For other uses, see Muse
(disambiguation).
Muse formed in Teignmouth,
Devon in
1997, comprising Matthew Bellamy (vocals, guitar, keyboards), Chris Wolstenholme (bass
guitar, keyboards,
vocals)
and Dominic Howard (drums, percussion).
More recently, Morgan Nicholls has been
featured on guitar and keyboards in Black Holes and
Revelations era live performances. Their
idiosyncratic style is a blend of alternative
rock, progressive rock, classical
music, funk,
electronica,
and heavy
metal. The band is known for their energetic live performances and
frontman Matthew Bellamy's eccentric interests in global
conspiracy, theology
and the apocalypse.
Muse have released 4 studio albums. The most recent, Black
Holes and Revelations, was also the most critically
acclaimed, garnering the band a Mercury Prize nomination and coming
third in the NME Albums of the Year list for 2006.
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Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 Formation
and early years (1992-1997)
- 1.2 First
EPs and Showbiz (1998-2000)
- 1.3 Origin
of Symmetry and Hullabaloo (2001-2002)
- 1.4 Absolution
(2003-2005)
- 1.5 Black
Holes and Revelations (2006-present)
- 1.6 Future
- 2 Discography
- 3 Awards
- 4 Notable
covers of Muse songs
- 5 References
- 6 External
links
|
History
Formation and early years
(1992-1997)
While students at Teignmouth Community
College in the early 1990s, the members of Muse played in separate
bands. The formation of Muse began after Matthew Bellamy successfully
auditioned for the part of guitarist in Dominic Howard's band, Gothic
Plague. They were left with a dilemma when their second guitarist Phys
Vandit decided to leave, so they asked Chris Wolstenholme, drummer with
another local band, Fixed Penalty, to learn to play the bass guitar.
In 1994, under the name Rocket Baby Dolls
and with a Gothic/glam image, the group won a local battle
of the bands contest, trashing their gear in the process (they were
"the only real rock band" there).
"It was supposed to be a protest, a statement",
Bellamy said, "so, when we actually won, it was a real
shock. A massive shock. After that, we started taking ourselves
seriously."
Shortly after the contest, they changed their name to Muse and decided to
forego university,
give up the jobs that only just paid the rent and eventually move away
from Teignmouth.
First EPs and Showbiz
(1998-2000)
After a few years building a fan base in London, Muse played
their first gigs in London
and Manchester.
The band had a significant meeting with Dennis Smith, the owner of
Sawmills, a recording studio in a converted water mill in Cornwall, S.W.
England.
This meeting led to their first proper recordings and the
release of a self-titled
EP, of which the front cover was designed by Muse's own drummer,
Dominic Howard, on Sawmill's in-house Dangerous label. Their second EP,
the Muscle Museum EP,
attracted the attention of influential British music journalist Steve
Lamacq and the weekly British music publication NME. Dennis Smith
subsequently co-founded the music production company Taste
Media especially for Muse (the band stayed with Taste Media for their
first 3 albums). This was fortunate for the band, as it allowed them to
preserve the individuality of their sound in the early stages of their
career.
Despite the minor success of their second EP, British record
companies were reluctant to back Muse, and many sections of the music
industry asserted that - like many of their contemporaries - their
sound was too similar to that of Radiohead. However, American
record labels were keen to sign them, flying Muse out to the U.S.
first-class for corporate auditions. They signed with Maverick
Records on December 24, 1998. Upon their return
from America, Taste Media arranged deals for Muse with various record
labels in Europe
and Australia,
allowing them to maintain control over their career in individual
countries. John Leckie, who had produced the
influential The Bends by Radiohead, the Stone
Roses, "Weird Al" Yankovic and The
Verve, was brought in to produce the band's first record, Showbiz.
The album showcased the band's aggressive style, and the lyrics made
reference to the difficulties they had encountered while trying to
establish themselves in Teignmouth.
The release of this album was followed by tour support slots
for the Foo
Fighters and Red Hot Chili Peppers in the United
States. 1999 and 2000 saw Muse playing major festivals in Europe and gigs in
Australia,
accumulating a considerable fan base in Western Europe, particularly in
France.
Origin of Symmetry
and Hullabaloo (2001-2002)
Their second album, Origin
of Symmetry, again produced by Leckie, resulted
in a heavier, darker rock sound, with Wolstenholme's bass, often
overdriven, distorted or synthesized, sometimes using more
classical techniques on songs like "Space Dementia".
