"Wild At Heart (10 Year Anniversary Piano Version)" music video by Birds Of Tokyo
Added: 23-07-2020
Genre : Rock & Alternative
Description : Birds of Tokyo - 'Wild At Heart' (10 Year Anniversary piano version)
10 YEAR ANNIVERSARY 'BIRDS OF TOKYO' ALBUM ?? 1?? 0?? ??
The self titled album was recorded over two months in Gothenburg, Sweden where it was minus twenty most days with unbelievable snow falls. The conditions actually payed off as we were literally snowed in at times so we worked on the songs day and night. We survived on pizza, the local soup shop and booze... a lot of booze. Cabin fever set in at different times and at one point it got a bit ‘Lord of the Flies’ with heated creative discussions over spilling into shirtless boozy punch ups. Throw in the odd sauna and a trip to the local discotheque and we found the perfect balance of madness and mojo.
Unforgettable. Happy Birthday 'Birds of Tokyo'.
Kenny
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Written by Birds of Tokyo
Published by Mushroom Music Publishing
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Birds of Tokyo are an alternative rock band from Australia who rose to domestic mainstream success with their second album, Universes (2008). Founded in 2004 in Perth, Western Australia, the band originally comprised Karnivool's Ian Kenny (vocals), Adam Spark (guitar), Anthony Jackson (bass), and Adam Weston (drums). Birds of Tokyo made their recording debut in 2005 with a pair of EPs (Birds of Tokyo, One Way/Stay) released in association with the independent label Egg Records. The song "Stay" earned the band its first of many WAMi Awards (West Australian Music Industry Awards), this one for Rock Song of the Year. Two years later, Birds of Tokyo released their full-length album debut, Day One (2007), and won a pair of WAMi Awards (Favorite Newcomer, Best Male Vocalist). Their second album, Universes (2008), marked their mainstream breakthrough, peaking at number three on the Australian albums chart and spawning a pair of singles ("Silhouettic," "Broken Bones").
The band's eponymously titled third album was released by EMI in July of 2010, included the hit singles “Plans” and “Wild at Heart,” and went on to receive double-platinum certifications. Following this success, the Australian music industry accolades continued to flood in. These included APRA awards for songwriting and a “Most Popular Australian Artist” award at the 2011 ARIA ceremony. Ahead of sessions in Los Angeles for a fourth album with David Cooley and Tony Hoffer, Birds of Tokyo brought two new players into the fold: Glenn Sarangapany on keyboards and Ian Berney who replaced Jackson on bass. Also prior to these sessions, Kenny, Spark, and Weston each left Perth behind, relocating to cities on the eastern coast of Australia. The resulting record, March Fires, was appropriately released in March 2013 and became the band's first album to hit the number one spot in the Australian charts, eventually going gold. The success of March Fires opened up new doors for the band internationally, and they spent much of 2014 in the U.S. with Los Angeles as their temporary home base. In between U.S. tours, they wrote and recorded four new songs which were released in April 2015 as the standalone EP Anchor. Brace, the band's dark and gritty fifth studio long-player, dropped the following year.
Tags : 2020,
20s,
Birds Of Tokyo