Hula
There is more than one band that recorded under the name Hula:
1) The Sheffield based band Hula was founded in November 1980. Three members (Mark Albrow, Alan Fisch & Ron Wright) lived with Stephen Mallinder (Cabaret Voltaire) and Paul Widger (They must be Russians, Clock DVA & the Box) in a villa called Hula Kula, named after an obscure Roxy Music track.
After trying the bass players Alan Watt, the notorious Chris Brain (Tense & NOS) & Mark Brydon (Chakk & Moloko), & after the replacement of Alan Fish (a.k.a. Fisch) by Nort (both drummed for Cabaret Voltaire), Hula released Fever Car, which became an indie hit. Then they recorded the impressive album Murmur. Ingredients like cut ups, steady rhythms, and paranoia vocals were blended together into a unique white funky sound.
Hula recruited John Avery as bass player. A bass player was necessary for the exciting live shows with lots of video material by Peter Care. Hula continued to bring out danceable 12 inches and more experimental albums. With this line-up Hula was more or less successful. International tours were made. Radio sessions for VPRO and John Peel were recorded and broadcast. Being a support act for Depeche Mode implied performing live in Wembley Arena for huge crowds.
After Nort left the band in 1986 the music changed, but still remained interesting. Later on Mark Albrow quit as well. When their record company Red Rhino went bankrupt they moved on to Wax Trax. They released the last Hula record: a Jimi Hendrix cover of Voodoo Chile. After the release, guest singer Jocelyn Cammack joined in officially. Ron moved on to bass and John to keyboards. In this new line up they made new songs. Intimates say these songs are the best Hula ever made. For the public it is hard to judge, for the material is still in the vaults of the studio. Eventually Hula broke up in 1992.
2) The more recent band named "Hula" was Chad King, Madelyn Burgess, Jesse Gelaznik, Alex Beard and Greg McMullen. They released 2 major albums, "Hula" in 2003 and "The cloud that eats hands" in 2007, before splitting up.
Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
|
Statistics:
- 50,369plays
- 5,330listners
- 180top track count
|
Music tracks:
Trackimage |
Playbut |
Trackname |
Playbut |
Trackname |
|
|