The band experimented with unorthodox instrumentation, such as
a church
organ, Mellotron,
and an expanded drum kit. There were more of Bellamy's high-pitched
vocal lines, arpeggiated
guitar, and distinctive piano playing, inspired by the works of
pianists of the Romanticism movement, particularly
Russians such as Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky. Also palpable
is the influence of minimalists such as Philip
Glass. Bellamy cites guitar influences such as Jimi
Hendrix and Tom Morello (of Audioslave
and Rage Against the Machine),
the latter evident in the more riff-based songs on Origin of Symmetry,
and in Bellamy's extensive use of pitch-shifting effects in his solos.
The album also features a reworking of Anthony Newley and Leslie
Bricusse's "Feeling Good". This album was described
by Neha Nimmagudda as "an electrifying thrillride through the ruins of
a post-apocalyptic universe, strewn with the sonic fragments of
contemporaenity."
The general eccentricity of Muse's fundamentally rock style
has sparked comparisons with Queen, although this is
partially due to their way of working the stage, with Bellamy's
charismatic style reminiscent of Queen's Brian
May.
Comparisons to Radiohead were still evident, Dean Carlson of the All
Music Guide commented on the album saying "if you want to
sound like Radiohead when even Thom Yorke doesn't want to
sound like Radiohead, you might as well take it to such preposterous,
bombastic, over the top levels."
The album might have led to Muse making a significant impact
on the American music scene, but Maverick had reservations about
Bellamy's vocal style (considering it not to be "radio-friendly"), and
asked Muse to change some of their songs prior to U.S. release.
Insulted, the band declined and left Maverick altogether, resulting in
Maverick's decision not to release Origin of Symmetry
in the U.S. (The album was finally released in the U.S. on September
20, 2005,
after Muse signed to Warner).
Having built up a strong reputation as a live band over the
course of the Origin of Symmetry tour, Muse decided
to release a live CD and DVD. The DVD, Hullabaloo,
featured live footage recorded during Muse's two gigs on consecutive
nights at Le
Zenith in Paris
in 2001 and a documentary film of the band on tour. A double album, Hullabaloo
Soundtrack was released at the same time,
containing a compilation of b-sides and a disc of recordings of some
songs from the Le Zenith performances. A double-A side single was also
released featuring new songs "In Your World" and "Dead Star", a move away from
the grand operatic style of Origin of Symmetry. The
single was greeted with a mixed reaction from existing fans, but radio
friendly song lengths and styles helped to attract many new fans. The
song "Shrinking Universe" from Hullabaloo Soundtrack
was used as one of the main songs used in the 2007 film "28
Weeks Later."
In the February 2006 edition of Q
Magazine, Origin of Symmetry was placed 74th in a
fans' poll of the 100 greatest albums ever.
Absolution
(2003-2005)
In 2003, a new studio album, Absolution,
was released. Produced by Rich Costey (who had previously produced
Rage Against the Machine),
the album demonstrated a continuation of the experimentation displayed
in Origin of Symmetry, while maintaining a sense of
the band as a three-piece. The album yielded the hit single "Time
Is Running Out".
Muse continued to blend classical influences into their hard
rock sound, the overall effect being somewhat Wagnerian
in style - especially on tracks such as "Butterflies and
Hurricanes", which features a Rachmaninoff-inspired piano solo. The
album is built around the theme of the end of the world, and reactions
to that situation; despite this, Muse described it as an "uplifting"
album, with a positive message coming through in songs such as Blackout
and Butterflies and Hurricanes. The apocalyptic
theme draws from Bellamy’s interest in conspiracy
theories, theology,
science,
and the supernatural.
The song "Ruled By Secrecy", for example, takes its title from the Jim Marrs
novel Rule By Secrecy about the secrets behind the
way major governments are run. Many lyrics on this album have political
references.
Chris Wolstenholme of Muse performing at the Mod
Club Theatre, Toronto
in 2004. The international Absolution tour included
the band's first shows in North America since 1999.
Finally receiving mainstream critical acclaim in Britain,
and with a new American record deal, Muse undertook their first
international stadium tour. It continued for about a year and saw Muse
visiting Australia,
New
Zealand, the United States, Canada, and France. Meanwhile,
the band released five singles (Time
Is Running Out, Hysteria, Sing
for Absolution, Stockholm Syndrome, and Butterflies and
Hurricanes).
The band played at the Glastonbury
festival in June 2004. At the time, Bellamy described the concert as "The
best gig of our lives",
but very shortly after the concert, drummer Dominic Howard's father,
Bill Howard, who was at the festival to watch the band, died from a
heart attack. "It was the biggest feeling of achievement we've
ever had after coming offstage," Bellamy said. "It
was almost surreal that an hour later his dad died. It was almost not
believable. We spent about a week sort of just with Dom trying to
support him. I think he was happy that at least his dad got to see him
at probably what was the finest moment so far of the band's life."
