- The Honey Buzzards
The Honey Buzzards were a
Norwich ,England based band who achieved significant Independent Music success in the early 1990s.They were formed by Ian Thompson (born 1971, vocals/guitar), Simon Shaw (born 1972, bass) and Matthew Wayne (born 1971,drums) at
Norwich School in 1988, and shortly recruited Nathan Moore (born 1970) and John Evans (born 1972) as guitarists. They took their name from a 17th Century British painting and their sound was influenced by an Art School sensibility,The Velvet Underground ,Lloyd Cole and the Commotions and latterlyThe Stone Roses .They released three singles on Manchester Based
Sheer Joy Records ; Sympathy (for two girls) (1990), Starhappy (1990) and Pale Horse (1991) all of which made the Top 20 of the Indie Chart, and issued a promo single with remixes byThe Orb [http://www.backsideoftheorb.com/index.php?search_id=8&view=remixes&sort=year&asc=&page_num=5] . Their strongest sales however were in Scandinavia, particularly Sweden.The first single was produced by Michael Johnson, who was responsible for most of
New Order 's back catalogue including the "Brotherhood", "Low-life" and "Technique" albums. In 1991, the band recorded two BBC Sessions, one for the Mark Goodier Evening Session (Radio 1) and one for Hit the North (Radio 5), while John Peel championed the band's singles extensively.They also appeared on the soundtrack to the
Diane Ladd andMax Parrish film "Hold me, thrill me, kiss me, kill me" (1993). The band split in 1994. They achieved critical acclaim inThe NME andMelody Maker , and shared a BBC Session studio withDavid Bowie . John Evans has gone onto to achieve mainstream national success with the band The Divine Comedy and continues to tour as their guitarist.External links
*
* www.myspace.com/thehoneybuzzards
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.