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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Londinium & Take My Head (19941999)  





1.2  Craig Walker era (20002004)  





1.3  Collective phase (2004present)  



1.3.1  With Us Until You're Dead  





1.3.2  Axiom  





1.3.3  Restriction  





1.3.4  The False Foundation  





1.3.5  25





1.3.6  Versions  





1.3.7  Call To Arms & Angels  









2 Members  



2.1  Band members  





2.2  Former members  







3 Discography  



3.1  Studio albums  





3.2  Soundtracks  





3.3  Compilations  





3.4  Live albums  





3.5  Live DVD  





3.6  Remix albums  





3.7  EPs  





3.8  Singles  







4 Entourage  





5 References  





6 External links  














Archive (band)






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Archive
Archive at Château Rouge, Annemasse in 2017
Archive at Château Rouge, Annemasse in 2017
Background information
OriginLondon, England
Genres
  • electronica
  • progressive rock
  • new prog
  • shoegaze
  • Years active1994–present
    LabelsIsland, Independiente
    MembersDanny Griffiths
    Darius Keeler
    Rosko John
    Dave Pen
    Pollard Berrier
    Maria Q
    Jonathan Noyce
    Steve Harris
    Karl Hinze
    Steve "Smiley" Barnard
    Steve Davis
    Holly Martin
    Mickey Hurcombe
    Lisa Mottram
    Past membersRoya Arab
    Suzanne Wooder
    Craig Walker
    Lee Pomeroy
    Dale Davis
    Websitearchiveofficial.uk

    Archive are a musical group based in London, England, whose music spans electronic, trip hop, avant-garde, post-rock and progressive rock.[1] Over their 28-year history, the band has released twelve studio albums and enjoyed established success throughout Europe.[2]

    History[edit]

    Londinium & Take My Head (1994–1999)[edit]

    Archive was formed in 1994 as a trip-hop band when Darius Keeler and Danny Griffiths formed up with Roya Arab and rapper Rosko John.[3] After releasing a few singles on their own label, they broke up in early 1996 following a dispute. A few months later, the group reformed with new personnel and began recording their debut album. Londinium was released on Island Records in September 1996. The album featured a mix of dark trip hop, electronica, string arrangements and classically influenced songwriting. However, creative differences on the follow-up resulted in the band once again breaking up.[citation needed]

    In 1997, Keeler and Griffiths regrouped and continued Archive with another female singer, Suzanne Wooder. In 1999, Archive released their second studio album on Independiente, entitled Take My Head. The album features a mix of pop and symphonic trip hop, far more melodic than its predecessor. Due to differences of musical taste with an undisclosed number of producers the band tried to work with on the album, they have described it as their least favorite album the band recorded.[citation needed]

    Craig Walker era (2000–2004)[edit]

    In 2000, Keeler and Griffiths began to demo new tracks for further studio production. After establishing a new sound to work with, the boys placed an advert in Mojo magazine, looking for a new lead singer. Craig Walker answered the advert and immediately began working with the band and singing on the tune that Darius wrote, entitled, "Again".

    Between 2002 and 2005, the band released three studio albums with Walker to further growing popularity and critical acclaim. "You All Look The Same To Me" (2002), "Noise" (2004), and "Michel Vaillant" were albums that marked a turning point of the Archive sound that gradually turned away from their roots in electronica and trip hop and towards more of a psychedelic and progressive style. One of the three composed albums was the soundtrack to the French film Michel Vaillant, released in November 2003. In winter of 2014, teaser music from the band's upcoming album was used for a TV advertisement for Meetic.[4]

    In November 2004, Archive began their European tour without Walker, posting on their website that Walker would not be joining the band as he has left Archive due to personal differences.

    Collective phase (2004–present)[edit]

    In Autumn of 2004, Archive announced that Dave Pen (BirdPen) would replace Walker on the Noise tour. During this same tour, Keeler and Griffiths met the singer Pollard Berrier (formerly of the band Bauchklang) at one of their shows in Vienna, Austria. Pollard had given Darius a demo CD of his own written material, with the intention of starting another project with Dan and Darius. Because of the latter circumstances, the three began writing and rehearsing together, and were recording in Southside Studios, London, by September 2005. A new modern era for Archive had begun with Darius, Dan and Pollard all writing and co-writing seven tracks and Dave Pen co-writing three, on the album, "Lights". Maria Q sang on three (including backing) tracks. From this point on, Archive was no longer a "front-man-band", but a "collective" of individual artists contributing to what is now an established sound. The album "Lights" was released in May 2006 and received high critical acclaim in France, Switzerland, Greece and Poland. Archive enjoyed predominantly sold-out gigs on their "Lights" Tour, as well as high acclaim at festivals around Europe.

    In May 2009, Archive returned to release their most acclaimed album to date, "Controlling Crowds I-III". It reached number one in the French charts for a week, number one in Greece, number two in Switzerland and number 5 in Luxembourg. The single, "Bullets", was their most acclaimed single to date and reached the charts in Greece, Poland, Switzerland, France, and Germany. It has also been featured in the teaser trailer for Cyberpunk 2077. The biggest surprise of this album was the return of Rosko John, who adds an unforeseen depth to the seventh studio album. In September 2009, the follow-up album "Controlling Crowds: Part IV" was released, along with single "The Empty Bottle". Archive continued their "Controlling Crowds" tour, having already sold out some fifty concerts from September 2009 - February 2010, up to and extensively for the 2010 Summer Festival Season.

