Phoenix Foundation and The Thomas Oliver Band Free Concert
Phoenix Foundation and The Thomas Oliver Band Free Concert
‘Surely the most
potent band to come out of New Zealand since the far-off
days of the Chills… Gorgeous.’
-
The Independent Newspaper, UK, November 2009 - 5 Stars
(Happy Ending)
‘If
Captain Cook was to explore the South Pacific in 2010, The
Phoenix Foundation would be his greatest
discovery.’
- Bret McKenzie, Flight
Of The
Conchords
With
acclaimed gold albums and movie soundtracks to their name,
as well as recent rave reviews in Europe, The Phoenix
Foundation are one of New Zealand’s most innovative and
respected bands.
Heralding from the capital city of
Wellington, New Zealand, The Phoenix Foundation are a band
in the truest sense: six members each bringing their own
unique skills to a musical collective responsible for
producing some of New Zealand’s finest music of recent
years.
From intelligent and infectiously catchy pop/rock gems, to epic, psychedelic prog rock, The Phoenix Foundation’s music is a glorious pop polyglot: sunbleached harmonies, chiming guitars, progressive synthscapes and subliminal rhythms, combined at the service of consistently high-grade songwriting, yet the result never sounds like anyone else.
With lyrics stemming from the pens of vocalists/guitarists Samuel Flynn Scott and Luke Buda, their songs walk a musical tight wire of creativity. Slung between romance and absurdity, their music can move you to tears, make you laugh out loud, or whisk you away into another world, without ever losing its poise.
Formed in the
closing days of the 20th century by Wellington High School
classmates Samuel Flynn Scott, Luke Buda and Conrad Wedde,
the band first started turning heads with the release of
their debut album Horsepower in 2003. The only album
to be nominated in the Best Album award category at both The
New Zealand Music Awards and The B-net Awards, The
NZ Listener’s Nick Bollinger noted it had
“everything I hope for but rarely find in a pop record:
atmosphere, emotion, wit and, most of all, great
songs.”
2005’s follow up album Pegasus
built on this groundswell, easily exceeding gold sales.
Nominated for the Best Album award at the New Zealand Music
Awards, Pegasus included one of The Phoenix
Foundation’s biggest, and perhaps most surprising singles
to date - the beautiful instrumental
‘Hitchcock’. Talented New Zealand director
Rueben Sutherland created a music video masterpiece for the
song, receiving acclaim both in New Zealand and overseas.
The clip features a fleet of choreographed Ladas performing
a last desperate ballet in the face of petrol-head doom.
Watch it
here!
The band’s third
studio album Happy Ending was released in 2007
through the legendary NZ label Flying Nun Records and
was, like its predecessors, considered one of the top New
Zealand albums of that year, topping many of the years
‘best album’ lists, and again surpassing gold sales
without any major commercial airplay.
The Phoenix
Foundation have recently excited ears in America and Europe.
Andy Gill, writing in The Independent in November
2009, honoured Happy Ending with a five-star review,
describing the group as “the most potent band to come out
of New Zealand”, while influential webzine Drowned In
Sound praised their “range of textural delights”.
BBC’s Radio 1 host Steve Lamaq, along with Jarvis Cocker
and Sex Pistols’ guitar-slinger Steve Jones, have all
recently played songs by The Phoenix Foundation on their
radio shows. On tour in the U.S., where Horse Power
was picked up by respected indie label Young American, they
played to full houses at the influential CMJ music
festival.
Further showcasing the band’s talent and
flexibility, The Phoenix Foundation wrote the score for
Oscar-nominated director Taika Waititi’s first feature
film - the quirky Eagle Vs Shark. Released through
Miramax and starring The Flight of the
Conchords’ Jemaine Clement, the film garnered
international attention for the band and has also led to
them writing the score for Waititi’s highly anticipated
new film Boy, which is released in March 2010.
Buffalo:
On April 26,
2010 The Phoenix Foundation released their long awaited
fourth full-length album Buffalo: ten beautiful new
songs that find the band scaling new heights of maturity and
imagination. Their most collaborative and unique work thus
far, Buffalo is a combination of the avant-garde
experiments of earlier albums Pegasus and
Horsepower and the kaleidoscopic pop of Happy
Ending.
