The Shiny Brights

The Shiny Brights are an indie rock band from Adelaide, Australia. The five members have varied tastes in music that all influence their songs; a mix of post-punk, Brit pop and garage rock, held together by lead singer Wolfgang's distinctive voice and the band's four-part gang vocals. They rehearse in a warehouse full of washing machines which inspired the band name, deriven from a laundromat franchise in Adelaide called Shiny Brights.[1]

The Shiny Brights
OriginAdelaide, South Australia, Australia
GenresRock, Indie, Punk
Years active2008 - present
LabelsIndependent
MembersWolfgang Marwe (vocals)
James Bartold (guitar)
Alex "Rego" Rajkowski (guitar)
Chris Plummer (bass)
Miles "Buns" Wilson (drums)
The band in New York

Members

  • Wolfgang Marwe - vocals, percussion
  • James Bartold – guitar, backing vocals
  • Alex "Rego" Rajkowski – guitar, backing vocals
  • Chris Plummer - bass guitar, backing vocals
  • Miles "Buns" Wilson - drums

History

Wolfgang, James, Chris and Miles all met at high school and formed The Shiny Brights in late 2007, later recruiting Alex to play lead guitar and to take on the duties of driving the tour van.[2]

In September 2008 they digitally released their debut 6-track EP Let's Not And Say We Did and launched it at the renowned Adelaide live music venue The Governor Hindmarsh Hotel. The single "Electric Tigerland" was added to Triple J, Nova and community radio stations around Australia. Let's Not And Say We Did was produced by Chris Doherty at Studios 301 in Sydney and mastered by Oscar Gaona.[3] On the back of this release the band were invited to play at the CMJ Music Marathon in New York, the Parklife Festival, and the Adelaide International Guitar Festival.[4] The band are currently working on their new EP 'Too Many Chiefs' which will be released in early 2010.

The band were selected to support UK act The Wombats as well as supporting Apollo Heights, John Steel Singers and The Vines.[5] In the month of December 2008 they experienced a landslide of band competition wins that put them in the spotlight; they were 'unearthed' by Australian youth radio network Triple J to play at the Big Day Out headlined by acts like Neil Young, Arctic Monkeys, My Morning Jacket, The Prodigy,[6] then they won a Sonicbids competition to play at Southbound Festival in Western Australia, alongside The Hives, Franz Ferdinand, The Kooks, Gomez amongst others,[7] and they also won a Nova Radio competition to play at the Clipsal 500 After Race Concert with The Living End, Gyroscope and The Butterfly Effect.[8] They were named as one of Rip It Up Magazine's 'Hot Six Local Picks for 2009'.[9]

gollark: Anyway, the commenter said:* sickness is a mechanic to make you pay attention* I should just wait for tj09 to magically fix viewbombing
gollark: Either that or "AAARGH, I wrote this code horribly... how long can I avoid fixing it?".
gollark: Yay, I got a comment on the sickness-removing thread.
gollark: Perhaps it's some kind of bizarre social experiment.
gollark: But no, changing then reverting button colours on accept/declines? Far more important.

References

  1. dB Magazine, interview with Stephen Davenport - 15 May 2008
  2. Eastern Courrier, interview with Emily Charrison - 27 January 2009
  3. thedwarf.com.au
  4. Rip It Up Magazine, interview with Scott McLennan - 28 August 2008
  5. The Messenger, interview with Jeff Crawford - 23 July 2008
  6. Triple J Unearthed Archived 4 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  7. Sunset Events
  8. Clipsal 500
  9. Rip It Up Magazine Archived 17 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine, interview with Jimmy Bollard - 22 January 2009
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