For other uses, see Franz Ferdinand
(disambiguation).
Franz Ferdinand are a Scottish rock band, from Glasgow. Formed
in 2001 and named after Archduke Franz
Ferdinand of Austria, the band consists of Alex
Kapranos on lead vocals and guitar, Bob Hardy on
bass guitar, Nick McCarthy on rhythm
guitar, keyboards, backing vocals, and Paul
Thomson on drums, percussion, and backing vocals.
The band's debut self-titled album (released
in 2004) debuted on the UK album charts at number three and won the 2004 Mercury Music Prize
before their second album, You Could Have It
So Much Better, charted at number 1. So far,
the band has released eight singles, a double single and two
video-clip-only singles, of which "Take
Me Out", "The Dark of the Matinée", "This
Fire" (on the download chart) and "Do You Want To" were top 10 hits in
the UK.
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Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 (2001–2003)
The "Château" - early years
- 1.2 (2003–2004)
Debut album
- 1.3 (2005–2006)
You Could Have It So Much Better
- 1.4 (2006–?)
Next album
- 2 Usage
in the media
- 2.1 Games
- 2.2 Campaigns
- 2.3 Previews
- 2.4 Television
- 2.5 Film
- 2.6 Other
- 3 Collaborations
- 4 Name
- 5 Art
- 6 Equipment
trivia
- 7 Discography
- 8 Music
samples
- 9 See
also
- 10 Notes
- 11 References
- 12 External
links
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History
(2001–2003) The "Château" -
early years
In late 2001, singer and guitarist Alex
Kapranos and bassist Bob Hardy began playing music together in Glasgow. After
meeting Nick McCarthy at a party,
they began to rehearse together at McCarthy's house. McCarthy was
classically trained on the piano and double bass but initially played drums. The trio then
met up with Paul Thomson who had played
drums with Yummy Fur. Thomson originally
was going to play guitar because he wanted to try something other than
drums. However, once Nick started playing the drums, Alex and Bob
realized that Nick didn't actually know how to. Quote "...when he said
he could play the drums what he meant was that he could hit them but in
no coherent order". Thomson took over on drums, and McCarthy moved to
lead guitar. Thomson was described by Kapranos as the best drummer in
Glasgow, but refers to how Paul wanted to be seen by the audience,
hence refusing to use rack toms. However, by late 2005 Paul was using
rack toms.
They started playing at an abandoned warehouse in the Gorbals which
they named "the Château." Franz Ferdinand also held rave-like
"happenings" combining music and art; Hardy was studying painting at the Glasgow
School of Art at the time. When the local police shut the events down,
the band found an abandoned Victorian courthouse and played there.
In a 2004 interview with VH1, Alex Kapranos described the sound they were
seeking. "On songs like 'Come on Home,' we wanted to sound like Donna
Summer and Link
Wray mixed together, but it doesn't sound like that at all! We thought
we could sound like Prince, too, but what we were really
trying to do was take on the attitudes of different bands and combine
them in our own way."
The band had recorded an EP worth of material which they
intended to release themselves. However, the band's reputation was
spreading rapidly, and Domino Records offered them a
contract to release an EP called Darts of Pleasure
in the latter part of 2003. The band developed its reputation further
by supporting Hot Hot Heat and Interpol
as well as winning a "Phillip Hall Radar Award" at the NME Awards
of 2004 (announced in late 2003). The band soon signed onto a contract
with Sony Music Japan in Japan and Epic
Records in 2004 for the United States.
(2003–2004) Debut album
Franz Ferdinand have been quoted as saying they wanted to make
"music that girls can dance to." [1]
This was combined with their art school background on their self-titled
debut released in early 2004. It debuted at number 3 in the UK
Albums Chart in February 2004 and at number 12 in the Australian album
charts in April 2004. While the album had only reached the lowest
levels of the Billboard 200 album charts in the US as of early 2004, it
reached the top 5 of the indie rock chart and the Heatseeker chart
for debut artists. After a couple of North American tours and heavy
rotation of the "Take Me Out" video on MTV, the album eventually
reached No. 32 on the Billboard 200 later in 2004 and has been
certified platinum in the US for sales exceeding 1,000,000. Five
singles were released from the album, namely:
- "Darts of Pleasure" placed on the UK
Singles Chart prior to being a particularly successful band;
- "Take Me Out" was the
breakthrough single and reached the #3 on the UK charts, #66 on the Billboard
Hot 100, and #3 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.
