We Know You Know It
That's How This Goes Down
Fine Dining With The Future
No Holiday
Hold Onto Nothing
Ghost Story
We Know You Know It (Filthy Dukes Remix)
Fine Dining With The Future (Boysnoize Remix)
Though the band’s name might suggest otherwise, the members of Manchester rock outfit Working For A Nuclear
Free City are not “a bunch of tree hugging hippies.” According to guitarist Gary McLure, the band plucked the name
from a British street sign they loved for its “subtle ironies and suggestion of secret bunkers hidden just underground.”
The band’s quirky, mysterious name is a fitting match for their music; WFANFC creates lush soundscapes that
are melodic and gripping without being easily sorted into any one genre. The band culls from electronic, dance,
and shoegazer influences (as far reaching as Berlin-trilogy era Bowie and David Axelrod) in an earnest effort to
bring something new to the table. “We want to create an alternative to the current retrospective trend in music,”
says singer and producer Dekko (a.k.a Phil Kay). “We just want to keep moving into uncharted territory.”
This is not to say that WFANFC does not have a distinctive sound – they simply do not sound like anyone else.
Beginning as the studio project of brothers Phil and John Kay and school friend Gary McLure in 2001, the group made
only slow-burning instrumental tracks until they added bassist Ed McLure to the mix, who introduced dance beats and
vocals to the tracks. “Sometimes a song doesn’t need words,” says Phil, “But we always intended to have vocals on
these tracks.”
What resulted is an eclectic mix of orchestral, adrenaline-fueled dance tracks juxtaposed with quiet, bedroom pop
songs and eerie, sparse, acoustic cuts. In the hands of another band, this eclectic mix of tempos and moods could
feel cluttered; on WFANFCs debut, the songs both compliment and challenge each other. “Troubled Son” pairs a
booming bass line with clanging industrial effects, “England” channels rainy day psychedelia, and “So” starts off as a
finger-picked folk track and ends in a booming chorus that would shake any dance crowd.
The band is no stranger to the live club scene, having made their mark on UK nightlife by crafting provocative
remixes--The Rakes, Polytechnic, Shitdisco, Archie Bronson Outfit, The Whip and Starsailor have all called on WFANFC
for an aural facelift, drawn to the band’s unexpected treatments of old songs. “I never listen to the original track if I
can help it,” says Phil. “I’ll take the coughs of the vocalist before he did his take and turn them into a beat, or take
the string noise from the guitar and make them into a new instrument.”
What is truly exciting about WFANFC’s world is that there are no constraints; their new debut US release
Businessmen & Ghosts, on Deaf Dumb + Blind Recordings, draws from loose grooves, neat Krautrock touches, and
even spoken word, and still feels like the work of a cohesive and musically-tight group. Featuring all the tracks from
their self titled UK debut album and subsequent Rocket EP on Melodic, plus a number of rare and unreleased tracks,
Businessmen & Ghosts is a groundbreaking collection from an important band on the verge of breakout success.
For a band that is just now making its United States debut, WFANFC could not be in a better position; they push
boundaries, cross genres, and still sound only like themselves. Just don’t mistake them for a pack of hippies.
In a karaoke bar, they would perform Purple Rain, Lets Dance and Wichita Line Man. They would like Robert Wyatt to cover Cylinders. Their favourite bands and artists are Serge Gainsbourg, Can, Captain Beefheart, David Bowie, Roxy Music, The Fall, Aphex Twin, Happy Mondays, Lou Reed/Velvet Underground, Beqach Boys, Kraftwerk, Talking Heads, Eno, Wire, Smog, Prince and Louis Jordan. Transparent Things is a book by Vladimir Nabakov, and also the title of the latest album by Fujiya & Miyagi. Following the sell-out success of their first three Tirk 10" vinyl only singles, this latest album release compiles new versions of those six tracks, available for the first time on CD, with four previously unreleased scorchers: Sucker Punch, Transparent Things, Cylinders and Reeboks In Heaven.
Fujiya & Miyagi are David Best (Miyagi, vocals, guitar, occasional but strictly non-progrock Moog), Steve Lewis (Fujiya, keyboard, beats, programming), and Matt Hainsby (Ampersand, bass guitar). The story of how they met and formed the band variously reports a mutual hero-worship of world heavyweight wrestler Kendo Nagasaki (from Wolverhampton, and like the boys from F&M, not a Japanese cell in his muscle bound body), and a shared interest in krautrock and early nineties electronica discovered while warming the subs bench during Sunday league football. And the name ? Miyagi was taken from the film 'The Karate Kid' and Fujiya was the name of a record player. It just looked really nice written down.
Fujiya & Miyagi produce a sound that has been located by the music and media fraternity as somewhere between Can, Happy Mondays, Alabama 3, Kraftwerk and Talking Heads. This, combined with Davids eclectic line in lyrics: I've got a slow, a slow, a slow metabolism, has won them an excited legion of supporters, among whom may be counted DFA, Tiga, Andrew Weatherall, Chicken Lips, Damo Suzuki, BBC 6 Music's Tom Robinson and Xfm's John Kennedy.
Mark Ryan, lead singer, urban legend and well-known NYC nightlife personality, originally formed the band with friend and producer Dean Baltulonis. After recruiting the rest of their line-up, the band recorded and self-released their eponymous debut EP in August 2005.
The band is quickly earning a reputation as one of New York's best live acts, serving up tight, energetic sets with added percussion, buzzes and electronic beeps. Mark Ryan's punk delivery and sassy lyrics compliment a call-and-response guitar exchange between Dean and James Gelini. Drummer Andy Action provides a sturdy backbone for the group to deliver the spazz, and Johnny McAuliffe's bass lines will stick in your head.
Since their recent inception, Foreign Islands has played with acts such as The Hold Steady, Les Savy Fav, White Rose Movement, The Detachment Kit, The Like, Lady Sovereign and more.