hey willpower
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
hey willpower | |
---|---|
Also known as | willpower, Hey Willpower |
Origin | San Francisco, California |
Genre(s) | Dance, Pop, R&B, Crunk |
Instrument(s) | Electronic |
Years active | 2003 - present |
Label(s) | Cochon Records (US) Tomlab (Europe) |
Website | http://www.heywillpower.com/ |
Members | |
Will Schwartz (vocals), Tomo Yasuda (electronics), Justin Kelly (dancer), Erin Rush (dancer), Christelle (keyboardist and DJ), Mecca (dancer) | |
Former members | |
Donal Mosher, Chelsea Starr (dancers) |
hey willpower is an American pop band, led by vocalist Will Schwartz and electronic musician Tomo Yasuda (usually known simply as "Tomo"), with rotating collaborators including musicians and dancers.
Contents |
[edit] History
hey willpower was formed by Will Schwartz (one of the "queer alt-rockers" [1] of Imperial Teen) and San Francisco musician Tomo Yasuda (of The Boy Explodes), under the name willpower in San Francisco during July 2003.[2] They had to change their name to hey willpower by December 2004 [3] after receiving a cease and desist order from an artist called Will Power. [4] Schwartz started the project to explore his interest in dance pop and R&B music, which he had no outlet for in his other band. [5]
Schwartz and Tomo began gigging in the San Francisco area in late 2003, eventually launching US and then European tours. The pair recruited dancers to liven up their shows; first Donal Mosher and Chelsea Starr,[6] and later Erin Rush and Justin Kelly. [5] In 2007, they toured Europe with a dancer named Mecca, and a keyboardist and DJ named Christelle.[7] hey willpower have opened for bands including Scissor Sisters, Le Tigre, and Peaches."[8]
In the US, hey willpower released a self-titled EP through Cochon Records in 2005 (which went out of print and was re-released as Dance in 2007). Singles for "Double Fantasy II" and "Hundredaire" were released, with music video clips directed by the band's own Justin Kelly. 2006 saw a European-released LP titled PDA, from Tomlab. In 2006, the band also contributed to a duet version of Norweigan electronic pop singer Annie's song "Chewing Gum."[8] [7]
In press, Will Schwartz has spoken effusively about his love for radio-friendly, danceable pop music, how emotionally and physically he is moved by it, and the pleasure he feels from seeing an audience move around and make some noise. [5] He has name-dropped the likes of Janet Jackson, L'Trimm,[2] Michael Jackson, Prince, Gwen Stefani, Justin Timberlake,[5] and Missy Elliott [9] as influences to hey willpower's sound. Schwartz has noted that some audiences disregard dance pop music like the kind he makes with hey willpower as being without musical integrity or value; as opposed to the sort of indie rock, post-punk music he makes with Imperial Teen. Schwartz refutes and rejects these attitudes.[4] [5] The music video for "Double Fantasy II" carried a John Lennon and Yoko Ono-inspired concept that urged viewers to "give dance a chance."
[edit] Discography
[edit] Albums
- hey willpower EP (2005)
- PDA (2006)
- Dance EP (2007)
[edit] Singles
- Double Fantasy II (2005)
- Hundredaire (2005)
[edit] References
- ^ "Joy of singles: Imperial Teen's Will Schwartz goes pop with his bubbly side project, hey willpower" - The Advocate 13 September 2005 retrieved from FindArticles.com
- ^ a b hey willpower Biography by Will Schwartz - heywillpower.com
- ^ "Name games" - San Francisco Bay Guardian December 2004
- ^ a b "Pop Goes the World" - San Francisco Weekly February 2005
- ^ a b c d e "Free Will" - San Francisco Bay Guardian May 2005
- ^ "Willpower" - San Francisco Bay Guardian January 2004
- ^ a b hey willpower MySpace
- ^ a b hey willpower Official Website
- ^ The Stranger August 2004