vibrations

Search for vibrations performed on Thursday, 8th January 2009.

vibrations

We found the term vibrations in 24 articles.

Free MP3 webspace on offer to Leeds bands...

If you are in a Leeds band and are looking for hosting for your MP3s then look no further than local magazine and promoters Vibrations who are now offering free MP3 webspace to local bands.

Band Profile: Deathretro

Deathretro hail from the Cumbrian fells, the band relocated down the A1 to Leeds last summer and have spent nine months playing and developing their blend of alternative rock smothered in dirty electronic grooves at venues, parties and festivals across Leeds and the rest of the country.

Band Profile: Stanford

Stanford are the fresh sound which is erupting into the city's local venues and beyond. Hidden away these five diverse talents combine to produce songs jam packed with variety and excitement.

Exit 52: Dandelion EP

Ah the theremin. Not since 'Good Vibrations' have I heard such magnificent use of the instrument. Opening track on this four track EP, and aptly enough the title track, 'Dandelion' thumps along with its array of kitsch 1960s instruments, its sleazy guitar riff and its myriad of churning organs, booming drums and a vocalist that sounds suspiciously like Jason Pierce.

The Cribs: Hey Scenesters!

Witchita have been grooming Bloc Party, making them into everyone's favourite indie band. While this has been going on, unbeknown to most of the indie community, another of Witchita's bands, The Cribs have been recording some songs with the legend that is Edwyn Collins.

Band Profile: Eureka Machines

Four-piece rock band from Leeds

The Delamores @ Escobar (Wakefield)

Firstly it must be made clear that at 2am this morning I was still to be found amateur mountaineering/forest-fire-avoiding after a party in a remote wood somewhere out towards Huddersfield and so my mental capacity is not at its best for remembering all of the events which unfolded at tonight's Louder Than Bombs session.

Band Profile: Hoover Dams

'Intense and claustrophobic music from Bradford. Extra proof, as if anyone needed it, of the Leeds/Bradford axis of musical accomplishment. More edge than a very edgy thing.'

Band Profile: Armstrong

ARMSTRONG, described by Kerrang! Magazine as "A Tornado of Infectious Pop-Rock Melodies", have cemented themselves as one of the most exciting bands in the UK thanks to a thrilling live show and chart success.

Band Profile: The Longshots

Adrenaline Injected Punk Rock'n'Roll

JJ72 @ LMUSU

After an interminable wait, a severely depleted Melaton grace the stage. The lead singer informs us that traffic made them late and half the band are still stuck in it, so they will attempt a shortened set with him and the bass player.

Band Profile: Rob Galloway

Rob Galloway Dubbed 'The Rebel of the Leeds Music Scene' ROB GALLOWAY describes himself as Beck meets Iggy Pop, creating an electric sound from dance beats, guitars, trip hop and punk rock

Rob Nichols @ Joseph's Well

Your reviewer failed to make it in time for Matthew Hill or the Frankling Mint, but enthusiastic punters reassured him they'd been good.

Band Profile: Chichino

funk soul acid jazz

Amp Fiddler @ HiFi Club

There are 3 things in this life guaranteed to make skinny white boys dance like a Jim Henderson inspired character.

AntiProduct @ Brudenell Social Club

If there was one thing that fatally crippled the "nu-Brit-indie" uprising of last year, it was the lack of general excitement and, more to the point, characters about the whole thing.

¡Forward, Russia! @ Mine

John McGee gets all giddy and silly and drunk and strange things happen while watching bands. Forgive me if I come on like a drunken raconteur but that's where the story begins, like all good stories should, in the pub, over a formerly nursed pint of cider now in smithereens on a tiled floor.

Mucky Sailor @ Milo

Impossibly big-mouthed Richard Archer of chart-hugging Staines chancers Hard-Fi props the bar up and gazes amenably into the eyes of his young paramour, trying hard not to notice being noticed and no doubt savouring the relaxed Thursday night vibrations and eclectic vinyl selections of the Chicken Shack DJs.

Rob Nichols @ Joseph's Well

First on was Math Hill & The Horrible Children. Previously advertised as medieval folk songs played to modern arrangements, the outlook was questionably dim.

Marilyn Manson @ Leeds Festival 2005

Before we delve into those cavernous vodka-marinaded archives of Leeds Festival 2005, I'll quickly make a short, sweet statement of truth.

Northern Theremonic @ Royal Park Cellars

I came tonight for only the second time to the Royal Park pub and I was indeed a Panama Virgin. I had heard good things about Steve Kind and his nights and was eager to find out if they were true.

Angelo Palladino @ Mixing Tin

Sometimes Annalee would venture into town to see live music in venues she'd never been to before... Time to reassess?

Jamie Lidell @ Across The Tracks Festival 2006

Jamie Lidell is an absolute nutter. Appearing as a diamond geezer dressed in silken bathrobe with gold rope strung loosely, provocatively, around his torso, he headbangs and face-pulls like a schizo on strychnine whilst a masked figure with white wires and whiskers coming out its face lurks about setting up cameras and sending disturbingly delayed footage to the screen at the back before propping up a mannequin's dismembered hand (which is, nicely, impaled on a metal pole, just in case you weren't freaked enough) in front of Lidell's mad-scientist decks; then leaves it to turn, slowly, in a revolving, demented circle.

The Sunshine Underground @ Faversham

Maybe it was the prospect of seven hundred ("Seven hundred??!") people squishing like marinaded sardines into the Faversham with such proximity that all sorts of potentially frisky things could happen; maybe it was the atmospheric buzz zipping about visibly like an electric-blue bolt of lightning over an array of extravagantly-varied haircuts; or maybe it was the range of world beers on offer but, whichever way, The Fourth Festival Of Nasty proved to be one stonking, stamping, stage-invading beast of an event with antlers Pan himself would have been proud of pronged firmly up its derrière.

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