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Gomez are an English indie rock band from Southport, comprising Ian Ball (vocals, guitar), Paul "Blackie" Blackburn (bass), Tom Gray (vocals, guitars, keyboards), Ben Ottewell (vocals, guitars) and Olly Peacock (drums, synths, computers).The band is distinguished in having three singers and four songwriters, employing traditional and electronic instruments. Their sound is versatile and evades typical music genres falling into blues, indie, alternative, rock, folk, psychedelic and experimental.
Their first album, Bring It On, won the Mercury Music Prize in 1998, giving them much media attention in the UK and throughout the world. Later awards came from the NME and Q Magazine along with a Brit Awards nomination.Gomez began their career on Hut records (Virgin) signing in 1997. Just before their third album release In Our Gun Hut records was forced to downsize and on the following record, Split the Difference, Hut records was disbanded by Virgin/EMI Records. The band were so dismayed by the music industry and shocked by huge setbacks they kept experiencing, that they decided to go it alone and asked Virgin Records to let them go in 2004. The following year American label ATO signed the group, releasing their first live album Out West and their most successful record stateside How We Operate and A New Tide.
Currently the band members are split between the UK and US with Ian Ball residing in Los Angeles, Olly Peacock in Brooklyn, New York, and Paul Blackburn, Tom Gray and Ben Ottewell in Brighton, England.Ball has released two solo records entitled Who Goes There (2007) and Unfold Yourself (2013). Ball and Peacock worked on the side project Operation Aloha. The experimental project designed by photographer Christopher Wray-McCann brought together 14 of his friends, living in tree houses making songs with whatever they could bring to the island of Maui, Hawaii.
Ball, Ottewell, Peacock and Pattison (engineer) created the Final Keep Me Up in 2009. They decided to record an album using only iPhones in the back lounge of the tour bus from Calais to Köln 2 May 2009. The album exists only in streaming form. Ben Ottewell has released two solo records entitled Shapes & Shadows (2011) and Rattlebag (2014).
Formation - Guitarist and vocalist Ian Ball and drummer Olly Peacock are long-time friends, having played in a 3 piece band from the ages of 14 to 18. They met bassist Paul Blackburn and multi-instrumentalist Tom Gray, who had grown up two doors down from Peacock, at college. Finally, Ian Ball met vocalist/guitarist Ben Ottewell from Matlock Bath in Derbyshire at Sheffield University.
The band played its first gig together in 1996 in Leeds at the Hyde Park Social Club on Ash Grove. At the time, they did not have a formal name. The band left a sign out which read "Gomez in here" for a friend of theirs whose surname was Gomez to indicate that it was the site of their first gig. People saw the sign and assumed that the band's name was Gomez. The name stuck.
The band started recording four-track demos in Peacock's father's garage in Southport during the summer of 1996. The demos were handed to Stephen Fellows (later manager/Comsat Angels) who distributed them to four initial record labels. A bidding war erupted immediately, including several U.S labels. The band, having only one performance under their belt, decided against playing showcases in London and instead made the record companies travel to Red Tape rehearsal studios. After several weeks of playing to over 25 labels, the band finally signed to Hut records (Virgin Records), in September 1997.
In 1998, Philips Electronics chose Gomez to cover The Beatles' song "Getting Better" for a $100 million ad campaign for Philips new lines of flat panel and high-definition television sets.The cover song was not released on an album until 2000 with Abandoned Shopping Trolley Hotline, a collection of B-sides and rarities.
They were also one of the many bands featured on a John Lennon Tribute aired on BBC Radio2 to mark the 25th anniversary of the musician's death. Gomez performed "Hey Bulldog" by The Beatles, and "[url= !]Instant Karma![/url]" by Lennon.
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Must admit was never a big fan, but some well good tunes. But I can mind back at t in the park 2002, Id promised my mate I would go watch them with him, this was weeks before the final line up came out. Turned out Joe Strummer was starting about 1/2 an hour earlier in king tuts. I am a Clash fan and only now 37 so had never seen them live ,he's no but I managed to drag him in. It was brilliant, playing loads of Clash tunes, mainly early stuff too. Wee G had his alarm set for Gomez so he was dragging me out until White Man In Hammersmith Palais came on - I refused to move, wound up having to bribe him to listen to that 1 tune. Told him if I dont know I will will ever get the chance to hear this live again so I am not leaving. I got to hear that tune, but not the rest of the gig as I had to go see Gomez. Strummer died 5 months later. Sorry for the Hijack, but I still have a go at the Wee Man about it now.
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We only scored 6 wrote:
Must admit was never a big fan, but some well good tunes. But I can mind back at t in the park 2002, Id promised my mate I would go watch them with him, this was weeks before the final line up came out. Turned out Joe Strummer was starting about 1/2 an hour earlier in king tuts. I am a Clash fan and only now 37 so had never seen them live ,he's no but I managed to drag him in. It was brilliant, playing loads of Clash tunes, mainly early stuff too. Wee G had his alarm set for Gomez so he was dragging me out until White Man In Hammersmith Palais came on - I refused to move, wound up having to bribe him to listen to that 1 tune. Told him if I dont know I will will ever get the chance to hear this live again so I am not leaving. I got to hear that tune, but not the rest of the gig as I had to go see Gomez. Strummer died 5 months later. Sorry for the Hijack, but I still have a go at the Wee Man about it now.
I was at the Gomez gig at T in the Park that year and was also faced with the tough decision to watch them instead of Strummer.Clash fan myself and also liked some of Strummer's solo stuff.
I'd seen Strummer support The Who just a few weeks before though so opted for Gomez.They were brilliant i thought.Only time i've seen them live.
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Seen them 4 times over the first 2 albums
i thought In Our Gun was fucking shite but Split the Difference better -after that i lost interest
the Beta band were far superior.These are their best 2 tracks
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The first album is cracking. 2nd one is ok. Lost interest after that.
Agree with Edmonds comment about the Beta Band
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Never cared much for The Beta Band.
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The Beta Band probably my favourite bad ever, saw them live about 8 times. Superb every time. Their last ever gig was the best gig I ever went to. Left me with bloody tinnitus though as was stuck with head next to a speaker on the balcony all night.
Last edited by We only scored 6 (01/8/2015 7:35 am)