My Bloody Valentine
Biography
Like the Velvet Underground, Sonic Youth, and the Jesus & Mary Chain before them, My Bloody Valentine redefined what noise meant within the context of pop songwriting. Led by guitarist Kevin Shields, the group released several EPs in the mid-'80s before recording the era-defining Isn't Anything in 1988, a record that merged lilting, ethereal melodies of the Cocteau Twins with crushingly loud, shimmering distortion. Though My Bloody Valentine rejected rock & roll conventions, they didn't subscribe to the precious tendencies of anti-rock art-pop bands. Instead, they rode crashing waves of white noise to unpredictable conclusions, particularly since their noise wasn't paralyzing like the typical avant-garde noise rock band: it was translucent, glimmering, and beautiful. Shields was a perfectionist, especially when it came to recording, as much of My Bloody Valentine's sound was conceived within the studio itself. Nevertheless, the band was known as a formidable live act, even though they rarely moved, or even looked at the audience, while they were on-stage. Their notorious lack of movement was branded "shoegazing" by the British music press, and soon there were legions of other shoegazers -- Ride, Lush, the Boo Radleys, Chapterhouse, Slowdive -- that, along with the rolling dance-influenced Madchester scene, dominated British indie rock of the late '80s and early '90s.
As shoegazing reached its peak in 1991, My Bloody Valentine released Loveless, which broke new sonic ground and was hailed as a masterpiece. Though the band was poised for a popular breakthrough, it disappeared into the studio and didn't emerge over the next five years, leaving behind a legacy that proved profoundly influential in the direction of '90s alternative rock.
Born in Queens, New York, Kevin Shields' family moved to Dubin, Ireland, when he was six years old. In his teens, he became obsessed with pop music, eventually playing in Complex with his childhood friend Colm O'Ciosoig. In 1984, Shields and O'Ciosoig formed My Bloody Valentine with vocalist Dave Conway and keyboardist Tina, taking their name from a slasher horror film. The group relocated to Berlin, where they released the Birthday Party-influenced EP This Is Your Bloody Valentine on the Tycoon label in 1985 to little notice. The following year, the band moved to London, where they added bassist Debbie Googe. By the summer, they had signed to Fever and had released the EP Geek!, which again was ignored. Later that year, the group moved to Kaledoscope Sound, releasing The New Record by My Bloody Valentine EP, which illustrated a Jesus & Mary Chain influence. The following year, the band moved to the Primitives' Lazy Records, releasing Sunny Sundae Smile early in the year. That EP was the first My Bloody Valentine record to mesh airy melodies with grinding guitars, but the two EPs that followed in 1987 -- Strawberry Wine and Ecstasy -- were more focused and acclaimed. Conway left the band by the end of the year and was replaced by vocalist/guitarist Bilinda Butcher, whose breathy vocals fit the group's evolving sound more appropriately.
My Bloody Valentine's new sound coalesced with the group's first full-fledged album, 1988's Isn't Anything. Released on Creation Records, Isn't Anything was greeted with enthusiastic reviews in the U.K. music press and the band's following increased dramatically by the end of the year; in fact, their reputation had become large enough to attract the attention of Sire/Warner Bros. in the U.S., who became the group's American label. Two other EPs, Feed Me With Your Kiss and You Made Me Realise, were also quite popular, and by the beginning of 1989, bands that based their sound on My Bloody Valentine's droning swirl began to appear. The group retreated to the studio in 1989 to record its follow-up, which meant that only one EP, Glider, was released during that year. By the spring of 1990, it was becoming clear that the follow-up to Isn't Anything wouldn't be appearing anytime soon, and reports about Shields' growing perfectionism began to circulate in the U.K. weekly music press. Soon, it became apparent that the band's lengthy recording sessions were crippling Creation Records, but the group's audience was still passionate despite the inactivity: the Tremolo EP was released at the end of 1990 to considerable acclaim, and managed to climb into the U.K. Top 40.
