For the Japanese band of the
same name, see Mono (Japanese band).
Mono was a British
pop
duo which became a one-hit wonder in the late 1990s with
their song "Life in Mono". The group's music
is often described as trip hop, based on its similarities to
contemporary electronic music acts including Sneaker
Pimps and Portishead. Audible, and
frequently cited, influences in Mono's songs include jazzy instrumentation
reminiscient of 1960s spy film soundtracks and production styles
rooted in 1960s pop music.
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Contents
- 1 History
- 2 Music
- 3 Discography
- 4 Tour
- 5 Reception
- 6 Notes
and references
- 7 External
links
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History
The band, formed in the autumn of 1996 in London,
consisted of singer
Siobhan de Maré and Martin Virgo on keyboards,
synthesizer
programming, and production. Virgo, trained in
classical piano at the Guildhall School
of Music and Drama, had been working as a session
musician since the early 1990s as part of the production team of Nellee
Hooper, which led to credits on a remix of Massive
Attack's "Unfinished Sympathy" (considered
one of the landmark songs of trip hop's "Bristol
sound") and Björk's
1993 album Debut.
De Maré comes from a family with several generations of history in
entertainment; her father was Tony Meehan, drummer for the
Shadows,
her grandfather was one of the Gongmen featured in the opening logo
sequences in Rank Organisation films,
and her grandmother was a dancer who worked with Shirley
Bassey.
She had been working as a session singer for hip
hop and R&B musicians,
as well as writing and touring, though much of this material consisted
of underground and white label releases.
The two were introduced to each other while in London in
pursuit of their respective musical projects: Virgo was in the midst of
a break in session work, while de Maré had been planning to set up a
personal recording studio in Paris.
Despite different musical influences (de Maré by R&B and soul,
Virgo by 1960s pop standards, and classical
music from sources such as France and the Second Viennese School),
their collaborative songwriting efforts apparently meshed easily. Virgo
describes the demos recorded at this time as
comprising ideas such as "Parliament breaks
under bits of Serge Gainsbourg".
After some demo tapes were distributed among music industry executives,
the band received a number of contract offers from record
labels.
The pressure of this drove them to form a group, even with de Maré
having gone on vacation in Los Angeles at this point.
Originally planning to use the name Tremelux,
they chose instead Mono, derived from the title of
the Phil
Spector release Back to Mono.
The band signed a UK-only contract at first with Echo
Records, passing up labels like Warner,
Island,
and London.
Their first release, in 1996, was an EP of the song "Life in Mono" and
various remixes, most notable of these being two by the Propellerheads,
a popular big
beat band and remix group at the time. This was followed by the Formica
Blues album in 1997.
In 1998, the use of "Life in Mono" in the soundtrack,
trailers,
and end
credits of the film adaptation of Great Expectations
(after Robert De Niro, who was working on
the film, heard the song)
brought greater exposure for the song than ever before, and it became
the number one most requested song on US radio
stations (such as KROQ-FM
in Los Angeles, KITS
in San Francisco, and WNNX-FM in Atlanta)
for weeks following the film's release.
(In terms of specific radio stations, for example, "Life in Mono" made
#45 on the KROQ Top 106.7 Countdown of 1998 and #76 on the 91X Top 91 of
1998,
while Formica Blues was #73 on Toronto's 102.1 The Edge's
1998 year-end top 102 albums countdown.)
With the band's new U.S. deal with Mercury
Records (signed with then-A&R
vice president Steve Greenberg,
who had reportedly been looking to sign the band from the start),
promotional singles of "Life in
Mono" were also distributed to nightclubs at about the same time as modern
rock stations,
though only later was the single provided to Top
40 stations.
Now at the height of their popularity, Mono embarked on their
only concert tour.
After a quiet period, however, the band broke up in 2000.
De Maré now sings for Violet Indiana featuring Robin
Guthrie of the group Cocteau Twins; later, in
2004, she recalled feeling "creatively stifled" as part of Mono.
