Blakfish

Blakfish
Origin Birmingham, England
Genres Mathcore, Math Rock
Years active 2000–2010
Labels Big Scary Monsters, Hassle Records, Zankyo, Richter Collective
Associated acts &U&I, Vietwow!, †Hymns†, Greatest Hits, Vehicles, Teletext, Kids Margherita, Robert Fruit
Website myspace.com/blakfish
Members Thomas Peckett
Sam Manville
Richard Lee
Robert 'Wiz' Wisely

Blakfish was a mathcore band, also described as 'death pop' by the NME, The band from Birmingham, England[1] formed in the year 2000 after meeting and becoming friends at school, contrary to their frequent fabricated claims that they all met in juvenile prison.

The band was perhaps best known for its live shows and relentless touring schedule, which led to it being labeled by many as one of the hardest-working bands in the country. In 2007 Blakfish became the full-time job of the members, and in 2008 they went on to play over 200 shows in over 10 countries topping that in 2009 with another 200 shows in 16 countries.[2] They played shows with, amongst others, Hell Is For Heroes (on their farewell tour) and Tubelord. In 2010 they achieved a support slot on the Biffy Clyro European tour,[3] which ultimately lead to the demise of the band, which they announced on their Myspace blog.[4] The band split up mid-tour following the departure of guitarist and vocalist Sam Manville. They had been scheduled to play shows in Tokyo and Osaka later in the year with 65daysofstatic. Plans were also shelved to record their 2nd album, again in Seattle with Chris Common. Only 7 instrumental demos were recorded in Lewes with producer Nick Kinnish, never to be released.

History

Formation (2000–2010)

Blakfish recorded their first EP, Dirty Import, in 2004, and followed this up a year later with the 4-track myforteistimetravel.[5] In 2007 they recorded a gapless 3-track EP named Gold. After this they signed to Big Scary Monsters, and in 2008 their fourth EP, See You In Another City was released, to a largely positive reception. See You In Another City was produced by Jason Wilson at Stakeout Studios.[6] The track "Jeremy Kyle Is A Marked Man" featured on the computer game Colin McRae: Dirt 2,[7] as well as receiving airplay from 4 different presenters on BBC Radio 1.
2009 saw the release of their one and only album, Champions, recorded by Chris Common at the Redroom Studios Seattle.[8] The band were stopped at an airport along the way and were questioned about the content of their lyrics book, which contained the dark lyrics to "9th Base". This experience was visited in the album track "Randy Sage - True American Hero" (Randy Sage was an airline pilot they met at the airport).[9] The album for the most part was widely praised; Kerrang! rated the album 4/5, and Rock Sound gave it a 9/10,[10] whilst NME was amongst the minority that did not enjoy the album, giving it a 1/10 rating, despite naming the band as "ones to watch" in 2009. The album was later re-released in a limited edition known as 'French Champions'. Each unit was handmade and utilised real gold leaf for the cover art.
They also recorded a Christmas single for Christmas 2009 once again with Nick Kinnish, named "Missing You (The True Meaning Of Christmas)", in which Rich and Wiz both sang as well as Thom and Sam. The single was released for free download on their website, along with an accompanying video.[11] The band handed out wrapped up CD-Rs at their Christmas show at The Flapper in Birmingham, claiming it to contain the single; however, the discs instead contained hardcore pornography. They performed the song live for the first and final time at this show.

Post-Blakfish (2010-Onwards)

In February 2010, Blakfish were touring Europe with Biffy Clyro, playing shows in Germany, Switzerland and Spain. In Bilbao, Sam announced he felt he could no longer continue as a member of Blakfish, and left the band with immediate effect. The remaining three members decided they would continue as a band - but this band would not be Blakfish.[12][13] The band pulled out of the remaining shows in Bilbao and Barcelona, and canceled a UK-wide tour scheduled for March, as well as shows in Japan with 65daysofstatic later in the year.

A 'Blakfish and Friends' farewell show took place on 19 March 2010 at The Flapper in Birmingham, with friends of the band filling in for Sam's vocals and guitars. Guest performers included Toby Hayes of Shoes And Socks Off and Meet Me In St. Louis (band), Steven Bachelor and Richard Buckley of Shapes, and members of Soni~Quella and The James Cleaver Quintet Jack Saunders (vox) Jimmy Diego (bass) Maud E Licious (guitar) Mackerel Skarrington (drums). Tickets for the event sold out on the first night they went on sale. Support came from Shapes, The James Cleaver Quintet and Conquistadors. Fifty screen prints of the poster for the show were made available, as was a re-issue of See You In Another City containing 9 additional tracks of b-sides and rarities.[14] At the final show, Thom, Rich and Wiz debuted a track named "You're A Guy", the first public performance of their new material for a new three-piece band.[15]

After the band broke up, Thom, Rich and Wiz officially formed "&U&I" and released EP 'Kill the Man that Shot that Man' on ondryland Records and full length LP 'Light Bearer' the following year. Sam has created 2 bands, one called "Vietwow!"[16] with Toby Hayes (Meet Me In St. Louis, Shield Your Eyes, Shoes And Socks Off), Alex Wiezak (Youves) and Bob D'Mello (Super Tennis) and a 2-piece named "†Hymns†" with former SOS drummer Peter Reisner. †Hymns† released their debut double album 'Cardinal Sins/Contrary Virtues' in January 2012 on Big Scary Monsters .[17] He also continues to work on his solo project "Greatest Hits".[18]

In 2010, Rob played drums on a project with On The Might Of Princes guitarist and singer, Jason Rosenthal. Following Rosenthal's death in August 2013, plans were made to finish and release the material.

