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Moose

There's a Place

About Me

This UK band comprises Russell Yates (vocals), Kevin "K.J." McKillop (guitar), Damien Warburton (drums) and Jeremy Tishler (bass). They inadvertently began the so-called "shoegazing" movement, so dubbed because of the static nature of bands who focused on the floorboards instead of their audience, when Yates read lyrics taped to the floor. They rose to notoriety with supports to Lush, from whom they borrowed Chris Acland when Warburton failed to appear at gigs. Another temporary change arose when McKillop attended his child's birth, and Tim Gane from Stereolab stepped in. Conversely, Yates moonlighted as a Stereolab guitarist and McKillop played with See See Rider. It was this sort of activity that fuelled "The Scene That Celebrates Itself" tag, summoned by the Melody Maker"s Steve Sutherland to describe the incestuous nature of a clutch of upcoming bands who were not indulging in traditional rivalries. Three EPs on Hut Records comprised the original batch of recordings, the last of which was the first to confirm that the band could offer more than the voguish My Bloody Valentine influences. The C&W-tinged "This River Will Never Run Dry" was applauded from almost all corners. Shortly afterwards both Warburton and Tishler left and were replaced by Lincoln Fong (bass), Russell Fong (guitar) and Richard Thomas (drums). Yates also achieved prominence through the Lillies, the brainchild of Stuart Mutler, editor of Tottenham Hotspurs" soccer magazine The Spur. This included Miki Berenyi and Chris Acland from Lush, Yates and Kevin McKillop from Moose, and was masterminded by Simon Raymonde of the Cocteau Twins. Together they recorded a flexi-disc entitled "And David Seaman Will Be Very Disappointed About That". Despite strong critical reaction in their favour, Moose were dropped by Hut when they failed to garner significant commercial reward for ... XYZ. The band released the Liquid Make Up EP on their own Cool Badge label before relocating to Belgium's Play It Again Sam Records. Honey Bee and Live A Little Love A Lot further moved them away from indie rock territory, dabbling in soul, folk and country nuances. The critical response was still strong, but again did not provide an upsurge in sales. It would seem that Moose are destined to remain a glorious cult, a situation their subsequent releases did little to remedy.
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My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 5/14/2006
Band Website: slowconfetti.com/moose
Band Members:
Influences: Love, Nick Drake, Tim Buckley, Scott Walker, Cocteau Twins, Fred Neil, Lee Hazlewood.
Type of Label: None

My Blog

New Interview w/ Russell

There's a new interview with Russell here.  He hints at the possibility of a retrospective album being released on a label in France.  Also, you can find out what the other members are up to...
Posted by Moose on Sat, 04 Aug 2007 10:27:00 PST

An update of sorts

First of all I'd like to say thank you to everyone that have added themselves to this page.  Also I appreciate all the comments that have been posted in the comment section. All five Mo...
Posted by Moose on Wed, 13 Sep 2006 08:38:00 PST

Videos now on myspace

I have uploaded both 'Jack' and 'Suzanne' onto myspace and they can be viewed in the video section. There is also a live video of 'Jack' on youtube here.  ...
Posted by Moose on Wed, 12 Jul 2006 06:13:00 PST

Moose on itunes and emusic

'Honey Bee', 'Live a Little Love a Lot', and 'High Ball Me!' are all currently available on both itunes and emusic.  Unfortunately the long out-of-print 'XYZ...' can still only be found on used r...
Posted by Moose on Mon, 15 May 2006 05:37:00 PST