Revolution by Night

For the similarly named Blue Öyster Cult album, see The Revölution by Night.
RBN UK
Also known as Revolution By Night, RBN, RBN UK
Genres Futurepop, Synthpop, ebm
Instruments Synthesizer
Years active Mark I 1994–1999, Mark II 2000–2005, Mark III 2006 to 2012
Associated acts 'stok:'holm, DKAG
Members Steve Weeks, Bryon Adamson, Phil Eaton.

Revolution By Night were an electronic music band based in London, UK. Often referred to simply as 'RBN', the only continuous members of the band were founding members Steve Weeks (vocal/keyboards/programming) and Bryon Adamson (keyboards/programming), with Phil Eaton (keyboards) joining in 2006.

Revolution By Night Mk 1 - 1994 to 1999

Revolution By Night were originally a 4 piece band featuring vocalist Steve Weeks and bassist Bryon Adamson which was heavily influenced by bands such as Fields of the Nephilim and The Sisters of Mercy. They recorded the full length album 'Breathe' in 1994, which was released the following year. No further releases followed other than a handful of compilation album tracks, and the group split in 1999.

Revolution By Night Mk 2 - 2000 to 2005

In late 1999, having previously unrealised ambitions in this area, Steve Weeks set up a small home studio and began working on new synth-based material and together with Bryon Adamson began to develop a new sound following a full-blooded electronic approach. The first fruits of their labour surfaced at the following year’s Wave-Gotik-Treffen festival in Leipzig, where the band played a synthesiser heavy set debuting the Weeks penned track 'Faithless'.

In June 2003, the Faithless EP was released. Featuring remixes of the title track by Ronan Harris of VNV Nation and Tom Shear of Assemblage 23, the EP contained two other new songs, 'Schadenfreude' and 'Higher Ground (voxless)' and two reworked older songs. With the EP reaching No. 14 in the DAC (German Alternative Chart) and No. 3 in the Belgian Side-line chart, the band again made an appearance at the Wave-Gotik-Treffen festival in Leipzig. The VNV Nation remix went on to become a dance floor hit at the Slimelight club in London, where Steve Weeks still DJs to this day.

RBN then spent most of 2004 and 2005 all but on hiatus due to personal reasons and although new material was written during this time, all of it was subsequently scrapped.

RBN (aka Revolution By Night mk 3) - 2006 to 2012

In 2006 the band relaunched supporting Covenant on their 2006 UK tour, playing a set of almost all new songs. A steady following began to develop, mainly in the London scene, with RBN supporting many of the scene's well known names. The following year saw the band's remix of the Reaper track 'X-Junkie' released on Reaper's CD 'The Devil Is Female', which reached number one in the German DAC chart in January 2008. Writing continued during the year for what would become the 'City Lights' album. Pre-production studio work on the album was completed by mid-2010 and handed over to producer Krischan Wesenberg from Rotersand, and the finished album slated for release in 2012. In November 2010, Weeks remixed Komor Kommando's track "Shrapnel".

With steadily growing success, RBN seemed destined for much bigger things, but 2011 and 2012 saw little public activity from the group.

In November 2012, RBN changed their name to 'stok':holm,[1] and finally released the much delayed 'City Lights' album on 1 January 2013.

To date, Stok:holm have played no live dates, nor produced any new music. Steve Weeks is currently working with 2 London DJs (Emmerick Gortz and Steve Wilkins) in the band DKAG.

Discography

Revolution By Night (Mk I)

RBN (Revolution By Night Mk II and III) / Stok:holm

Remixes for other artists

References

  1. "http://www.stok-holm.com". Retrieved 27 November 2012.

[1]

External links

  1. http://www.last.fm/label/RBN?ac=rbn