My Bloody Valentine (band)

My Bloody Valentine (band)
My Bloody Valentine

My Bloody Valentine performing in 2008
Background information
Origin Dublin, Ireland
Genres Alternative rock,[1] shoegazing,[1]
noise pop,[1] dream pop,[1] indie pop[1]
Years active 1983–1997
2007–present
Labels Tycoon, Lazy, Creation, Sony, Sire
Website www.mybloodyvalentine.co.uk
Members
Kevin Shields
Bilinda Butcher
Debbie Googe
Colm Ó Cíosóig
Past members
Dave Conway
Tina Durkin
Joe Byfield

My Bloody Valentine are an alternative rock band formed 1983 in Dublin, Ireland. The band's founding members are guitarist/singer Kevin Shields and drummer Colm Ó Cíosóig. The lineup during the band's late 80s/early 90s heyday included singer-guitarist Bilinda Butcher and bassist Debbie Googe after the band settled in London.

As My Bloody Valentine's music progressed, their use of distortion, pitch bending, and digital reverb resulted in a sound that came to be known as shoegazing. The group's 1991 critically acclaimed album Loveless took two years to make mostly due to funding problems. Following Loveless, My Bloody Valentine became inactive, with Shields recording and shelving several albums' worth of follow-up material. In 2007, Shields announced that the band had reunited and were recording new material. The name of the band is taken from the 1981 horror film of the same name.[2]

Contents

History

Early history

Colm Ó Cíosóig and Kevin Shields met in the late 1970s as teenagers in Dublin. They quickly became friends and joined a local punk rock band named The Complex.[3] Toward the end of 1983, Shields and O'Ciosoig formed their own band with singer Dave Conway. Conway, who went by the stage name Dave Stelfox, suggested names such as Burning Peacocks before they settled on My Bloody Valentine.[4] The band was completed by Conway's girlfriend Tina, who played keyboards.

Gavin Friday of Dublin post-punk band The Virgin Prunes gave the group contacts that secured them a show in the Netherlands.[5] Based on getting that one gig, the band moved to Holland and ended up staying for three months. Due to a lack of opportunities and a lack of correct documentation, the band then moved to Berlin, where they recorded the mini-LP This Is Your Bloody Valentine. The record failed to have the expected impact, and, after four months, the band left Berlin, returning to Holland briefly before settling in London around the middle of 1985. Conway was the main songwriter in the early line-up, with Shields describing the process: "for each song he'd write about 3 pages of lyrics and usually me and Colm would pick out the bits we liked and David would sing that".[6]

Settling in London

After a period when My Bloody Valentine members lost contact with each other as they looked for places to stay, the band regrouped and decided to audition bass players. The band lacked a regular bassist and Conway's girlfriend had decided to leave the band, not feeling confident in her abilities as a keyboard player. Having been given the telephone number of a bass player in London, Debbie Googe, they invited her to audition, and, ultimately, to join the band, fitting in rehearsals around her day job.

At this point the band were rehearsing at Salem Studios, which was connected to the record label Fever Records. Impressed by what they heard, Fever agreed to release an EP. On the strength of this, Googe left her job, and the EP, titled Geek! was released in April 1986. The band soon began to play on the London gig circuit, but the record failed to make as much of an impact as the band had hoped. With the band's slow progress, Shields contemplated moving back to New York, where some of his family were living.

However, Joe Foster, an associate of Creation Records, had decided to set up his own label, Kaleidoscope Records, and persuaded the group to record for him. The EP, The New Record by My Bloody Valentine, was the result, released in October 1986. The band also began to step up their live appearances, developing a small following and venturing outside London for gigs supporting bands like the Membranes.

The band's next record was Sunny Sundae Smile, an EP released in March 1987 by Lazy Records, a label set up by The Primitives with their manager Wayne Morris. The label had been interested in My Bloody Valentine for a while, and the band turned to them this time due to Foster's indifference. The band then spent a few months performing in London and managed to secure a support slot with the Soup Dragons. During the shows with the Soup Dragons, Conway announced his decision to leave the band; he had been suffering with a gastric illness for a while and had become disillusioned with music.[6] Conway has since pursued a career as a writer.[6]

Conway departs and Butcher joins

Butcher on stage in 1989.

