Slowburn (band)

Slowburn was a Canadian alternative rock band, best known for the 1996 Alternative top-10 single "Whatever" from their self-titled album released on the Handsome Boy Records label and from the soundtrack to the 1995 movie My Teacher's Wife.

Slowburn
OriginVancouver, British Columbia, Canada
GenresAlternative rock
Years active1990's
LabelsHandsome Boy Records
Past membersCliff Boyd
Charles Boname
Robert Watkins
Neil Atkinson
Harvey Windsor
Chris Pollon

The video directed by Ulf Buddensieck from the second single from the album, "Hit the Ground", was nominated for a Much Music Best Independent Video award.

History

Formed in Vancouver, Slowburn consisted of lead singer and rhythm guitarist Cliff Boyd, drummer Robert Watkins, lead guitarist Charles Boname, and a variety of bassists. Their first bassist was Neil Atkinson. Atkinson was followed by Harvey Windsor and final bassist Chris Pollon. The original name for the band was Catherine Wheel, however because there was already a successful English band with the same name, they chose Slowburn before the release of their debut album Sparked in 1994.[1][2] That same year, the band's song "Whatever" began to receive radio airplay.

In 1996, Slowburn released a self-titled album, that featured a re-recording of "Whatever" that originally appeared on Sparked, and two other singles: "Hit the Ground" and "Flesh + Bone". The album was recorded at Mushroom Studios, and mixed at Bryan Adams Home Studio by Randy Staub. Former Blue Peter guitarist Chris Wardman produced the album. The self-titled album was a moderate success on Canadian Campus Chart, debuting at No. 34 on April 30, 1996,[3] and peaking at No. 16 on June 11.[4]

In addition to success on the album charts, the single "Whatever" debuted at No. 28 on the RPM Alternative 30 charts on April 29, 1996.,[5] peaking at No. 10, where it stayed for two weeks in June 1996.[6]

After touring extensively behind their self-titled album, the band broke up in the midst of finishing their third album. Only one song, "Galactic", from the unreleased album has appeared.[7]

Post breakup

After the band broke up, Charles Boname attended the British Columbia Institute of Technology and graduated in June 2001. Cliff Boyd spent several years in Europe, most notably in Chester, UK, where he completed an MSc in Information Systems at the University of Chester, before returning to Vancouver in 2009. Cliff currently works as a Web Designer and continues to write songs.

Bassist Chris Pollon returned to journalism, and has since been widely published in magazines and newspapers across North America.[8]

gollark: I mean, there was not really any information provided, I'm filling it in guessily.
gollark: Not phrased that way, but you know.
gollark: I made a hatchery which stopped sickness (kind of) by taking out eggs at unsafe view levels, and TJ09 just decided "this goes against the grand vision, I must stop it".
gollark: Removing sickness is probably *easier* than keeping it, but it goes against the Grand TJ09 Vision.
gollark: As long as DC has sickness and a system of view-an-image-to-hatch/sicken-stuff, it will not be possible to prevent viewbombing, outside of weird edge cases.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2005-11-19. Retrieved 2007-10-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2006-05-29. Retrieved 2007-10-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. April 30, 1996 Campus Radio Chart
  4. June 11, 1996 Campus Radio Chart
  5. "Rock/Alternative - Volume 63, No. 11, April 29 1996". Archived from the original on 2017-12-22. Retrieved 2017-12-22.
  6. "Rock/Alternative - Volume 63, No. 16, June 03 1996". Archived from the original on 2017-12-22. Retrieved 2017-12-22.
  7. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GC8dR1AssJY
  8. http://www.chrispollon.ca
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