Bailter Space

Bailter Space
Background information
Origin Christchurch, New Zealand
Genres Noise rock, shoegazing
Years active 1987 - approx. 2001
Labels Flying Nun
Matador
Turnbuckle
Associated acts The Gordons
The Skeptics
The Clean
Me You Us Them
Members
Alister Parker
John Halvorsen
Brent McLachlan
Past members
Hamish Kilgour
Ross Humphries
Glenda Bills
Todd Lindner
Ian Ljungquist

Bailter Space (a.k.a. Bailterspace) is an atmospheric noise rock band that formed in Christchurch, New Zealand in 1987 as Nelsh Bailter Space; they had previously recorded as The Gordons. Its members are Alister Parker (guitar, bass), John Halvorsen (bass, guitar), Brent McLachlan (drums/percussion, samples). After releasing seven studio albums, numerous EPs/singles and a career retrospective compilation, Bailter Space went on an extended hiatus in 2004. They returned in August 2008 to play the Bowery Ballroom in Manhattan.

Contents

History

Halvorsen, Parker, and McLachlan were in a band called The Gordons formed by John Halvorsen in 1980.[1] The Gordons released the three-song Future Shock EP in 1981, along with a video for the song "Adults And Children". Their debut self-titled LP came out later that year. The band then released the Volume Two LP in 1984, with Vince Pinker on bass in the absence of Alister, before disbanding circa 1985.[1] Flying Nun Europe (and subsequently Flying Nun proper) reissued The Gordons and Future Shock on one CD, while Volume Two remains unavailable.

Nelsh Bailter Space was formed by Parker and former Clean drummer Kilgour in 1987, initially completing the line-up with Glenda Bills on keyboards and Ross Humphries (also of The Terminals, and formerly of The Pin Group), later shortening its name to Bailter Space.[1][2] After a couple of singles, Bills and Humphreys left, with Halvorsen joining on bass, this line-up recording the Tanker album and the "Grader Spader" single, both produced by Brent McLachlan.[1] The band travelled to the United States where they played at the New Music Seminar in 1989, and when they returned, Kilgour opted to stay there with his new wife and form a new band, Monsterland.[2] Parker and Halvorsen recruited Mclachlan as the new drummer, recreating the original Gordons lineup. This line-up debuted with the Thermos album, recorded in 1989.[3]

After several releases on Flying Nun, and after changing base several times between New Zealand, Germany, and the US, New York City indie label Matador Records signed them for release in the United States, in approximately 1990. The 1992 The Aim EP was the band's first official U.S. release, and was released as two separate 7-inch singles in the UK, with both awarded "Single of the Week" by Melody Maker.[1][2] The band moved to New York City during the 1993 Robot World sessions. The EIP EP was released, containing slightly-remixed versions of two Robot World tracks and two that would appear on the forthcoming Vortura. Vortura would be followed a year later by Wammo.

After this, their U.S. releases came out on NYC-based label Turnbuckle Records, which folded circa 2002. In 2004, Matador Records deleted all Bailter Space releases from their catalog. The band's releases are now out of print, except for in New Zealand / Australia.

A career-spanning retrospective, Bailter Space, was issued in 2004.

In August 2008, Bailter Space emerged from a 4-year hiatus to perform live at the Bowery Ballroom in New York City. They were joined by new recruit Ian Ljungquist filling in on the bass.

Musical style

The band have often been compared to Sonic Youth, and they were once described as "The Sonic Youth of the Southern Hemisphere",[4] with Trouser Press describing their early sound as "hard, droning, unforgiving guitar music with occasional lapses into verse/chorus regularity".[5] By Tanker their sound had become more conventional.[5] With their relocation to New York, their sound also shifted, with the band's next releases described as "an unholy collision between Beatle harmonies and Velvet Underground dissonance", with Parker stating at the time that the band were getting into "the harmonic value of distortion; we started to be very particular about where we set the instruments up and the angles the sounds were bouncing at. From these harmonic experiments I became more interested in the actual melodic content of the music".[2] Pitchfork Media described them in 1999 as "a huge mess of sound that's simultaneously beautiful, jagged, atonal, and supremely melodic",[6] while another review in the same year described their sound as "one part Superchunk, one part Pixies, and one part Dinosaur Jr."[7]

Discography

Albums

Date Title Label Charted Certification Catalog Number
1988 Tanker Flying Nun Records (reissued on Matador Records with Nelsh EP on one CD, 1995) - - FNCD107, OLE 136
1990 Thermos Flying Nun (reissued on Matador, 1995) - - FNCD142, OLE 135
1993 Robot World Matador/ Flying Nun - - FNCD259, OLE 50
1994 Vortura Matador/ Flying Nun - - FNCD295, OLE 93
1995 Wammo Matador/ Flying Nun - - FNCD325, OLE 142
1997 Capsul Turnbuckle Records - - TR 5, FNCD375
1999 Solar.3 Turnbuckle - - TR 17
2004 Bailterspace Flying Nun - - FNCD484

EPs & Singles

Year Single Album Charted Certification
1987 "New Man" b/w "In A City Wardrobe" 7" 1 from Nelsh Bailter Space - -
1987 Nelsh Bailter Space 12" - - -
1988 Grader Spader 12" Tanker - -
1991 "Shine" b/w "The Unseen" 7" - - -
1992 "The Aim" b/w "We Know" 7" "The Aim" is a remake of band's '87 song "Our Aim" - -
1992 The Aim CD EP compiles the two previous 7"s onto one CD - -
1994 B.E.I.P. CD EP 2 from Robot World, 2 from Vortura - -
1995 "Splat" b/w "At Five" & "Fascination" 7" 2 from Wammo, 1 from Robot World - -
1995 Retro CD EP Wammo studio track + two '95 live tracks - -
1997 "Capsule" b/w "Argonaut" 7" Capsul - -
1998 Photon CD EP/ mini album - - -

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Strong, Martin C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, ISBN 1-84195-335-0, p. 211
  2. ^ a b c d Thompson, Dave (2000) Alternative Rock, Miller Freeman, ISBN 0-87930-607-6, p. 173-174
  3. ^ Ankeny, Jason "Bailter Space Biography", Allmusic, Macrovision Corporation
  4. ^ Jenkins, Mark (1994) "Bailter Space", Washington City Paper, Nov. 18 - 24, 1994 (Vol. 14, #47)
  5. ^ a b Moon, Tom "Bailter Space", Trouser Press
  6. ^ Schneyer, Jeremy (1999) "Bailter Space Solar 3", Pitchfork Media, 23 March 1999
  7. ^ Cuccaro, Mike (1999) "Bailter Space with 3D5SPD: The Point, Atlanta May 11, 1999", Ink 19

External links