Conway's departure left the band without a vocalist, a situation they decided to remedy by placing advertisements in the music press. This process proved torturous, Shields noting, "It was pretty dangerous, I made the mistake of mentioning The Smiths because we liked their melodies, the whole thing was disastrous and excruciating, you should have seen some of the fruitballs we got."

The band eventually turned to recommendations and experimented with having two vocalists: Bilinda Butcher and Joe Byfield.[7] It soon became apparent that Byfield was unsuited to the band, and Shields took on second vocalist duties alongside Butcher; he noted she "sounded all right and she could sing one of our songs which sounded fine, we just had to show her how to play guitar." Shields was initially reluctant to take on a vocal role, but stated in 1988 "I've always sung in the rehearsal room, I've always made up the melodies."[6] With the new line-up in place, the band intended to leave the My Bloody Valentine moniker behind, but according to Ó Cíosóig "we never could think of a good enough name".[6]

Under pressure from Lazy Records to produce an album, the band compromised, citing the need for time to stabilize their line-up. The band agreed to record an EP followed by a mini LP. The EP, Strawberry Wine, consisted of three tracks and was released in November 1987. The mini-LP, titled Ecstasy, followed soon after in December. The EP has been described as "certainly the better of the two releases."[8] Ecstasy has been criticized as showing "a group who appeared to have run out of money halfway through recording,"[8] which was indeed the case. Ecstasy also suffered from production difficulties, as Shields described errors in mastering the recordings. These hardships were not surprising as the band were funding the studio time themselves; The deal with Lazy was that the label would do the promotion, the band paying for the recording.[8]

Creation Records

In January 1988 My Bloody Valentine played a gig with Biff Bang Pow!, a band that featured Creation Records owner Alan McGee as a member. The performance convinced McGee that they were the Irish equivalent to American band Hüsker Dü, and he approached the band after the show.[9] The band decided to record a single for the label. My Bloody Valentine recorded five songs at a studio in Walthamstow in east London in less than a week. Released as the EP You Made Me Realise, the release was the band's first to be largely well-received by critics.[10] The group followed with the EP Feed Me with Your Kiss and the album Isn't Anything (1988). The band's multi-layered guitar sound became a major influence on a number of new bands who the British music press grouped together under the shoegazing label.

Shields in 1989.

My Bloody Valentine began work on their second full-length album in February 1989. Shields said that Creation Records thought the album could be recorded "in five days"; he later recalled, "But when it became clear that wasn't going to happen, they freaked."[11] Work continued throughout the year. Shields and McGee agreed to release an EP prior to the album's release,[12] so the band recorded Glider, which was released in 1990. In May 1990 the band recorded a second EP, Tremolo (1991).[13] The band halted work on the album in order to tour behind the release of Glider in Summer 1990.[14]

It ultimately took My Bloody Valentine two years to finish their second album Loveless (1991). The making of the album was rumored to have cost £250,000 and to have nearly bankrupted Creation Records, claims which Shields has denied.[15] Reviews of Loveless were almost unanimous with praise.[16] The NME review of Loveless declared, "...however decadent one might find the idea of elevating other human beings to deities, My Bloody Valentine, failings and all, deserve more than your respect."[17] However, the album failed to perform commercially. Loveless peaked at number 24 on the British album charts, and failed to chart in the United States, where it was distributed by Sire Records.[16] Since its release, Loveless has remained a critical favorite, with the internet music publication Pitchfork Media naming Loveless the second greatest album of the 1990s.[18] However, McGee dropped My Bloody Valentine from Creation Records soon after the album's release because he could not bear working with Shields again; "It was either him or me", he told The Guardian in 2004.[19]

Post-Creation

My Bloody Valentine signed with Island Records in October 1992, reportedly for £250,000.[20] The band spent their advance on constructing a studio in a house in Streatham. The studio was completed in April 1993, but problems with the studio and attempts to repair them sent the band into "semi-meltdown" according to Shields.[21]

