Sweet Thing (band)

Sweet Thing
Origin Toronto, Canada
Genres Pop rock
Labels EMI
Website www.sweetthingmusic.com
Members
Owen Carrier
Nick Rose
Alex Winter
Morgan Waters
Tyler Kyte
Past members
Tim Nussey

Sweet Thing are a Canadian pop rock band based in Toronto who have been signed to EMI Music Canada since 2008.[1] They are best known for their singles "Dance Mother" and "Change of Seasons".

Contents

History

Band members are originally from Ottawa and Lindsay, Ontario, and Victoria, British Columbia.[2] Bassist Morgan Waters, guitarist Nick Rose, and drummer Tyler Kyte all had acting careers in Canada prior to the formation of Sweet Thing. (Waters won two Gemini Awards for the television series Cock'd Gunns and one for The Morgan Waters Show.)[3] The band took their name from the song by Van Morrison.[2] They cite such influences as The Beatles, The Band, Stevie Wonder, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Michael Jackson, Sloan, and Ted Leo.[4] They worked with producer Rob Schnapf (Elliott Smith, Beck) in Los Angeles for their debut album.[5] Billboard wrote that the album "is full of chiming guitars and chugging rhythms, recalling other guitar-based groups searching for a danceable groove like Franz Ferdinand."[1] Critic Ben Rayner of the Toronto Star wrote, " 'Lazy Susan' and 'Lorraine' prance like Spoon after a '70s soft-rock bender, while 'Winter Night' makes a run for the children-of-Coldplay club and succeeds with a smashingly universal and emotive girly-boy chorus."[6]

Sweet Thing toured Canada in 2010 to promote their debut album.[3]

Their single "Change of Seasons" was featured in the 2010 film Easy A starring Emma Stone and Amanda Bynes.

Band members

Discography

Track listing

  1. "Change of Seasons"
  2. "Lazy Susan"
  3. "Gun"
  4. "Winter Night"
  5. "Over Me"
  6. "Dance Mother"
  7. "Spider"
  8. "Lorraine"
  9. "Duotang"
  10. "Kite Fight"
  11. "We're on Fire Tonight"
  12. "Please"

- Produced & Mixed by Rob Schnapf

- Engineered & Miixed by Doug Boehm

References

  1. ^ a b Thompson, Robert (March 13, 2010). "Up-and-comers: Sweet Thing", Billboard 122 (10): 26.
  2. ^ a b Carpenter, Kyle (August 17, 2010). "Sweet Thing Figure Dancing Is Better Than Crying", Chartattack.com. Retrieved November 20, 2010.
  3. ^ a b Devlin, Mike (September 8, 2010). "Self-parody can be oh so sweet", Times-Colonist, p. C1.
  4. ^ "Sweet Thing", CBC Radio 3. Retrieved November 19, 2010.
  5. ^ Clevett, Jason (August 2010). "Damn Sweet: Toronto's Sweet Thing the Next Big Thing?", Gay Calgary (82). Retrieved November 5, 2010.
  6. ^ Rayner, Ben (August 17, 2010). "CD reviews: Sweet Thing: Sweet Thing", Toronto Star CD Reviews Toronto Star, p. E5.

External links