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SILVERCHAIR
Press
Release, December 14, 2007
Press
Release, 2007 ARIAS
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Release, July 12, 2007
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Release, June 28, 2007
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Release, June 18, 2007
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Release, May 21, 2007
SILVERCHAIR:
THE HISTORY
Silverchair are one of
the most acclaimed and successful bands in Australian music history.
They have had five #1 albums in their homeland, which is more than
any other local group (Midnight Oil had 4, AC/DC and Crowded House
each had 3). They’ve sold over six million albums and their
most recent release – Young Modern – is the
fastest seller of their extraordinary career to date.
The group’s members
were all born in 1979 in the Newcastle surf suburb of Merewether.
Singer/guitarist Daniel Johns and drummer Ben Gillies started making
music together at primary school and schoolmate Chris Joannou later
joined on bass. They got their big break in mid-1994 when they won
a national demo competition conducted by SBS TV show “Nomad”
and Triple J.
The band changed its
name from Innocent Criminals to Silverchair and in August 1994 they
released their winning demo – a track called “Tomorrow”.
The song eventually spent six weeks at #1 on the Australian singles
charts and 20 weeks in the top 10. In 1995 it became the most played
song of the year on U.S. modern rock radio.
Silverchair’s debut
album frogstomp, recorded in just nine days in early 1995,
was a raw sounding slab of alternative rock. A #1 hit in Australia
and New Zealand the disc went on to become the first Australian
album since INXS to hit the U.S. top 10, selling more than 2.5 million
copies throughout the world. As frogstomp and “Tomorrow”
propelled Silverchair to music superstardom through 1996 the group
juggled memorable performances on the roof of Radio City Music Hall
and tours with Red Hot Chili Peppers alongside full time schooling
commitments back home in Newcastle.
The trio also found time
that year to record their sophomore album Freak Show which
was released in February 1997. A more adventurous piece of work
than frogstomp this disc yielded three top ten singles
in Australia - “Freak,” “Abuse Me” and “Cemetery.”
Global sales eventually exceeded 1.5 million copies in spite of
the fact that the band had to juggle world tours while trying to
finish their final year of high school.
After finally graduating
from school, the band was able to spend much more time creating
their critically lauded breakthrough, Neon Ballroom which
was released in March 1999. The group’s songwriter, Daniel
Johns had been battling personal demons as he attempted to adjust
to Silverchair’s sudden success and he poured these experiences
into his new batch of songs. Determined to shake the constant musical
comparisons that had previously dogged his band, Johns created a
truly original sounding album. Fusing heavy rock with orchestral
flourishes and synthetic touches with powerfully emotional lyrics,
the dark and haunting Neon Ballroom was universally acclaimed
as a huge creative leap for Johns and his bandmates.
Silverchair toured extensively
in support of the album, propelling it to even stronger worldwide
sales than they had achieved with Freak Show. In Europe
and South America it became the group’s most successful album
to date due to the Comet Award winning “Ana’s Song”
- a track about Daniel Johns’ battles with an eating disorder.
Elsewhere, distinctive tracks like “Emotion Sickness”
and the aching “Miss You Love” established the group’s
staying power once and for all.
The band toured Europe
and the U.S. throughout 1999 including appearances on leading festivals
such as Reading and Bizarrefest. After all this touring Silverchair
announced that they would be taking a 12-month break during 2000
to recharge their batteries.
Having fulfilled their
initial recording contract the group was pursued by labels for much
of this year off. At the end of 2000 they announced that they had
signed new deals and as a result their former label released two
compilation albums over the following years without the band’s
involvement.
Silverchair’s one
and only gig in 2000 was a sold out appearance at Australia’s
Falls Festival on New Years Eve. It was followed on January 21,
2001 by the biggest show of their lives - 250,000 people at Rock
In Rio - a performance which the band describe as the highlight
of their career to date.
In June 2001 the band
started work on their fourth album, Diorama. This time
Daniel Johns set out to explore even more new musical territory.
