| Klaxons |

Klaxons
at the Eurockéennes
2007
|
| Background information |
| Origin |
London, England |
| Genre(s) |
Indie rock
New
Rave
Dance-punk |
| Years active |
2005-present |
| Label(s) |
Current
Rinse Records (Polydor) (UK)
Modular Records (SYD)
Previous
Angular Recording
Corporation (UK)
Merok Records (UK)
|
| Website |
Official website |
| Members |
Jamie
Reynolds
Vocals, Bass guitar, Keyboards
James
Righton
Vocals, Keyboards, Bass Guitar
Simon Taylor-Davis
Guitar, Backing Vocals
Steffan Halperin
Drums, Backing Vocals |
| Former members |
Finnigan
Kidd
Drums |
Klaxons are an English band,
currently based in London. The word 'klaxon' is derived from the Greek
verb klazō, meaning "to shriek", and most commonly
refers to air-raid sirens or other warning devices. The core band
members hail from the provincial English towns of Bournemouth
(Jamie Reynolds) and Stratford-Upon-Avon (James
Righton and Simon Taylor). They are currently signed to Rinse Records,
their own branch of Polydor Records in the U.K. They are
also signed to Geffen/DGC
Records in the United States, Modular
Records in Australia and Because Music in France (who also
act as licensee for Jarvis Cocker & Faithless).
The band's debut album Myths of the Near
Future was released on January
29, 2007
following the release of single "Golden Skans" on January 22
of the same year. The album was produced by James Ford, of Simian
Mobile Disco (who also provided the drums and percussion for the album,
on all tracks with the exception of "Atlantis To Interzone" which was
done by Steffan Halperin). On July 17, 2007, the album was
nominated for the Mercury Music Prize.
Klaxons headlined the NME Indie Rave Tour starting in February
2007, which sold out the Hammersmith Palais in London in just two
days. They have also had promising early success in Europe, Japan, and
Australia selling out tours in November 2006. The band has recently
completed their own sell-out tour of America and then continued to do
the same on their UK tour throughout May 2007. The band are currently
taking part in a number of UK and Ireland Festivals, such as Glastonbury,
T
in the Park, Oxegen,
the O2
Wireless Festival and Reading and Leeds. They
also recently played Rock Werchter in Belgium on June 30, 2007 and Roskilde
Festival in Denmark
on July
6, 2007.
|
Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 Formation
(2005 - 2006)
- 1.2 Angular/Merok/Modular
Records (2006)
- 1.3 Polydor
Records (2006 - present)
- 2 'New
Rave'
- 3 Musical
Style
- 4 Discography
- 4.1 Albums
- 4.2 EPs
- 4.3 Singles
- 4.4 Contributions
- 4.5 Covers
- 4.6 Awards
- 5 References
- 6 External
links
|
History
Formation (2005 - 2006)
Simon Taylor-Davis attended
school in Stratford-upon-Avon. He was
taught guitar by James Righton, who was in the year
below him at school. He studied Fine Art at Nottingham Trent
University and was approached by Jamie
Reynolds, the boyfriend of one of his housemates, to form a
band.
Jamie Reynolds grew up in Bournemouth and Southampton
and was active in several bands from his early teens, most notably the
bands Thermal and Real/Sweet/Deal. The bands quickly dissolved,
however, and he dropped out of school to work in record shops over the
next few years, studying philosophy at the same time. He moved to
London after he was made redundant, spending his redundancy money on a
studio kit in order to record with Simon and James under their early
guise of "Klaxons (Not Centaurs)".
James Righton, like Simon, grew up in Stratford-Upon-Avon,
working every summer on the river cruise and hire boats in
Stratford-upon-Avon. His interest in music was fueled by his musician
father. After studying history and politics at Cardiff
University, he spent some time in Madrid teaching English, and arrived back in
the UK on the invitation of Simon to join the band as they needed
another vocalist/instrumentalist. Alongside members of Pull
Tiger Tail (whom they had shared a flat with in New Cross)
James and Simon had previously been in a band together called
'Hollywood is a Verb' which was very briefly active during the summer
of 2004.
