Our Lady Peace

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Our Lady Peace
Image:Our Lady Peace 2006.jpg
Our Lady Peace performing in Kitchener, Ontario, 2006
Background information
Origin Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Genre(s) Alternative rock, rock, hard rock
Years active 1992–present
Label(s) Columbia, Sony BMG
Associated
acts
Fair Ground, Pedestrian
Website www.ourladypeace.com
Members
Raine Maida
Jeremy Taggart
Duncan Coutts
Steve Mazur
Former members
Mike Turner
Chris Eacrett
Jim Newell

Our Lady Peace, often abbreviated OLP, is a Canadian alternative rock band consisting of Raine Maida (vocals, guitar), Duncan Coutts (bass guitar, backing vocals), Jeremy Taggart (drums, percussion), and Steve Mazur (guitar, backing vocals). Until 2001, guitarist and founding member Mike Turner was a member of the band. During their career they have sold over five million albums worldwide,[1] won four Juno Awards out of twenty nominations, and won ten MuchMusic Video Awards, including the People's Choice Award in 1997, 1998 and 2000. They have the most awards won by any artist or group at the MMVA's.[2]

Contents

[edit] Band history

[edit] Formation and debut

Mike Turner placed a "musicians wanted" ad in Toronto-based Now Magazine in 1992. Michael Maida, a criminology student at the University of Toronto, was the first to reply. The two formed a band called As If with Jim Newell playing drums and a friend of Mike Turner's, Paul Martin, playing bass. Having played a number of gigs in Oshawa with sets containing a mix of original and cover material, Turner's friend departed and the band placed a "musicians wanted" ad for a replacement bass player. Chris Eacrett, a business student at Ryerson University, replied and was accepted after the audition. During that time, Turner and Maida attended a music seminar where they met songwriter and producer Arnold Lanni, the owner of Arnyard Studios. The band, with Lanni, commenced writing new material and recorded some material under the As If name.

To better reflect the new musical direction, the name of the band was changed to Our Lady Peace, and with encouragement from Arnold and his management team, they performed some gigs in Eastern Ontario and Montreal with the assistance of D.J. Williams (a Ridley College alumnus and classmate of Michael Maida, also a Ridley College alumnus), in conjunction with The Tea Party. During this time, Maida began using the name Raine to reduce the confusion of having two Mikes in the band. An independent video of the song "Out of Here" was also created during this time period by Sam Siciliano, a Ryerson University film student and friend of Mike Turner, who produced, edited, and directed the video. The video was aired on MuchMusic on their Indie show.

After returning to Arnyard Studios to continue writing and recording material, Jim Newell departed the band. Writing and recording continued with session drummer John Bouvette. With Coalition Management (Rob Lanni and Eric Lawrence) representing the band, and temporary drummer Jody Wilson, short showcases were arranged with Warner Canada, EMI Canada, and Sony Music Canada. Sony Music Canada head of A&R, Richard Zuckerman, liked what he heard and along with Sony president, Rick Camilleri, Mike Roth and Gary Furniss (both with Sony Music Publishing), saw the potential of the producer, the band, and band management, and made an offer. The band commenced writing additional material for a first album, as well placed a "musicians wanted" ad for a drummer. Jeremy Taggart answered the ad, and on the strength of his potential, the producer and band asked that he join the band.

After additional material was written and recorded, with the continued assistance of John Bouvette on several tracks and guitarist Phil X contributing a solo on "Denied," Our Lady Peace released its debut album Naveed in 1994 on Sony Records. The record was later picked up and released in the United States in 1995. Following the release of the album, the band toured with fellow Canadian acts I Mother Earth and 54-40. Touring continued on into 1996 with time spent touring with Canadian Alanis Morissette. The title track, "Naveed," became a hit in Canada, while "Starseed" became a hit in both Canada and the United States. "Starseed" would later be featured on the Armageddon film soundtrack. After touring as the opening act for Van Halen through the summer of 1995, and as the band began writing material for their follow-up album, Chris Eacrett and the band parted ways due to musical differences. Rob Coutts (a Ridley College alumni and classmate of Raine Maida) joined the band as Duncan Coutts on bass.

[edit] Success

Their second album, Clumsy, was released in 1997. It features the hit songs "Superman's Dead," "4AM," "Automatic Flowers," and the title track "Clumsy." It is widely considered the group's best effort. It established Our Lady Peace as a leading band in the Canadian rock scene, and provided them with an international presence.

In 1999, the band released their third album, entitled Happiness...Is Not a Fish That You Can Catch. The album included such hits as "Thief," a song about a young girl, named Carissa Battersby, the band met who had cancer, as well as "One Man Army" and "Is Anybody Home?" Jamie Edwards, a multi-instrumentalist, was brought in on the sessions for Happiness... in 1996 and remained an unofficial member until 2001 when he was asked to officially join the band to finish the album Gravity. Shortly after the completion of the record Jamie chose to leave the band, returning briefly to stand in for Mike Eisenstein during the Canadian tour of Gravity. The band also played an eleven song set at Woodstock 1999.

[edit] 2000–present

In 2000, the band released Spiritual Machines, a concept album inspired by Ray Kurzweil's book The Age of Spiritual Machines. Spiritual Machines sold below expectations. This album featured the singles "In Repair," "Life" (which found a soundtrack listing for the Canadian sports comedy film Men with Brooms) and "Right Behind You (Mafia)." In December 2001, after commencing work with producer Bob Rock, Mike Turner left the band citing creative differences. According to the band members the separation was amicable. Turner later joined Fair Ground. In April of 2002, Steve Mazur was announced as the new guitarist for the band.