A range of other musicians were drawn in to contribute to the disc,
most notably the legendary Beach Boys and U2 collaborator, Van Dyke
Parks who contributed orchestral arrangements to three tracks including
a lush epic called “Luv Your Life.” Also helping out
again were Neon Ballroom sidemen, Paul Mac and Jim Moginie.
The album saw Johns embracing
melody and combining it with brighter lyrics than most of his previous
works. It was a huge creative leap, which also saw the band exploring
a vast array of instrumentation and musical styles.
Diorama means
“a world within a world.” It was a particularly apt
name as this evocative work lifts you out of the everyday and carries
you into a world of its own. According to Rolling Stone magazine
in its four and a half star review, the album was “one of
the boldest musical statements ever made by an Australian rock band.”
Diorama entered the Australian
charts at #1 in April. It yielded the top 10 singles “The
Greatest View” and “Without You” and the top 20
hit “Luv Your Life” as well as the airplay favourites
“After All These Years” and “Across The Night.”
The album’s international
performance was unfortunately impeded by the band’s inability
to tour or do promotional appearances due to Daniel Johns’
ill health. The singer/guitarist spent 2002 battling a severely
debilitating case of reactive arthritis from which he is now completely
recovered. Nevertheless, even without any of the usual promotional
support the album has reached #12 in Germany and the top 40 of numerous
other countries including Holland, Sweden and Brazil. However, the
group’s inability to tour in support of the release still
made the middle of 2002 a very frustrating period.
This all began to change
in October 2002 when the band’s work on Diorama won them six
ARIA Awards (Australia’s Grammies) including “Best Group”
and “Best Rock Album.” In a last minute surprise the
trio returned to the stage to deliver a searing performance of “The
Greatest View” which catapulted their album back into the
national top 10.
The disc went on to be
certified five times platinum in their homeland. In spite of the
musical challenges presented by the album and the band’s inability
to tour or promote it, in Australia at least Diorama still
managed to attract the biggest audience of any Silverchair release.
From March to June of
2003 Silverchair finally got to play the album live. Their “Across
The Night” tour sold out around their homeland in minutes
and was the largest of their career. The band also played multiple
sold out shows in South America, the U.S., Canada and the U.K.
This remarkable tour
capped a roller coaster year for Silverchair – a year which
in many ways traced the journey of Diorama itself –
from bleak times into a much happier new dawn. The event was captured
in a multiplatinum CD/DVD set called Live From Faraway Stables that
was released in late 2003.
The band then went on
an indefinite hiatus. Daniel Johns collaborated with Paul Mac to
create an acclaimed gold selling album as The Dissociatives and
the group toured Australia and the UK. Chris Joannou was nominated
for an ARIA award for his production work with The Mess Hall while
under the banner of Tambalane, Ben Gillies recently recorded an
album with some friends that showed his longstanding love of James
Brown style funk. Throughout this time the group repeatedly refuted
media reports that they had split up – pointing out that they
were just taking an open ended break and that they would make music
together again when the time was right.
That time finally came
when Silverchair and their management helped pull together the unforgettable
Waveaid benefit concert at the Sydney Cricket Ground on January
29, 2005. The event drew a sold out crowd of 55,000 people and saw
a ‘who’s who’ of Australian music raise over $2,500,000
for the victims of the Asian tsunami. The undeniable spark that
the band felt together in the rehearsal room and onstage at that
extraordinary show rekindled their desire to start making another
album together later that year.
And so the decision was
made to regroup but to “remove all the pressure” that
had surrounded the band since the explosive reaction to their first
CD. Not only did that involve an unhurried and quite secretive creative
approach, it also meant the band taking the highly unusual step
of choosing to fund the entire album themselves so as to avoid a
repeat of the creative clashes that occurred with their US label
during the recording of Diorama. The focus was on the three
guys recapturing the “sense of endless possibilities”
that they had when they first started out.
