FC Kahuna

FC Kahuna (also known as FC/Kahuna) was a British DJ and electronic music production duo, consisting of Jon Nowell and Daniel Ormondroyd. The group released only one album, Machine Says Yes, in the spring of 2002. It had a number of singles released from it, most notably "Machine Says Yes" and "Hayling", which both featured vocals by Icelandic singer Hafdís Huld. The album sold over 50,000 copies and received positive response from critics at New Musical Express,[1] Dallas Observer,[2] and others.[3][4][5]

FC Kahuna
OriginLondon, England
GenresBig beat, electronica, trip hop, acid house
Years active1997–2003
LabelsKahuna Cuts, City Rockers
Past membersJon Nowell
Daniel Ormondroyd

History

In 2003, they released their first mix album Another Fine Mess — an offshoot of the Another Late Night compilation series — which featured tracks by Blur, The Polyphonic Spree, Green Velvet, Josh Wink and others. Among the artists remixed by the band are New Order, Felix da Housecat, Mellow and the US band The Faint.

The music of the duo was featured in TV shows such as Hotel Babylon, Six Feet Under, CSI: Miami and Nip/Tuck, and in films such as Domino, Layer Cake, Riding Giants and Rolling.[6] The music for several video games have also featured music from the duo, including Need for Speed: Underground and Crackdown.

Live performances

Originally a DJ duo, FC Kahuna added some live members to their shows in 2002, touring the UK in support of Röyksopp, which culminated in a sold out show at Brixton Academy.

Members

  • Daniel Ormondroyd - keyboards, samples, mixing, programming
  • Jon Nowell - drums
  • Hafdis Huld - vocals
  • Martin Bramah - guitars, keyboards
  • John Thompson - bass

The band also played at Coachella in Southern California, T in the Park in Scotland, Roskilde in Denmark, Reading and Leeds in the UK, and Benicàssim in Spain.

Partial discography

Albums

Singles and EPs

  • "You Know It Makes Sense" (1997)
  • "Bright Morning White" (1998)
  • "Mind Set to Cycle" (2000)
  • "Glitterball" (2002) - UK #64
  • "Machine Says Yes" (2002) - UK #58
  • "Hayling" (2003) - UK #49
  • "Nothing Is Wrong" (2003)[7]
gollark: More if you compromise on quality, I suppose.
gollark: £30 of HDD capacity can store something like 90 days of music.
gollark: I would generally favour just storing music on regular digital storage (flash/tape/HDD/blu-ray/whatever), but if you want a spinny thing, CDs better, in my IMO opinion.
gollark: I see.
gollark: CDs are superior, since they have very high-quality (lossless 44.1kHz 16-bit) digital audio.

References

  1. Robinson, Peter (19 April 2002). "FC Kahuna : Machine Says Yes - Ex-big beaters come good..." New Musical Express.
  2. Hampton, Justin (21 November 2002). "FC Kahuna Machine Says Yes (review)". Dallas Observer.
  3. Fahnestock, Jesse. "Machine Says Yes: FC Kahuna (review)". Ink Blot Magazine.
  4. Moffat, Iain (19 April 2002). "Machine Says Yes: FC Kahuna (review)". PlayLouder.com. Archived from the original on 30 April 2002.
  5. Cibula, Matt (10 January 2003). "FC Kahuna: Machine Says Yes (review)". Pop Matters.
  6. Macavity. "Kosmetic Surgery preview: interview with FC Kahuna". HarderFaster. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  7. Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 191. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.


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