Muse continued their tour. Their last dates were in the U.S.
and at the Earls Court arena in
London, where they played an extra date due to the high demand for
tickets. They won two MTV Europe awards, including "Best Alternative
Act," and a Q Award for "Best Live Act." At the end of 2004, Vitamin
Records released The String Quartet
Tribute to Muse by The Tallywood Strings, an
album of instrumental string versions of some of Muse's songs. Muse
received award for "Best Live Act" at the 2005
BRIT Awards.
The band finished touring in January 2005, but visited the
U.S. in April and May, as their profile there was considerably higher
than before. On July
2, 2005,
Muse participated in the Live 8 concert in Paris,
where they performed their singles "Plug In Baby", "Bliss", "Time
Is Running Out" and "Hysteria".
An unofficial DVD biography called Manic
Depression was released in April 2005; the band
was not involved with the project and did not endorse the release.
Another DVD, this time official, was released on December
12, 2005, Absolution
Tour, containing re-edited and re-mastered
highlights from the Glastonbury Festival 2004, and previously unseen
footage from London Earls Court, Wembley Arena, and the Wiltern
Theatre in Los Angeles. However, three songs were
cut from the original BBC edit for reasons unknown (although this was
possibly due to lack of space on the disc): "Interlude", "Stockholm
Syndrome" and "Citizen Erased". (Fans have speculated that "Citizen
Erased" was omitted due to a piano interlude played at the end of the
song, which developed into "Take A Bow", the opening track on the later
Black Holes and
Revelations" album.) However, "Stockholm
Syndrome" was included in the Earls Court footage. Two songs,
"Endlessly" and "Thoughts Of A Dying Atheist", are hidden tracks on the
DVD taken from Wembley Arena. Absolution eventually
went gold in the US.
Black Holes and
Revelations (2006-present)
In 2006, Muse announced that they were to release a new album
(produced again by Rich Costey) entitled Black Holes and
Revelations. The album leaked onto the Internet
on June
7, less than a month before it was due to be released. The album was
released officially in Europe on July 3, 2006 and in North
America on July
11, 2006. It
was released to the Japanese
market a few days earlier, on June 28, 2006. The Japanese edition included an extra
track, "Glorious", which is only available globally as the b-side to
the Invincible
vinyl. The album charted at No. 1 in the UK, much of Europe, and
Australia and also achieved American success, reaching No. 9 in the Billboard
200 album chart. Black Holes and Revelations was
nominated for the 2006 Mercury Music Prize, Muse lost
to Arctic Monkeys. The album
did, however, earn a Platinum Europe Award after
selling one million copies in the continent, and the band received the
2006 Q
Award for Best Live Act.
The album's title and themes are the result of the band's
fascination with space, particularly with Mars and Cydonia. The cover artwork was
designed by Storm Thorgerson and depicts a
Martian landscape with four men seated around a table and four
miniature horses on it - presumably the Four Horsemen of
Apocalypse, who have outgrown their horses.
The song "Exopolitics" refers to a government
conspiracy of faking an alien invasion for corporate gains and a dark
manipulative way of controlling the world population to submit to their
will.
The first single from the album, "Supermassive Black
Hole," was first released as a standalone download on May 9, 2006, accompanied by a
music video directed by the acclaimed Floria
Sigismondi. Reactions to the single were diverse as it represented a
departure from the style of the band's previous work; later on in 2006,
the band revealed the song was inspired by the work of Soulwax and
one-time support band Millionaire; a thank you was
posted on Millionaire's website but can no longer be found. The single
was officially released online on 12 June 2006, with the CD release taking place on June 19. The CD
release contained the B-side "Crying Shame." The second single, "Starlight",
was released on September 4, 2006. "Knights of Cydonia" was released
in the U.S. as a radio-only single on June 13, 2006 and in the UK on November
27, 2006. It
charted in the Top 10 and was accompanied by a six-minute promotional
video filmed in Romania.
The fourth single from the album, Invincible,
was released on April
9, 2007,
Another single, "Map of the Problematique",
was released for digital download only on June 18, 2007, following the
band's performance at Wembley Stadium.
