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Sunday 3 November 2013

SIDEWINDER (CANBERRA)


Sidewinder was founded in 1990 in Canberra by Pip Branson on guitar, Martin Craft on bass guitar and backing vocals, his brother Nick Craft on lead guitar and vocals, and Giri Fox on drums. Most of the members were still in secondary school. They played their first live shows in 1991 and in the following year they signed to Half a Cow – a label owned by ex-Canberran musician Nic Dalton (Lemonheads, Plunderers) – which was later purchased by Universal Music. By that time Jeremy David had joined on viola. One of the group's early gigs was at a circus in July 1992.

Dalton compiled a sampler album, 'Slice Two' (November 1992), by various artists on his label, which included an early Sidewinder track, "Last Time". On 12 February 1993 the group issued their debut five-track EP, 'T Star' – the title refers to "an obscure brand of dodgy runners". The Canberra Times' Steven Corby described their sonation as "grungy guitar pop, a definition Martin agrees with. It's not pop and it's not metal and the experimental move of adding a viola player to their line-up has given their sound a thickness that is its most original factor."

Their second EP, 'Yoko Icepick', which had four tracks followed on 22 October 1993. Late that year David left and was not replaced. Sidewinder toured with Tumbleweed; The Canberra Times' Rachel Hill found that as a consequence "the songs from Yoko Icepick were being played better live, leaving a gap between what people were hearing on the CD and at gigs." Early in the following year the group appeared at the Big Day Out; soon after Shane Melder (ex-the Hummingbirds) replaced Fox on drums.

The group's third EP, 'The Gentle Art of Spoonbending', appeared in February 1995, for which Hill felt that they "had moved on to a different type of sound and, with the help of better equipment, were producing a bigger sound." The five tracks were written by the Craft brothers and "display an underlying simplicity not shared by the previous releases." Musicologist Ian McFarlane opined that it "included two of the band's strongest songs in 'Up to You' and 'Day After Day'."[4] Hill described "Up to You", which "represents Sidewinder's dynamics as a live band, illustrating the sonic power which drives it" while "Day After Day" was "a beautifully written ballad with a Beatlesque feel to it, demonstrating the band's songwriting skills."

The group relocated to Sydney in February 1995. Late that year, the band issued their debut studio album, 'Atlantis', which McFarlane declared was "brimming with unabashed, infectious rock energy and displayed a great deal of potential." Ahead of its appearance they released a single, "Anything You Want" (October), and then joined Powderfinger and Fur on a national Truckstop tour. Two further singles followed in 1996, "Evil Eye" (January) and "Not Coming Home" (April). Also, in January that year they appeared on the Big Day Out tour and followed, during that year, with national tours alongside Custard, Snout and then the Fauves.

While still members of Sidewinder, Martin Craft and Melder formed a side project, Fragile, as a studio-only band with Wayne Connolly on guitar and backing vocals (ex-the Welcome Mat, Knievel) and Simon Holmes on guitar and lead vocals (ex-the Hummingbirds). That group issued an album, 'Airbrushed Perfection', on Half a Cow/Mercury in March 1996. McFarlane described how it "ran the gamut of sounds from jangly pop ('Dream Come True') to noisy Hüsker Dü-inspired rockers ('She Really Means that Much to Me', 'Resolving Conflict Situations')."

Their second album, 'Tangerine' (September 1997) made many top ten lists for the best album of the year and is sometimes considered to be one of the finest Australian rock records of the 1990s. It was co-produced by Paul McKercher and the group. Brett Winterford of The Sydney Morning Herald reflected on the album, in January 2008, which "grafted a jangle of distorted guitars with electronic loops and samples, affected vocals and stunning, synth-led soundscapes... Artistically, Tangerine was a window into the future of indie music but commercially it was a flop." Rolling Stone's Kate Crawford felt it provided a "special breed of uplifting pub pop that wins hearts and minds no matter what disasters occur."

The lead single from their second album, "Titanic Days", was released in April 1997: it appeared on the soundtrack for the feature film, Blackrock. A second single, "Here She Comes Again", was issued in August. "Titanic Days" was listed on the Triple J Hottest 100, 1997, with a third single, "God", appearing in February 1998.bDespite their ability to pull crowds throughout Australia, their critical success, good airplay and solid sales figures, Sidewinder were dropped by Universal in 1999 when the label took over Mercury/Polygram.

Members

Nick Craft (guitar, vocals), Martin Craft (bass), Pip Branson (guitar, violin), Giri Fox (drums),
Shane Melder (drums), Jeremy David (violin)




SINGLES
Evil Eye

11 FEB '96#94






References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidewinder_%28band%29

http://top100singles.blogspot.com.au/


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