Klaxons
are a indie rock band, based in London. Following the release of numerous 7-inch vinyls on different independent record labels, as well as the success of previous singles "Magick" and "Golden Skans", the band released their debut album, Myths of the Near Future
on 29 January 2007. The album won the 2007 Nationwide Mercury Prize. [1] After playing festivals and headlining tours worldwide (including the NME Indie Rave Tour) during late 2006–2007, the band started working on their follow-up album in July 2007. [2]
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KLAXONS TICKETS
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History
Formation (2005–2006)
Jamie Reynolds grew up in
Bournemouth and
Southampton in his early twenties.
[3] He dropped out of studying
philosophy at
Greenwich University [4] to work in a record shop, before moving to
London and being made
redundant.
[5] He met James Righton and Simon Taylor-Davis, who was his girlfriend's roommate.
[6] Righton had been working as a teacher at the time.
[7] All three had previously played in various other groups, including
Reef and
Oasis cover bands.
[8] Simon and James grew up in
Stratford-upon-Avon, where they attended the same school. They shared a house with members of
Pull Tiger Tail in
New Cross, London, briefly playing a gig together as 'Hollywood Is a Verb' in 2004.
[9] Live tracks from the gig are available on the band's
MySpace page.
[10]
James taught Simon how to play guitar,
and with Reynolds' redundancy money they bought a studio kit.
They began recording and performing live under their early guise of "Klaxons (Not Centaurs)", including an appearance at the 2006
Camden Crawl.
[11] The name came from a quote from
Filippo Tommaso Marinetti's
futurism text
The Futurist Manifesto
.
[12] Initially the band played with drummer Finnigan Kidd in 2005,
[13] until Kidd left to play with fellow
New Cross band,
Hatcham Social. Replacement live drummer Steffan Halperin joined in February 2006,
[14] with the band announcing him as an official member in an interview in Prefix Magazine in early 2007.
[15] 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".
[16] Around this time, the band began playing under their new, shortened name of Klaxons.
[17]
Early releases and debut album (2006-2008)
thumb
, their first of many for the band
Klaxons' debut single, "
Gravity's Rainbow" was released on 29 March 2006 on
Angular Records. Only 500 copies were released, and all were printed on a
7-inch vinyl decorated by the band themselves.
Radio 1's
Steve Lamacq was the first DJ to play the band, and invited them to play a
Maida Vale Studios live session on the strength of the single.
[18] The band's second single, "
Atlantis to Interzone", was released on June 12 of the same year. It was their first release for
independent record label Merok Records, and led to further coverage in
NME
. The song enjoyed radio coverage from
Zane Lowe and daytime airings from
Jo Whiley, who repeatedly, and mistakenly, called the song "Atlantic To Interscope".
[19] Zane Lowe also wrongly credited the song as "Atlantis To Interscope".
[20] They released their first
EP,
Xan Valleys
, on 16 October 2006. It was released on
Australian record label
Modular Recordings, and contained their first two singles alongside various
remixes.
[21] The band played their first
North American dates in
New York's
East Village in October 2006.
[22]
In August 2006, the band signed to
Polydor Records for a reported
£500,000,
[23] following offers from numerous different record labels.
[24] Regarding the amount, James Righton said that the fee was "absurdly off the mark", and that the band signed for considerably less on the condition they would be given their own label
imprint,
Rinse Records.
[Magick", was released on 30 October 2006 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 22 January 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. [25] The band then released "It's Not Over Yet", a cover version of a song originally by Grace. The track included the "My Love" cover as a b-side, and peaked at #13 in the UK Singles Chart. [26]
Their debut album, titled Myths of the Near Future
, was released on 29 January 2007. It entered the UK Album Charts at #2, beaten only by Norah Jones's album Not Too Late
. Percussion and drumming on the album was provided by the album's producer James Ford, [27] with live drummer Halperin recording on "Atlantis to Interzone".
On 20 September 2007, it was revealed that the band was to release a double album featuring 27 tracks mixed exclusively by Reynolds. Entitled A Bugged Out Mix
, the band follow in the footsteps of Miss Kittin, Erol Alkan, Felix Da Housecat and Simian Mobile Disco, who have all made similar contributions. It was officially released on 1 October 2007. [28]
Klaxons singled out a new song that has strong prog influences as a guide to one possible direction the album may go in, revealed recently NME. Guitarist Simon Taylor said: "We wanna make something that's bigger and softer and louder and lo-fi and heavier produced - just lots of contradictions. I think it's gonna be like the last record but swollen. We've been listening to a lot of European prog music and dubstep and dance and folk. A huge broad variety of things really. There's one track we've been playing in soundcheck, it's this massive prog opus."
Klaxons performed with the singer Rihanna on the song "Umbrella" which had "Golden Skans" mixed into the background during the Brit Awards 2008 held in London on 20 February 2008.
