Biting Elbows
Appearance
Biting Elbows | |
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Origin | Moscow, Russia |
Genres | Indie rock, Alternative rock, alternative metal |
Years active | 2008–present |
Labels | Mystery of Sound |
Members | Ilya Naishuller Ilya Kondratiev Garik Buldenkov Alexei Zamaraev |
Website | bitingelbows.com |
Biting Elbows is a Russian indie rock band that was formed in 2008 in Moscow.
In 2012, they were an opening act for Guns N' Roses and Placebo's concerts in Moscow, played at Maxidrom. In 2013, they played at Park Live Festival.
The band is perhaps best known for its music videos for the songs "The Stampede" and "Bad Motherfucker". The videos, directed by frontman Ilya Naishuller, went viral because of their first person perspective, special effects, and action.[1][2][3] Naishuller directed a full-length first-person action/sci-fi/adventure film written by himself, Hardcore Henry (2015), starring Sharlto Copley and Danila Kozlovsky.[4] Biting Elbows wrote the single "For the Kill" for the film's soundtrack.
Discography
Studio albums
Title | Album details |
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Biting Elbows |
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Shorten the Longing |
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Extended Plays
Title | Details |
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Dope Fiend Massacre EP |
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Singles
- "The Stampede" (2011)
- "Bad Motherfucker" (2013)
- "Bullied Boy" (2015)
- "For the Kill" (2016)
- "Love song" (2017)
- "Anarchy" (2018)
- "Heartache" (2019)
- "Control" (2019)
References
- ^ BITING ELBOWS’ NEW VIDEO IS THE MOST ULTRAVIOLENT GANGSTER MOVIE TARANTINO NEVER MADE
- ^ Biting Elbows lança sequência de clipe com cenas de violência; assista
- ^ "Amazing: Biting Elbows 'Bad Motherf*cker' Video is a Hilarious POV Ultraviolence Overdose". Archived from the original on 2013-03-22. Retrieved 2013-03-21.
- ^ Hardcore - Behind The Scenes Part 1
- ^ "Biting Elbows by Biting Elbows". Apple Music. November 13, 2011. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
- ^ "Shorten the Longing by Biting Elbows". Apple Music. June 26, 2020. Retrieved 2020-06-26.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "Dope Fiend Massacre EP by Biting Elbows". Apple Music. August 10, 2011. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
External links