The lineup was recently bolstered with the addition of drummer
Steffan
Halperin (former drummer Finnigan Kidd left to focus on another band,
Hatcham Social
), who was recruited for live gigs after appearing on the track
"Atlantis To Interzone" (the rest of the percussion on Myths of the
Near Future was provided by the album's producer James Ford). As of
early 2007 Halperin had become a quasi-official fourth member of the
band, being listed on the Klaxons MySpace page and present in several
interviews. However he remains mostly absent from the band's music
videos, appearing only in the early video "Atlantis to Interzone" and
briefly in the 2007 re-release of "Gravity's Rainbow".
Angular/Merok/Modular Records
(2006)
Klaxons' debut single, "Gravity's Rainbow" was
released on March
29, 2006 on Angular Records. Only
500 copies were released, and all were printed on a 7" vinyl decorated
by the band themselves. Radio 1's Steve Lamacq was the first DJ to play
the band and band recorded a Maida Vale session for his show on the
strength of 'Gravity's Rainbow'. The band's second single, "Atlantis
to Interzone", was released on June 12 of the same year. It was their first
release for new label Merok and led to further coverage in
the NME. The
song enjoyed even more radio coverage including play from Zane Lowe and
daytime BBC
Radio 1 plays from disc jockey Jo Whiley, who repeatedly, and mistakenly,
called the song "Atlantic To Interscope". Zane Lowe
also wrongly credited the song as "Atlantis To Interscope".
They released their first EP, Xan
Valleys in the UK on October
16, 2006 on Modular Recordings.
Polydor Records (2006 - present)
In 2006, the band signed to Polydor
Records. Their first single for the label, "Magick",
was released on October 30 and reached #29 in the UK
Top 40 the following week.
In August of that year, Klaxons played at the Reading and Leeds
festivals, playing in the Carling tent on each festival site. The
Carling tent, at both festivals, is the smallest stage and as a result
large numbers of people were forced to watch from outside the tent.
Fans sounded "Klaxons!" and cheered loudly between songs, brandishing
glowsticks, seemingly giving credit to the "New Rave" (see
below) bandwagon label. This term was coined by Angular Records
founder Joe Daniel and later used by NME to describe the burgeoning scene.
The first single from their debut album, "Golden
Skans", was released on January 22, 2007. It reached #16 in the
UK Singles Chart on download sales alone, two weeks before the official
release of the CD. It climbed to #14 the next week, eventually peaking
at #7 after the CD release. On January 24, Klaxons performed on the BBC
Radio 1 Live
Lounge, performing "Golden Skans" and a cover of Justin
Timberlake's "My Love", to great
acclaim from Jo
Whiley.
Their debut album, titled Myths of the Near
Future, was released on January
29, 2007. It entered the UK Album Charts at #2, beaten only by
Norah
Jones's album Not Too Late.
The band have recently collaborated with The Chemical Brothers
on the track "All Rights Reversed", taken from the duo's new album We
Are the Night and have expressed on several
occasions an interest in working with Dr. Dre or Snoop Dogg on their
follow up album (plans for which have not yet been finalized).
'New Rave'
Klaxons in concert, 2007.
-
Main article: New Rave
HMV describes Klaxons as "acid-rave sci-fi punk-funk", while
their MySpace
page touts 'Psychedelic / Progressive / Pop'. However, they are one of
the isolated acts being referred to as 'New Rave', a genre term coined
by Angular Records
founder Joe Daniel, who released the trio's first single. Though the
band's sound is decidedly art rock, they draw upon some less common
influences - notably the rave culture of the 1990s, which they
appropriate and redefine in a post-modern fashion. Their influences
are perhaps most represented in their covers
of rave hits "The Bouncer" by Kicks Like a Mule and "Not
Over Yet" by Grace. Both tracks have since been
released by the band, the first as part of a double a-side with "Gravity's Rainbow" in March
2006 and the latter as a single on June 25, 2007 titled "It's
Not Over Yet".
