Radio 4 (band)
Radio 4 were an American dance-punk band based in Brooklyn, New York. Formed in 1999, they claimed their music is "made in New York, is about New York, and sounds like New York".
Radio 4 | |
---|---|
Origin | Brooklyn, New York, United States |
Genres | Dance-punk |
Years active | 1999–2012 |
Labels | Astralwerks |
Associated acts | Garden Variety |
Members | Anthony Roman Greg Collins P.J. O'Connor Dave Milone |
Past members | Gerard Garone Anthony Rizzo Tommy Williams |
History
Early years
The band was formed in 1999 as a trio, comprising Anthony Roman (vocals/bass), Tommy Williams (guitar/vocals) and Greg Collins (drums). The three had been friends growing up in Long Island, where they had been involved in the hardcore scene,[1] appearing in bands such as Garden Variety (Roman) and Sleepasaurus.[2] They initially formed the band under the influence of late 1970s/early 1980s punk and post-punk, recording a three-track EP which was released on New Jersey's Gern Blandsten label.[3]
Their first album The New Song & Dance was released in 2000, produced by Tim O'Heir. This record was a low-budget, gritty rock album with a slightly retro sound, drawing comparisons to The Clash in particular.[2] Around this time Anthony Roman opened a record store in Brooklyn which became a focus for the emerging scene, and the first album was followed by the Dance to the Underground EP, also produced by O'Heir. A dance remix of the title track became a club hit and was used in a Mitsubishi advert, indicating a new direction for the band's sound.[1]
Gotham! and mainstream success
The band subsequently became a five-piece, comprising Roman, Collins, David Milone (Vocals/Guitar) (who replaced original guitarist/singer Tommy Williams in 2005), Gerard Garone (Keyboards), and P.J. O'Connor (Percussion),[1] and teamed up with James Murphy and Tim Goldsworthy's DFA Productions to produce their second album. This collaboration signalled a new direction for the band, merging the guitar punk of their first album with electronic and dance music influences to create a dance-punk sound similar to other DFA-affiliated artists such as The Rapture.[3] Gotham! was released in 2002 on Gern Blandsten, described as "half dance party, half political rally",[4] leading the band to mainstream recognition and international success.[1][3]
The band recorded their third album, Stealing of a Nation, in a basement studio in Brooklyn with Max Heyes, and it was released in September 2004,[3] to a poor critical reception.[5] A fourth album entitled Enemies Like This followed in 2006.[5]
Gerard Garone left the band in April 2008. They last appeared together as a full band at the CBGB Festival in New York in 2012. Roman and Milone still occasionally perform together as Orange Cassettes along with former members of Elefant.[6]
Influences
They cite a variety of influences, including Gang of Four,[1] Mission of Burma, Primal Scream and Zero Zero, though their lively punk sound combined with their militant political stance has drawn a strong comparison with The Clash.[1]
Their name comes from a Public Image Ltd. song from that group's second album, which is itself a reference to BBC Radio 4.[1]
Discography
Studio albums
- The New Song & Dance (2000)
- Gotham! (2002)
- Stealing of a Nation (2004)
- Enemies Like This (2006)
EPs
- Dance to the Underground (June 2001, Gern Blandsten Records)
- Electrify (August 2004, Astralwerks)
- Enemies Like This Remixes (September 2006, Astralwerks)
- Packing Things Up on the Scene (October 2006, Astralwerks/EMI)
Singles
- "Beat Around the Bush" (1999, Gern Blandsten Records)
- "Dance to the Underground" (June 2001, City Slang) - UK No. 94
- "Struggle" (May 2002, City Slang) - UK No. 84
- "Eyes Wide Open" (May 2002, City Slang) - UK No. 182
- "Start a Fire" (August 2003, City Slang) - UK No. 130
- "Party Crashers" (July 2004, Astralwerks/City Slang) - UK No. 75
- "Absolute Affirmation" (September 2004, City Slang) - UK No. 61
- "State of Alert" (November 2004, City Slang) - UK No. 121
- "Transmission" (March 2005, City Slang) - UK No. 153
- "Enemies Like This" (May 2006, Astralwerks) - UK No. 162
- "Packing Things Up on the Scene" (October 2006, Astralwerks/EMI) - UK No. 175
- "As Far as the Eye Can See" (August 2007, Astralwerks/EMI)
Songs in other media
- "Party Crashers" in Project Gotham Racing 3
- Radio 4's song, "Caroline" is featured in "Rooney - Heart" in Nike's Joga Bonito series of advertisements.
- "Dance to the Underground" is featured in the musical score of Grandma's Boy, produced by Adam Sandler's production company Happy Madison in 2006.
- "Start a Fire" from the album Gotham! has been featured in Warren Miller's Journey, and commercials for FX's show Rescue Me
- "Enemies Like This" has been featured in commercials for the National Geographic Channel's documentary series Critical Situation.
- "Calling All Enthusiasts" was used in commercials for the new Schwinn Sting-Ray bikes in 2004.
- A pre-release version of "Give it to Me" was featured in Sharpie marker's TV commercial with David Beckham in the summer of 2008.[7]
References
- Laurence, Alexander. "RADIO 4". Free Williamsburg. Retrieved 23 March 2016.
- D'Angelo, Peter J. "The New Song and Dance - Radio 4". allmusic.com. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
- Spano, Charles. "Radio 4 Biography and History". allmusic.com. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
- D'Angelo, Peter J. "Gotham! - Radio 4". allmusic.com. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
- Theakston, Rob. "Enemies Like This - Radio 4". allmusic.com. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
- Glazer, Joshua. "LCD Soundsystem are re-uniting - here's 5 more 00s Dance-Punk acts we want back now". thump.vice.com. Vice. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
- Sanford L.P. (June 19, 2008). "David Beckham - Sharpie Markers ad (60 sec.)". YouTube. Retrieved 2008-09-22.