It also made the top 10 of the Irish and Canadian charts and the top 40
in a composite European chart as well as being voted number one in the
Australian Triple J Hottest 100 for 2004
(more than doubling the votes for the song which received second
place). It is also a song option for the videogame "Guitar Hero".
- "The Dark of the Matinée" or
"Matinée" reached #8 in the UK singles charts and the top 30 on the
World Modern Rock Charts (a composite chart of US, German, UK, Swedish,
Finnish, Canadian and Australian modern rock charts); and
- "Michael" reached the
#17 on the UK singles charts. A large amount of the single's sales were
not counted, as they were not released in the correct format.
- "This Fire" was released in North
America in November 2004, and was a download-only single in the UK. It
reached #17 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart, and reached #8
on the UK download chart.
The song "Michael" was the first in a trend among newer bands
to write songs with lyrics reflecting a more fluid sexuality. "Michael"
is a frenzied dance/rock song based on a private joke among the band
about a friend of theirs who got drunk and was dancing unabashedly at a
club.
Franz Ferdinand's debut album managed to
excede sales of 1,000,000 copies
The Franz Ferdinand album received a
generally strong positive response from critics. The New
Musical Express said that the band was the
latest in the line of art school rock bands featuring Duran
Duran, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Who,
Roxy
Music, the Sex Pistols, Wire, Travis
and Blur.
It rated the album as 9 out of 10 and said: "This album is the latest
and most intoxicating example of the wonderful pushing its way up
between the ugly slabs of Pop Idol, nu metal and Britons aping American bands.
What these blossoming bands have in common is the absolute conviction
that rock ‘n’ roll is more than a career option."
The BBC's
review of the album said: "At only 38 minutes long Franz
Ferdinand may not be a particularly long album, but it is a
masterpiece of funky, punky, suave cool from the first track to the
last."
The All Music Guide rated the album as
four out of five stars and said "Franz Ferdinand
ends up being rewarding in different ways than the band's previous work
was, but it's apparent that they're still one of the more exciting
groups to come out of the garage-rock / post-punk
revival."
On September 7, 2004 the album was awarded the 2004 Mercury
Music Prize. Take Me Out gained first place in the
Australian Triple J Hottest 100 for 2004,
winning more than twice the votes of the second-place entry. Franz
Ferdinand proceeded to win an Ivor Novello Award in 2004 and
two BRIT
Awards in 2005. The avant-garde music video for Take Me Out
earned them a Breakthrough
Video MTV Award.
(2005–2006) You Could
Have It So Much Better
The band spent much of 2005 in the studio in Scotland working
on their follow-up album, You Could Have It
So Much Better, which was released on 3 October 2005. Throughout the
recording process, the band had intended to leave the album self-titled
like their debut, but they changed it to You Could Have It So
Much Better...With Franz Ferdinand before settling on the
current title. The first live performance of their new music came as
the band headlined at the V Festival in August 2005.
The band's second album You Could Have It
So Much Better was their first UK #1 record
After the ecstatic reception of their debut, some reviews
towards the new album became more polarized, with some complaints that
the recording was rushed. However, it generally was critically
acclaimed and seen as an album equal to, or better than their first by
most critics, including the NME. It entered the UK Album Charts at
Number 1 and the US charts at Number 8.
The album is less associated with art music and dance, with
the band taking a more raw, indie-rock-style approach. This stylistic
change was reflected in more lively live shows, featuring band members
jumping off the drum kit, smashing guitars and rolling around on stage.
On the tour that followed the album release, Franz broke the
record for the longest run at the Alexandra
Palace, North
London, by playing 4 sold out nights during November-December 2005.
To support the album, four singles have been released.
Included in that set is a double A-side single that contained a
video-clip only single as well (both the AA-side "L. Wells" and the
video-clip "Jeremy Fraser" are not featured on the album, recorded in
early 2006 during the band's tour of Australia in support of the
album). Also included is another video-clip-only single called "Wine In
the Afternoon" which is the B-side to Eleanor Put Your Boots On,
and was also not featured on the album, but recorded on tour in
Michigan. "Do You Want To" made it to number 4,
while "Walk Away" and "The
Fallen" / "L. Wells" entered the top 15 of the UK
Singles Chart. The 4th and final single from the second album, "Eleanor Put Your Boots On"
peaked at number 30.
