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Waves (band)
・ Waves (Charles Lloyd album)
・ Waves (compilation album)
・ Waves (festival)
・ Waves (hairstyle)
・ Waves (Jade Warrior album)
・ Waves (Katrina and the Waves album)
・ Waves (Mono Band song)
・ Waves (Moving Mountains album)
・ Waves (Mr Probz song)
・ Waves (Rhydian Roberts album)
・ Waves (Sam Rivers album)
・ Waves (Terje Rypdal album)
・ Waves (Waves album)
・ Waves and shallow water


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Waves (band) : ウィキペディア英語版
Waves (band)

Waves was a New Zealand folk-rock band that recorded a top-selling self-titled album in 1975 before disbanding in 1977. Its lineup emerged from an acoustic trio, Rosewood, which originally included Geoff Chunn, who later joined Split Enz. Despite making only sporadic live appearances—one of which was a double billing shared with Split Enz—their singles gained major airplay on Auckland radio and the ''Waves'' album reached No.7 on the New Zealand album charts, later becoming a sought-after collector's item.
In 1976 the band recorded a second album that was rejected by their record company, which later erased the tapes. Dejected, the band split up in September 1977. A surviving rough mix of the second album was released in 2013 as ''Misfit'', a bonus disc with the first official CD release of ''Waves''.
A co-founder of the band, Graeme Gash, released a solo album, ''After the Carnival'', in 1981.
Waves reformed in 2013 for a record store performance in Auckland and announced they were writing songs for a further album.
==History==

In the early 1970s Auckland Technical Institute art and design students Graeme Gash and Kevin Wildman formed Rosewood, an acoustic folk-pop trio, with Geoff Chunn, gigging regularly at an Auckand venue and also at the 1973 Ngaruawahia Music Festival. Rosewood disbanded when Chunn left in April 1973 to join Split Enz as drummer.
Gash and Wildman continued to meet to play guitar and work on their vocal harmonies, mixing with other Auckland musicians at the Parnell Rd home of Geoff and Mike Chunn. Gash recalled: "One day David Marshall crashed our jam; we were gobsmacked. He was great. We snapped him up. Michael Matthew was hanging out with a bunch of musos we knew, and we cajoled him into accompanying us on the bashwalk to glory."
Adopting the name Waves, the band—with Gash, Wildman and Marshall on guitar and Matthew on bass—played at folk clubs, cafes and eventually at Auckland Town Hall, His Majesty's Theatre, the Maidment and the Mercury, playing soft rock and singing four-part harmonies. They avoided the pub circuit, as Gash explained: "They wanted something to drink to, not think to. So we needed venues where the intricacies of our music would be heard." The band had three writers, with each member excelling at singing or guitar-playing.〔 Gash said the band felt proud playing original New Zealand songs. "Back then it wasn't particularly popular to front up and play all your own music. People tended to get a little bored with that."
With continued performances, the band sensed a building excitement and air of anticipation. "Split Enz had embedded themselves into the national psyche, or at least the leading edge of it," Gash said. "''Hot Licks'' was championing a lot of local work. Radio stations like Hauraki were into doing their bit for the locals as well. Hauraki were great in those days; they used to do Buck-a-Head concerts. Big venue, one dollar for two bands."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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