Colourbox
Colourbox | |
---|---|
Origin | London, England |
Genres | Electronica, soul, reggae |
Years active | 1982–1987 |
Labels | 4AD |
Past members | Steven Young Martyn Young Ian Robbins Lorita Grahame Debian Curry |
Website | Colourbox at 4AD.com |
Colourbox were an English electronic musical group on the 4AD label, releasing a number of records between 1982 and 1987. The band was formed by brothers Martyn and Steve Young, along with guest singers, until Lorita Grahame joined as a permanent member in 1983.
Colourbox stood apart from their then-4AD labelmates - bands such as Dead Can Dance, Cocteau Twins, and This Mortal Coil (although the Young brothers contributed to tracks on the latter project's first two albums It'll End in Tears and Filigree & Shadow[1][2]). Their sound was eclectic, drawing from reggae and soul influences (with covers of tracks by U-Roy and Augustus Pablo released as singles), beat-box driven hip-hop rhythms, blue-eyed soul, as well as a fusion of far-ranging influences spanning from classic R&B, to dub and industrial.[3]
Career
Following their debut single "Breakdown" / "Tarantula" in late 1982 (and a 1983 remake with new and permanent vocalist Lorita Grahame), a four-track mini-album simply titled Colourbox was released in November 1983, displaying the band's fledgling experimental sound. After a handful of singles, Colourbox's first full-length studio album - also self-titled - followed in August 1985, which further refined the band's diverse palette, mixing sample-splattered power-punk instrumentals with elegiac piano pieces ("Just Give 'em Whiskey" and "Sleepwalker" respectively), commercial pop ("The Moon Is Blue" and "Suspicion") and more reggae and soul covers (U-Roy's "Say You" and The Supremes' "You Keep Me Hanging On").[citation needed] It was to remain the band's only full-length album.
In 1986, the band issued two completely different singles simultaneously on the same day: one was an instrumental initially intended as a FIFA World Cup anthem of that year ("The Official Colourbox World Cup Theme"); the other, a cover of Jacob Miller's "Baby I Love You So," featured third member Lorita Grahame on vocals. The same year, 4AD issued the 1983 mini-LP on CD for the first time, with the 12" versions of both of these singles added, along with the B-side "Looks Like We're Shy One Horse / Shoot Out" and the previous non-album single "Breakdown".
The band had an international hit in 1987 with "Pump Up the Volume", a collaboration with A.R. Kane under the name M/A/R/R/S. The song was notable for being constructed almost entirely from samples of other records, a novelty for a popular record at that time, though Colourbox themselves been using sampling extensively since their 1983 mini-album. The pressures of sudden success and the long-running litigation caused by the use of samples resulted in the band never recording as Colourbox again.
For a brief time following Colourbox's dissolution, Martyn Young served as a producer on records by acts as diverse as The Christians and fellow labelmates The Wolfgang Press, whilst former singer Lorita Grahame lent her vocals to a record released by short-lived One Little Indian act Hit the Roof (on a cover of Edwin Starr's "Contact"). Since then, little has been heard from any of the group members, save for a brief return to promotional duties for Martyn Young in 2001, to oversee the release of the Colourbox compilation Best of Colourbox 82/87.[4]
4AD released a self-titled box set of four compact discs, compiling all of their catalogue (the full-length album with its companion remix album in full, a 7" mix CD, a 12" mix CD, and the first EP with two BBC Radio sessions and a previously unreleased mix of "Arena") on 21 May 2012. The collection, marking the 30th anniversary of the group, was sequenced by Martyn Young.[5]
In 2014, Colourbox were the subject of an exhibition, Music of the Band (1982 - 1987), curated by Wolfgang Tillmans at his Between Bridges gallery in Berlin. A compilation of 16 tracks selected by Tillmans was released by 4AD to tie in with the exhibition.[6]
Martyn Young has been playing additional keyboards, recording, producing and mixing the new Modern English album due for release in March 2016. [7] Ian Robbins passed away in 2014. [8]
Discography
All released on the 4AD label. Chart placings shown are from the UK Indie Chart.[9]
Albums
- Colourbox (mini-album) (7 November 1983), No. 8
- Vinyl (MAD315); CD (MAD315CD – released in 1986)
- Colourbox (album) (12 August 1985), No. 1
- Vinyl LP (CAD508); CD (CAD508CD); cassette (CADC508)
- Colourbox (12 August 1985) – free mini-album included with first 10,000 copies of CAD508
- Vinyl LP (MAD509)
Singles
- "Breakdown" / "Tarantula" (November 1982) – featuring Debian Curry
- 7" (AD215); 12" (BAD215)
- "Breakdown" / "Tarantula" (second version) (May 1983)
- 7" (AD304); 12" (BAD304)
- "Say You" / "Fast Dump" (March 1984), No. 7
- 7" (AD403); 12" (BAD403)
- "Punch" / "Keep on Pushing" (June 1984), No. 15
- 7" (AD406); 12" (BAD406)
- "The Moon Is Blue" / "You Keep Me Hanging On" (15 July 1985), No. 3
- 7" (AD507); 12" (BAD507)
- "Baby I Love You So" / "Looks Like We're Shy One Horse" / "Shoot Out" (14 April 1986), No. 4
- 7" (AD604); 12" (BAD604)
- "The Official Colourbox World Cup Theme" / "Philip Glass" (14 April 1986), No. 6
- 7" (AD605); 12" (BAD605)
Compilations
- Lonely Is an Eyesore (15 June 1987)
- Vinyl (CAD703); CD 9CAD703CD) - 4AD label sampler included the exclusive track "Hot Doggie"
- Best of Colourbox 82/87 (15 October 2001)
- CD (GAD2107CD)
- Colourbox (14 May 2012)
- 4-CD box set (CAD 3204 CD)
- Music of the Band (1982 - 1987) (2014)
- CD (TAD 3443)
References
- ^ This Mortal Coil - It'll End In Tears (LP) at Discogs
- ^ This Mortal Coil - Filigree & Shadow (2xLP) at Discogs
- ^ allmusic ((( Colourbox > Biography )))
- ^ 4AD: Colourbox profile
- ^ 4AD TO RELEASE 4CD COLOURBOX BEST OF COMPILATION
- ^ Wolfgang Tillman's Curated Exhibition - 4AD
- ^ http://imeltwithyou.proboards.com/thread/250/new-modern-english-album-update
- ^ https://www.funeralzone.co.uk/obituaries/1192
- ^ Lazell, Barry (1997). Indie Hits 1980-1999. Cherry Red Books. ISBN 0-9517206-9-4.