Pink Grease

Pink Grease were a six-piece rock group from Sheffield, England. Drawing from prominent early influences like David Bowie, Iggy Pop, T.Rex and even Kiss, the band's sound and style was often seen as glam rock while also being heavily influenced by such new wave artists like Duran Duran and punk rock artists like The Damned.

Pink Grease
OriginSheffield, England
GenresPost-punk revival, glam punk, new wave, indie rock, garage rock, garage punk
Years active20022007
Past membersRory Lewarne (vocals)
Nicholas Collier (synthesizer)
Steven SantaCruz (guitar, vocals)
John Joseph Lynch (guitar, saxophone)
Marc Hoad (drums)
Stuart Faulkner (bass guitar, vocals)

Pink Grease released their debut EP All Over You, in May 2003 to some minor critical praise. Then in June 2004 they followed up with the full-length This Is For Real with similar praise and some moderate commercial success. Their second album titled Mechanical Heart was planned for a release sometime in 2006/2007 but, after the split from the record label Mute Records, it is still unreleased and just a few promotional copies exist.

Rory Lewarne now sings with White Witches, who describe themselves as "foppish Celts with glitter in their veins". They released their debut album, Heironymus Anonymous, in 2018.

Discography

Albums

Singles

  • "Working All Day / Manhattan On Fire" - (2002)
  • "Waiting So Long / Soul Paco" - (1 May 2003)
  • "The Nasty Show" - (27 October 2003)
  • "Fever" - (22 March 2004)
  • "The Pink G. R. Ease" - (14 June 2004) Chart Position: #75 (UK)
  • "This is for Real" - (21 June 2004)
  • "Strip" - (10 January 2005) Chart Position: #36 (UK)
  • "Peaches" - (28 March 2005) Chart Position: #44 (UK)
  • "Ordinary Girl" - (5 June 2006)
  • "Alien" - (25 September 2006)
  • "Carlights" (29 January 2007) Chart Position: #34 (UK)[1]
gollark: I disagree entirely.
gollark: ! is the uninhabited type.
gollark: How does that follow?
gollark: Besides, ! has undefined information, as it can be converted to ALL types.
gollark: I don't think your theory is very useful.

References

  1. Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 427. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.


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