Ampere (band)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ampere
Image:Http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2359/1861487713 03f943c155 o.jpg
From left: Andy, Will, Stephen, and Meghan of Ampere
Background information
Origin Amherst, MA (USA)
Genre(s) Hardcore, Screamo
Years active 2002 – Present
Label(s) Ebullition Records, No Idea Records, various
Members
Will Killingsworth
Andy Skelly
Meghan Minior
Stephen Pierce

Ampere is a DIY punk band based in Amherst, Massachusetts known for their short (10-15 minutes) but extremely loud and intense live shows. The band has put the importance of DIY punk ethics at the forefront of their lyrics and are known for the particular attention they bring to their vegan principles.

The members of the bands have been involved in the DIY punk scene for a number of years with the most notable being guitarist Will Killingsworth, who played guitar in Orchid, Laceration and Bucket Full of Teeth and who continues to run his Clean Plate record label and Dead Air recording studio where the band records all of their music. Drummer Andy Skelly played drums in both The Last 40 Seconds and Wolves, Stephen's previous bands were Montcalm and The Last 40 Seconds; he currently also plays guitar in self-destructive supergroup Aerosols featuring members of Wasteland, Cut Up, and Northern Aggression. He also briefly ran Distort, an independent record store in Northampton, Massachusetts (May '06 - December '06). Meghan played bass in Stop The Clock and Unicoroner sang in Relics on their first 7".

Much like Orchid, Ampere (especially earlier albums such as "All our Tomorrows End Today") often borrow some of their lyrics from philosophers and revolutionaries such as Guy Debord. They have preserved some of the "intellectual" punk seen in bands like Orchid, Sinaloa, Native Nod, Current, and others. In all of their endeavors, Ampere has persisted in their commitment to intellect, art, and sincerity.

The band actively tour in the US and completed a tour of Europe with Sinaloa in March 2006. A split record on Ebullition Records between the two bands was released in time for the tour, along with a 7" of their early recordings and a four-way split 11" with Death to Tyrants, Wasteland and Daniel Striped Tiger which was recorded live at Dead Air. Since then, a split 12" comprised completely of cover songs was released with Das Oath.

2007 was a productive year for the band, encompassing a brief Japanese tour as well as three new split records; a 6" with Ringers on No Idea Records, a 9" with Funeral Diner put out jointly by Clean Plate and The Electric Human Project, and a 7" picture disk with France's Daitro on Clean Plate/purepainsugar.

In 2008, an Australian-tour-only split 7" with Off Minor was released. Both bands contributed a previously-released but compilation-exclusive song from an Animal Rights benefit CD on Exotic Fever. It is Ampere's most-limited release to date (aside from the cassette format of the demo tape) at a scant 300 copies. Each band took 150 for their respective jaunts down under and made different packaging.

[edit] Discography

  • Demo 7"/Tape 2002 (Self-Released)
  • Wolves/Ampere Split 7" 2003 (Moganono Records)
  • All Our Tomorrows End Today 10"/3" CD 2004 (Ebullition)
  • Welcome The Plague Year/Ampere split 5" 2005 (Clean Plate/Turnstile)
  • First Recordings 7" 2006 (purepainsugar)
  • Ampere/Death to Tyrants/Wasteland/Daniel Striped Tiger split 11" 2006 (Clean Plate)
  • Ampere/Sinaloa Split LP/CD 2006 (Ebullition)
  • Das Oath/Ampere Split LP+CD 2006 (Self-released)
  • Ampere/Daitro Split 7" picture disc 2007 (Clean Plate/purepainsugar)
  • Ampere/Ringers Split 6"/7" 2007 (No Idea Records)
  • Funeral Diner/Ampere Split 9" 2007 (Clean Plate/Electric Human Project)
  • The First Five Years CD 2008 (Yellow Ghost)
  • "Ampere/Off Minor Split 7"" 2008

[edit] External links

Languages