Lunatic Calm were an English electronic music group formed in 1996. Despite a wide-ranging sound palette, the group was best known for their high impact, industrial-tinged big beat compositions.

Lunatic Calm
OriginLondon, England
Genres
Years active1996–2003
LabelsMCA Records
City of Angels
Past membersSimon "sHack" Shackleton
Howard "Howie" Saunders
Jez Noble

History edit

[1] Formed in 1996 and composed of Simon "sHack" Shackleton and Howard "Howie" Saunders, they released two well received albums, as well as several singles and a wide range of remixes. The two had known each other since an early age, and prior to forming Lunatic Calm, they also played in several bands with Thom Yorke (Radiohead frontman), namely Headless Chickens and Flicker Noise.

Metropol (1997) edit

Their debut album Metropol was often compared to the works of The Prodigy and other bands, although it ranged from offbeat and psychedelic trip hop to heavy turbo-charged big beat. Record company MCA failed to support the band and they switched their attentions to the American market where they enjoyed a series of successful tours with other groups including Crystal Method. The most notable track from that album, and the one for which the group remains best known, is "Leave You Far Behind". This track has appeared on numerous movie soundtracks including The Matrix, Charlie's Angels, and Mortal Kombat Annihilation, also including The Crow in 1998–1999. A number of Lunatic Calm's tracks were used on video games, and the group did numerous remixes for various artists including Bush, DJ Scissorkicks, and Curve. The production equipment included an Atari ST, Akai S1000, Roland SH-101, Roland D-20, Nord Rack, Novation SuperNova II, Novation Bass Station, Alesis Quadraverb, Lexicon Reverb Signal Processor, Gibson and Fender electric guitars and a Mackie 16-channel, 4-Bus Mixer.[2]

Breaking Point (2002) and disbanding edit

The group's second album, Breaking Point was released in 2002, after several years of wrangling with record companies, and with little to no promotion. As the album was due to be released, the record label City of Angels went bankrupt. Without label support the band were unable to continue and Lunatic Calm disbanded in 2003. In Simon Shackleton's words: "There was no label support at all, a complete failure to promote or help in any way with either album, so everything we did we did ourselves. After a while, we simply ran out of energy and funds having been burnt badly on both albums."[3]

Aftermath edit

Simon Shackleton has been highly active as a solo producer and DJ ever since, operating primarily under the name Elite Force, but also under aliases such as Killer Elite, Futurecore, Double Black, pHrack R and Zodiac Cartel. He has run labels such as U&A Recordings (2006–present) and the Fused & Bruised imprint between 1996 and 2002, and is often cited as one of the leading proponents of the emergent Tech-Funk movement, fusing house, breaks, Electro and Techno. Some of his songs (both remixes and new tracks) have appeared on the Crystal Method remix albums, Community Service and Community Service II amongst others. He is currently recording an album as Simon Shackleton which is scheduled for release in early 2016 and has become a regular performer and attendee at the Burning Man Festival in Nevada each summer.

Howie is now one half of DoubleDose, a music production and sound design partnership he set up in 2004 with BAFTA award winner Nick Ryan, devising multimedia marketing campaigns, live event productions and sonic branding for companies such as Nokia, Shell, Ernst & Young, Ford, Mazda, Land Rover, Intel and Formula One motor racing across Europe, North America & Asia Pacific. Howie is also a Director at AudioFuel, which launched in December 2008 and offers music that is custom-composed for runners and personal fitness training programs.

Discography edit

Albums edit

Singles edit

  • "Centista" (1996)
  • "Leave You Far Behind" (1997)
  • "Roll the Dice" (1997)
  • "LC Double '0' Series" (1998)
  • "One Step" (1999)

Remixes edit

  • The Heads - "Don't Take My Kindness for Weakness" (1996)
  • Amen - "Vacuum" (1996)
  • Collapsed Lung - "Ballad Night" (1996)
  • Hurricane #1 - "Chain Reaction" (1997)
  • Black Grape - "Get Higher" (1997)
  • Bush - "Comedown" (1997)
  • Curve - "Chinese Burn" (1997)
  • Definition of Sound - "Outsider" (1997)
  • Elite Force - "Cool Like The Man" (1997)
  • Meat Katie - "Boned"(1997)
  • Pitchshifter - "Genius" (1998)
  • Mankind Liberation Front - "Isolated" (1999)
  • DJ Scissorkicks - "Clap Yo' Hands" (1999)
  • Earl Hagen - "I Spy" (2001)

Soundtrack appearances edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Interview with Lunatic Calm". Archived from the original on 29 October 2005.
  2. ^ https://www.flickr.com/photos/157635647@N03/53455717803/in/datetaken-public/
  3. ^ https://www.flickr.com/photos/157635647@N03/53456016640/in/datetaken-public/

External links edit