Tom Havelock

Tom Havelock is a British singer-songwriter and lead singer of the band PREP. He is also sometimes known by his stage name Tom Cane.

Tom Havelock
Birth nameThomas Havelock
Also known asTom Cane
OriginOxford, England
GenresElectro-pop, dance, indie, alternative
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter, frontman
InstrumentsVocals, cello, electric guitar
Years active2011–present
Associated actsPREP, Psychid, Hook & The Twin, Matrix & Futurebound, Drumsound & Bassline Smith, Klangkarussell, Eric Prydz, Cheryl Cole

Music career

Early beginnings

Havelock was an academic and music scholar at Eton before becoming a student at the University of Oxford when he decide to join in a band with his three close childhood friends back in 1997 to play a few college gigs.[1] Along with Henry Morton Jack, Marcus Efstratiou and Rupert Harrison, they initially performed under the name The Full Monty. Their sound was comparable to the likes of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young – breezy West Coast harmonies and lightweight sunshine psychedelia. An early demo caught the imagination of local label Shifty Disco (themselves still in their first year infancy). In the November of that year a single "Welcome" was released. This was followed by a national tour with labelmates Beaker and Dustball. The band started to gel into a serious unit, but things were moving on already. They parted company with Rupert and recruited a new member, Owen O'Rorke. Their name changed to Hester Thrale and they started to move away from their early sounds, using more keyboards and more experimental guitar sounds, inspired by the likes of Radiohead, Pink Floyd and The Beatles (circa The White Album-period). All four members are accomplished musicians and switch between guitar, keyboard and bass. Tom was the group's primary vocalist.

The band's music have often been compared to that of Radiohead, Pink Floyd, The Doors, Human League and German experimental work.[2] The band had actually supported Radiohead at their gig in South Park, Oxford. They were selected personally by Radiohead from 120 local acts to open the all-day concert. Shortly afterwards they signed to the fledgling db Records in 2001, a label set up by veteran A&R man David Bates, the man who discovered Def Leppard. They had met Dave three years prior after he went to their first ever gig at The Pit in Witney. At the time the only other notable acts of the label were the Brighton duo known as The Electric Soft Parade and singer-songwriter Tom McRae. The band have been ensconced in the studio, writing and recording at a prolific rate, something that had become their trademark over the previous couple of years.

They have also undergone two more name changes: initially they had been known as Moth for a few months, but after being contacted by a Christian rock outfit from Cardiff, whom had explained their strong rights to the name, they had finally settled on the name Psychid. They put out a series of singles and EPs receiving BBC Radio One plays from Mark Radcliffe and Jo Whiley before the release of their critically acclaimed debut album in 2003. The album was recorded with producer Chris Hughes, a man who previously went under the name of Merrick in Adam & The Ants. Following support slots with Radiohead, The Electric Soft Parade, and Brendan Benson, the band parted ways in 2006.

Eventually, Tom founded Hook and the Twin with drummer Marcus Efstratiou. The duo have released a string of singles, attracting radio DJ fans, including Rob da Bank, Huw Stephens, John Kennedy and Zane Lowe. Their first album titled Never Ever Ever was released in 2013.[3]

Havelock was also an accomplished cellist. He has performed in tracks for Tom McRae's 2000 self-titled album and the Cold Specks' 2012 album I Predict a Graceful Expulsion.

As a writer

Tom has been working with various artists and producers including Raleigh Ritchie, Joel Compass, Sinead Harnett and Craze & Hoax. He adopted the stage name Tom Cane in 2011 and began his solo career as a songwriter. He co-wrote the first single from Sub Focus' new album, "Falling Down" featuring Kenzie May in late 2011. He co-wrote and featured on the single "Through the Night" for Drumsound and Bassline Smith in mid-2012. He has also worked with Cheryl Cole as well, co-writing the title track for her third studio album A Million Lights.

