Headswim
Headswim | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Essex, England |
Genres | Alternative rock, indie rock, grunge |
Years active | 1992–2001 |
Labels | Crush Records Epic Pet Sounds |
Past members | Daniel Glendining Tom Glendining Clovis Taylor Nick Watts |
Headswim were an English alternative rock band active during the 1990s, best known for their 1997 single "Tourniquet". Band members would subsequently go on to projects including BlackCar, Tenebrous Liar and Mew.
History
The band originally formed in 1989 in Essex, England under the name Blinder.[1] The initial lineup was Daniel Glendining (guitar/vocals), his brother Tom Glendining (drums), Nick Watts (keyboards/backing vocals) and Matt Pegg (bass guitar). The band's main influences were grunge and progressive rock and their most successful concerts were two support slots for It Bites in 1989[2] (one of which was to a capacity audience at the Hammersmith Odeon). Following Pegg's departure Blinder rethought their approach, reducing the progressive rock elements in their music. Pegg was replaced as bass player by a friend of the band, Clovis Taylor, and by 1992 Blinder had changed their name to Headswim.
Headswim’s first releases were two four-track EPs, Tense Nervous Head and Moment of Union on their own Crush Records label (the eight songs from the two EPs would later be compiled and released as the mini-album Tense Moments). The EPs made enough of an impression for them to be signed by the Sony Music subsidiary Epic Records in an eight-album deal[3] and they released their full-length debut album Flood in 1994. The album's third single "Crawl" made the UK Singles Chart and the band embarked on their first extensive tour of the UK and Europe. However, the death later that year of Dan and Tom's brother Matthew (who had created all of the band's album artwork up to this point) after a long battle with leukaemia had a profound effect on the group, who took time off to regroup.
Headswim re-emerged in 1997 with their second album Despite Yourself which contained many cathartic songs about death and spirituality. The group’s music had also shifted from their earlier grunge influences to a more reflective alternative rock sound more akin to artists such as Radiohead and Jeff Buckley. The lead single "Tourniquet" reached the Top 30 in the UK and was a minor radio hit in the U.S. Soon after, the band supported Kula Shaker on a U.S. tour. However, sales of the album did not live up to expectations and Sony made the decision to drop them. Subsequently the band released only one further single, "Dusty Road", in 2000 on the independent record label Pet Sounds in the UK, before splitting up in early 2001.
Following the group’s split, Daniel Glendining formed a new band, BlackCar, essentially a solo project with occasional contributions from other musicians. He also composed the instrumental film score for Lindy Heymann’s 2010 low-budget British film, Kicks.[4] Tom Glendining also plays drums for BlackCar, dividing his time between the group and another band, Tenebrous Liar[5] In February 2011 it was announced that Dan would be joining his brother Tom in Tenebrous Liar as their new guitarist[6] while continuing to work as BlackCar. Nick Watts now works as a graphic designer, but is still involved in the music business as he plays keyboards for the Danish alternative rock band Mew when they are on tour.[7]
Discography
Studio albums
- Flood (1994)
- Despite Yourself (1997 in USA, 1998 in UK & Europe) - UK No. 24
EPs
- Tense Nervous Head (1993)
- Moment of Union (1994)
- combined and released as the mini-album Tense Moments (1994)
Singles
- "Gone to Pot" (1994)
- "Soup" (1994)
- "Crawl" (1995) - UK No. 64
- "Tourniquet" (1997 in USA, 1998 in UK & Europe) - UK No. 30
- "Better Made" (1998) - UK No. 42
- "Dusty Road" (2000)
(highest UK chart positions taken from "British Hit Singles & Albums")[8]
References
- ↑ Biography on Matt Pegg's MySpace page
- ↑ Matt Pegg biography on Procol Harum homepage, accessed August 28, 2009
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Daniel Glendining's MySpace page
- ↑ Tom Glendining's MySpace page
- ↑ The Tenebrous Liar official website, news story 12 February 2011
- ↑ Interview with Nick Watts by Tero Heikkenen on MewX.info
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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