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16 Horsepower

 
Artist: 16 Horsepower
 

Group Members:

David Eugene Edwards, Jean-Yves Tola, Pascal Humbert, Steve Taylor, Keven Soll, Jeffrey Paul Norlander

Similar Artists:

The Denver Gentlemen, Briertone, Reverend Glasseye and His Wooden Legs, Lift to Experience, Richmond Fontaine, Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, Grant Lee Buffalo, Fields of the Nephilim

Followers:

Empty Orchestra

Formal Connection With:

  • Formed: 1992, Denver, CO
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Folklore," "Sackcloth 'n' Ashes," "Low Estate"

Biography

16 Horsepower is a Denver-based alternative country band revolving around the unique songwriting and singing of David Eugene Edwards. The band made its name with music that combines rural, backwoods kitsch with edgey, off-kilter country-rock. First teaming with drummer Jean-Yves Tola and bassist Pascal Humbert, Edwards lost the latter when the band relocated to Denver from California and added Keven Soll to the lineup instead. Their eponymous debut album was released in 1995 on A&M Records and was followed a year later by Sackcloth 'N' Ashes, which featured a cameo from Gordon Gano (Violent Femmes) on fiddle. Humbert returned in 1997, with Soll leaving the band and new guitarist Jeffrey Paul Norlander now included in the lineup. Drafting in PJ Harvey collaborator John Parish to produce the band, Low Estate appeared in early 1998. Secret South followed two years later, but was followed by a well-deserved break from recording. Guitarist Steve Taylor joined before this point when Norlander left the group. The live document Hoarse, released in spring 2001, marked the band's first release for the new millennium. In 2002, the original trio got back together with Taylor and began writing and recording Folklore, which was released that summer through New York indie Jetset. A year later, Jetset issued Olden, which collected 12 previously unreleased demo/alternate versions of classic 16hp material; six live tracks culled from a 1994 date in Denver; and two band interviews. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine and Bradley Torreano, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: 16 Horsepower
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16 Horsepower
David Eugene Edwards of 16 Horsepower performing live in 1998.
David Eugene Edwards of 16 Horsepower performing live in 1998.
Background information
Origin Denver, Colorado, USA
Genre(s) Alternative country
Years active 1992 - 2005
Label(s) A&M Records
Glitterhouse Records
Razor & Tie Records
Volkoren
Alternative Tentacles Records
Associated acts Woven Hand
Lilium
The Denver Gentlemen
Website http://www.16horsepower.net
Former members
David Eugene Edwards
Jean-Yves Tola
Pascal Humbert
Keven Soll
Jeffrey-Paul Norlander
Steve Taylor
Rob Redick
David Eugene Edwards live in 2004.

16 Horsepower was an alternative/traditional musical group based in Denver, Colorado. Their music was usually serious in tone with distinct Christian religious lyrics dealing with conflict and redemption. For the bulk of their career, the band consisted of David Eugene Edwards, Jean-Yves Tola, and Pascal Humbert (the latter two formerly of the band Passion Fodder). After releasing four studio albums and touring extensively, the band broke up in 2005, citing "mostly political and spiritual" differences. The members remain active in the groups Woven Hand and Lilium.

Contents

Band history

David Eugene Edwards and Pascal Humbert formed 16 Horsepower in 1992 in Los Angeles, California, where they had met building movie sets for Roger Corman’s Hollywood Studios. Friend, co-worker and trained jazz drummer Jean-Yves Tola joined shortly after. The trio performed once as Horsepower before they parted ways with Humbert as Edwards re-located back to Denver, Colorado, soon followed by Tola.

Back in Denver, the band once again became a trio as Edwards' old acquaintance Keven Soll, a luthier and accomplished double bass player, joined the band. Frustrated by misconceptions about the name Horsepower being related to heroin and inspired by a traditional American folk song about sixteen horses pulling the coffin of a beloved to the graveyard, the name was changed to 16 Horsepower. The band spent the following years rehearsing and gaining a reputation for their intense live performances while touring extensively across North America and eventually they released a seven-inch single, "Shametown", in 1994. By this time they had gained the attention of A&M Records, and recording of Sackcloth ‘n’ Ashes began in 1995. For various reasons A&M decided to postpone the release of the album, and so the band returned to the studio and recorded their eponymous debut EP which was released the same year.

The debut full-length studio album Sackcloth ‘n’ Ashes was eventually released in 1996, garnering praise from the international music press. At this time Pascal Humbert had re-located to Denver and joined the band as a second guitarist, although his primary instrument is the bass. Following differences about the musical direction, Soll was asked to leave and was replaced by Rob Redick, later known as the bassist for Candlebox. Redick did not last long because of what the band has referred to as "kind of a mutual unhappiness", and Humbert took over the bass duties. Jeffrey-Paul Norlander joined on second guitar shortly before recording began on the second album, Low Estate, with John Parish as producer. Edwards and Norlander had previously been in several bands together, most notably The Denver Gentlemen.