Opening gently with the lilting, lyrical
‘Eventually’, the album picks up pace with the
stampeding title track (also the first single)
‘Buffalo’, the swelling, sonorous ‘Flock Of Hearts’
and faintly Dunedin-tinged ‘Bitte Bitte’; breaks for a
refreshing ‘Orange and Mango’, before moving on, through
the lush textures of ‘Bailey’s Beach’ and epic finale
‘Golden Ship’.
Having received 8 nominations for
the 2010 Vodafone New Zealand Music Awards, with the band
picked up the three technical awards for Best Producer,
Engineer and Album Artwork, as well as being named
Best Group for 2010.
Buffalo will be
released in Europe in early 2011 after the band recently
signed a record deal with top UK record label Memphis
Industries. (Field Music, The Go! Team). The band will
head to Europe in January for a 2-month release tour, before
returning for a second, longer tour in mid 2011.
Watch the video clip for the first single and
album title track
here:
The
Phoenix Foundation Are:
Mr
Samuel Flynn Scott - guitars, vocals
Dr Luke Buda - guitars, vocals, keys
Prof. Conrad Wedde - guitars, keys
Snr Tom Callwood - bass guitar
Mssr Richie Singleton - drums
The Hon. Will Ricketts –
percussion
For Press
enquiries contact:
EMI NZ:
Mark.Kelliher@emimusic.com
The
Phoenix Foundation Management:
matt@thephoenixfoundation.co.nz
craig@thephoenixfoundation.co.nz
Watch
Other Phoenix Foundation Video’s Here:
Bleaching Sun
Forty Years
Let Me Die A Woman
Press:
‘Praise
for the Wellingtonian sextet is wholly
justified’
- Uncut Magazine, March,
2010, 4 Stars (Happy Ending)
‘This record is like
the beautiful feeling of falling asleep in a hammock out the
back of a faded old beach house and dreaming of epic vistas
and love affairs… a beautiful record indeed.’
- Neil Finn (Crowded House/Split Enz)
(Happy Ending)
‘Surely the most potent band
to come out of New Zealand since the far-off days of the
Chills… Gorgeous.’
- The
Independent Newspaper, UK, 5 Stars (Happy
Ending)
‘Brimmed with
Rock & pop classicism. Impressive.’
- Mojo Magazine, 4 Stars (Happy Ending)
‘A quest of
a record. For those in the know, your secret might not be
safe for long.’
- Drowned In Sound,
8/10 (Happy Ending)
‘The Phoenix
Foundation’s whimsical and magical qualities transport you
to another planet, and that’s the best indication of a
perfect pop album… This is one of the best examples of pop
music that this country has
produced…’
- The Herald – Scott
Kara, 5 Stars (Happy
Ending)
‘A work of
genius… a brilliant album… one of the few NZ albums of
the past year that genuinely deserves the
praise.’
- The Press NZ – Richard
McFarlane, 5 Stars (Happy Ending)
‘…often
blissful, occasionally bittersweet, The Phoenix Foundation
are the sound of languid sunshine
daydreams…’
- The Stranger,
Seattle
‘The Best band in
the country… something serious and important is going on
with this unpigeonholeable new
album.’
- Grant Smithies, Sunday Star
Times (Happy Ending)
‘Serene and fluid
experimental pop rock that could be the soundtrack to the
dream you never want to end.’
-
Sentimentalist Mag, New
York
‘…the most
gorgeously unexpected surprise of the
year.’
- V Man Magazine,
U.S.
‘…one of the most
nuanced, textured, seductively melodic and vibrant albums
that Flying Nun has released in a very long time.’
- Graham Reid, Elsewhere (Happy
Ending)
Live:
‘These
six incredibly talented musicians proved beyond a doubt
their brand of indie-pop music’s ability to shatter
stereotypes and demographics as they performed a near
perfect set of healing proportions.’
- ‘Best Live Gig of 2007’ – The
Press NZ
‘Great band,
great show.’
- Brooklyn
Vegan, New
York
ends