Geneva | |
---|---|
Origin | Aberdeen, Scotland |
Genres | Alternative rock Art rock Indie |
Years active | 1992–2000 |
Labels | Nude Records |
Website | Official archive site |
Members | |
Andrew Montgomery Steven Dora Keith Graham Stuart Evans Douglas Caskie |
Geneva were a British indie band from Aberdeen, Scotland.[1]
Contents |
The band were formed in 1992 by vocalist Andrew Montgomery and guitarist Steven Dora. They recruited second guitarist Stuart Evans, bass player Keith Graham and finally drummer Craig Brown. Craig was later replaced by Douglas Caskie. Originally the band were called Sunfish.[1]
One of their demos found their way to Suede’s record label, Nude, who signed the band in 1996. The band changed their name, originally to Garland, then later to Geneva, and released their debut single "No One Speaks" the same year. The band garnered enough press to headline NME's annual Bratbus tour of up and coming bands in early 1997. The band released second single "Into the Blue" to coincide with the tour.
The band fitted well with the current musical scene and were well promoted by the UK music press of the time. As a reaction to the fading Britpop scene many bands rejected the laddish ideals of bands like Oasis and wrote darker, more intelligent songs. Montgomery’s high pitched vocals were often compared to Suede.[1]
Geneva released their debut album, Further, early in June 1997. The album mixed power pop with darker brooding songs. It reached #20 in the UK Albums Chart, and included amongst others the NME voted "Single of the Year", "Tranquilizer", plus "Best Regrets", "No One Speaks" and "Into the Blue".[1]
The second album, Weather Underground, was released in March 2000, after more than a year of wrangling with the band's record label. It was preceded by the single "Dollars in the Heavens" and followed by the single "If You Have To Go". The band split later that year.
Following the breakup of Geneva, Montgomery embarked on a number of musical collaborations, most notably with American composer Ben Neill and Leeds electronica guru Overseer. Montgomery formed a band called Amityville with guitarist Stuart Peck and drummer David Bevis; they released the Pacific Radio Fire EP in 2004 to critical acclaim - a limited release, it quickly sold out. Amityville broke up in late 2005 and Montgomery formed a duo with Keris Howard called St Famous. In March 2009 Montgomery announced on the band's Myspace page that Keris Howard has decided to leave and St Famous is a solo project now. Montgomery continues to collaborate with a number of musicians and record producers.
Evans and Graham formed 69CORP and released an album, Our Present to the Future in 2005, although 69CORP now consists of just Graham.
Montgomery also appeared in the 'Identity Parade' in the BBC Television television programme, Never Mind The Buzzcocks.
Releases | ||
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↙Studio albums | 2 | |
↙Singles | 8 |
Year | Title | Chart Positions |
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UK Albums Chart[2] | ||
1997 | Further
|
20[3] |
2000 | Weather Underground
|
117 |
Year | Song | UK Singles Chart[3] | Album |
---|---|---|---|
1996 | "No One Speaks" | 32 | Further |
1997 | "Into the Blue" | 26 | |
"Tranquillizer" | 24 | ||
"Best Regrets" | 38 | ||
1999 | "Dollars in the Heavens" | 59 | Weather Underground |
2000 | "If You Have to Go" | 69 | |
"Cassie" / "Have You Seen the Horizon Lately?" (Promo) | – | ||
Musecone 1 (Promo) | – |