Some critics contended that in the early 2000s the band's new music changed, adopting an increasingly mainstream sound and softening the music considerably. Some critics of the band's fifth album, Gravity, called it "overproduced" and "too mainstream." Despite such criticism, the album's chart-topping first single, "Somewhere Out There," became the band's biggest international hit to date. The second single released off the album was "Innocent." "Made of Steel" was also a hit across North America.

On 2 July 2005 the group played at the Canadian Live 8 concert in Barrie, Ontario. In August, the band released their sixth album, Healthy in Paranoid Times, which included the tracks "Angels/Losing/Sleep," "Will the Future Blame Us," and "Where Are You?" Shortly after recording the album, the band disclosed that during the making of the album, they nearly broke up.[3] However, the band has also said that they were really proud of the album. According to Rolling Stone, it took 1165 days to create it, and its twelve tracks were chosen from forty-five that the band had written and produced.

At a November 2005 concert at Massey Hall in Toronto, Ontario, it was announced that the concert would be filmed for the purpose of creating a DVD. The DVD that was filmed there was put on the A Decade DVD (Canadian release only).

The band added a fifth stage member, Joel Shearer (of the band Pedestrian), for the Paranoid Times tour, which saw them stopping in several North American cities between April and May of 2006.

On November 21, 2006 (November 28, 2006 in USA), their greatest hits compilation entitled A Decade was released. There are two new songs on the album, "Kiss On The Mouth" and "Better Than Here;" Steve Mazur wrote in a blog on the band's fan club that the new songs on the disc are two unreleased songs from the Healthy in Paranoid Times sessions. The collection also includes the Top 10 tracks: "Where Are You," "Clumsy," "In Repair," "Somewhere Out There," "Innocent," "Thief," "Naveed," "Starseed" and "4 A.M." A Decade also includes a bonus DVD containing live concert footage and exclusive interviews at the Massey Hall concert. The single "Kiss On The Mouth," the first off A Decade, has received play on radio stations across Canada.

The band has stated on their official website that they have already begun working on a new album as of February 2007.[4] The album should be complete before mid-2008.

[edit] Discography

Year Album Chart positions Label Sales
U.S. Canada U.S. Canada
1994 Naveed Columbia 400,000
1997 Clumsy 76 1 Columbia 1,000,000 1,000,000
1999 Happiness... 69 1 Columbia 300,000
2000 Spiritual Machines 81 10 Columbia 200,000
2002 Gravity 9 2 Columbia 1,000,000 200,000
2003 Live 112 5 Columbia
2005 Healthy in Paranoid Times 45 2 Sony 100,000
2006 A Decade Sony

[edit] Band member timeline

<timeline> ImageSize = width:600 height:auto barincrement:25 PlotArea = left:100 bottom:60 top:0 right:50 Alignbars = justify DateFormat = dd/mm/yyyy Period = from:01/01/1992 till:01/01/2008 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy

Colors =

 id:official       value:claret     legend:Official
 id:unofficial     value:oceanblue  legend:Unofficial
 id:producer       value:tan1       legend:Producer

Legend = orientation:horizontal position:bottom

ScaleMajor = increment:1 start:1992

PlotData=

 width:20 textcolor:black align:left anchor:from shift:(10,-4)
 bar:Raine Maida text:"lead singer" from:01/01/1992 till:end color:official
 bar:Mike Turner text:"lead guitar" from:01/01/1992 till:12/12/2001 color:official
 bar:Steve Mazur text:"lead guitar" from:15/04/2002 till:end color:official
 bar:Jim Newell text:"percussion" from:01/01/1992 till:01/04/1993 color:unofficial
 bar:Jeremy Taggart text:"percussion" from:01/09/1993 till:end color:official
 bar:Chris Eacrett text:"bass" from:01/01/1992 till:01/09/1995 color:official
 bar:Duncan Coutts text:"bass" from:01/09/1995 till:end color:official
 bar:Jamie Edwards text:"session musician" from:01/07/1999 till:01/04/2002 color:unofficial
 bar:Mike Eisenstein text:"session musician" from:15/05/2002 till:27/03/2003 color:unofficial
 bar:Joel Shearer text:"guitar" from:01/05/2005 till:end color:unofficial
 bar:Arnold Lanni text:"producer" from:01/09/1992 till:12/12/2000 color:producer
 bar:Bob Rock text:"producer" from:01/11/2001 till:30/08/2005 color:producer

</timeline>

[edit] Trivia

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Our Lady Peace Get Well", Rolling Stone, August 1, 2005. 
  2. ^ MuchMusic.com > MMVA06 > REWIND > 97, 98, 00. MuchMusic. Retrieved on 2007-01-17.
  3. ^ "Our Lady Peace Get Well", Rolling Stone, August 1, 2005. 
  4. ^ http://www.ourladypeace.cc/index.htm

[edit] External links

als:Our Lady Peace

de:Our Lady Peace fr:Our Lady Peace ko:아워 레이디 피스 ms:Our Lady Peace nl:Our Lady Peace pl:Our Lady Peace

Views
Personal tools

Toolbox