The Experimental Pop Band

The Experimental Pop Band are a rock group led by former singer with The Brilliant Corners, Davey Woodward.

The Experimental Pop Band
OriginBristol, England
GenresIndie pop
Years activeMid-1990spresent
LabelsSwarffinger
Cup of Tea
City Slang
Cooking Vinyl
Associated actsThe Brilliant Corners
Alpha
MembersDavey Woodward
Joe Rooney
Phil Willmott
Keith Bailey
Past membersChris Galvin
Corin Dingley
Mark Barber

History

The band was formed in mid-1990, initially as a studio project under the name The South West Experimental Pop Band, by former Brilliant Corners members Davey Woodward and Chris Galvin, along with third member Corin Dingley.[1][2][3] The band's first two releases were the EPs The Lounge and Boutique in my Backyard, the latter named 'Single of the week' by Melody Maker, with the lead track later covered by The Audience.[1][3] Tracks from these and the "Skinny" single were compiled together on the Woof album in January 1997, with the band's debut album proper, Discgrotesque, released in June that year. Corrine left to join Alpha, with Joe Rooney (keyboards) and Keith Bailey (drums) added to the line-up, and the band recorded a session for John Peel's BBC Radio 1 show in February 1997.[4] A further EP was issued in 1998 before Galvin's death after a long battle with cancer on 22 December 1998, aged 39.[1] Material released prior to his death was released in January 1999 on the "Frozen Head" single, and on the Homesick album later that year.[1]

After a two-year break, Woodward, Rooney and Bailey returned in 2001 and recruited new bassist Mark Barber, the band now signed to City Slang.[1] The Tracksuit Trilogy was released in 2001, produced by John Parish, and given a four-star review by the Sunday Herald.[1][5] Further albums followed with Tarmac & Flames (2004) and Tinsel Stars (2007). Barber had been replaced by Phil Wilmott by 2004.[6] The band played on the new bands stage at Glastonbury in 2004. The band released a further album Tinsel Stars in 2007 with limited sales although successful European tours followed.

In 2010, Keith Bailey (drums) left the band and was replaced by Mark Bradley of ME and they have recently finished recording material for a new album due for release in 2012.

Discography

Albums

  • Woof (1997), Swarffinger
  • Discgrotesque (1997), Swarffinger
  • Homesick (1999), City Slang
  • The Tracksuit Trilogy (2001), City Slang
  • Tarmac & Flames (2004), Cooking Vinyl
  • Tinsel Stars (2007), Triumphant Sound
  • Vertigo (2012), Wear It Well (Cargo Records)

EPs

  • The Lounge (1996), Swarffinger
  • Boutique in my Backyard (1996), Swarffinger
  • Forty Greatest Hits (1998), Cup of Tea

Singles

  • "Skinny" (1995), Swarffinger
  • "Frozen Head" (1999), Cup of Tea
  • "Punk Rock Classic" (1999), City Slang
  • "Bang Bang You're Dead" (2001), City Slang
  • "Hard Enough" (2001), City Slang
  • "Glowing in the Dark" (2005), Neutone
  • "Little Things" (2012) Wearitwell
gollark: Oh, hmm, it appears that this application actually contains 320000 lines of PHP.
gollark: Oh, and one of the backend services has a connection open to IRC and MPD.
gollark: There is also a separate static site compiler, all the ridiculous random tweaks I made on the live instance, tons of arbitrary forwarding rules to SPUDNET and such...
gollark: I run two separate PHP applications, one of which contains several thousand LOC.
gollark: The CSS is *finally* cascading as I wish it to.

References

  1. Strong, Martin C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, ISBN 1-84195-335-0, p. 246-7
  2. Raggett, Ned "Experimental Pop Band Biography", Allmusic, retrieved 2010-11-27
  3. Ernill, Dixie (2006) "Experimental Pop Band : Interview", Penny Black Music, 16 April 2006, retrieved 2010-11-27
  4. "02/02/1997 - Experimental Pop Band", Keeping It Peel, BBC, retrieved 2010-11-27
  5. Virtue, Graeme (2001) "Experimental Pop Band - The Tracksuit Trilogy", Sunday Herald, Tracksuit Trilogy gained album of the week in Guardian, and there followed a 4-star review for a show at night & day in Manchester.11 March 2001, p. 11
  6. Sweeting, Adam (2004) "The Experimental Pop Band, Water Rats, London", The Guardian, 3 February 2004, retrieved 2010-11-27

Facebook experimental pop band including new tracks 2011

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