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British Sea Power |
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| British Sea Power | ||
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Promo
photo, 2002 (L-R: Hamilton, Noble, Wood, Yan)
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| Background information | ||
| Origin | ||
| Genre(s) | Indie rock | |
| Years active | 2000–present | |
| Label(s) | Rough Trade Records | |
| Website | britishseapower.co.uk | |
| Members | ||
| Yan Noble Hamilton Wood |
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| Former members | ||
| Eamon (2002–2005) | ||
British Sea Power are a four-man indie rock band based in Brighton, England. Their style ranges from the sweeping, often epic, guitar pop sound to the visceral and angular. Critics have likened their sound to post punk and new wave groups like Echo & the Bunnymen and, at the same time, the alternative rock of The Smiths and Pixies. The vocals owe much to David Bowie and on some songs the post-punk influence of Joy Division is clear. The band is comprised of:
Contents
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British Sea Power's Yan, Hamilton and Wood are school friends from Kendal in Cumbria. They were in a number of bands together while at school, but after finishing his exams Yan moved to study at Reading University, where he met guitarist Noble. A few years later Hamilton and Woody moved down to join them and form a band.
They played some gigs and produced a 4 track demo in Reading as British Air Powers, before relocating to Brighton in search of a more vibrant music scene. "British Sea Power" was actually the name of one of these demo tracks, and was eventually reworked into "Carrion". In Brighton, BSP amassed a strong local following, due mainly to their own club night called "Club Sea Power". The club nights featured many different support bands, and other forms of entertainment such as a 1930s fashion show, and were most frequently hosted at the Freebutt and the Lift (the latter has now closed down).
Their debut single, "Fear of Drowning", was issued in
limited numbers of their own
The follow-up,
British Sea Power have a reputation for elaborate live shows and won the 2004 Time Out London Live Band of the Year award. The stage is often decorated with foliage and plastic birds and sets generally finish with a semi-improvised song called "Rock in A", which sometimes lasts for over 20 minutes. Various members often climb riggings and tear down the foliage, Eamon walks around the audience beating his marching drum, and a ten-foot bear, Ursine Ultra, occasionally makes an appearance - often taking a beating from various band members. This has become one of the signatures of the band. Their tours often include unusual venues such as the Scillonian Club on the Isles of Scilly, Grasmere Village Hall, the St. John Boste Social Club in Kendal, Cumbria and Carnglaze Caverns in Cornwall.
The band have built up an eccentric image in interviews and
press releases; some of which is based on fact, other times merely
whimsical building of outward personas. This has included giving
journalists grid references at which to meet
them, and expressing obsessions with
The band has a fiercely loyal and devoted hardcore fanbase, sometimes referred to as the Third Battalion.
At the beginning of 2006, it was announced that Eamon had left
British Sea Power to concentrate on his own band Brakes
.
The group spent part of late 2006 working on new material in
In 2007, American Laundromat Records announced that British Sea Power would record a version of the Pixies' "Caribou" for an album called "Dig For Fire - A Tribute To Pixies."
The band is noted for referencing (sometimes somewhat) obscure things in their lyrics.
| British Sea Power |
|---|
| Yan | Hamilton | Noble | Wood |
| Eamon | Abi Fry | |
| Albums |
| Singles |
| "Fear of Drowning" | " " |
| Related articles |
| Rough Trade Records | Roy Wilkinson | Brakes | Brighton | Frank Sidebottom |
| videos lyrics discography biography article music mp3 gallery pictures |