Klaxons won 'Best Album' at the 2008 NME Awards held at London's IndigO2 Arena on 28 February 2008. This followed having won 'Best New Band' the previous year. Klaxons also won 'Best International Album' and 'Best International Track' for "Golden Skans" at the first American NME awards, which were held in Los Angeles, California.
Second album (2008-present)
The band first began talks of a second album in November 2007, during the band's winter tour of the United Kingdom. Taylor-Davis said influences included dubstep, dance and folk music, mentioning that the band were playing an untitled "prog" track during soundcheck. [29] The band features on Steve Aoki's debut album Pillowface and His Airplane Chronicles
, contributing the Soulwax remix of "Gravity's Rainbow" for its release in January 2008. [30] After a long break the band made their live return with a series of gigs in Holland, Poland, Estonia, Russia, Mexico, Argentina, Chile, and Brazil. At these shows they debuted two new tracks: "Valley of the Calm Trees" and "Moonhead". [31] The band also made an appearance at Modular Records's NeverEverLand festival that toured around Australia in December 2008. [32]
At the beginning of 2009, it was reported that the band had been told to re-record parts of their second album, after it was rejected by their record label. The Sun
confirmed that Polydor deemed the record "too experimental" for release, [33] with Reynolds stating that "...we've made a really dense, psychedelic record" and that "it isn't the right thing for us [the band]". [34]
In an interview with the BBC in April 2009, Reynolds revealed that the songs "The Parhelion" (previously entitled "Valley of the Calm Trees"), "Moonhead" and a new song "Marble Fields And The Hydrolight Head Of Delusion" would 'probably' make the final tracklist. [35]. Other titles that have been gathered from live set lists include "Imaginary Pleasures", "Silver Forest" [36], "Echos", "Venus", and "Hoodoo Borer".
Musical style
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HMV describes Klaxons as "acid-rave sci-fi punk-funk", a phrase lifted directly from Tim Chester's Radar feature in NME, 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 rock-based, 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 is consistently hailed as the defining act of the sparsely-populated New Rave movement, Klaxons have worked to avoid being typecast as champions of the genre. Even so, Klaxons member Jamie Reynolds expressed no regrets at the dubious honour, saying that "...it's great that it started as an in-joke and became a minor youth subculture". [37]
Discography
Albums
- Myths of the Near Future
(2007), Polydor
Compilation albums
- A Bugged Out Mix by Klaxons
(2007), New State Music
EPs
- Xan Valleys
(2006), Modular
Singles
| Year
| Title
| UK Top 40
| Album
|
| 2006
| "Gravity's Rainbow" / "The Bouncer"
| —
| N/A
|
| "Atlantis to Interzone"
| -
| Re-Recorded for Myths of the Near Future
|
| "Magick"
| 29
| Myths of the Near Future
|
| 2007
| "Golden Skans"
| 7
|
| "Gravity's Rainbow" (Re-recording)
| 35
|
| "It's Not Over Yet"
| 13
|
| "As Above, So Below" (French Only)
| N/A
|
Awards
- 2007 NME Awards: Best New Band [38]
- 2007 Mercury Music Prize: Myths of the Near Future
- 2007 XFM: Live Breakthrough Act
- 2008 NME Awards: "Myths of the Near Future" Best album
- 2008 Ivor Novello Awards: "Golden Skans" Best Contemporary Song (Nominated)
- 2008 NME Awards USA: "Golden Skans" - Best International Track
References
- Mercury Music Prize: The nominees
- Klaxons get writing
- Klaxons - press area - Because Music
- Get Lifted With London's Klaxons
- Klaxons on Kevchino
- Klaxons feeling a little bit Mercurial
- MPR: The Klaxons perform in studio
- MegaStar meets Klaxons
- Pull Tiger Tail biography
- Hollywood is a Verb MySpace
- Camden Crawl; April 2006
- Pumped Up With an Artsy, Postpunk Jolt of Rave
- Klaxons
- Interview
- Klaxons: Interview
- Mercury Prize Jewish winner
- Q&A Klaxons
- Independent Focus: Angular Recording Corporation
- Hot British & International Pop for 2007
- Zane Lowe - Tracklisting
- Klaxons - Xan Valleys
- This is going to be MDMA-zing
- Interview: James Righton from the Klaxons
- Magickal Klaxons
- Jo Whiley's Live Lounge Gallery
- ChartStats - Klaxons - It's Not Over Yet
- Klaxons: Myths of the Near Future
- Its A ‘Bugged Out’ Life For Klaxons
- Klaxons shed light on their second album
- LA DJ calls on Klaxons and Justice for new album
- Klaxons - Auditorio Ibirapuera, Sao Paulo, 23/10/08
- Klaxons - Golden Skans LIVE (NeverEverLand, 13.12.2008)
- Klaxons to lay it again
- Klaxons to re-record second album
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/8023224.stm
- http://www.nme.com/news/klaxons/42518
- The future's bright...
- Klaxons crowned Best New Band at Shockwaves NME Awards