Violet Indiana has released a number of singles, two albums and a
singles collection. More recently, de Maré also founded Pearl Dust, a music
management company.
Virgo joined International Love Corporation, an unsigned
rock band promoted through MySpace and CD Baby, as keyboardist.
Music
Virgo has stated that his top musical influences are John Barry, Burt
Bacharach and Phil Spector.
These influences are evident in the songs on Formica Blues,
which Virgo has characterized as being inspired by the most-played
music in his record collection.
For example, "Life in Mono" samples harpsichords from Barry's soundtrack to The IPCRESS File,
and "High Life" pays homage to the sound of the girl
groups Spector produced in the 1960s.
The music of early 20th-century classical music composers has
also been identified as samples in the song "Hello Cleveland!"; in
particular, the presence of pieces by Anton
Webern, Arnold Schoenberg, and Alban
Berg, the principal members of the Second Viennese School,
supports Virgo's citation of the group (as well as their Klangfarbenmelodie
technique)
as among his influences.
Discography
Mono's entire discography consists of the Formica
Blues album, two releases of the "Life
in Mono" single, further UK singles "Silicone", "Slimcea Girl" and
"High Life", and the song "Madhouse", released only on the soundtrack
to the 1998 film version of Psycho.
A score of remixers were commissioned on their four single
releases; aside from the Propellerheads, the more notable of these
include Stuart
Price (in an early appearance as Les Rythmes Digitales), Mr. Scruff,
Matthew
Herbert, Jóhann Jóhannsson (under the alias
Lhooq), and 187 Lockdown.
Tour
In 1997, Mono played a few shows across the United Kingdom and
France.
- August 11: La Cigale, Paris
- September 8: Cafe Blue, Bristol
- September 9: The Cobden, London
- September 10: Dry 201, Manchester
- September 11: Bargo, Glasgow
The Independent,
in a review of the Cafe Blue show, (attributing it as the group's
"debut gig"), questioned the choice of location but gave a positive
response.
In 1998, the band embarked on its
only tour, twenty-one dates divided between North America and Europe
while skipping the UK altogether. Following the tour's conclusion, the
band were to return to the United States to join the lineup of the 1998
Lilith
Fair.
They were scheduled to play the following seven dates (reportedly
cancelled):
- June 28: Blockbuster Desert Sky Pavillion, Phoenix
- June 29: New Mexico Festival, Albuquerque
- July 1: All Sports Stadium, Oklahoma City
- July 2: Sandstone Amphitheater, Bonner Springs
- July 4: Deer Creek Music Center, Noblesville
- July 5: Polaris Amphitheater, Columbus
- July 6: Pine Knob Music Theater, Detroit
Reception
It has been noted, both during and after the peak of Mono's
success, that it was largely centered in the United States, countered
by their relative obscurity in the United Kingdom.
When interviewed by Rolling Stone
just prior to their first U.S. concert, the band remarked on the lack
of a promotional campaign in the UK, and the relative longevity of
charting records in the U.S. in comparison;
still, "Life in Mono" failed to chart highly on either country's
national singles chart, reaching #70 on the Billboard
Hot 100 and #60 on the UK Singles Chart.
Comparisons
In making comparisons to other popular artists of the late
1990s, Al Muzer, in Consumable Online, commends the
band's music for being more sophisticated than chart-topping acts such
as the Spice Girls and Hanson;
other reviewers, such as Spin's
Jeff Salamon, take a more critical stance in noting the preponderance
of bands with similar influences—period film scores and orchestrated
pop, overlaid with beats—in the wake of Portishead,
and criticize Mono for playing "by-the-numbers" in a combined review
with Alpha's
ComeFromHeaven,
which is rated above Formica Blues for its more
varied musical approaches.
Several other critics make a note of Mono's relationship to this body
of artists—characterized by All Music Guide as "mid-'90s male
instrumentalist/female singer duos"
and The Independent
as "that very Nineties pairing of the shady back-room knob-twiddler and
the photogenic chanteuse".