The group did a few big
Australian shows in March/April ’06 to roadtest some new songs
and to help build a warchest to fund the venture. Then they headed
to another house in LA where tracking commenced in a backyard studio
called Seedy Underbelly. The album that eventuated – Young
Modern - melds elements from each of the band’s previous
works while somehow seeming more cohesive than anything they’ve
done since their debut.
The disc was released
in Australia on March 31, 2007 and like all of their albums it debuted
at #1. It also rocketed past double platinum sales faster than any
of the previous releases propelled by the lead track “Straight
Lines” which became their biggest hit since “Tomorrow,”
racking up a month at #1 on both the singles and airplay charts.
Young Modern is scheduled for release in the US on July
24, 2007 through Warner Music Group’s Independent Label Group
(ILG).
On this new album Daniel
shared the producer role with Nick Launay who had helmed earlier
‘chair albums Freak Show and Neon Ballroom.
Diorama producer, David Bottrill was brought in as mixer
Paul Mac was again on hand for keyboard duties as he was with the
group’s two previous albums and legendary Beach Boys collaborator
Van Dyke Parks reprised his Diorama role penning orchestrations
for three songs. In keeping with the free spirited nature of the
process his sections were recorded in Prague … as you do when
you’re seeking 80 piece orchestras.
(By the way, this seems
as good a place as any to mention that in addition to being a fine
summary of the intent behind the album, “Young Modern”
is also the nickname that Mr. Parks has used for Mr. Johns since
they first met.)
Silverchair’s intent
is clear from the brash guitar wail and the pounding drums and bass
that give liftoff to the album’s opening track, “Young
Modern Station.” “The band is back together” exclaims
an exuberant Daniel Johns a few seconds into the song and it’s
impossible to argue the point.
Then it’s straight
into the slow burning epic “Straight Lines” before things
take a memorable left turn with the deranged dreaming of “If
You Keep Losing Sleep.” Glorious sweetness follows with “Reflections
Of A Sound,” the three parts of “Those Thieving Birds”
and the beautiful “Waiting All Day” while a more twisted
and edgy band steps out on ‘side two’ with rougher tracks
like “Man Who Knew Too Much,” “Mind Reader,”
“Low” and “Insomnia.” Then to top it all
there’s the album closer “All Across The World”
– a warm final embrace that’s made to measure for the
spirit of this album.
This new album is the
latest step in an extraordinary journey. Even though the members
of Silverchair are still only 27 years old the trio has already
had five consecutive number 1 albums in their homeland. They’ve
received 39 ARIA Award nominations over the last 12 years and they’ve
sold over 6 million albums around the world. Their music has evolved
hugely since their teenage years and they’ve grown into critical
darlings – a feat that seemed highly unlikely back in the
mid-‘90s.
To top it all, just a
few months back they were the only artist other than U2, Radiohead
and The Beatles to have three of their albums make the top 100 most
popular Australian CD’s of all time in a big ABC TV poll (Diorama
came in just behind Midnight Oil’s classic 10…1
as the most popular Aussie album on the list).
But the challenge of
living up to this amazing history is not one that Daniel Johns finds
daunting.
“It took me a long
time to realize that the sound Ben, Chris and I make when we play
my songs is something special,” says the Silverchair frontman.
“I’ve been thinking a lot since we finished the album
about were this fits into the other stuff we’ve done. The
way I see it the first album was naivety, the second one
was anger, the third one was depression and the
last one was escapism. Young Modern is all about
acceptance. It’s about embracing who we are as band
and just really enjoying ourselves because that’s all that
really matters. Hopefully listening to this album will make other
people feel what we feel when we play these songs together because
I’ve finally figured out that that’s a very special
feeling.”
For more information
please visit:
www.chairpage.com
www.myspace.com/silverchair
Media Contacts:
Amanda Cagan @ ABC PR – 818-990-6876 – acaganpr@aol.com
Andrew Steinthal @ ILG – 212-707-3086 –
Andrew.Steinthal@WMG.com
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