The Clouds (Manchester band)

The Clouds were a Greater Manchester-based indie band signed to Chris and Julia Nagle's 'Wobble Records'. They recorded a John Peel session in 1991 and appeared live on Mark Radcliffe's 'Hit the North' Radio 5 show in the same year. The band received some regional and national radio airplay and appeared live as a support act with World of Twist (1991), Intastella (1991) and Flowered Up (1991) as well as in their own right at venues in the North West. For the duration of the time they were signed to Wobble Records, the band were made up of;

Early Years

The band was formed after the three remaining members of the 'Dillen Experience' Tim Jones, Simon Moss and Simon Dickinson were joined by Ex 'Dillen Experience', 'Rig' and 'Resonance' keyboard player Dave Drennan. They were joined by Simon Maguire (previously in Sale band 'The Sewage') shortly afterwards. They signed to Wobble Records following regular plays of a demo featuring 'Moon Llama' to clients and staff at Strawberry Studios where Dave Drennan was employed. Three of the group were called Simon, which led to an array of obligatory pseudonyms, including Vincent Van Void, Sonic Windpipe, Balloon, Doctor Kecks, Bruce Starbuck, The Beast and Jimmy Goggles.

Releases

Two EP's were released on Wobble Records; "Moon Llama" and the follow up "Bingo Clubs Millennium Ball"

EP Title Track Names Year of Release Label Producer/Engineer
Moon Llama 'Moon Llama' 1991 Wobble John Pennington
'Snowman', 1991 Wobble Chris Nagle
'Set Free to Be' 1991 Wobble John Pennington
'Moon Llama Too' 1991 Wobble John Pennington
Bingo Club's Millennium Ball 'Dude Electric Cell' 1992 Wobble John Pennington
'King Of The Rocket Men' 1992 Wobble John Pennington
'Jungle Mooncake Rocket Man' 1992 Wobble John Pennington
'Blue Cat' 1992 Wobble John Pennington

The band also recorded tracks for an album that was never released; 'Poll Tax Blues', 'Druids Sacrifice of the Autumnal Equinox', 'Osmosis' and 'Touch of the Sun'.

Courtesy of Wobble Records, vocalist and guitarist Simon Dickinson also played guitar and sang on the Mighty Force track 'Playbeast' which features on the 1992 album Hypnovel.

The Moon Llama EP was recorded in down time at Strawberry Studios in Stockport. Bingo Clubs Millennium Ball EP was recorded at Courtyard Studios in Stockport.

The band stopped playing live and recording in 1992. They got together again circa 1997 for a one-off show at the Roadhouse in Manchester. This line-up did not feature rhythm guitarist Simon Maguire or keyboard player Dave Drennan but did include Eldon Snelgrove (real name) on percussion and keyboards. They then re-formed briefly in 2012, playing four shows; at the North London Tavern (Kilburn, London), Power's Bar (Kilburn, London), Affstock (Chelmsford) and the Ruby Lounge (Manchester). The only absentee from the 2012 line-up was Simon Maguire.

Current Activity

Following the demise of the Clouds, Simon Dickinson went on to form Buzzwagon with bass player Tim Jones and ex 'This Years Blonde' drummer Eldon Snelgrove, re-recording The Clouds' 'Touch of the Sun'. Simon Dickinson now writes and records as Hamfist and collaborates with drummer Simon Moss who records in his own right as Sonic Windpipe.

References

New Musical Express, 10 August 1991, Page 6
City Life Magazine, 29 August - 11 September 1991, Page 29
Ett Noll Ett, Issue 17, 1992, Page 35, ISSN 1102-1837, Swedish
Melody Maker (Gig Review - Manchester Boardwalk), 29 June 1991, Page 16
Melody Maker (The Clouds), 27 April 1991, Page 12, Author: John Robb
Melody Maker (Gig Review, Leeds Duchess of York), 31 August 1991, Page 27
City Life Magazine (EP Review), 20 May - 4 June 1992, Author Chris Sharrat
Manchester Evening News (Sun Shining on the Clouds), 23 May 1992
New Musical Express (But Cirrusly), 13 July 1991, Page 8, Author: Penny Anderson
New Musical Express (EP Review), 27 July 1991, Page 22
International Musician, Volume 17 - No 11, October 1991, Page 7
Manchester METRO News (As Lonely as a Cloud), 5 June 1992, Page 33
Manchester Evening News (Clouds Control), 12 July 1991, Page 12, Author: Terry Christian

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.