Franz Ferdinand at Viña del Mar International Festival. February 27th,
2006
(2006–?) Next album
According to NME in 2005, the band had no intentions to stop
and continued to record at a relentless pace.
In January of 2006, they began new recording sessions, coinciding with
some dates in Australia and New Zealand: "Then we’ll see how many songs
we’ve got together but we’re talking about going into the studio at the
end of January." Kapranos explained. "We’re popping over to Australia
and New Zealand at the end of January as well, as you do. It’s
brilliant, I’m looking forward to that. We get to miss the Scottish
winter, which is not a bad thing at all."
Their third album will likely be released in late 2007 or even 2008,
however the band revealed in early September 2006 that they were going
to take a break after headlining the Carling Weekend
and playing two shows in Brazil. Alex and Nick managed to find time to
appear at the Edinburgh
International Book Festival in August 2006, and took part in a
songwriting session for the festival.
During his break, Alex Kapranos produced The
Cribs' third album.
On March 8th, 2006, the band began meeting and working on
their third album.
Franz Ferdinand at the Roskilde Festival in 2006
On March 13th, 2007, Alex Kapranos and Nick McCarthy spoke
exclusively to Xfm about their next album. Alex had this to say
regarding the next album...
"Nick and I are writing some more tunes," Kapranos explained,
"We’ve got a wee place in Glasgow where we’re doing some new songs. Its
a wee bit different from last stuff but still very danceable, that’s
the main thing. It’s always pop. Franz Ferdinand has always been pop."
On February 14, 2007, Bonnaroo released the initial 2007 lineup,
which included Franz Ferdinand, the two confirmed that this would be
the only festival they'll perform in this year, in the same interview
held with XFM discussing the next album, Alex said this to XFM.
"We’re gonna play Bonnaroo [in the US alongside The Police,
White Stripes and Flaming Lips], but no British festivals. We don’t
really want to play any British festivals until we’ve written a bunch
of new songs for people to hear. I don’t really see the point of
keeping on going out and playing the same old stuff again and again.
You wanna come back with something exciting."
On March
26, 2007,
the band's MySpace
website was updated with a video of them recording an instrumental song
dubbed Flight of the Galvatron, however there is
not any more information on the song and whether it will be released on
the next album or not.
On May
9, 2007,
Alex Kapranos updated the band's MySpace blog with brief mentions of two new
songs, entitled A New Thrill and English
Goodbye. Nothing else is known about the songs except, as
Alex clarifies, "The latter is about the expression 'saying an English
goodbye', not a call for Scottish independence."
In a recent live show in Glasgow, the band debuted those two
songs live. In addition, they played "Favourite Lie," "Turn It On," and
"Anyone In Love." On May 30, 2007, Rock'n Coke Festival in Istanbul
released the lineup, which included Franz Ferdinand.
The following tracks are strong contenders for the next album:
- "Anyone in Love"
- "A New Thrill
- "English Goodbye"
- "Favourite Lie"
- "Turn It On"
- "Flight of the Galvatron"
- Possibility of "Hallam Foe Dandelion Blow" as bonus track
Usage in the media
Games
- In 2004, "Take Me Out" was in the EA Sports video
games, Madden NFL 2005
and NHL
2005 and also featured in Codemasters
Club Football
2005; while "This Fire" was in Burnout
3: Takedown, made by EA Games and Criterion
Games. "Tell Her Tonight" was placed on the track of FIFA 2005.
"Michael" was featured in Gran Turismo 4. "Take Me Out" was
also featured in the Playstation 2 video game Guitar
Hero.
- Sony's Singstar karaoke Series on the Playstation
2 featured "Take Me Out" on the "Party" collection and "Do You Want To"
was included in the "Rocks" collection. "Take Me Out" was also featured
on the Playstation 2 video game Guitar
Hero (which allowed players to play the song on
a guitar-like device).
- "Do You Want To" is included in the lineup of licensed
songs in Konami's
Dance Dance
Revolution SuperNOVA for the Playstation 2.
Campaigns
- During the 2005 general
election campaign, the band, who feel strongly about environmental
issues, donated This Fire as the background music
for the election broadcasts by the three UK
Green parties. The TV
broadcasts, directed by Alex Cox and produced by Kim Ryan, were
screened on 28
April 2005
across all UK terrestrial channels.
