Nizlopi

Nizlopi
Origin Royal Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, England
Genres Folk, hip hop
Years active 2003–present
Labels FDM Records[1]
Website Nizlopi.com
Members Luke Concannon (vocals, guitar, bodhrán)
John Parker (double bass, beatbox)

Nizlopi /nɪzˈlɒpi/ are a two-piece alternative band with Luke Concannon on vocals, guitar,[1] and bodhrán, and John Parker on double bass, human beatbox,[1] and providing backing vocals.

History

The duo both grew up in Royal Leamington Spa, England.[2] and attended The Trinity Catholic School.[3] The band is named after a Hungarian girl whom Luke had a crush on at school.[4] After creating the band, they then began to perform throughout England, building up a small but loyal fan base. Future musical artist and performer Ed Sheeran was their guitar technician at many of their early shows and has stated they were a major influence on his musical style, favouring an acoustic guitar to more lush efforts.[5]

Half These Songs Are About You

In early 2004, they released their first album Half These Songs Are About You with FDM Records. In 2007, they received an Impala Platinum award recognizing sales of the album in Europe. It was produced by Gavin Monaghan, also known for his work with Scott Matthews and Robert Plant.

Their first release, "JCB Song", is their most successful song, and was written about the dyslexia suffered by Luke at school and his escape to accompany his father at work. It was released first as a single in June 2005, reaching number 160 in the UK Singles Chart. The single was then re-released in the UK later in the year in December, reaching number one the following week on 18 December 2005, selling more than twice the number of copies than their closest competitor, the band Westlife. Dermot O'Leary gave the track extensive airplay on his BBC Radio 2 show. Some bookmakers put it in the running for the honour of Christmas number one, but it was beaten by the winner of the second series of the UK version of The X Factor, Shayne Ward's début single, "That's My Goal".

The music video received widespread airplay, mainly on music television channel VH1, and was an animated video,[5] made by Laith Bahrani (aka Monkeehub), who also animated an unofficial video for an acoustic version of "Creep" by Radiohead.

In 2007, the duo received yet another Impala Platinum award recognizing sales of over 500,000 copies of the song across Europe.

Their follow-up single, released on 3 April 2006, was "Girls." The band have described the song's music video on radio interviews as "Tim Burton-esque". The video was directed by Karni & Saul of Flynn Productions, and was the first video that the band appeared in. Like "JCB," the song was first released on the Internet.

Limited radio play meant the song did not chart in the UK top 40.

The ExtraOrdinary EP

A mini-EP (extended play) containing six songs and titled ExtraOrdinary, was released on 4 September 2006. The six tracks included two that had been released before — "Helen" and "Yesterday" - which were previously released on the "JCB" and "Girls" EPs respectively. The record is an attempt to strip down the orchestral production of their early work to represent the duo's vibrant live sound.

The EP contained the track "Homage To Young Men," a spoken-word piece written and performed by Alastair McIntosh. McIntosh was inspired to write this piece after working with Concannon and performed live twice with the band. The band have likened Alastair's performances to "..the howlings of a wild animal". McIntosh is well known for his contributions to the Scottish version of 'Thought for the Day' and has been dubbed "The Rapping Reverend".

The second album

The second album, titled "Make It Happen," was released on 31 March 2008. The album was recorded with producer Phil Brown who had formerly produced artists such as Bob Marley. The album was recorded on 2-inch tape, a traditional style of recording said to create a more 'raw' sound that is popular with musicians preceding the era of digital recording technology. The album included guest appearances by Martyn Barker (percussion/drums), Andy Simms (piano), Jonnie Fielding (violin), Jack Hobbs (vocal/scratching), Rory Simmons (trumpet), Kadially Kouyate (kors & Senegalese vocals), The Individuals Dedicated to the Ministry of Christ choir and a contribution by the poet Benjamin Zephaniah.

The release was preceded on 17 March 2008 by a digital single, "Start Beginning". In November of that year they completed a tour entitled "Last Nights on Tour." Afterwards they announced using both their official website and on social media website Myspace that they would be taking the year 2009 off and would meet while travelling in Cuba to discuss the band's future.

Dissolution of the duo

The band members confirmed that they split on 10 February 2010,[6] when an e-mail was sent out to all mailing list subscribers confirming that the band had split up after being together for 7 years, with Concannon stating:

"And that after many wild meanderings and much confusion I feel I must go on, on my own from here. That my dream is now to do another project, not Nizlopi, and to build a new life. So, this is good bye from Nizlopi. We are no more! Wow, there you go I said it. Scary as it is." Luke Concannon[7]

Concannon announced that he was working on a solo album and had planned to set up his own website by 2011 via the band's mailing list and previewed new material on Touch FM's 'First Break Show'.[8][9][10] He had also been taking part in song-writing workshops.[11]

Reformation

The split ended with an announcement on their website in late 2011 "Luke and John got back together" to headline a one-off charity concert at the Union Chapel in London on 22 November 2011.

After the performance, they took yet another break, but finally announced new playing dates in July 2013 for the rest of the year.

Live shows

In between recording albums, they have aggressively toured since early 2000. They are known for crowd involvement at their gigs, giving an energetic performance. They often improvised, even going so far as to invite people up on stage to sing and dance or unplugging and going into the crowd themselves. They took part in 'Healthy Concerts' or 'gigs in digs' where artists play in someone's house. On 14 October 2008, Nizlopi played an intimate version of "Answers" on a balcony overlooking Camden Lock for the music viral show BalconyTV.[12]

They have toured with and shared gigs and stages with a diverse range of artists, touring the UK and Europe with Jamie Cullum, joined Christina Aguilera for two nights at Wembley Arena, toured Ireland with Damien Dempsey, opened Gigbeth festival with Mr Hudson and The Library, duetted with Billy Bragg at the Hackney Empire, and been supported at headline shows by Newton Faulkner and Duke Special amongst others.

The band had been able to take in a great number of venues of note, headlining shows at the Shepherd's Bush Empire and at Indigo2 at the O2 Arena (formerly the Millennium Dome). They were also popular regulars on the festival circuit, having performed to crowds for years at Glastonbury Festival, Wireless Festival, Ireland's Fleadh, Cambridge Folk Festival and Solfest.

The duo have delighted fans by announcing that they are to make a small number of one-off appearances on the festival circuit this year including 'Lainfest'[13] (Headlining Saturday night) in August 2013 and 'Barn On The Farm' in July 2013.[14] The band successfully held the "mini-tour," but have not announced any new dates in the press on their website.

Discography

Albums and EPs

Singles

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Nizlopi Discography at Discogs", Discogs.com, 2009, web: dcogs-Nizlopi.
  2. "Nizlopi – Free listening", Last.FM, 2011, web: Last-Nizlopi.
  3. "Nizlopi's new sound". Leamington Courier. 4 September 2006.
  4. Nizlopi - O2 Wireless Interview Retrieved 14 August 2009
  5. 1 2 "One-Hit Wonders at the BBC". 17 April 2015. BBC Four. Missing or empty |series= (help)
  6. Nizlopi official website, retrieved 16 September 2011.
  7. Nizlopi official website Retrieved 10 February 2010
  8. First Break Show on YouTube. Accessed 2 October 2010.
  9. First Break Show on YouTube. Accessed 2 October 2010.
  10. First Break Show on YouTube. Accessed 2 October 2010.
  11. Warwick Records. Accessed 2 October 2010.
  12. "NIZLOPI - Video Archive". Balcony TV. Retrieved 2012-04-18.
  13. . Accessed 30 March 2013.
  14. . Accessed 30 March 2013.

External links

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