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About The Electric Soft Parade
The Electric Soft Parade began in Brighton, where brothers Alex White (vocals/guitar) and Tom White (drums) recorded sloppy four-track albums and sold them to locals under the moniker Feltro Media. One of these recordings caught the attention of indie DB, which signed the siblings in 2001. Renamed the Electric Soft Parade and enlisting the aid of bassist Matt Thwaites and keyboardist Steve Large, that April the group issued the single "Silent to the Dark," which showcased their mix of latter-day Britpop sensibilities with doses of American-style modern rock and psychedelia. DB issued the full-length Holes in the Wall in early 2002, and extensive touring followed. There was even a bit of Oasis-style brotherly strife to spark the interest of the British music press. The Electric Soft Parade jumped to BMG for The American Adventure, which was issued in the U.K. in October 2003. Large left the band during this period, and drummer Matthew Priest was brought into the fold. The band went on the road throughout the next year, sharing the stage with bands like Elbow, Starsailor, and the Who. They then returned to the studio and recorded the Human Body EP, which arrived in 2006. The band's third full-length effort, No Need to Be Down-Hearted, came out a year later. ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide
The Electric Soft Parade's Discography (8)
| Misunderstanding | Truck Records |
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| No Need to Be Downhearted | Truck Records |
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| Lose Yr Frown | BMG UK & Ire... |
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| Empty At The End/This Given Line | DB Records L... |
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| Holes In The Wall | DB Records L... |
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Compilations Featuring The Electric Soft Parade (7)
| The Saturday Sessions: The Dermot O'Lear... | BBC Worldwid... |
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| Reloaded | Universal Mu... |
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| Album Of The Year: Panasonic MERCURY MUS... | Mercury Musi... |
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| Mercury Music Prize Compilation | Mercury Musi... |
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| Teachers 2: Back To School | Channel 4 Te... |
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Shazam Recommends...
Shazamers Who iD'd The Electric Soft Parade
| Featured Review | |
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Beat Control Tilly And The Wall |
| "O",The third offering from Omaha's indie darlings, left a bitter taste in our mouths while passing completely unnoticed thanks to a lacklustre collection of rather dull tunes. Luckily for the tap-dancing five-piece, they kept an ace up their sleeves and it's about to become an unexpected hit as the Radio 1 has playlisted it. "Beat Control" was originally released as a very limited edition 7" single, in between albums, and it was not meant to be included in "O". Hailed as a shift towards dance-pop, with some discreet electronic touches, it showed a welcomed new direction for the band, away from their habitual folky-pop. Many would have preferred them following that path. Better late than never, if this track confirms its potential it could become the cornestone of Tilly & The wall's future. | |
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