- Take Me Out was used in an ad campaign
for Sony's PlayStation
Portable game system (PSP). Do You Want To was used
in an ad campaign for Sony's Walkman players (in Japan).
- "Do You Want To" is used in a commercial for L'Oreal Vive
Pro shampoo and conditioner.
Previews
- This Boy is used in German previews for
the TV series Jimmy Neutron.
- The intro of "40' " was used in the Dutch previews for the
TV series "Catscratch"
- Part of the song I'm Your Villain was
used in a preview for the 2006 film "The Guardian".
- Do You Want To was used in a preview for
the 2007 film "Good Luck Chuck."
- "Do You Want To" was also used to promote the films "Fun
with Dick and Jane" and "Daddy Day Camp".
- The beginning of "40' " was also used in a television
commercial for the film "In Good Company" in 2004 and also for the film
"A Good Year" in 2006.
Television
- The song "Come on Home" also features on the "Live 8" DVD, the
follow up to "Live
Aid". Music from the song is played at the beginning of the DVD, during
the explanation of what Live 8 was. Also, the intro was used in
Brazilian MTV Travel show Mochilão MTVopening.
- The song "Take Me Out" is used as the theme music for
Australian Television Program "Any Given Sunday." In
Australia it is also used on Channel Ten's Sports Tonight. The song is
also used on Eurosport channel, when it advertises Eurosport 2 and was
included on the kid-oriented album Kidz Bop 8,
and the TV show Video Mods.
- "Do You Want To" was also used in the second episode of the
third season of the series The O.C., in an
episode of Malcolm in the Middle,
on CSI
and as the ending theme music to the Paradise
Kiss anime television series.
- "The Fallen" is in the episode Party girl of Without a
trace and on The Real Hustle.
- The song "Darts of Pleasure" appeared briefly in an episode
of Entourage.
- The song "40'"
appears in the BBC documentary "Teenagers hooked on porn".
Film
- Hallam Foe Dandelion Blow was written
specifically for the upcoming film Hallam Foe, other Domino
artists contributed music as well. Hallam Foe premiered at the Berlin
Film Festival on the February 16, 2007 and competed for the Golden Bear for Best
Motion Picture. The film won the Silver Bear for Best Music.
Other
- Take Me Out is featured in "Weird Al" Yankovic's Polkarama!
off his newest album, 'Straight Outta Lynwood," as
the second song in the medley.
- The main riff to "Take Me Out" is often sampled during Gym
Class Heroes concerts to various songs.
- "The Fallen" was used as the theme song as the internet meme Smash
Our Stuff series (SmashMyiPod, etc).
Collaborations
Franz Ferdinand covered the LCD
Soundsystem song All My Friends
which appeared as a B-side on the single. They have also made covers of
Pulp's
popular single Mis-Shapes, Gwen
Stefani's top 5 hit What
You Waiting For?, Sexy Boy
by Air
and It Won't Be Long by The
Beatles.
Franz Ferdinand have had remixes by major electronic artists Daft Punk, Hot
Chip, Justice,
and Erol
Alkan.
Kapranos produced the 3rd The Cribs album in Vancouver in
November/December 2006.
The band performed played and recorded with Jane Birkin,
covering the Gainsbourg song "Sorry Angel".
Kapranos sang on the Handsome Boy Modelling School track
"World's Gone Mad".
In early 2005, Kanye West declared Franz Ferdinand to be
his favourite band, and coined the term white
crunk to
describe the band's gritty drum sounds. West and the band met at the
2005 MTV Europe Music Awards,
where they sat down together to share praise and advice. West feels
that the white crunk vibe has affected his new work, and is best
exemplified on the track "Diamonds from Sierra
Leone", from his 2005 album Late
Registration. The band itself is also greatly
influenced by Kanye and sought advice from him on how to improve
production for their 2005 album You Could Have It
So Much Better.
Rapper Snoop Dogg has also declared an
admiration for the band, and famously expressed interest in
collaborating with the group, though he could not remember the band's
name at the time. He stated:
"I'm working on an album that I plan to do with a lot of
European artists," he revealed. "I wanna do something with the people
that sang "Take Me Out"."
In response, Kapranos playfully replied, "Someone told me the
guy who does "Drop It Like It's Hot" wants
to collaborate with us... That's great. I love that song and like his
style."