Still others, however, felt that Mono stood out from this
group (suggested as a "case of bad timing" by Melody
Maker,
which nevertheless published a very favourable review of Formica
Blues): those with this opinion, such as Chaos
Digizine, tended to compare the band more to Saint Etienne, to
illustrate their successful "weaving together musical elements of the
past and present".
In turn, a certain selection of pop singers and composers from the
1960s were frequently associated with Mono as well. The London music
newspaper Echoes summarizes: "John Barry, Juliette
Gréco, Françoise Hardy... Astrud
Gilberto... Jerry Goldsmith, Jane
Birkin, Brigitte Bardot... cheap raw fags,
cheaper red gut-rotter... Avengers... black roll
necks... Jean-Paul, Simone,
Albert...",
concluding with references to period television, fashion, and the
leading figures of existentialism.
In this, the band found approval with critics who appreciated
their faithfulness to the music of the era: Toronto's Eye Weekly
said that "unlike many of their contemporaries, they have a reverence
for properly constructed songs",
and similarly, Charles Taylor, in The Boston Phoenix,
remarked that "What distinguishes the album from a shopping list of
mid-'60s cool is the enormous affection de Maré and Virgo conjure up
for the period they invoke. It's the lack of irony or distance in that
affection that are the key to understanding this band."
Notes and references
-
D., Spence (July 1998). In Stereo With Mono. grid magazine.
Retrieved on 2006-03-09.
-
Rocklists.com.
Retrieved on 2007-01-22.
-
1998: Top 102 Albums. Edge
Year-End Charts. 102.1 The Edge. Retrieved on 2006-09-21.
-
Mono Live Tour Dates. Official Mono
website (retrieved from the Internet Archive) (1998). Retrieved
on 2006-03-09.
-
Harder, Derrick (August 29, 2000). Mono Disbands, World Promptly Forgets They
Ever Existed. Pitchfork Media. Retrieved on 2007-01-19.
-
Vanderwall, Peter (May
4, 2004). Violet Indiana, B2 Club. Culture
Reviews. Expatru. Retrieved on 2006-09-21.
-
Pearl Dust
-
International Love Corporation: Experimental
Shape of Happiness. CD Baby (retrieved from the Internet
Archive). Retrieved on 2007-01-19.
-
Micallef, Ken (February 24, 1998). Mono Tones. Yahoo!
Music. Retrieved on 2006-03-09.
-
Nicholson, Sara
(2002), "Keep Going!: The Use of Classical Music
Samples in Mono’s “Hello Cleveland!”", Echo: a
music-centered journal 4 (1),
ISSN 1535-1807
-
Flohimont, Clarisse (1998). Interviews - Mono (French).
Alternative. Impulsion. Retrieved on 2006-09-21.
-
Lilith Fair '98. Joanna's Sarah
McLachlan Page (1998). Retrieved on 2006-09-21.
-
Violet Indiana Interview (RealMedia). Thump
Radio (August
9, 2000).
Retrieved on 2006-10-08.
-
Bartz, Kristen (April
20, 1998). Life with Mono. Rolling
Stone. Retrieved on 2007-07-11.
-
Zywietz, Tobias (March 22, 2005). Chart
Log UK: Mew - Monty Python. Chart Log UK.
The Official Zobbel Website. Retrieved on 2006-10-08.
-
Billboard.com - Artist Chart History - Mono.
Billboard.com. Retrieved on 2006-10-08.
-
Salamon, Jeff (March 1998). Alpha - Come From Heaven / Mono - Formica
Blues. Spin (retrieved from the Internet
Archive). Retrieved on 2007-01-20.
-
Raggett, Ned. Formica Blues. All
Music Guide. Retrieved on 2007-01-19.
-
James,
Martin (October
11, 1997),
"Mono double-edged, low-phat pop", Melody
Maker 74 (41): 12,
ISSN 0025-9012
-
Anderson, Jason (April
16, 1998). Getting Back to Mono. Eye Weekly.
Retrieved on 2007-01-19.
External links