翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ The Selfish Woman
・ The Selfs
・ The Sell Out
・ The Sell Out (film)
・ The Sell Out (The Avengers)
・ The Sell-In
・ The Seller
・ The Selling of the President 1968
・ The Selling Wizard
・ The Sellout
・ The Sellout (album)
・ The Sellout (film)
・ The Sellswords
・ The Selmanaires
・ The Semantic Turn
The Semantics
・ The Seminar
・ The Semonski Sisters
・ The SemWare Editor
・ The Sen Times
・ The Senate (band)
・ The Senator (play)
・ The Senator (tree)
・ The Senator Was Indiscreet
・ The Send
・ The Sender
・ The Sending
・ The Seneca Hotel
・ The Senior
・ The Senior Skull Honor Society


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

The Semantics : ウィキペディア英語版
The Semantics

The Semantics were a band from Nashville, Tennessee, formed by Jody Spence, Millard Powers and Will Owsley.
== History ==
Jody Spence and Owsley began writing songs after a couple of years of touring with Judson Spence, Jody's brother. Jody and Owsley soon got publishing contracts with Sony Music Publishing which were facilitated by Scott Siman in 1990. In 1991, Siman attended a show in North Carolina where a band called Majosha performed, which featured Ben Folds and Millard Powers. Not long after that, Siman brought Folds to Nashville and Powers later followed. Siman furnished a small demo studio that the Spence brothers, Owsley and Folds would often share. Folds would eventually introduce Millard Powers to Jody Spence and Owsley.
Within a month of meeting each other, Spence, Powers and Owsley had written and recorded entire albums worth of songs at the Sony Tree studio, 7 of which would later end up on the Geffen Records album ''Powerbill''. The trio played a few shows in and around Nashville under the names "Spence Powers Owsley" and "Parade" with Folds sitting in on keys sometimes. The name "Jody's Powerbill", often confused with "The Semantics", was a name that Folds had suggested for the trio which they didn't use. Folds used the name himself for a while before becoming Ben Folds Five. After a trip to Los Angeles and changing their name to "The Semantics", the trio developed a buzz within the major labels which eventually brought John Kalodner of Geffen Records to Nashville, Tennessee for a showcase and the band ended up signing with him.
In the search for a producer, tensions grew between the three and Jody Spence ended up leaving the band. Spence was eventually replaced by drummer Zak Starkey, Ringo Starr's son. A producer was eventually found in Peter Asher, under whose tutelage the band members worked for four years on the album ''Powerbill'', a process which had taught the band members much about the production process and about management.〔 ''Powerbill'' was initially slated for release in 1993, but was never released in the U.S for being "too pop for alternative and too alternative for pop."〔Everything2 (February 7, 2001). (Owsley ). Retrieved May 17, 2010.〕 It eventually got distributed in Japan through Alfa International on December 21, 1996.〔Publishing information listed on packaging of physical copy of Japanese pressing of Powerbill〕〔VanTassell, Kathy (November 21, 2004). "(Zak Starkey's work with: The Semantics )", ''Kathy's Zak Starkey Site''. Retrieved May 12, 2010.〕
Although suddenly being dropped from the label initially left the members of the band members destitute and broke,〔 all band members have overcome this shock and continued to pursue a career in music, while also paying tribute to The Semantics. In 1999, Owsley re-recorded the "Coming Up Roses" for his eponymous first solo album Owsley. The album was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Engineered Album. Millard Powers' 2001 solo album featured "Jenny Won't Play Fair", a re-recording of the song off Powerbill.
Powers, Starkey and Spence continue to perform and record. Will Owsley died in April 2010, as the result of an apparent suicide.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「The Semantics」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.