He had co-written the hit single "Magnetic Eyes" featuring Baby Blue with Matrix and Futurebound, which was A List at Radio 1 for 6 weeks. A year later, Tom continued his successful partnership with Matrix and Futurebound, writing their biggest track to date, "Control" featuring Max Marshall, which spent three weeks in the top 10 and has been a major UK airplay hit. Recently, he was a featured performer in the UK top 40 hit single "Half Light" by British musician Wilkinson, which reached number 25 in the UK Singles Chart. It was originally released as the final track from his 2013 album Lazers Not Included before being its sixth and final single.

In 2014, Cane was featured as an uncredited vocalist in songs for Swedish DJ and producer Eric Prydz and Austrian dance music duo Klangkarussell.

PREP

Havelock joined the band PREP in 2014 as the lead singer, completing the lineup along with bandmates: Llywelyn Ap Myrddin, Guillaume Jambel (GIOM) and Daniel Radclyffe.[4]

Discography

Year Title Peak chart positions Album
UK SCO
2012 "Through the Night"
(Drumsound & Bassline Smith featuring Tom Cane)
3439 Wall of Sound
2013 "Starting Again"
(East & Young featuring Tom Cane)
Non-album single
2014 "Half Light"
(Wilkinson featuring Tom Cane)
2528 Lazers Not Included
"Sun in Your Eyes"
(Michael Brun and DubVision featuring Tom Cane)
Non-album single
2015 "Feels Good"
(Flux Pavilion featuring Tom Cane)
Tesla
2016 "Time"
(Mint Royale featuring Tom Cane)
Non-album single
"You'll See Me"
(Moguai featuring Tom Cane)
"—" denotes a song that did not chart or was not released.

Singles

Year Title Artist Role Peak chart positions Album
UK SCO IRL BEL FRA AUT GER SWI
2012 "Falling Down" Sub Focus featuring Kenzie May Co-writer Torus
"Magnetic Eyes" Matrix & Futurebound featuring Baby Blue Co-writer 24 29 117 Non-album single
2013 "Control" Matrix & Futurebound featuring Max Marshall Co-writer 7 7 97 Mystery Machine
"Summer Calling" Sigma featuring Taylor Fowlis Co-writer Non-album single
2014 "Liberate" Eric Prydz Co-writer, vocals 71 100 Opus
"Netzwerk (Falls Like Rain)" Klangkarussell Co-writer, vocals 83 96 17 190 7 17 13 Netzwerk
"Don't Look Back" Matrix & Futurebound featuring Tanya Lacey Co-writer 38 29 Non-album single
"Symmetry" Klangkarussell Co-writer, vocals 65 Netzwerk
"Sun Goes Down" Robin Schulz featuring Jasmine Thompson Co-writer 94 11 6 15 3 2 3 Prayer
"Headlights" Tor Miller Co-writer American English
2015 "Second Chance" Digitalism Co-writer Non-album single
"Generate" Eric Prydz Co-writer, vocals Opus
"La Serenata (Dream of You)" DJ Pippi and Kenneth Bager featuring Lilly Wright Co-writer Non-album single
2016 "Follow Me" Steve Angello and Still Young Co-writer, vocals
"—" denotes a song that did not chart or was not released in that territory.

Non-singles

Year Title Artist Album Role
2012 "A Million Lights" Cheryl Cole A Million Lights Co-writer
2013 "Back to Life" Drumsound & Bassline Smith Wall of Sound Featured artist
2014 "Never Take It Away" The Aston Shuffle featuring Mayer Hawthorne Photographs Co-writer
"The Same" Riton featuring Irfane Bad Guy RiRi (EP) Co-writer
"No Other Way" Sinéad Harnett featuring Snakehips N.O.W. (EP) Co-writer
"Live Life Now" Cheryl Cole Only Human Co-writer
"All in One Night" Co-writer
2015 "Forgiven" Kwabs Love + War Co-writer
"Brother" Ben Haenow Ben Haenow Co-writer
"LMHY" Plaitum Plaitum Co-writer
"Carousel" Co-writer
"Higher" Co-writer
"Sway" Co-writer
2019 "Together" Third Party Together Co-writer, vocals

References

  1. NIGHTSHIFT – The Big Question – July 2002 Archived 4 August 2002 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "BBC - Wiltshire - Music and Gigs - Local Band Moth Review". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  3. "PREP". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.