Razorlight
are an English indie rock band formed in 2002. They are primarily known in their home countries, having topped the charts with the 2006 single America and its parent self-titled album, their second. The band includes: Johnny Borrell (Lead singer, rhythm guitar), Björn Sten Ågren (guitarist), Carl Gustaf Dalemo (bassist) and David 'Skully' Sullivan-Kaplan (drummer)
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RAZORLIGHT TICKETS
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History
Formation and early years (2002-2003)
At the beginning of their career
Johnny Borrell's new outfit began by supporting
The Libertines at various venues (including 333 in Old Street) where a young
A&R scout, Justin Cross, found them and put them in Liam Watson's
Toerag Studios where he produced the tracks "
Rip It Up", "
Rock 'n' Roll Lies" and "
In the City" alongside John Fortis. Off the back of these tracks the band (now named Razorlight) began getting serious A&R heat due to the songs' success on radio stations such as John Kennedy Show on
XFM.
Following a signing race the band finally settled with
Mercury Records and then were steered by Richard O'Donovan. The band started to become very popular on the
London music scene. Large demand caused the band to play extra shows, including a 7,000+ capacity gig at
Alexandra Palace.
Up All Night
and Hyde Park (2004-2005)
Razorlight's debut album,
Up All Night
, was released on
June 28 2004, reaching number 3 in the UK album charts.
[1] The critical reception was generally good, receiving good reviews from
NME
,
Q
magazine and
Billboard
, although they were also accused of lack of imagination and unoriginality for allegedly borrowing ideas from other influential bands such as
The Strokes. Following the release of their successful debut album
Up All Night
in summer 2004, drummer
Christian Smith-Pancorvo left the group and was replaced by
Andy Burrows.
Up All Night
was re-issued in April 2005, including the previously unreleased single "
Somewhere Else", which peaked at Number 2.
In July 2005, the band performed at
Hyde Park, London as part of the
Live 8 series of concerts. However, the band came under fire for being the only band that did not donate their extra revenue to charity. The band subsequently claimed that due to their "fledgling status", they were unable to make such a commitment.
[2]
Razorlight contributed the song "Kirby's House" to the
War Child charity album
Help!: A Day in the Life
. The song, which was originally over 4 minutes long, was later cut down almost in half and re-mastered, appearing as the eighth track on the band's second album,
Razorlight
.
Razorlight
(2006-2007)
Continuing their association with
The Who which started at the
Live 8 gig, Razorlight debuted some of new songs from their forthcoming second album live on
March 30,
2006, in one of a chain of
Teenage Cancer Trust concerts, organised by
Roger Daltrey. Later that year, on
July 2, they played to a sellout Hyde Park Calling gig, where they were preceded by
The Zutons, and opened for The Who. The band went on to play on the beach opposite
Brighton's West Pier on
July 12 in a free concert as part of a
Vodafone TBA event broadcast on
Channel 4.
Razorlight released their second album
Razorlight
on
July 17,
2006, in the United Kingdom and it debuted at #1 in the
UK Albums Chart a week later. It received mixed reviews,
Q magazine giving it a rare 5/5 rating, whilst Pitchfork Media gave it 2.8/10.
Razorlight
is the album by which many of the original Razorlight fans became disinterested with the band, and some accused them of 'selling-out' by diluting their raw, edgy rock sound to cater for a new, radio-friendly mainstream audience. The leading single from the album, "In the Morning" was released as a single on
July 3,
2006, which peaked at #3 in the
UK Singles Chart. To date, it is their third biggest single after "Somewhere Else", which peaked at #2, and "America", which peaked at #1. It also reached #2 on
iTunes. In 2007, Razorlight were nominated for two
BRIT Awards - one for 'Best British Band' and the other for 'Best Song', "
America". They were also nominated for two
NME Brit Awards for 'Best Band' and 'Best Album'.
Razorlight supported
Queen + Paul Rodgers on
July 15, in front of 60,000 people. This gig had been rescheduled following the
July 2005 London bombings. In December of the same year, they supported
Oasis, at Cardiff's
Millennium Stadium. They also supported
The Rolling Stones at their gigs in Cologne and Paris. During the Christmas season the band played an intimate show at the Railway Inn in Winchester. They were supported by up and coming London band
Captain Phoenix, who are fronted by drummer Andy Burrows' younger brother Ben. The band played their biggest tour to date in October-November 2006 and also supported
Richard Ashcroft in his homecoming gig at the
Lancashire County Cricket Club on
June 17. They played
Reading on
24 August, and Leeds on
25 August 2007. They also played the Main Stage on
19 May in Preston for Radio 1's
Big Weekend alongside bands such as
Kasabian and the
Kaiser Chiefs. On
July 7,
2007, Razorlight performed at both the
UK leg of
Live Earth at
Wembley Stadium,
London, and
T in the Park in
Balado,
Scotland. In November 2006 the band had to be hospitalised after traces of radioactive poisoning was detected on their plane. Their
British Airways return flight from
Moscow was a scheduled route used by Russian ex-spy
Alexander Litvinenko.
[3]
The same month they supported the Mando Diao "Ode to Ochrasy Tour" in Germany.
Slipway Fires
(2008-present)
Razorlight was intended to perform for BBC
Children in Need 2008, but the lead singer needed to rest his vocals as they had performed for their gigs nationwide. However, they made donations to the charity.
After many months of producing new material, some of which was written on the
Isle of Tiree in the
Inner Hebrides, Razorlight released their third studio album,
Slipway Fires
, on November 3, 2008 with the lead single, "
Wire To Wire", being released on October 20, 2008. The album's first single, "Wire To Wire", was played for the first time on
BBC Radio 1 by
Zane Lowe on 8 September 2008.
[4] The second single taken from
Slipway Fires was
Hostage of Love; however, having received little critical or commercial attention, it failed to enter the charts.
It is likely that the next single to be taken from the album will be 'Burberry Blue Eyes', as the band have recorded a video for the song.
On 5 March 2009, NME.com confirmed that
Andy Burrows had quit the band due to 'personal reasons'.
Johnny Borrell was adamant that the band would continue, although he would miss the drummer.
[5] The Winchester born drummer has opted for a quieter life away from the band's hectic touring schedule. New Yorker
David 'Skully' Sullivan-Kaplan will take over the drums at the band's live shows until the end of 2009.
Razorlight will have a busy
summer in
2009. With a top 5
album and
single in
Germany, the band head to
America,
Australia and
Europe before returning to the
UK for shows in May at
The O2 and
Manchester Evening News Arena followed by UK
festivals.
Discography
- Up All Night
(2004)
- Razorlight
(2006)
- Slipway Fires
(2008)
References
- UK Top 20 Albums @ Top40-Charts.com - 40 Top 20 & Top 40 Music Charts from 25 Countries
- http://www.nmefestivals.com/t_in_the_park/news/112932
- NME: Bands caught up in spy poison scandal [1]
- Strange Glue: Razorlight Plan New Album For November [1]
- NME: Andy Burrows quits Razorlight [1]