While the band are consistently hailed as the defining act of
the sparsely-populated New Rave movement, Klaxons have worked to avoid
being typecast as champions of the disputed genre that may or may not
exist. Even so, Klaxons member Jamie Reynolds expressed no regrets at
the dubious honor, saying that "...it's great that it started as an
in-joke and became a minor youth subculture"
Musical Style
Klaxons' music is often supernatural and magic-realist
in theme, as shown in a number of song titles and lyrical content.
Examples of this are "As Above, So Below" (favourite saying of Aleister
Crowley), "Atlantis to Interzone" (a William
Burroughs reference), "Magick" (Crowley) and "Four Horsemen
of 2012"/"Gravity's Rainbow" (Thomas
Pynchon references). The original name of Klaxons comes from a line in
the art text, The Futurist Manifesto.
"Forgotten Works" also contains references and lines from Richard
Brautigan's In Watermelon Sugar.
Discography
Albums
- Myths of the Near
Future (29 January 2007) Polydor Records #2
UK
EPs
- Xan Valleys (16 October
2006) Modular
Recordings
Singles
| Date of Release |
Title |
Uk Top 40 Chart Position |
Album |
| March
29, 2006 |
"Gravity's Rainbow" / "The
Bouncer" |
N/A |
N/A |
| June
12, 2006 |
"Atlantis to Interzone" |
N/A |
N/A |
| October 30, 2006 |
"Magick" |
29 |
Myths of the Near
Future |
| January 22, 2007 |
"Golden Skans" |
7 |
Myths of the Near Future |
| April
9, 2007 |
"Gravity's Rainbow"
(Re-recording) |
35 |
Myths of the Near Future |
| June
25, 2007 |
"It's Not Over Yet" |
13 |
Myths of the Near Future |
Contributions
- "4 Horsemen of 2012" - On Delete
Yourself compilation 'Digital Penetration' (July 31, 2006)
- "Magick (Simian Mobile Disco Mix)" - On NME compilation Club
NME Presents Dancefloor Distortion (October 7, 2006)
- "Gravity's Rainbow" (credited to "The Klaxons") - On Tony
Hawk's Project 8 In-Game Soundtrack (October 17, 2006)
- "Gravity's Rainbow (Van She Remix)" - On Kitsuné
Music compilation Kitsuné Maison Compilation 3 (November
22, 2006)
- "Gravity's Rainbow" - On Angular Recording
Corporation compilation 'Future Love Songs' (December
11, 2006)
- "Golden Skans to Interzone (So Me Remix)" - On Ed
Rec Vol. 2 label compilation from Ed
Banger Records (March
19, 2007)
- "The Bouncer" (credited as "Bouncer") - On "Kiss
Does...Rave: Original Rave V New Rave" compilation, Disc 2 (April 30, 2007)
Covers
- "Golden Skans" covered by Kaiser
Chiefs on Radio 1 Live Lounge Session
- "Golden Skans" covered by Mark
Ronson on Radio 1 Live Lounge Session
- "Gravity's Rainbow" instrumental version by The
Central Band of the Royal British Legion
Awards
- 2007 NME Awards:
Best New Band
References
External links
Klaxons
noquotend -->
Interviews/Reviews
| v • d • e Klaxons |
| Jamie Reynolds | Simon
Taylor-Davis | James
Righton | Steffan
Halperin |
| Discography |
Albums: Myths of the Near
Future
EPs: Xan
Valleys
Singles: "Gravity's Rainbow" | "Atlantis
to Interzone" | "Magick" | "Golden
Skans" | "It's Not Over Yet" |
| Related
articles |
| New
rave | Polydor Records | Angular Recording
Corporation |