Afterhours (band)

Afterhours
Background information
Origin Milan, Italy
Genres Alternative Rock, Indie Rock, Noise Rock
Years active 1985 – present
Labels Universal Records, Mescal Records, Vox Pop, Toast Records.
Website Afterhours.it
Members
  • Manuel Agnelli - vocals, guitars and keyboard
  • Giorgio Prette - drums (since 1991)
  • Giorgio Ciccarelli - guitars, keyboard (since 1999)
  • Roberto Dell'Era - bass (since 2005)
  • Rodrigo D'Erasmo - violin (since 2008)
  • Xabier Iriondo - guitars (1992-2001 and since 2010)
Past members
  • Paolo Cantù (guitars 1990-91)
  • Lorenzo Olgiati (bass 1990-91)
  • Max Donna (drums 1990-1991)
  • Alessandro Zerilli - bass (1991-1997)
  • Davide Rossi - violin (1994-1997)
  • Andrea Viti - bass (1997-2005)
  • Dario Ciffo - violin - guitars (1997-2008)
  • Enrico Gabrielli - keyboard, sax, percussion, flute, chorus, mouth organ, xylophone (2006-2009)

Afterhours is an Italian alternative rock band. The name is a tribute to the same-titled Velvet Underground's song.

Biography

The Afterhours were formed in 1985 in Milan around Manuel Agnelli, a Velvet Underground fan. They debuted in 1987 with the single My bit boy, followed a year later by the EP All Good Children Go to Hell. The band has released two albums and two EPs in English. Since Germi (1995), the group switched to Italian language, except for Ballads for Little Hyenas, produced by Afghan Whigs leader Greg Dulli, who also played with the group in a 2006 tour in the United States. Afterhours also served as the Italian backing band to Greg Dulli and Mark Lanegan’s Gutter Twins project and Agnelli co-wrote two songs with Dulli on the latest Twilight Singers album Powder Burns.[1] In 2009, the band won the "Mia Martini" Critics Award at the Sanremo Music Festival. In the same year they released the compilation "Il paese è reale" ("The country is real") aiming to advance the Italian indie rock scene. In 2014 the band released a double special edition of their most famous album Hai paura del buio?, containing a Remastered version of the original album and a new disc (called Reloaded) where every song was reinterpreted by a different artist, including John Parish, Afghan Whigs, Mark Lanegan, Damo Suzuki, Nic Cester and Joan as Policewoman.

Discography

EP

Albums

Live

Collection

Other

DVD

Singles and Videoclip

Covers

Released songs

Live performances

References

  1. "Afterhours Bio". Retrieved 2017-01-20.
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