On 24 August 2012, marking three years to the day since the release of Champions, Leeds-based magazine Musical Mathematics celebrated the first ever Blakfish Day, encouraging fans to celebrate the band's music and career.[19] This was also the first and last time that Blakfish's 2nd album demos were heard, via Musical Mathematics' website.[20]

Band lineup

In interviews and media, the band generally were generally referred to by their stage names.

Song Meanings

The lyrics to Blakfish songs were generally about things which annoyed them.[21] Some examples include:-

This was not the only inspiration for songs though, some other song meanings include:-

Discography

Albums

01. Economics
02. Ringo Starr - 2nd Best Drummer in The Beatles
03. Your Hair's Straight but Your Boyfriend Ain't
04. If the Good Lord Had Intended Us to Walk He Wouldn't Have Invented Rollerskates
05. We Beg, We Borrow, We Steal
06. I Saw a Car on Fire There Once
07. The Closer to the Bone, the Sweeter the Meat
08. Randy Sage - True American Hero
09. I'm Laughing Now... But It's No Joke
10. 9th Base
11. Scotland's Worst Invention

EPs

01. Preparing For Guests
02. My Stomach Feels Like My Throats Been Cut
03. Jeremy Kyle Is A Marked Man
04. Make Your Bed And Lie In It
05. Carnival Of Carnivores
Bonus tracks:
06. Leaving Home (Dirty import, 2002)
07. 22nd (myforteistimetravel, 2005)
08. Death of a Soap Star (myforteistimetravel, 2005)
09. Captain Burns (Gold, Live, 2007)
10. The Curriculum Vitae of Uri Gagarin (Carnival of Carnivores demo, 2008)
11. Sh*t On My Face and Tell Me I'm Simon Cowell (Ringo Starr - 2nd Best Drummer In The Beatles demo, 2008)
12. Jeremy Kyle Is A Marked Man (Game version, 2009)
13. Charmer (Kings Of Leon cover - Rollerskates b-side, 2009)
14. A Day In The Life (un-used b-side, 2009)

01. Preparing For Guests
02. My Stomach Feels Like My Throats Been Cut
03. Jeremy Kyle Is A Marked Man
04. Make Your Bed And Lie In It
05. Carnival Of Carnivores (listed in some places as 'Carnival Carnivore')

01. Captain Burns
02. Merry Fucking Xmas
03. Planes, Trains And Obese Women

01. 22nd
02. Superpowers
03. Death Of A Soapstar
04. Cooking Can Be Child's Play

01. Leaving Home
02. Senile
03. Clifton

Other

References

  1. "The Myspace page for Blakfish". Retrieved 18 March 2010.
  2. Harrington, Kirk. "Ondryland: Blakfish". Retrieved 21 March 2010.
  3. "Alter The Press!: Blakfish To Support Biffy Clyro In Europe". Retrieved 23 March 2010.
  4. "The End - Blakfish". Retrieved 18 March 2010.
  5. "Zimbio: Interviews Blakfish". Retrieved 21 March 2010.
  6. Douch, Kevin. "Big Scary Monsters Recording Company". Retrieved 21 March 2010.
  7. "The Sixth Axis: Colin McRae: Dirt 2 Soundtrack Revealed". Retrieved 21 March 2010.
  8. Harrington, Kirk. "Ondryland: Blakfish". Retrieved 21 March 2010.
  9. Jones, Dan. "Rock Midgets: Track By Track: Blakfish - Champions". Retrieved 21 March 2010.
  10. "Rocksound: Review for Blakfish - Champions". Retrieved 23 March 2010.
  11. "Youtube: Blakfish - Missing You (The True Meaning of Christmas)". Retrieved 23 March 2010.
  12. "Rock Sound". Retrieved 18 March 2010.
  13. "The End - Blakfish". Retrieved 18 March 2010.
  14. "Rock Sound". Retrieved 18 March 2010.
  15. "Youtube: Blakfish - You're A Guy (New Song For Their New Band)". Retrieved 23 March 2010.
  16. "Myspace: Vietwow!". Retrieved 3 June 2010.
  17. "Myspace: †Hymns†". Retrieved 3 June 2010.
  18. "Myspace: Greatest Hits". Retrieved 3 June 2010.
  19. http://musicalmathematics.co.uk/24th-of-august-is-blakfish-day/
  20. https://soundcloud.com/musical-mathematics/sets/blakfish-2nd-album-demos
  21. Jones, Dan. "Rock Midgets: Track By Track: Blakfish - Champions". Retrieved 21 March 2010.
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