Dawn of the Replicants

Dawn of the Replicants are a Scottish indie rock quintet from Galashiels.[1] Four of the 1997 line-up (Pringle, Vickers, Simian and Small) had previously worked together on the short-lived Scottish music magazine, Sun Zoom Spark.

Dawn of the Replicants
OriginGalashiels, Scotland
GenresIndie rock
Years active1996– present
Labelseastwest, Hungry Dog (Flying Sparks imprint), SL Records
MembersDavid Coyle
David Little
Roger Simian
Mike Small
Paul Vickers
Past membersDonald Kyle
Grant Pringle

Band members edit

  • Donald Kyle: Bass & guitar (1997 to 2001)
  • Grant Pringle: Drums, guitar, keyboards & vocals (1997 to 2001)
  • Roger Simian: Guitar, keyboards & vocals (1996 to present)
  • Mike Small: Guitar, keyboards & vocals (1997 to present)
  • Paul Vickers: Lead Vocals, keyboards & gadgetry (1996 to present)
  • David Coyle: Bass, guitar & vocals (2002 to present)
  • David Little: Drums, vocals & engineer (2002 to present)

Biography edit

Initially a duo (Vickers and Simian), the band released a mail-order EP, entitled So Far So Spitfire in December 1996.[1] John Peel and Mark Radcliffe, BBC Radio 1 DJs gave the EP substantial airplay.[1][2] The band was expanded to a quintet and a second self-released single followed in the summer of 1997. They signed for East West Records, a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Records. Before the close of the year, a few more EPs followed, accolades from the NME, and The Times newspaper declared them the 'best new band of 1997'.[3]

The 1998 single "Candlefire", taken from the debut album reached number 52 in the UK Singles Chart.[4] The follow-up, "Hogwash Farm"(lead track of The Diesel Hands EP), peaked at number 65.[4] That summer the band played both the Glastonbury and Reading Festivals.

Before his death, John Peel aired five sessions, four as Dawn of the Replicants plus a one-off session which Vickers and Simian recorded as side project, Pluto Monkey. The band's single "Science Fiction Freak", taken from the second Replicants' album, made John Peel's 'Festive 50' in 1999. The album sold less well than its predecessor and Warner Bros. dropped the band.

In 2000, Vickers and Simian released an album and two singles through Shifty Disco of electronica, under the name Pluto Monkey.

After a break the band returned with a third album and a live tour in 2002. In 2005 the band played at the South by Southwest Festival in Austin, Texas. In recent years they have also recorded sessions for Huw Stephens on BBC Radio 1 and Marc Riley on BBC 6 Music. While on tour in the UK during early 2006, the band took part in the Abbey Road Sessions for American satellite radio station U-Pop and enjoyed video plays on MTV2, whilst Mojo, NME, Uncut, and Q all carried reviews of their fifth studio album, Fangs.

In 2006 ten years was celebrated with a 22-track singles collection, the first 1,000 copies of which included a free DVD, featuring live footage, videos and interviews. New tracks were recorded in early 2007 for the sixth studio album. Members of Dawn of the Replicants can currently be found working on projects including Paul Vickers and The Leg, Mr. Twonkey, The Stark Palace, The Stone Ghost Collective, Mike and Michi, The Border Boogie Band, The Countess of Fife, The Shamanic Project, The Wedding Present, P.P. Arnold and The Duncan MacKinnon Music and Arts Trust venue Mac Arts.

Discography edit

Albums edit

  • One Head, Two Arms, Two Legs (East West Records) 1998
  • Wrong Town, Wrong Planet, Three Hours Late (East West Records) 1999
  • Touching The Propeller (Flying Sparks) 2002
  • The Extra Room (Hungry Dog) 2004
  • Fangs (SL Records) 2006

Compilations edit

  • Bust The Trunk: The Singles (SL Records) 2006 [1]

EPs edit

  • "So Far So Spitfire EP" (dumb/SULK trigg-er) 1996
  • "Violent Sundays EP" (East West Records) 1997
  • "All That Cheyenne Caboodle EP" (East West Records) 1997
  • "Rhino Rays EP" (East West Records) 1997
  • "The Diesel Hands EP" (East West Records) 1998
  • "I Smell Voodoo EP" (East West Records) 1998
  • "Bun Magic EP" (Simple Bounty) 2005

Singles edit

  • "Candlefire" (East West Records) 1998
  • "Born In Baskets" (Fierce Panda Records) 1998
  • "Rule The Roost" (East West Records) 1999
  • "Science Fiction Freak" (East West Records) 1999
  • "Rockefeller Center, 1932" (Flying Sparks) 2002
  • "Leaving Town / Smoke Without Fire" (Flying Sparks) 2002
  • "Ricecake Rabbit Soul" (Flying Sparks) 2005
  • "Essence of Maureen / Little Driver" (SL Records) 2005
  • "Oh Bumblebee (SL Records) 2006
  • "Fix The Air" (SL Records) 2006

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Strong, Martin C. (2000). The Great Rock Discography (5th ed.). Edinburgh: Mojo Books. p. 246. ISBN 1-84195-017-3.
  2. ^ Tom Davies (14 November 1997). "Speed of Sound: Dawn of the Replicants - Rhino Rays EP". Cherwell. Vol. 219, no. 6. p. 14. This EP needs quite some listening, but why else would John Peel be playing this band to death?
  3. ^ Craig Harris: Dawn of The Replicants biography at AllMusic. Retrieved on 2008-07-23
  4. ^ a b Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 143. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.