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British
Sea Power are:
Yan,
vocals and guitar.
Noble, guitar.
Hamilton, bass and vocals.
Wood, drums.
Eamon, keyboards and percussion.
British
Sea Power play amplified rock music and are based in Brighton,
East Sussex. Over the past couple of years, they have variously
found themselves sharing tea and talk with Julian Casablancas,
John McEnroe, Jarvis Cocker, Julian Cope and Jeremy Vine (just
to stick to the letter Js). You have to ask yourself, how
on earth did this happen?
The British
Sea Power story really started in Kendal, Cumbria, up beside
the English Lake District. It was here that brothers Hamilton
and Yan attended the same school as drummer Woody. After finishing
his exams, Yan relocated to Reading, Berkshire, where he met
a guitarist from Leeds called Noble. Hamilton and Wood came
down to Reading to join the jamwagon and, in essence, British
Sea Power had begun. However, it wasn't until the band moved
to Brighton that anyone noticed.
In Brighton,
BSP began to stage their own Club Sea Power night. This was
2001, the year which also saw the release of the band's first
record, the single Fear Of Drowning on their own Golden Chariot
label. With beech branches arcing up over the amplifiers and
a plastic peregrine falcon peering out at the crowd, Club
Sea Power soon became a byword for a remarkable night-out.
At the bar you might see a group of young women, DIY BSP tattoos
inked lividly on cleavage. On stage you might see The Copper
Family, English folk legends led by the then 88-year-old Bob
Copper. The tattoos turned out to be temporary, but Club Sea
Power had enduring effect. One Friday, Rough Trade boss Geoff
Travis came down to Club Sea Power. Soon after, he offered
the band a recording contract.
British
Sea Power's first record on Rough Trade was a single called
Remember Me, released in late 2001 (this song would later
be re-recorded and, in 2003, give the band their first Top
30 single). In 2002, British Sea began to find themselves
playing alongside a series of fine groups. In June, they supported
Pulp on their Forestry Commission tour. Playing in the middle
of forests from the Scottish Highlands to East Anglia, BSP
had a lovely time. Of particularly fond memory is the evening
they took Jarvis Cocker out to see the Nightjars in Thetford
Forest, Norfolk. This enigmatic bird is best seen at dusk
and can be attracted by waving a white handkerchief (in imitation
of the bird's white wing spots). Jarvis waggled his handkerchief
with abandon.
By this
point, BSP were gaining a reputation as a astonishing live
act. A Rolling Stone review of the 2002 Reading festival dismissed
all the other performances in a couple of lines, before dwelling
on the BSP set at length: "Fuck this puerile drivel,
we're going to see British Sea Power... All of them have crazy
acid-fried stares, the bass player is wearing tree branches
on his head and one deliriously psycho-delic tune concludes
with singer Yan beating on the drum-kit with a large stuffed
owl. British Sea Power rule."
In January
2003, British Sea Power supported The Flaming Lips in Britain.
By this point, BSP had expanded to a five-piece, with the
addition of Eamon on keyboards and marching drum. It is generally
held that Eamon is the most notable player to have emerged
from Gloucestershire since Laurie Lee. On the second Flaming
Lips date, BSP walked into soundcheck to find the Oklahoma
trio solemnly playing the BSP instrumental Heavenly Waters.
In March and April 2003, BSP toured nine European countries
with Interpol.
The debut
BSP album, The Decline Of British Sea Power, was released
in June 2003. It was an ambitious work, ranging from visceral
70-second blasts called Favours In The Beetroot Fields to
the beautifully structured anthemicism of Carrion. There was
also Gregorian chant and the 14-minute keystone of Lately.
The latter took in references to George Formby, the novels
of LP Hartley and the Scandinavian sea lanes of the Kattegat.
Clearly this could all have been a terrible mess. Yet, the
album wore its scope well and drew resoundingly favourable
reviews. "Stadium-sized melodies and exquisite songwriting,"
said MOJO. "Out of this world... a dazzling debut,"
said the NME. The Sunday Times simply decided that BSP were
"The best band in Britain." The LP was also ringingly
endorsed by David Bowie, Radiohead, Lou Reed and the nice
young man who plays Harry Potter. The Decline Of British Sea
Power has now been certified silver in the UK (60,000 sales).
The band
celebrated the album's release with festival dates and, then,
their own shows. In November 2003, BSP were supported by an
impressive new band called The Killers. These dates saw BSP
hit by an an unlikely injury. BSP bassist and singer Hamilton
had climbed a tree to gather a few branches for stage decoration.
In Keystone Kops style, he sawed through the branch he was
hanging onto and fell to the ground. A severe wrist injury
meant that night's show was abandoned, while this unlikely
story shot around the world's news wires. This, seemingly,
was the way to publicity. The band discussed which of them
would now stand on a rake, who would volunteer to plummet
down an open manhole.
The year
2003 concluded with BSP supporting The Strokes in Britain
and Spain. There were two nights at Alexandra Palace in London
and it was here that BSP met John McEnroe. Yan and Noble found
themselves debating premium-strength beers with the tennis
star. McEnroe argued loudly in the cause of Carlsberg Special
Brew, while Noble fought the corner for Gold Label barley
wine.
The globe-spanning
BSP tour schedule bore fruit at the Time Out Awards in January
2004. BSP were presented with the award for Live Band Of The
Year. The group were pleased to note that previous winners
at the awards included Brian Wilson and Sir John Gielgud.
BSP's April tour of Scotland and England concluded with a
riotous, sold-out show at Shepherds Bush Empire. BSP festival
appearances this year included Glastonbury and the prestigious
opening slot on the main stage at Fuji Rock in Japan.
BSP spent
much of 2004 working toward their second album. Songs were
demoed in a barn up on the South Downs, beside the ancient
chalk-hill figure The Long Man Of Wilmington. The album was
recorded at Rockfield Studio in South Wales and at Kore Studios
in West London.
The majority
of the album was recorded with the tireless Norwegian Mads
Bjerke and mixed by the great Bill Price. The latter has,
of course, worked with anyone from the Sex Pistols and The
Clash to Sparks, The Libertines and Fluffy. However, BSP were
particularly impressed to note that Bill is quite probably
the only man to have made records with both Joe Meek and Axl
Rose.
The second
BSP album is called Open Season. It is an album that retains
this band's peculiar power while adding new dimensions of
poise and prettiness. The time is right, then, to put your
money on British Sea Power. After all, please remember, the
less you gamble, the more you lose when you win.
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