

In late 2006 the band went their separate ways, according to a posting on the band's MySpace site, the split was down to the fact they have been unable to release any new material "due to circumstances with labels and money etc."

Derek Meins is now pursuing a solo career, performing and releasing as The Agitator.

Discography

Albums

  • Shades of Black (2003)
  • The Article (2005)

EPs

  • Last Excerpt (2002)[3]

Singles

  • "Feed Your Addiction" (2003) - UK Number 72
  • "Saffron" (2004) - UK Number 55
  • "I Said Pig on Friday" (2004)- UK Number 65

[4]

gollark: BEE.
gollark: It should have a pointer to the 1th element, the eth element, the e²th element, and so on.
gollark: Interesting features:- all numbers are hexadecimal always- it has no support for immediate parameters which aren't addresses or something- there are no registers and exactly 256 bytes of memory, one of which is the program counter- conditional moves are the only conditional thing
gollark: ```x86asm!PAD E0LOOP:re 8 RIadd RJ RI !1mez RJ I !0re 8 RJidm RI RJmov I !LOOPRI: ! 0RJ: ! 0```Here is some example code.
gollark: Or machine code.

References

  1. "User profile page - Eastern Lane". ukbands.net. Archived from the original on 2 October 2013. Retrieved 30 September 2013.
  2. Eastern Lane at AllMusic. Retrieved 8 January 2009.
  3. Last Excerpt EP - Eastern Lane at AllMusic. Retrieved 30 September 2013.
  4. Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 177. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.


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