    With Us Until You're Dead[edit]

    Archive have worked on their eighth studio album (excluding Michel Vaillant) in London and Paris; under new management, having finished their deal with Warner Music - This has enlivened hopes in their home country of an official release at last. As early as November 2011, short samples of new works featured on the band's official website.

    In May 2012, the band confirmed via the website that the album, titled With Us Until You're Dead, would be released on 27 August from their own label Dangervisit Records. It was accompanied by a European tour starting in October, to which a London show was promptly added. Fusing orchestral, electronic, soulful, progressive and emotional elements, Keeler describes the new material in comparison to previous works as "more personal - love songs basically. But coming at the subject matter in that non-formatted Archive way." Fans heard a new song, Violently, featuring new vocalist Holly Martin, which was released as part of the Wiped Out / Violently EP on 2 July.

    Axiom[edit]

    In November 2013, Archive announced details of their most ambitious project to date, a forty-minute short film and accompanying album set for release in May 2014.[5]

    The film was created with the help of Spanish film collective NYSU. Director Jesus Hernandez said of the film:『Archive has produced a great album that works like an entire movie script... Our challenge was to translate the band’s script into images.』The film is set on Axiom, an island in the middle of nowhere with steep cliffs on all sides. On the island there is an underground city dominated by a bell, which decides the fate of the city's inhabitants.

    The album, titled Axiom, was officially released on 26 May 2014. The band debuted the short film and performed live at the 2014 Sundance London film festival.[6]

    Restriction[edit]

    On 20 October 2014 Archive announced their upcoming album Restriction which was released on 12 January 2015. Videos for the tracks "Black And Blue", "Kid Corner" and "Feel It" are available for viewing on the official website.

    The False Foundation[edit]

    On 7 October 2016 Archive released their tenth album The False Foundation.[7] The band released music videos for "Driving In Nails", "Bright Lights" and "The False Foundation".

    25[edit]

    To celebrate their 25 years of activity, in May 2019 the band released a massive retrospective collection called "25". The standard edition features 26 tracks drawn from the band's career, including new and previously unreleased songs - including collaborations with Band of Skulls and Steve Mason. The 4 CD deluxe edition contains 42 tracks.

    Versions[edit]

    In 2020 Archive released the remix album Versions, a collection of 10 previously released songs that were remixed or re-recorded to generate mostly more quiet and atmospheric versions.

    Call To Arms & Angels[edit]

    On 29 April 2022 Archive released their twelfth studio album Call To Arms & Angels[8] recorded at RAK Studios and produced by Jérome Devoise. The album features 17 tracks and is accompanied by the documentary Super8: A Call To Arms & Angels. Archive released music videos for the tracks "Shouting Within", "Fear There & Everywhere", "We Are The Same", and "Frying Paint". The album introduces Lisa Mottram as the band's new vocalist.

    The associated tour, scheduled for autumn 2022, had to be postponed in August 2022 by one year due to Darius Keeler's treatment for colon cancer.[9]

    Members[edit]

    Band members[edit]

    Former members[edit]

    Discography[edit]

    Studio albums[edit]

    Soundtracks[edit]

    Compilations[edit]

    Live albums[edit]

    Live DVD[edit]

    Remix albums[edit]

    EPs[edit]

    Singles[edit]

    Londinium

    Take My Head

    You All Look The Same to Me

    Michel Vaillant

    Noise

    Lights

    Controlling Crowds (Parts I-III)

    Controlling Crowds – Part IV

    With Us Until You're Dead

    Axiom

    Restriction

    The False Foundation

    Call To Arms and Angels

    Entourage[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ Stortford recording studio making huge waves in Europe with Archive[permanent dead link] "...with tracks that feature a dramatic and layered genre-spanning sound taking in progressive rock, post-rock, electronic, trip hop and experimental"
  • ^ "Rockhal, Tuesday night: The British gem that Europe found - Archive". wort.lu. 4 November 2015. Retrieved 21 January 2017.
  • ^ "Archive - Biography & History - AllMusic". allmusic.com. Retrieved 21 January 2017.
  • ^ "meetic". archive.org. 17 March 2006. Archived from the original on 17 March 2006. Retrieved 21 January 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  • ^ "Archive Announce Details Of New Film And Album 'Axiom' Due Out May 2014". contactmusic.com. 11 November 2013. Retrieved 21 January 2017.
  • ^ Barraclough, Leo (24 February 2014). "Archive to Perform, Preem Pic 'Axiom' at Sundance London". variety.com. Retrieved 21 January 2017.
  • ^ "Archive Announce New Album 'The False Foundation' Recap ::Archive News ::antiMusic.com". antimusic.com. Retrieved 21 January 2017.
  • ^ "Review: Archive - Call To Arms and Angels". sputnikmusic.com. 3 May 2022. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
  • ^ Millar, Mark (23 August 2022). "Archive – Call To Arms & Angels European Tour Rescheduled". XS Noize. Retrieved 2 September 2022.
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Archive_(band)&oldid=1222592562"

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    This page was last edited on 6 May 2024, at 20:27 (UTC).

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