Rosie and the Goldbug

Rosie and the Goldbug are a British indie-rock trio.[1]

Rosie and the Goldbug
OriginCornwall, England UK
GenresIndie rock
Electropop
Years active2007–present
LabelsPublic Recordings
MembersRosie Vanier
Lee "Pixie" Matthews
"Bubs" Taylor

History

The band are from Cornwall, England.[2] They formed in 2007, after lead singer and keyboard player Rosie Vanier had completed her music studies at Roehampton University and returned home, eager to form a band.[1][3][4] The "Goldbug" in the name refers to a story by Edgar Allan Poe.[1]

According to The Guardian, Vanier grew up in Bodmin Moor "on a plot of land with no electricity, no heat, no TV, just a piano."[1] Her mother and part-Native American father used to go on cycle tours in Europe, playing folk ballads along the way to entertain passers-by.[1] The bass player and guitarist, Lee "Pixie" Matthews, is the "son of hippie-surfer parents who spent his childhood in a beachside caravan."[1] The drummer, Sarah "Plums" Morgan, had previously played with a Japanese drumming ensemble.[1] Matthews and Morgan knew each other from being university students in Exmouth; and had played in a band together before joining Vanier.[3][4]

Rosie and the Goldbug have built up a reputation as a live band in Cornwall and started to attract wider attention.[3] They toured Europe with Cyndi Lauper for most of 2008.[5][6] The band released their music on their manager's label, Lover Records. They said that going it alone was an easy decision to make; according to the BBC, they wanted "to make it purely on talent alone and stay true to their roots" and were hoping that without relying on the support of a major label, people would be "more honest and raw about them."[3] They entered into writing partnerships with Marcella Detroit and Glaswegian band El Presidente on some of the tracks of their debut album.[3] Their first EP and album were produced by Jim Eliot of electropop duo Kish Mauve.[3]

Despite positive response from the music press, a management dispute temporarily derailed the project.[7] and on 14 August 2009, the band announced via their MySpace site that "Rosie and the Goldbug are over". The band members voiced regret, but did not go into any detail as to what had caused their decision.[8][9]

The band had planned to record a second album in the U.S., with new management.[9] Vanier subsequently embarked on a solo project; she completed a debut solo EP in November 2010.[10] Vanier and bassist Lee "Pixie" Matthews continued to work with each other, touring (with guitarist Rich Searby and drummer Joseph "Bubs" Taylor) as "Rosie and the Vandals" in 2013[11] and releasing the Bad in Love EP as a trio with Taylor in 2014, under the band name Lightknife.[12]

Vanier subsequently stated despite the changing name, the Rosie and The Goldbug project was never completely abandoned. She told West Briton, "They were all Rosie and the Goldbug in disguise. I definitely felt like a suppressed artist for a while."[7]

After signing a new deal with Public Records towards the end of 2014, a renewed Rosie and Goldbug - now consisting of Vanier, Matthews on bass and Taylor on drums - are once again recording and releasing new music.

Single 'Running In The Dark', recorded at The Cube studio near Truro and produced by Gareth Young, is due for release on 4 May 2015. Further singles and an EP are planned for later in 2015.

Reception

The band's style mixes electronics and rock and was described as "Kate Bush on crack with Goldfrapp on synths," with Vanier's voice moving "effortlessly from seductive whispers to banshee wails."[1] Q Magazine characterised it as "somewhere between Siouxsie & The Banshees and Cyndi Lauper having a sing-off with Kate Bush; the band’s spiky synth stabs providing the perfect canvas for Vanier's enchanting howl."[4] Simon Price, writing for The Independent, stated that the "drama-pop trio" was like a throwback to "more interesting times", noting that "Classically trained singer-pianist Rosie Vanier has a voice which leaps from sugary pop to operatic whoops, her ivories chiming through a repertoire ranging from the turbulent to the serene, and even juddering Moroder electro-disco."[13] Morgan's playing was characterised in an NME review of a live concert as "primal, cavewoman-with-class drum bashing".[14] Clash announced in September 2008 that the band had become "one of the hottest names to drop on the indie scene", describing the group as "sexually charged".[15]

Line-up

Discography

Albums

EPs

  • 2008 – War of the Roses (Because You Said So)

Singles

  • 2008 – "Lover"
  • 2008 – "Butterfly"
  • 2008 – "You've Changed"
  • 2009 – "Heartbreak"
gollark: Common misconception. GTech™ actually occupies the space 3 seconds ahead of now, so it's not considered the future for everyone else.
gollark: Here we go, it syncs up perfectly somehow. On this simple test case.
gollark: I'm sure *you'd* like to think so.
gollark: Must I *already* initiate Sequence Omega?
gollark: Jabu, this is actually metaphorically your fault?!

References

  1. Lester, Paul (2008-06-10). "No 330: Rosie and the Goldbug. Today's new band are a techno-ish, keyboard-enhanced trio whose music is a (Transvision) vamp through the Blondie catalogue", The Guardian
  2. McKeown, Rory (2008-03-27). Electro-pop Goldbugs set for Bar 27, Bridgwater Mercury
  3. (2008-05-30). Rosie and the Goldbug, BBC Cornwall
  4. Meikle, Ash (2009-02-06). Track of the Day – Rosie & the Goldbug, Q Magazine
  5. Rosie and the Goldbug Archived 25 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine, culturedeluxe
  6. (2009-02-09). New Rosie single, interview on BBC Cornwall
  7. "Thank you for the last two years xx". Retrieved 28 August 2009.
  8. "Rosie and the Goldbug split". Thisiscornwall.co.uk. 17 August 2009. Archived from the original on 21 August 2009. Retrieved 28 August 2009.
  9. (2010-11-04). Rosie Vanier finishes debut solo EP, DIY
  10. "Rosie and The Vandals – B-SIDE @ BUNTERS". cleanslatemusic.org/. January 2013. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  11. Cornish Guardian (10 July 2014). "Surely EP signifies it's finally Rosie's time?" Archived 20 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine, The Cornishman. Retrieved 19 October 2014.
  12. Price, Simon (2008-10-05). Album: Rosie and the Goldbug, Rosie and the Goldbug (Lover), Review in The Independent
  13. Cooper, Leonie (2009-04-02). "Live Review: Rosie And The Goldbug", NME
  14. Murray, Robin (2008-09-04). "Rosie And The Goldbug Single – Group Storm The Nation's Airwaves", Clash magazine
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