词条 | Perfume Tree |
释义 |
| name = Perfume Tree | image = | caption = | image_size = | background = group_or_band | alias = | origin = Vancouver, British Columbia | genre = Ambient, electronica, techno, trip hop, downtempo, chill out, drum and bass, ethereal | years_active = 1991 - 1999 | label = Minimum Records | associated_acts = | website = www.minimum.ca (Website abandoned) | current_members = Pete Lutwyche - programming, guitars, keyboards Jane Tilley - vocals, bass, guitar Also: Bruce Turpin - live beat mixing Ian MacLachlan - programming Melissa McCabe - bass Adam Sloan - bass Jim Peers - bass Martin Bell - bass/ Bubbles - mews }}Perfume Tree was a band from Vancouver, British Columbia that existed from 1991[1] until December 1999. Members were Jane Tilley, Bruce Turpin, Peter Lutwyche[2] The band performs light electronic rock.[3] HistoryPerfume Tree was formed by a group of disc jockeys from the University of British Columbia's campus radio station, CITR. The group signed with Zulu Records,[4] and released an album, Dust, in 1992. After releasing three more albums with Zulu, the band signed with World Domination Records, and released an EPP, Fathom the Sky in 1995. The band continued performing in the Vancouver area.[5] Their 1998 album Feeler blended Tilley's vocals with electronic rock rhythms.[6] Four of their songs were chosen for the 2000 Canadian crime drama The Spreading Ground directed by Derek Vanlint. Virgin, Dreaming, and Paradise were used in part, and So Far Away appeared almost in its entirety at the end of the film. The song Uneasy, from the album A Lifetime Away, appeared on the soundtrack to the 2007 film Weirdsville. Number of their songs were used in the Teton Gravity Research skiing films and TV series. The samples "Don't you believe in anything?" and "The future's not so bad, have faith in me" from the song Aircraft Engines on The Sun's Running Out are Ace from the Doctor Who episode The Curse of Fenric when she speaks to the Vicar in the empty church. Perfume Tree's last album, Felt, was released in 2000.[3] Tilley and Lutwyche went on to form Veloce with Ian MacLachlan. DiscographyAlbums
References1. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/19990220165221/http://www.chartattack.com:80/archives/archfeat/ptree/ptree.html "Perfume Tree Lo-Fi Dream Pop"]. Chart Attack, September 1995. by Stephanie Quinlan 2. ^{{cite book|author=CMJ Network, Inc.|title=CMJ New Music Monthly|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RCoEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA46|date=May 1998|publisher=CMJ Network, Inc.|page=46|issn=1074-6978}} 3. ^1 [https://exclaim.ca/music/article/perfume_tree-felt "Perfume Tree Felt"]. Exclaim!, By Eric Hill. Sep 01, 2002 4. ^{{cite book|author=Mike Gunderloy|title=Factsheet Five|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yzxUAAAAMAAJ|year=1998|publisher=M. Gunderloy|page=52}} 5. ^"Re-evolution, Perfume Tree with The Electrosonics, The Starfish Room Vancouver, B.C. February 5, 1998". Dropd, Review by Darren Gawle 6. ^[https://ink19.com/1998/12/magazine/interviews/perfume-tree "Perfume Tree"]. Ink 19, December 30, 1998, Bryan Reesman 7. ^{{cite book|title=Keyboard|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CWUJAQAAMAAJ|year=1998|publisher=GPI Publications|page=132}} External links
6 : Canadian electronic music groups|Musical groups from Vancouver|Musical groups established in 1991|Musical groups disestablished in 1999|1991 establishments in British Columbia|1999 disestablishments in British Columbia |
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