When My Bloody Valentine's second album, Loveless, finally appeared in late 1991, it was greeted with uniformly excellent reviews and it became a hit within the U.K., reaching number 24 on the charts. In America, the group made significant inroads, particularly by supporting Dinosaur Jr. Despite the band's acclaim and growing audience, Loveless didn't sell in numbers to recoup its reported 500,000 dollar recording cost and Creation dropped the band from their label roster; Creation wouldn't fully recover until 1994, when they signed Oasis. My Bloody Valentine signed with Island and entered the studio at the end of 1992 to record a new album. In 1993, the group contributed a James Bond cover to a charity compilation.
And then...nothing happened.
Shields built a home studio with his Island advance and reportedly completed two separate albums, but scrapped them both. Often, the studio ran into technological problems. Between 1993 and 1997, both Googe and O'Ciosoig left the band, leaving only Shields and Butcher; after driving a cab for about a year, Googe formed Snowpony in 1996. There were signs that My Bloody Valentine were emerging from hiding in 1996, when the group contributed to the Wire tribute album Whore and Shields played on Experimental Audio Research's Beyond the Pale. Still, no new My Bloody Valentine material appeared. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Selected Discography
Dying Monkeys...go t t a Love it! And gotta Love MBV, they are sublime...Pe a c e !
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You Made Me Realise not being on Pandora makes me so sad, because it is my all-time favourite MBV track. Their cover of Wire's geography love song is also pure genius.
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the first time I heard this band I was in a Recording studio...... . t h e producer played me Only Shallow in the control room at about 110 Db thru a Set of Adams. It changed my life slightly and my songwriting style if that can even happen...... . . .
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when my ten year old heard this song he said it sounded like dying monkeys... you have to have an ear for shoegaze... I've been a better person since I've heard My Bloody Valentine.
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CORPSEROT: Everything you just said is TRUE. I can say this because I live in suburbia and deal with mainstream crap everyday :)
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first off why bother saying anything awkwardronal d if its going to be crap.anyways mbv's drunk/stoned guitar sound on loveless makes them pretty unique and though most the songs arent very technical the chord and riff changes are really good and also catchy.obvio u s l y mainstream america rejects the hell out of this band cause there way to different with a depressed or miserable overall expression(w h i c h is why i love it)guys shouldnt sing to this kind of music ever.check out loomer,blown a wish
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mbv is loud in a way that is somehow different from any 'too loud' concert i've ever been too. mbv is loud in a way that is part of the experience without losing any of the musicality. they are also loud in a way that'll shake your pants off. with my 30db custom molded musician's ear plugs, at All Tomorrow's Parties in NY I still feared for my hearing, but was OK the next day. Well, my *hearing* was OK. I was mind-melted for DAYS if not weeks. Still in awe, really.
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I are returned from the show.
I are more deafery. Spaceman3 opened for them, what a pleasant surprise. Catchy catchy. |
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dm for the thinking set-its the work you have to do to get the melodiesthey were everything sonic youth isn't cept kim gordon is a hot chick-lovele s s is one of the best ten records ever made in modern rock-how many bands have accomplished that-even tho its just my opinon-for me now in 2008 it's Gallhammer but it wasn't long ago that if days went by and i didn't have mbv in my life i wouldn't feel right.
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Gods of the Shoegazers, My Bloody Valentine is. I'm seeing them in SF in September-is h . They are VERY LOUD, which kind of is a minus in my book, seeing as how I am nearly deaf and loud just sounds like RAAARRRRRRRR R R R R R R R in my head now, even with hearing protection. BE ADVISED CHILDREN! PROLONGED LOUD NOISES MAKE YOU HEARING IMPAIRED. I blame standing in front of loud amps and machine guns for my dead ears. Not very sorry though.
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No mention here, but Kevin Shields does soundtrack work and did a lovely job for "Lost in Translation" . "City Girl" in particular is a gorgeous MBV type affair. Check it out.
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Considering they've got tens of thousands of songs we should be grateful we've got this much. They're catching up! I saw errors a few months ago that were fixed within a couple of weeks. Where has this band been? I am blown away.
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