No Connection (band)

No Connection are an English classic rock music group based in Reading, Berkshire.

No Connection
OriginReading, Berkshire, England
GenresRock
Years active1997-2018
LabelsNo Connection Music
Websitehttp://www.noconnectionmusic.com/
MembersGraham Young
Simon Whenlock
Jon Hill

History

No Connection were formed in May 1997 in Reading, Berkshire by Graham Young (lead vocals, guitar), Simon Whenlock (bass, backing vocals), and Jon Hill (drums, backing vocals). The group claims as their inspirations the likes of Aerosmith, AC/DC, Deep Purple, George Michael, Public Enemy, Queen, The Cult, Van Halen, and U2.[1][2]

No Connection released their first album, titled Justified, in January 2000.[2] The album included ten songs, including "Victory Girl",[2] which was featured in the teaser of an episode of First Wave titled "Ohio Players".[1] Two more songs off the album—"Ain't Foolin'" and "Love for Free"—reached No. 1 on MP3.com's Classic Rock chart.[1]

The band released Deal With It, co-produced with John Mitchell,[3] in 2001 through their indie record label No Connection Music.[4] In October 2002, the group toured the United States, performing in Philadelphia, New Jersey, and New York City (including at the CBGB club).[1] They also subsequently performed in the Czech Republic and Poland in 2005, and in Lithuania in 2006.[1]

In 2004, No Connection released Love To Hate To Love, followed in 2005 by Feed The Machine and in 2008 by Red Light Fever.[5]

No Connection's music has been featured in two games of the FlatOut video game series: three songs—"Burnin'", "Living American", and "Love to Hate to Love"—were included in the original game (see FlatOut (video game))[6][7] and two songs—"The Last Revolution" and "Feed the Machine"—were present in FlatOut: Ultimate Carnage.[8][9]

Discography

  • Justified (2000)
  • Deal With It (2001)
  • Love To Hate To Love (2004)
  • Feed The Machine (2005)
  • Red Light Fever (2008)
  • Tal Es La Vida (2010)
  • The Best And The Rest (2011)
  • The Lithuanian Incident (2014)
  • Suck It Up (2018)
gollark: When have I explained nothing? I want an annotated 500-word essay with examples.
gollark: Yes, I am in fact Olivia too.
gollark: Perhaps they're semirandom. Perhaps I devise bespoke bluffs by myself and then share them. Perhaps my bluffs are optimized automatically via testing against high-fidelity computer simulations of all other participants. Perhaps I don't make bluffs but merely disseminate cognitohazards causing perception of bluffs. Perhaps my every word and bluff is meticulously generated to produce minimum guessing of me. Perhaps I never bluff and every word I say is accurate.
gollark: I generate my bluffs via RNG now to avoid the terribleness of human random number generation (heavpoot has data on this), unless I don't and am trying to trick you into not making inferences from them.
gollark: Unless I didn't but am *not* trying to fool you all.

References

  1. "No Connection". BBC. 23 January 2006. Retrieved 15 August 2008.
  2. "No Connection CDs". New Horizons. Retrieved 15 August 2008.
  3. "No Connection". BBC. Retrieved 15 August 2008.
  4. "Collection: Deal With It by No Connection". Bitmunk. Retrieved 15 August 2008.
  5. "No Connection". Xfm. Retrieved 15 August 2008.
  6. "Game Credits for FlatOut". MobyGames. Retrieved 15 August 2008.
  7. "FlatOut > Credits". Allgame. Retrieved 15 August 2008.
  8. "Game Credits for FlatOut: Ultimate Carnage". MobyGames. Retrieved 15 August 2008.
  9. "FlatOut: Ultimate Carnage > Credits". Allgame. Retrieved 15 August 2008.


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