Shooting At Unarmed Men
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Shooting At Unarmed Men | |
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Origin | Cardiff, Wales |
Years active | 1999 – Present |
Label(s) | Too Pure |
Members | |
Jon Chapple Chris Drane Richmond Brain |
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Former members | |
Simon Alexander Tom Cooper Julian Tovey Steve Morgan |
Shooting At Unarmed Men is the music project of former Mclusky member Jon Chapple (vocals/guitar), Steve Morgan (drums), and Big Joan member Simon Jarvis (bass). The original bassist for the band's formal incarnation was King Alexander member Simon Alexander (bass/vocals), although the band had existed as a sporadical joke since circa 1999. Alexander also co-wrote the mclusky song "Chases", from the mclusky Do Dallas album.
They released their first mini-album, Soon There Will Be..., on Too Pure Records, on 17th October 2005. The second, "Yes! Tinnitus!" was released on May 22nd 2006 - however, Chapple has since moved to Melbourne, Australia for two years (the band played their last gig in the Northern Hemisphere on April 16th 2006 at Cardiff's Clwb Ifor Bach, where Chapple also sold most of his books, videos and some of his records). Since emigrating, Chapple has assembled an Australian incarnation of the band with members of the bands The Cheats and Riff Random - Tom Cooper and Julian Tovey. Chapple hinted at the possibility of maintaining two distinct versions of the band in order to play shows on both continents.[1] During October 2006, the band played a weekly residency at the Tote in Melbourne, played at the Melbourne show in the Big Day Out festival in January 2007 and continue to be an active part of the local music scene.
The band released their third album Triptych - a 3 disc record - on August 11, 2007, the first with the Australian line-up.
Contents |
[edit] Discography
[edit] Singles
- The Pink Ink (26th September, 2005)
- Girls Music (8th May, 2006)
- Somestimes The Best Thing You Can Do Is Die (31st March, 2008)
[edit] Albums
- Soon There Will Be... (17th October, 2005)
- Yes! Tinnitus! (22nd May, 2006)
- Triptych (31st March, 2008)
[edit] External Links
[edit] References
- ^ Aversion.com: Anger and Other Virtues, by Matt Schild, accessed 17 October 2006