Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Hey willpower

 
Artist: Hey Willpower

Group Members:

Tomo Yasuda, Will Schwartz

Similar Artists:

Formal Connection With:

  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "P.D.A.

Biography

San Francisco's Hey Willpower began as Imperial Teen bassist Will Schwartz's homage to the hip-hop, urban, and dance-pop he grew up with, such as L'Trimm and Janet and Michael Jackson's singles. The original incarnation of the band included the Aislers Set's Amy Linton, but she was too busy with her main band to spend a lot of time with Hey Willpower. A mutual friend introduced Schwartz to Tussle's Tomo Yasuda, and the pair were soon practicing and recording furiously. In 2005, their self-titled EP introduced their dancefloor-savvy sound; appropriately, the group's live show also included a troupe of dancers. The Hundredaire single -- a witty tribute to André 3000's "Millionaire" -- arrived in 2007, as did the Dance EP. Later that year, Hey Willpower's debut album, P.D.A., was released in Europe; Tomlab released it in the U.S. in early 2008. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Hey willpower
Top
hey willpower
Also known as willpower, Hey Willpower
Origin San Francisco, California
Genres Dance, Pop, R&B, Crunk
Instruments Electronic
Years active 2003 - present
Labels Cochon Records (US)
Tomlab (Europe)
Associated acts Imperial Teen, Tussle, The Boy Explodes
Website http://www.heywillpower.com/
Members
Will Schwartz (vocals), Tomo Yasuda (electronics), Justin Kelly, Mecca, Hayley Kaufmann, and Joey Guillory (dancers)
Former members
Erin Rush, Donal Mosher, Chelsea Starr (dancers), Christelle (keyboardist and DJ)

hey willpower is an American pop band, led by vocalist Will Schwartz and electronic musician Tomo Yasuda (usually known simply as "Tomo"), with rotating collaborators including musicians and dancers.

Contents

History

hey willpower was formed by Will Schwartz (one of the "queer alt-rockers" [1] of Imperial Teen) and San Francisco musician Tomo Yasuda (of The Boy Explodes), under the name willpower in San Francisco during July 2003.[2] They had to change their name to hey willpower by December 2004 [3] after receiving a cease and desist order from an artist called Will Power. [4] Schwartz started the project to explore his interest in dance pop and R&B music, which he had no outlet for in his other band. [5]

Schwartz and Tomo began gigging in the San Francisco area in late 2003, eventually launching US and then European tours. The pair recruited dancers to liven up their shows; first Donal Mosher and Chelsea Starr,[6] and later Erin Rush and Justin Kelly. [5] In 2007, Schwartz and Tomo toured Europe with a dancer named Mecca, and a keyboardist and DJ named Christelle.[7] hey willpower have opened for bands including Scissor Sisters, Le Tigre, and Peaches."[8] In spring/summer 2008, the Schwartz, Tomo, and Kelly will embark on another tour of the United States and Europe, retaining Mecca and adding dancers Hayley Kaufmann and Joey Guillory.[7]

In the US, hey willpower released a self-titled EP through Cochon Records in 2005 (which went out of print and was re-released as Dance in 2007). Singles for "Double Fantasy II" and "Hundredaire" were released, with music video clips directed by the band's own Justin Kelly. 2006 saw a European-released LP titled PDA, from Tomlab. In 2006, the band also contributed to a duet version of Norweigan electronic pop singer Annie's song "Chewing Gum."[8] [7] In 2007, the band recorded a cover of Architecture in Helsinki's song "Heart It Races".[7]

In press, Will Schwartz has spoken effusively about his love for radio-friendly, danceable pop music, how emotionally and physically he is moved by it, and the pleasure he feels from seeing an audience move around and make some noise. [5] He has name-dropped the likes of Janet Jackson, L'Trimm,[2] Michael Jackson, Prince, Gwen Stefani, Justin Timberlake,[5] and Missy Elliott [9] as influences to hey willpower's sound. Schwartz has noted that some audiences disregard dance pop music like the kind he makes with hey willpower as being without musical integrity or value; as opposed to the sort of indie rock, post-punk music he makes with Imperial Teen. Schwartz refutes and rejects these attitudes.[4] [5] The music video for "Double Fantasy II" carried a John Lennon and Yoko Ono-inspired concept that urged viewers to "give dance a chance."

Discography

Albums

  • hey willpower EP (2005)
  • PDA (2006)
  • Dance EP (2007)

Singles

  • Double Fantasy II (2005)
  • Hundredaire (2005)

References

  1. ^ "Joy of singles: Imperial Teen's Will Schwartz goes pop with his bubbly side project, hey willpower" - The Advocate 13 September 2005 retrieved from FindArticles.com
  2. ^ a b hey willpower Biography by Will Schwartz - heywillpower.com
  3. ^ "Name games" - San Francisco Bay Guardian December 2004
  4. ^ a b "Pop Goes the World" - San Francisco Weekly February 2005
  5. ^ a b c d e "Free Will" - San Francisco Bay Guardian May 2005
  6. ^ "Willpower" - San Francisco Bay Guardian January 2004
  7. ^ a b c d hey willpower MySpace
  8. ^ a b hey willpower Official Website
  9. ^ The Stranger August 2004

External links


 
 
Learn More
Hey Willpower (Rock Band, 2000s)
Imperial Teen (Rock Band, '90s, 2000s)
P.D.A. (2006 Album by Hey Willpower)

What is the Latin word for willpower? Read answer...
How do you build strong willpower and character? Read answer...
You want to know about willpower? Read answer...

Help us answer these
How do you improve one's willpower?
What is the meaning of sheer willpower?
What is the Greek word for willpower?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

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 Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hey willpower" Read more