The group recorded very little, which included the contribution of a cover of a James Bond theme song to a charity compilation (We Have All the Time in the World), and a cover of the Wire song "Map Ref. 41 Degrees N 93 Degrees W" for the tribute album Whore: Tribute to Wire. Unable to finalise a third album, Shields isolated himself and, in his own words, went "crazy," drawing comparisons in the music press to the behavior of musicians such as Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys and Syd Barrett of Pink Floyd.[19] The other band members went their own ways during the period of inactivity following Loveless: Butcher contributed vocals to Collapsed Lung's 1996 single "Board Game,"[22] Googe had been sighted working as a cab driver in London[23] and formed the supergroup Snowpony in 1996,[24] O'Ciosoig joined Hope Sandoval & the Warm Inventions,[25] while Shields collaborated with Yo La Tengo, Primal Scream, and Dinosaur Jr.[26]

Rumors spread among fans of albums being recorded and then shelved. In 1999, it was reported that Shields had delivered 60 hours of material to Island.[20] According to sources, one was possibly influenced by jungle music.[23] Shields later confirmed that at least one full album of new material was abandoned. He said, "We did an album's worth of half-finished stuff, and it did just get dumped, but it was worth dumping. It was dead. It hadn't got that spirit, that life in it."[27] Shields later said to Magnet magazine, "We are 100 percent going to make another My Bloody Valentine record unless we die or something", and attributed the band's sparse output to a lack of inspiration.[28]

Reunion

In 2007 Shields announced that the band had reunited and that a new album they had started recording in 1996 was "3/4th finished."[29] In a 2007 interview with Ian Svenonius for the show Soft Focus, Shields speaks of releasing both the unfinished album and a record of new material.

In August 2007, internet rumors claimed that the band were negotiating a performance at the 2008 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival or were planning a world tour. Vinita Joshi, Kevin Shields' then-manager, said "there are no confirmed shows at all."[30][31][32]

On November 15, 2007, My Bloody Valentine announced three upcoming live gigs in the UK for 2008.[33] On June 13 and 14, the band played in public for the first time in fifteen years, offering a pair of 'Live Rehearsal' presentations at the ICA in London and officially starting their series of comeback performances.

Shields performing with the band in 2008.

The band went on to play a slew of festivals in Summer and Fall of 2008, which included the Roskilde Festival (Denmark, July 3–6), Festival Internacional de Benicàssim (Spain, July 17–20.),[34] Fuji Rock Festival 08 (Japan, July 25–27), Øyafestivalen (Oslo, Norway, August 5–8) and The Electric Picnic Festival (Ireland, August 29–31),[35] and Bestival 2008 (Isle of Wight, September 5–7). On September 19–21, My Bloody Valentine curated and performed at the 2008 All Tomorrow's Parties festival in Monticello, New York.

Following the festivals, the band played dates in New York, Chicago, Toronto, San Francisco, LA, and Austin in late September, early October.[36]

Following their appearance at the All Tomorrows Parties festival, the New York Times reported that Shields was planning to complete the unfinished album: "I realized that all that stuff I was doing in 1996 and 1997 was a lot better than I thought."[37]

The band played an exclusive small capacity club show at the Effenaar club in Eindhoven, Netherlands on May 25, 2009, nearly 25 years after the show they played there on November 24, 1984.[38]

My Bloody Valentine curated the All Tomorrow's Parties 'Nightmare Before Christmas' festival in December 2009, where they were obliged to perform on a smaller stage due to noise level issues. They played all three nights of the festival so that all attendees would be able to see them at least once.

