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Pram

 
Artist: Pram
Pram

Group Members:

Max Simpson, Sam Owen, Rosie Cuckston, Matt Eaton, Steve Perkins, Alex Clare, Nick Sales

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See Pram Lyrics
  • Formed: 1990, Birmingham, England
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "The Museum of Imaginary Animals," "Sargasso Sea," "North Pole Radio Station"

Biography

As indicated by their name, Pram brought a distinctly childlike world-view to their uniquely cinematic brand of fractured electro-pop; unlike the cutesy, baby-doll mentality that informed the work of many of their more whimsical contemporaries, however, the group's vision of childhood was decidedly nightmarish, evoking a hallucinatory world of helplessness and fear. Formed in Birmingham, England, in 1990, Pram originally fostered an aesthetic consisting primarily of frontwoman Rosie Cuckston's eerie vocals and the sounds of a homemade theremin, but the unit's ranks later swelled to include multi-instrumentalist Matt Eaton, bassist Sam Owen, and keyboardist/sampler Max Simpson. After their bare-bones 1992 EP debut, Gash, Pram's music began to grow more intricate, their odd melodies and hypnotic beats textured by toy pianos, triangles, glockenspiels, glass hammers, and even a Hawaiian bubble machine; the 1993 releases Iron Lung and the full-length The Stars Are So Big, the Earth Is So Small...Stay as You Are greatly expanded their horizons by experimenting with sound and structure, and by the release of 1994's Helium they even began incorporating elements of jazz and hip-hop.

Pram's progress continued with 1995's excellent Sargasso Sea, a deeper plunge into sampling that yielded their most taut material to date. Another EP, Music for Your Movies, followed in late 1996, and in 1998 Pram returned with the full-length North Pole Radio Station. Fall 2000 saw the release of The Museum of Imaginary Animals. The following year the group issued the Somniloquy EP, and then returned with another full-length, Dark Island, in early 2003. Pram worked on other projects, such as the Static Caravan compilation Binary Oppositions, to which they contributed a track, and remixed a song by Indian singer Mohammed Rafi, "Babul Ki Duayein Leti Ja." Eaton collaborated on a score to the classic silent film Nosferatu with Grandmaster Gareth from the band Misty's Big Adventure, who provided string arrangements on Dark Island and Pram's following album, The Moving Frontier. The band's 11th full-length, The Moving Frontier, was released in fall 2007 in the U.K. and nearly a year later in the U.S. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Pram (band)
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For other uses, see Pram (disambiguation)

Pram
Origin Birmingham, England
Genres Experimental rock
Dream pop
Post-rock
Years active 1988 – Present
Labels Howl
AE
Too Pure
Domino
Merge
Associated acts Broadcast
Monade
Modified Toy Orchestra
Micronormous
Website http://www.pram.uk.net
Members
Rosie Cuckston
Sam Owen
Matt Eaton
Max Simpson
Laurence Hunt
Harry Dawes
Former members
Steve Perkins
Daren Garret
Nick Sales
Alex Clare
Dave Turner
Mark Butterworth
Andy Weir
Hannah Baines
The/Mr. Verdigris Horn
The Colonel

Pram are an experimental band who formed in the Balsall Heath/Moseley area of Birmingham, England in 1990.

Contents

History

Originally from Harrogate, North Yorkshire, Rosie Cuckston and Matt Eaton went to school together. They moved to Birmingham in the late 80's, schoolfriend Andy Weir keeping in touch after a move to London to study Art. Cuckston met Sam Owen by chance at a local supermarket's Singles Night. The four began performing under the name "Hole" in 1988 performing only with vocals and a homemade thermin. The band eventually became "Pram," Matt Eaton playing multiple instruments, Max Simpson joined later on keyboard and sampler, Andy Weir on the drums, and Sam switching to bass.

Pram's first album Gash was self-released and sold by mail order and at gigs. Along with their name, and incorporating toy instruments, the band had a child-like theme. Also, Cuckston's eerie vocals and lyrics dealt with depression, loneliness and the dark side of childhood. The band's early recordings had a krautrock-influenced blend of rhythmic guitar, keyboards and percussion.

The Too Pure years

The band soon attracted the attention of Too Pure Records (home to then Stereolab, Mouse on Mars and PJ Harvey) On that label, Pram had released several increasingly sophisticated albums and EPs between 1993 and 1995.

On their second LP, The Stars Are So Big... a trumpeter, credited as "The Verdigris Horn," joined and played on several tracks, including the quarter-hour "In Dreams You Too Can Fly". Their next album Helium (1994) featured increasing use of the sampler.

Their later recordings show a marked interest in "exotica". The band's final Too Pure album, 1995's Sargasso Sea, was "awarded" a score of 0/10 when reviewed by the NME, which the band saw as a compliment. (However, in 2004, NME tipped Pram as the next big band to watch out for.) The band's popularity continued to gain momentum.

In 1995, Pram left Too Pure, and released a cassette compilation of early demos and live recordings called Perambulations. Some of these recordings were added to the CD reissue of Gash. Singles and EPs were recorded for a variety of labels (including Stereolab's Duophonic Records), before the band found a new home at Domino Records.

The Domino years

Their first album for Domino, North Pole Radio Station, was originally recorded for Wurlitzer Jukebox Records, but the label shut down before it could be released. 1999's "Keep in a Dry Place and Away From Children" was the soundtrack to an animated film, and also featured a remix by Mouse on Mars. The band's releases on Domino have been distributed by Merge Records in the US.

From the release of 2003's 'Dark Island', the song 'Track of the Cat' was used on a BT Group advert. The remix of "Simon from Sydney/Untitled 2," commissioned by Warp Records, was used on Volkswagen's "30 years in the Making" advertising campaign. Grandmaster Gareth of Misty's Big Adventure produced the string arrangement on 'Peepshow'. He also arranged all the strings on the 2007 'The Moving Frontier' LP and played the cello on the songs "The Empty Quarter" and "Compass Rose".

Pram have been remixed by several artists (Somniloquy features remixes by fellow Brummie experimentalists Plone and Tele:funken amongst others), and remixed LFO and the Aphex Twin for the Warp Records 10th anniversary compilation.

Outside band activities

Most notably, Rosie Cuckston had recorded songs with Laetitia Sadier as Monade in the late 90s. She had appeared on their "M Is The Thirteenth Letter/Monade" and "Split" 45s.

Matt Eaton DJs with Mark from Plone for Silver Dollar, a reggae club in Birmingham. Eaton also produces his own music under the name 'Micronormous.' In Autumn 2009 he is working on a LP for Warm Circuit records, home of the Modified Toy Orchestra.

Their one-time drummer Steve Perkins had also been part of fellow Birmingham band Broadcast. The band's original theremin player left to become a bomb disposal worker.

Discography

Albums

Compilations

  • Brum Brum (1989, Pram's song 'Jack Sabbath' appears on this compilation, along with other brummie bands)
  • Perambulations (1995, cassette-only collection of early recordings, some live)
  • Telemetric Melodies (1999, collects various single/EP tracks from 1997-99)

Singles and EPs

  • Iron Lung (1993, EP)
  • Meshes (1994, EP)
  • Omnichord (1996)
  • Music for Your Movies (1996, EP)
  • The Last Astronaut (1997)
  • Sleepy Sweet (1998)
  • Keep in a Dry Place and Away From Children (1999)
  • The Owl Service (2000)
  • Somniloquy (2001, EP)
  • Prisoner of the Seven Pines (2008, EP)

DVD's

  • Shadow Shows of the Phantascope (2008)

External links


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