On November
2, 2006, Muse won the Best Alternative and Best Live Act awards at the
2006 MTV European Music Video Awards in Copenhagen, and performed their
single "Starlight". Justin Timberlake, presenting the
awards, commented that Muse was the best band there when introducing
their performance of "Starlight", and lead singer of The
Killers, Brandon Flowers, mentioned Muse
while receiving their Best Rock award, saying that the award belonged
to Muse. The band also recently won the BRIT award for Best Live Act in
February 2007, however losing Best Album and Best British Band to Arctic
Monkeys.
Muse recorded a live session at Abbey
Road Studios for Live From Abbey Road in August
2006.
The band started performing live again on May 13, 2006 at BBC
Radio 1's One Big Weekend, followed by a
number of other promotional TV appearances. The main live tour started
just before the release of their album and initially consisted mostly
of festival appearances, most notably a headline slot at the Reading and Leeds
Festivals.
A tour of North America took place from late July to early August 2006,
and after the last of the summer festivals, a tour of Europe began,
including a large arena
tour of the UK.
The band spent November and much of December 2006 touring Europe with
British band Noisettes as the supporting act.
The tour continued in Australia and South-East Asia; Muse have
published further tour dates up to October 2007. Major performances
included the Big Day Out 07 and the headlining spot
at the Isle of Wight Festival on June 9, 2007.
Towards the end of 2006, Muse announced that they would play a
75,000-capacity gig at the newly-rebuilt Wembley
Stadium on June
16, 2007.
The first Wembley concert sold out within a matter of hours, prompting
the band to add a second date on June 17.
The support acts for the Wembley shows were The
Streets, Rodrigo y Gabriela, and Dirty Pretty Things
on June
16, and My Chemical Romance, Biffy
Clyro, and Shy Child on June 17.
Both Wembley concerts were filmed for a future DVD, slated for release
in time for Christmas in 2007.
After the BRIT Awards the band announced that they were asked
to play at one of the Live Earth concerts, also staged at
Wembley Stadium, on July
7, 2007, but
declined as they were already scheduled to play the Oxegen festival in
Ireland
on the same day.
Muse were forced to withdraw from several tour dates with My
Chemical Romance in May because some of the crew and My Chemical
Romance had food poisoning.
Muse headlined Saturday night of Lollapalooza in Chicago on
August 4, 2007 drawing their largest US audience to date.
It was announced that the band will play at Madison
Square Garden on August 6, 2007, Philadelphia's Festival Pier on August 10, 2007,
and the Austin City Limits
Festival in September 2007. Further to claims by Matthew Bellamy that
Muse may be playing a one-off gig with the recently reunited Rage Against the Machine,
Muse were confirmed as part of the lineup for October 2007's Vegoose Festival
in Las
Vegas, alongside bands like Rage Against The Machine, Daft Punk,
and Queens of the Stone Age.
Though it was speculated the band would be playing at the 2008 Glastonbury
Festival, Michael Eavis has since denied this by
saying "We’ve already got headline acts for next year, but it’s not
Muse or U2,"
although according to NME
Magazine, so far only two of the three headliners have been booked for
the 2008 festival. Stuart Galbraith, the organizer of the Download
Festival at Donington Park is also confirmed as
being interested in having Muse headline the festival..
Muse came ninth in Q Magazine's "10 Most Exciting Bands On The
Planet Right Now" list in the 252nd issue (July 2007).
Future
In an interview given in May 2007 to Rock Mag and published in
the July 2007 issue, Bellamy confirmed that he has begun to work on a
new album and new songs, some more in line with electronic
or "dance"
music and others more with classical or symphonic
music. The band is also thinking of hiring an orchestra
for some of them. He also revealed that the next album should be
self-produced, in order to have more freedom. Bellamy also talked about
a DVD of footage from the Black Holes and Revelations tour, which could
be released by the end of 2007.