In 2006, Franz Ferdinand, Death
Cab for Cutie and The Cribs went on a
joint-headline tour, primarily of shows at universities.
Andy Knowles has served as a
live support member of the band, as an auxiliary keyboardist
and second drummer. Knowles has not appeared on an album, but drums on
"Brown Onions," an instrumental B-side on The
Fallen / L. Wells double A-Side single. He is also seen briefly in the
video for Walk Away.
At the 2006 Reading Festival, Madness
drummer Daniel Woodgate (Woody) appeared
with the band on stage and played on the song 'Outsiders'. When they
performed the song on the Jools Holland show, Jamie Hince of The Kills,
Ross Jarman of The Cribs and Kieran
Hebden joined them as drummers.
Last October 8 of 2006 Nick McCarthy did a special appearance
at a concert for the Mexican band Zoé at the Palacio de los Deportes, where he
performed "Human Space Volt".
At the 2005 Grammies, the band performed a live medley with
Los Lonely Boys, Maroon 5, Black Eyed Peas and Gwen Stefani.
The band met Gorillaz in December 2005, and
interviewed each other for a feature in Observer
Music Monthly.
Name
The late Archduke Franz
Ferdinand of Austria inspired the band's name
The name of the band was originally inspired by a racehorse
called The Archduke.
After seeing the horse run on television the band began to discuss Archduke Franz
Ferdinand and thought it would be a good band name because of the sound
of the name and the implications of the Archduke's death (his
assassination was one of many factors which lead to World
War I). They discussed it in a very early interview with the Scottish
magazine Is This Music?
"Mainly we just liked the way it sounded," says Bob. "We liked
the alliteration."
"He was an incredible figure as well," continues Alex. "His life, or at
least the ending of it, was the catalyst for the complete
transformation of the world ... he was a pivot for history. But I don't
want to over-intellectualise the name thing. Basically a name should
just sound good ... like music." Paul has a much grander notion. "I
like the idea that, if we become popular, maybe the words Franz
Ferdinand will make people think of the band instead of the historical
figure."
The song "Take Me Out", on the band's first
album, was the second single to be released by the band. The single
release of "Take Me Out" came with the B
side, "All For You Sophia", based on the assassination of Archduke
Ferdinand and his wife, whose name was Sophie, not Sophia. The
band changed the name Sophie to Sophia to give the song a better ring
to it.
Art
The artwork from the single "Take Me Out", inspired by a
1923 poster for "One-Sixth Part Of The World", by Rodchenko
The band is notable for its use of Russian
avant-garde imagery in album and single covers. Examples include "You Could Have It
So Much Better" which references a 1924 portrait of Lilya Brik
by Alexander Rodchenko, "Take
Me Out", which references One-Sixth Part of the World
also by Alexander Rodchenko, "This Fire", which references Beat
the white with the Red wedge by El
Lissitzky and "Michael", with single
art based on A Proun by Lissitzky.
The avant-garde music video for Take Me Out,
directed by Jonas Odell, was inspired by Dadaism, Busby
Berkeley choreographies and Russian constructivist
design.
The lyrics of Do You Want To make reference to
parties at the 'trendy' Glasgow art gallery Transmission and the video
includes a satire of the work of contemporary artist Vanessa
Beecroft.
Also, in "Outsiders", the lyrics "In seventeen years will you
still be Camille, Lee
Miller, Gala
or whatever" are a reference to the lovers of the artists Auguste
Rodin, Man
Ray and Salvador Dalí.
Equipment trivia
- They own an Ackuset, a Swedish sound mixer, and used it on You
Could Have It So Much Better. Not much is known about it
except that it's rather old, sometimes malfunctions, and is one of only
seven units in the world. Of the seven, only three are functional.
- Nick McCarthy owns two 1959 Hagstrom p46 Deluxe Guitars,
one of the rarest and most prized Hagstrom models, one red and another
a blue sparkle. The red model McCarthy used primarily on the band's
tour for their first album, but still could be seen while the band was
promoting You Could Have It So Much Better
(YCHISMB). The blue guitar can be seen on the video for The
Dark of the Matinée. The elusive blue model can also be
spotted being played by Alex Kapranos during a performance of This
Fire on the Franz Ferdinand Live DVD, as
well a few other performances.
Discography
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Main article: Franz Ferdinand
discography
List of studio albums: