The Physics House Band | |
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Origin | Brighton, England |
Genres | Progressive rock, experimental rock, [1] psychedelia [2] |
Years active | 2012–present |
Labels | Blood and Biscuits, Small Pond |
Members |
|
Past members |
|
The Physics House Band are an English band formed in Brighton, England, in 2012. They have released three studio albums.
Formed in 2012, the band comprised multi-instrumentalists Sam Organ and Adam Znaidi and drummer Dave Morgan, who met while studying at University in Brighton, and were initially members of a five-piece band. [3] They initially gained a following from their video for "Titan" on YouTube. [3] [4] The band's debut album, Horizons/Rapture, was released in 2013. [3] [4] Comedian Stewart Lee, in a Sunday Times review of Horizons/Rapture wrote: "This youthful Brighton trio’s debut offers ugly-beautiful instrumental progressive rock that ageing King Crimson fans think no-one can play anymore." [4]
The band's second album, Mercury Fountain, was released in 2017. [4] The title of this album references an Alexander Calder sculpture of the same name that Znaidi saw in Madrid. [5] The album was described in The Independent as "a cataclysmic, cyclical odyssey that spirals in and out of kaleidoscopic pockets, serene ambience and frenetic, apoplectic wig-outs". [4]
In 2018 Saxophonist/multi-instrumentalist Miles Spilsbury joined the group.
On March 9, 2021 the band released a statement saying Adam Znaidi had stepped way from the band the previous year.
The band released a third album Incident on 3rd on December 3, 2021.
The group have toured and performed shows with Alt-J, Jaga Jazzist, Deerhoof, LITE, 65daysofstatic, Three Trapped Tigers, Mono, Omar Rodriguez-Lopez.
The band's music has been described as "psychedelic experimental rock", "psych-rock", and "psychedelic, experimental math-rock". [3] [4] [6] Paul Lister, writing for The Guardian, described them as a "perfect storm of rock, prog, psych, cosmic, tech metal and jazz fusion", stating that the band members played "about 33 instruments" between them. [2]
Studio albums
Remix albums
The Physics House Band | |
---|---|
Origin | Brighton, England |
Genres | Progressive rock, experimental rock, [1] psychedelia [2] |
Years active | 2012–present |
Labels | Blood and Biscuits, Small Pond |
Members |
|
Past members |
|
The Physics House Band are an English band formed in Brighton, England, in 2012. They have released three studio albums.
Formed in 2012, the band comprised multi-instrumentalists Sam Organ and Adam Znaidi and drummer Dave Morgan, who met while studying at University in Brighton, and were initially members of a five-piece band. [3] They initially gained a following from their video for "Titan" on YouTube. [3] [4] The band's debut album, Horizons/Rapture, was released in 2013. [3] [4] Comedian Stewart Lee, in a Sunday Times review of Horizons/Rapture wrote: "This youthful Brighton trio’s debut offers ugly-beautiful instrumental progressive rock that ageing King Crimson fans think no-one can play anymore." [4]
The band's second album, Mercury Fountain, was released in 2017. [4] The title of this album references an Alexander Calder sculpture of the same name that Znaidi saw in Madrid. [5] The album was described in The Independent as "a cataclysmic, cyclical odyssey that spirals in and out of kaleidoscopic pockets, serene ambience and frenetic, apoplectic wig-outs". [4]
In 2018 Saxophonist/multi-instrumentalist Miles Spilsbury joined the group.
On March 9, 2021 the band released a statement saying Adam Znaidi had stepped way from the band the previous year.
The band released a third album Incident on 3rd on December 3, 2021.
The group have toured and performed shows with Alt-J, Jaga Jazzist, Deerhoof, LITE, 65daysofstatic, Three Trapped Tigers, Mono, Omar Rodriguez-Lopez.
The band's music has been described as "psychedelic experimental rock", "psych-rock", and "psychedelic, experimental math-rock". [3] [4] [6] Paul Lister, writing for The Guardian, described them as a "perfect storm of rock, prog, psych, cosmic, tech metal and jazz fusion", stating that the band members played "about 33 instruments" between them. [2]
Studio albums
Remix albums