Discography
-
Main article: Muse
discography
| Release date |
Album name |
| October 3, 1999 |
Showbiz |
| June
17, 2001 |
Origin of Symmetry |
| September 21, 2003 |
Absolution |
| July
2, 2006 |
Black Holes and
Revelations |
Awards
| Year |
Award |
Category |
Region |
|
2000
|
NME Awards |
Best New Artist |
United Kingdom |
|
2001
|
Kerrang! Awards |
Best British Band |
United Kingdom |
|
2004
|
Q
Awards |
Innovation Award |
United Kingdom |
| Kerrang! Awards |
Best Album |
United Kingdom |
| Q
Awards |
Best Live Act |
United Kingdom |
| MTV
EMA |
Best Alternative |
Europe |
| MTV
EMA |
Best UK & Ireland Act |
Europe |
|
2005
|
BRIT Awards |
Best Live Act |
United Kingdom |
| NME Awards |
Best Live Act |
United Kingdom |
| MTVU Woodie Awards |
Best International |
United States |
|
2006
|
Q
Awards |
Best Live Act |
United Kingdom |
| MTV
EMA |
Best Alternative |
Europe |
| Kerrang! Awards |
Best Live Act |
United Kingdom |
| UK Festival Awards |
Best Rock Act |
United Kingdom |
| BT Digital Music Awards |
Best Rock Artist |
United Kingdom |
| BT Digital Music Awards |
Best Unofficial Website ([1]) |
United Kingdom |
| UK Festival Awards |
Best Headline Act |
United Kingdom |
| Vodafone Live Music Awards |
Best Live Act |
United Kingdom |
|
2007
|
BRIT Awards |
Best Live Act |
United Kingdom |
| NME Awards |
Best British Band |
United Kingdom |
Notable covers of Muse songs
- Dream Theater - "Stockholm Syndrome" (live
only)
- Ken Zazpi - "Irri Bat"
(same "Muscle
Museum" melody, different lyrics) (2001)
- Scala & Kolacny
Brothers - "Muscle Museum" (2002)
- The Section Quartet - on album "Lizards
Like Us" (2004) - "Time Is Running Out"
- The String Quartet
Tribute To Muse (2005): "Stockholm Syndrome", "Map
Of Your Head", "Time Is Running Out", "Muscle
Museum", "In Your World", "Showbiz", "The
Small Print", "Sunburn", "New Born", "Bliss",
"Sing for Absolution"
- William Joseph - "Within" (2004) "Butterflies and
Hurricanes"
- The Mick Gerbers Band - "Muscle
Museum" (2005)
References
-
NME.COM
- News - Muse play supermassive free show. NME (December
4, 2006).
-
NME Albums Of The Year 2006. NME
(2006). Retrieved on 2007-08-05.
-
Muse's Matt Bellamy Talks. Ultimate-Guitar.com
(possibly reprinted from Total Guitar (UK
Magazine)) (December 25, 2003).
-
Muse. Meanstreet (December, 2004).
-
Carlson, Dean. Origin of Symmetry - Review. All
Music Guide. Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
-
Muse - Absolution Tour [original edit].
BBC News (June 2004). “Bellamy: "[T]his has been the best gig
of our lives, this is our last song tonight, this is called Stockholm
Syndrome"”
-
Muse confirm new single. Retrieved
on 2007-07-26.
-
MOTP - Wembley Souvenir Download.
Microcuts.net (June
8, 2007).
Retrieved on 2007-08-04.
-
Confirmed Festival Dates and Album Release
Date. Muse Management (March 13, 2006).
-
Muse Syndrome - Current Tour Dates.
Muse Syndrome (February 5, 2006).
-
Wembley Stadium - Press Releases (December
4, 2006).
-
Muse add second Wembley show.
NME.com (December
9, 2006).
-
Muse Name
Wembley Supports.
-
Muse asked to play at Climate Change Concert.
Xfm.co.uk (February
16, 2007).
-
Muse Fall Victim To Food Poisoning.
StrangeGlue.com (May
2, 2007).
-
Muse Announce Massive New York Show.
NME.com (May
2, 2007).
-
Muse headlining Madison Square Garden.
The Rock Radio (May
4, 2007).
Retrieved on 2007-05-12.
-
Glastonbury Festival.
-
Download Festival at Donington Park.
-
DVD and new Album Info. Retrieved
on 2007-07-26.
External links
| Muse |
| Dominic
Howard | Matthew Bellamy | Chris Wolstenholme |
| Discography |
| Studio albums:
Showbiz | Origin
of Symmetry | Absolution
| Black Holes and
Revelations |
| Compilations
and Live DVDs: Hullabaloo
Soundtrack | Absolution
Tour |
| Extended
plays: This
Is A Muse Demo | Muse
| Muscle Museum EP
| Random
1-8 (Japan only) | Dead Star/In Your World
(Japan & France only) |
| Singles:
"Uno"
| "Cave"
| "Muscle
Museum" | "Sunburn" | "Unintended"
| "Plug
In Baby" | "New
Born" | "Bliss" | "Hyper Music/Feeling Good" |
"Dead Star/In Your World" | "Stockholm Syndrome" | "Time
Is Running Out" | "Hysteria" | "Sing
for Absolution"| "Apocalypse Please" | "Butterflies and
Hurricanes" | "Supermassive Black
Hole" | "Starlight" | "Knights
of Cydonia" | "Invincible" | "Map of the Problematique" |
| Production |
| John
Leckie | Rich
Costey | Paul
Reeve |
|
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