The Clientele

The Clientele
Origin London, England, United Kingdom
Genres Indie pop
Years active 1991–present
Labels Merge Records
Pointy Records
The Track & Field Organisation
Website The Clientele's Official Website
Members Alasdair MacLean
Mark Keen
James Hornsey
Past members Mel Draisey
Innes Phillips
Daniel Evans
Howard Monk

The Clientele is a London-based British band with Alasdair MacLean on vocals and guitar, Mark Keen on drums, and James Hornsey on bass.

The band has experienced greater success in the United States, where they are signed to Merge Records, home of bands such as Lambchop and Spoon, than in their native Britain. They have conducted several extensive U.S. tours.

History

MacLean and Hornsey both grew up in Hampshire, England, and began collaborating musically while still in school, after MacLean saw that Hornsey had written the name of the band Felt on his pencil case. The band formed in 1991, with Innes Phillips sharing singing and songwriting duties with MacLean; their original name was The Butterfly Collectors. The band recorded an album's worth of material but failed to get any label interest. Innes left the band (and would go on to found The Relict); the rest of the group re-formed in 1997, after which they moved to London and released a number of singles that were eventually collected on Suburban Light (2000). That compilation won the band glowing reviews; SF Weekly said the band "offers a brand of appealingly melancholy pop that might just surpass that of its forebears." [1] The Violet Hour (2003) was their first album proper, which again saw great acclaim, but, as yet, little commercial success.

August 2005 saw the release of their second full album, Strange Geometry, the first the band recorded with a producer, Brian O'Shaughnessy, who had previously produced Primal Scream. It was notable for a much cleaner production sound than the reverb-heavy sound that had previously been their defining characteristic; it was also the first time the band had used a strings section on one of their records. The task of writing these arrangements was given to Louis Philippe. Only one single, "Since K Got Over Me", was released from the album, which failed to reach the Top 75 in the UK. Another song from the album, "(I Can't Seem) To Make You Mine", was featured on the soundtrack of the film The Lake House.

Strange Geometry was quickly followed by a collection of recordings from 1991 to 1996, featuring Innes Phillips, called It's Art, Dad. After a U.S. tour in August 2006, The Clientele became a four-piece again, adding Mel Draisey (on violin, keys and percussion), who became their first female member. They then recorded the album God Save The Clientele with producer Mark Nevers, known for his work with Merge labelmates Lambchop; the album again featured several Louis Philippe-composed string arrangements. God Save The Clientele was released in May 2007 in the United States. Bonfires on the Heath followed in October 2009, and Minotaur, a Mini-LP, was released on 17 July 2010.

On 6 July 2011, the band announced on its website that The Clientele would be taking an indefinite hiatus.

The band announced that it would reunite for a lone gig at The Bell House in Brooklyn on 21 March 2014.

Since then, the 'Suburban Light' album has been reissued with bonus tracks and gave the band a Billboard top 30 album for the first time in their history.[2] They also released two new singles in 2014, 'Falling Asleep'[3] and 'On A Summer Trail'.[4] The band have continued to tour in both the US[5] and Europe,[6] and McClean is writing songs which may constitute a forthcoming album.[7] On 24 March 2016, the group's official Facebook page posted an image of the mixing board at Brian O'Shaughnessy's Bark Studios in London, with the implication that the group were recording new material.

Style

Their music has often been noted for its reverb-rich production[8] and MacLean's distinctive breathy vocals (an effect achieved partly by MacLean singing with a microphone plugged into a guitar amplifier) and unique guitar style. Their lyrics take a strong inspiration from surrealist literature and art from the early 20th century; "We Could Walk Together" quotes a line ("like a silver ring thrown into the flood of my heart") from a 1928 poem by French surrealist Joë Bousquet; in its final two verses, the song "What Goes Up" quotes the poem "Stupidity Street" by Ralph Hodgson in its entirety.

Discography

Albums

EPs

Singles

Split singles

Equipment

A detailed gear diagram of Alasdair Maclean's 2007 Clientele guitar rig is well-documented.[9]

References

  1. Archived 27 January 2005 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. "HL007 - the third hangover lounge picture disc | Hangover Lounge Records". Hangoverloungerecords.bandcamp.com. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  3. "The Clientele / King Khan & The Shrines* / Destroyer (4) - Falling Asleep / Orpheus Avenue / Know Your Product / Te Recuerdo Amanda (Vinyl)". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  4. "The Clientele / Birdie (2) - The Third Hangover Lounge Picture Disc (Vinyl)". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  5. "The Clientele Announce Summer Tour | News". Pitchfork. 2014-04-03. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  6. "The Clientele / Shows". Theclientele.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  7. Philip Runco (2014-07-16). "BYT Interviews The Clientele (2014) - BrightestYoungThings - DC". BrightestYoungThings. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  8. Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  9. "Alasdair Maclean of The Clientele - Guitar Rig and Gear Setup - 2007". Guitargeek.com. 2007-05-21. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
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