Discography

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "My Bloody Valentine: Overview". Allmusic. Retrieved on 21 March 2011.
  2. ^ http://www.mybloodyvalentine.net/faq/index.html#02
  3. ^ McGonigal. p. 22
  4. ^ McGonigal, p. 21
  5. ^ McGonigal, p. 23
  6. ^ a b c d e Booth, Vachel (1988) "My Bloody Valentine: Weep For You", Underground, February 1988 (Issue 11), p. 25
  7. ^ Strong, Martin C. (1999). The Great Alternative & Indie Discography. Canongate. ISBN 0-86241-913-1. 
  8. ^ a b c my bloody valentine: to here knows web
  9. ^ McGonigal, p. 26
  10. ^ McGonigal, p. 27
  11. ^ McGonigal, p. 41
  12. ^ McGonigal, p. 44
  13. ^ McGonigal, p. 59
  14. ^ McGonigal, p. 47
  15. ^ McGonigal, p. 66
  16. ^ a b McGonigal, p. 97
  17. ^ Fadele, Dele. Loveless review. NME. 9 November 1991.
  18. ^ Pitchfork Media's Top 100 Albums of the 1990s.
  19. ^ a b Lester, Paul. "I lost it". The Guardian. 12 March 2004. Retrieved on 06 August 2007.
  20. ^ a b Stubbs, David (1999) "Sweetheart Attack: My Bloody Valentine's Isn't Anything is the Eighties rock album", UNCUT, February 1999
  21. ^ McGonigal, p. 101-102
  22. ^ Collapsed Lung, Bilinda Butcher vocals (compact disc). Board Game (music). Deceptive Records, London Records. BLUFF 034 CD. 
  23. ^ a b DeRogatis, p. 491
  24. ^ "My Bloody Valentine Exclusive Interview". Creation-Records.com. Retrieved on 24 August 2007.
  25. ^ Rondeau, Bernardo. "My Bloody Valentine – Loveless – PopMatters Music Review". PopMatters. 29 January 2003. Retrieved on 24 August 2007.
  26. ^ Phares, Heather. "Loveless: Review". Allmusic. Retrieved on 24 August 2007.
  27. ^ Raggett, Ned. "My Bloody Valentine -- interview with KUCI". KUCI. Retrieved on 23 August 2007.
  28. ^ "My Bloody Valentine set to record again". NME. 15 January 2007. Retrieved on 05 August 2007.
  29. ^ Cohen, Jonathan. "Shields Confirms My Bloody Valentine Reunion". Billboard. 07 November 2007. Retrieved on 08 November 2007.
  30. ^ "Believe It or Not: My Bloody Valentine reuniting for Coachella 2008?". http://www.thedailyswarm.com/swarm/believe-it-or-not-my-bloody-valentine-reuniting-for-coachella-2008/. Retrieved August 28, 2007. 
  31. ^ "My Bloody Valentine Reunion Likely!!!!". Archived from the original on October 11, 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20071011213301/http://tinymixtapes.com/My-Bloody-Valentine-Reunion-Likely/. Retrieved August 30, 2007. 
  32. ^ "My Bloody Valentine reunion? Amen!". http://popwatch.ew.com/popwatch/2007/08/my-bloody-valen.html/. Retrieved August 30, 2007. [dead link]
  33. ^ Official website. Retrieved on 15 November 2007.
  34. ^ "Festival Internacional de Benicàssim = FIB Heineken". FIB. http://www.fiberfib.com/. Retrieved 2008-04-04. 
  35. ^ "Electric Picnic 2008, Stradbally Estate, County Laois, Ireland". www.electricpicnic.ie. http://www.electricpicnic.ie/. Retrieved 2008-04-04. 
  36. ^ My Bloody Valentine Announce North American Tour! | Pitchfork
  37. ^ Reunited, Loud and Finding the Love By JON PARELES Published: September 22, 2008
  38. ^ www.effenaar.nl

Sources

  • Brown, Nick. "My Bloody Valentine" Spiral Scratch, February 1991.
  • Cavanagh, David. The Creation Records Story: My Magpie Eyes Are Hungry for the Prize. (London) Virgin Books, 2000. ISBN.
  • DeRogatis, Jim. Turn On Your Mind: Four Decades of Great Psychedelic Rock. Milwaukee: Hal Leonard Corporation., 2003. ISBN.
  • McGonigal, Mike. Loveless. New York: The Continuum International Publishing Group Inc., 2007. ISBN.
  • O'Hagan, Sean. "Daydream believers". The Observer. 18 May 2008. Retrieved on 2 January 2010.

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