Norlander departed in 1998 and was replaced by Steve Taylor, the band's guitar technician, who had already been performing on a handful of songs on the bands European tour in 1996.

Spending two years touring and writing new material, 16 Horsepower’s third full-length album Secret South was not recorded and released until 2000. The album marked a distinct change in sound and tone from earlier releases as the up-tempo rock influences had all but vanished completely and left room for a more melodic folk-inspired sound. A planned European tour during the summer of 2001 was canceled because of what seemed like internal conflicts within the band, and rumours of a break-up began to circulate shortly after. This rumour was further fueled by the fact that the band members had begun to focus on solo and side-projects. Humbert had released his solo-debut with his project Lilium the previous year and Edwards had begun recording and performing live with his new project Woven Hand.

16 Horsepower, short of Steve Taylor, returned in 2002 with Folklore. As hinted by the title, this fourth studio album took the band further into traditional folk territory and featured only four original 16 Horsepower compositions. While the band went on several tours in support of the album, their creative output was focused on Woven Hand and Lilium, Tola having also joined the latter. Olden, a compilation of previously unreleased versions of early material was released in 2003. This release was supported by a tour in early 2004, including their first US dates in three years, featuring a set split between early material and Folklore-era songs. In April 2005 the band announced their official break-up, as a result of personal, political and spiritual differences as well as finding the constant touring incompatible with their daily lives.

Alternative Tentacles Records, a San Francisco-based record label run by former Dead Kennedys frontman Jello Biafra absorbed American distribution of the band's latter records shortly before their breakup. Since the band's demise, the label has released two DVD-format retrospectives, and in 2008 released a two-CD set Live March 2001. Humbert joined Woven Hand in 2007.

Styles and themes

It has always been difficult to describe the band's music in simple terms as it borrowed just as heavily from folk music, country, bluegrass, and traditionals as it did from rock music. 16 Horsepower and Edwards' later project Woven Hand were described by one critic as "incendiary gospel, hallowed folk and mordant tones infused with a high, dark theatricality worthy of Nick Cave." [1]

Edwards' grandfather was a Nazarene preacher and young Edwards often went along as his elder preached the gospel to various peoples. This experience coloured his approach to songwriting as well as the instrumentation employed to develop the band's unique sound. On several tracks over the course of the band's career, Edwards evoked decisive Christian imagery, particularly that of the redemptive capacity of Jesus Christ.

16 Horsepower, especially in their early days, saw themselves first and foremost as a rock band. David Eugene Edwards, however, had an interest in all things from past times, including musical instruments. One instrument that was paramount during the nascent days of 16 Horsepower was the Chemnitzer concertina.[citation needed] It was erroneously credited as a bandoneon (a closely-related instrument) on Sackcloth 'n' Ashes. The antique instrument used on the early tours and recordings was falling apart and quite cumbersome to tour with; some time before the sessions for Low Estate, it was replaced with the more modern American-made Patek brand instrument shown in the above photo.

Influences

Acknowledged influences on the band included Joy Division, The Gun Club, Nick Cave and The Birthday Party. 16 Horsepower would eventually share the same management as Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds and tour with them. [2] They also collaborated with French band Noir Désir on a cover of The Gun Club's "Fire Spirit" for the 1998 EP The Partisan.

Legacy

Sixteen Horsepower are among the Denver-based bands credited for laying the foundation for what today has become known as Gothic Americana.

Band members

Original and final line-up:

Former members:

  • Keven Soll - upright bass, flat top bass, cello, vocals (1993-1996)
  • Rob Redick - bass (1996-1997)
  • Jeffrey-Paul Norlander - fiddle, guitar, cello, organ, vocals (1997-1998)
  • Steve Taylor - guitar, keyboards, vocals (1998-2001)

Live guests:

  • Bob Ferbrache - lap steel (1996)
  • Elin Palmer - violin (2001)
  • Daniel McMahon - organ (2002)
  • John Rumly - guitar, bass, banjo (2002)

Discography

Albums

Singles

  • "Shametown" (vinyl 7" - 1994)
  • "Black Soul Choir" (CD - 1996)
  • "Haw" (vinyl - 1996)
  • "For Heaven's Sake" (CD - 1997)
  • "Coal Black Horses" (CD - 1997)
  • "The Partisan" (CD - 1998)
  • "Clogger" (CD - 2000)
  • "Splinters" (CD - 2001)

Video

  • "Black Soul Choir" and "Haw" (1995)
  • 16HP DVD (2005)
  • Live DVD (2006)

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "16 Horsepower" Read more

 

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