The Revs
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- This is an article about the Irish rock band. For the Major League Soccer team, see New England Revolution.
The Revs | ||
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Background information | ||
Origin | Kilcar, Co. Donegal, Ireland | |
Genre(s) | Indie rock Punk rock |
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Years active | 2000–present | |
Label(s) | Haldern Pop, Evelyn | |
Website | http://www.therevs.com/ http://www.myspace.com/sver | |
Members | ||
Rory Gallagher John McIntyre Michael O'Donnell |
The Revs are an indie rock band from Kilcar, Donegal, Ireland. The group consists of three childhood friends: Rory Gallagher (named after the famous blues guitarist Rory Gallagher and who had previously released the album 20th Century at the age of 18) on bass guitar and vocals, John McIntyre (guitar, vocals) and Michael O' Donnell (drums, percussion). They formed on the eve of the millennium with an aim to "change the face of Irish music".[citation needed]
Contents |
[edit] History
Early on, The Revs music courted controversy because of their attacks on manufactured pop. The group's targets included 'Louis Walsh' (Louis Walsh being the svengali behind Westlife and Boyzone, amongst others). Their debut album SonicTonic achieved gold status, despite being a low-budget and independent live release, and drew comparisons to The Police, Weezer and Supergrass.
They followed this up with the stand-alone singles Tuesday, Monday and Loaded before the debut studio album Suck in February 2003. This album (recorded in Trackmix Studios, Clonsilla, Dublin) entered the charts gaining them many new fans, as well as pleasing the ones who had assembled en masse due to their constant touring across Ireland and the UK. The songs are an eclectic mix of punk rock, surf guitars, pop-rock and indie, similar to Pixies, Radiohead and Muse, with paranoid lyrics (influenced by Bill Hicks) expressing their conflicting love and distaste with the world.[citation needed]
Taking a lengthy break during which they decided upon a change of direction, wrote dozens of songs and roadtested them in small venues around Ireland, they returned in November 2004 with a sample of the music that was to come: a new single Broken?, backed with Ode to Saint Susie, Patron Saint Of Supermarkets. They now sounded more like The Flaming Lips, Big Star or The Smiths, with their love of Radiohead still shining through, and this release confused the public who had dismissed them. During the months that opened up 2005, they recorded their third album, The Revs, in Malmö, Sweden with Tore Johansson, the producer behind Franz Ferdinand and The Cardigans.
This LP was released on October 14, 2005, following the single Time Slippin in September. Despite being their most critically-acclaimed release to date, it was their least commercially-successful album in Ireland. A successful European tour of Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium and France followed in 2006, alongside the well received European release of The Revs.[1]
In January 2007 Rory Gallagher of the Revs announced on the band's official forum that they were taking a break of "indefinite" length.[2] Their manager Shea McNelis has insisted that the band have not broken up.
[edit] Discography
[edit] Albums
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[edit] Singles/EPs
Release date | Title | Label |
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2001 | Wired To The Moon | Treasure Island |
2001 | Alone With You | Treasure Island |
2002 | Tuesday Monday/Turnin' Japanese | Treasure Island |
2002 | Loaded | Treasure Island |
2003 | Death of a DJ | Treasure Island |
2004 | Broken? | Evelyn |
2005 | Time Slippin' | Evelyn/Haldern Pop |
2006 | Every Monkey | Haldern Pop |
[edit] Video
[edit] Notes
- ^ "New Irish dates added for December". therevs.com.
- ^ "The Revs - Official Website Forum Index". therevs.com