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Archangel Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts

Archangel

Apr 20, 2024

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Archangel Biography

Archangel (1) UK Indie / Alternative Band, 2007
Archangel (2) US 1960's & 1970's Rock Band
Archangel (3) UK (80's?) 90's, 00's Death Metal

Archangel (1) http://www.myspace.com/archangelmusic

Official Archangel Biog:

"Archangel are a brilliant new band. That’s not strictly true. They’re not really a band.

But you can keep the bit about “brilliant”. Archangel is the brainchild of Nick Webber, a young man from west London with a strong will and a warped imagination who spent a year and a half going quietly mad in the wilds of Wiltshire as he recorded his masterpiece aka the soundtrack of his life. The album in question and the answer to your prayers, How To Lose Your Best Friend, comprises 11 magnificently overwrought and dramatically fashioned songs that explore the lexicon of love with an epic sweep and neon glow that will remind you of all your favourite 70s and 80s groups while sounding utterly contemporary. Archangel – whose name comes from a scene in the film Apocalypse Now! – are where ABC meet Arcade Fire.

How did he do that? He did it, first and foremost, alone in a recording studio based in a bungalow in Wiltshire, “in the middle of nowhere”, as he puts it, using equipment he’d accrued from years on the margins of the music industry, where he learned his craft and plotted his next moves. Having written nine of the 11 tracks himself, he proceeded to perform and produce them all by himself, darting between the controls and the instruments during a process that was pure solipsist monomania.

“It took 18 months and it nearly killed me,” he recalls. “I became a bit schizophrenic after a while; I went a bit crackers. How mad did it get? I didn’t know who I was anymore. I don’t know if I’d do it again, doing everything all by myself. There were a few crazy moments where I thought I was losing the plot. It was a bit like [the film] Papillion: I was going quietly bonkers. But it was good in a way. It was a real achievement.”

Nick’s obsessive determination to handle the production as well as vocal, guitar, piano, electronic keyboard, synth-bass and percussion duties, which meant he’d have to literally press “record” and run to the drum kit or the guitar and start playing, stems from his earlier stints as a producer. Having cut his teeth on a series of “obscure white-label electronic records, very groovy Hoxton house music which frankly wasn’t my bag,” and a variety of other projects over the years, he learned quite quickly that he was happier having total control himself. “I’ve had help before,” he says, “and I’ve never really been happy with it. I like the idea that, if I fuck up, I’ve got no one else to blame.”

There was just one surprise yet pleasant intrusion by the outside world during his period of isolation, and that was when Zane Lowe chanced upon the demo of Archangel’s track
Physical Energy, was blown away, and decided to play it several times. It gave him hope and the strength to carry on with his meisterwerk. “It made me realise there was a world out there,” says Nick, who was in a local country pub when the chef leaned through the kitchen hatch and said of the song being played on the pub radio, “Hey, Nick, is this yours?” He remembers: “Zane Lowe said, ‘I know nothing about this track, I just found it on my desk and I absolutely love it.’ It was really surreal. He played it a few times, so did [xfm’s] John Kennedy, and that got it onto MTV2. Things suddenly started happening, and that spurred me on.”

Nick Webber was born into a musical family at the end of the 70s, and it remains one of his favourite music eras – in fact, one of the first songs he learned to play was Janet Kay’s Lovers Rock classic from 1979, Silly Games. Other music from that time and just after, by bands and artists such as Roxy Music, The Police, David Bowie, Kraftwerk, Psychedelic Furs, Japan and ABC, has informed the sumptuous, dramatic pop of Archangel’s debut album,
How To Lose Your Best Friend.

“Pop music of the 70s and 80s is where my heart lies,” he says. “I wanted to make a great pop record: dark, up, weird, with lots of short songs. You’ve got to be a good self-editor. You can’t bang on for ages. It must be lean.”

The title of the album is a reference to Nick’s split from his long-term girlfriend, one that led to his 18-month sojourn in Wiltshire and kick-started the album. “It’s quite mysterious,” he says of the title. “It can mean anything.” It’s also the title of the opening track, a powerful, arresting piece of, yes, dark, up pop music that drives its hook home and is both energetic and edgy but doesn’t tell you how to lose your best friend. “Like I say, it’s important to be mysterious. And I like the idea of making people stop for a moment and think, ‘What does that really mean?’”

Nick stops for several moments to talk about the live aspect of his music; “Fans come up to me and tell me I’ve got this bizarre nervous energy on stage,” he says. “It’s all quite frenetic. But there’s glamour, too, and sleaze. I like wearing nicely cut suits. Basically, if I had my way and money was no object, I’d be Robert Palmer or Bryan Ferry with loads of female backing singers, a huge horn section and a massive band.”


Archangel’s debut album “How To Lose Your Best Friend” is released on October 7th 2008 through Medical Imprint"


Archangel (2)
Archangel truly began in 1965, when brothers John and Robert Flomer started noodling on guitars. By the 1970 they had formed a semi-surf rock cover band "U.S. Pipe" named after the imprint on a section of sewer pipe at a construction site where they had stolen plywood to build speaker cabinets. The name was perfect (because they had, by now, discovered marijuana) and the hippies loved them!

"At some point during the reign of U.S. Pipe (1970-71) we must've been visited by aliens (you know, the ones from outer space) because the music changed, as did the name of the band. We were now "Archangel" (not to be confused with several really "pop" Archangels that emerged from "who-knows-where" after that) and we were making a name for ourselves!"

After renaming the band, and reforming the line-up with Mark Gallagher on Vocals, Doug Paulson on Guitar, and (a then unknown) Yanni on keyboards, they set their sights to the west, and moved to Los Angeles in 1973.

"Working all over the LA area, they met a lot of music industry heavy weights. At one point Archangel was in negotiations with Herb Cohen, Frank Zappa's manager. Although Cohen showed extreme interest in "Archangel", he was so busy with Zappa's affairs that nothing other than talk ever came out of it. Finally, recording some material and continuing to play in LA venues, the group believed they were making progress. Unfortunately most of the "big-wig" record executives felt the group was way ahead of it's time and therefore hard to promote. Some exec's even suggested the band would do better to wait for 6 or 7 years until an up and coming new format "Video" could jump start them. Feeling they needed to be seen to be promoted properly record exec's told them this new medium could be the avenue that would launch the group into stardom. The problem with this for "Archangel" was how to survive for that long of a time period without breaking up." According to John, one producer told them to give him a call in 25 years. Here we are (and then some).

In late 1973, after recieving less than satisfying results in LA, the band drifted apart and moved back to Minneapolis, surviving a short-lived strong point of fame in the midwest, but ending in several more watered down reincarnations. In '77 Gallagher moved back to Minneapolis from Chicago, but by then Archangel was a cover band in bars playing "Cat Scratch Feverrrrrr", or how about....."put your hand into my pocket and grab on to my rocket..."

By the end of the decade, John Flomer was the only original member and the band had lost all the feeling and potential that it once had. In 1980 Flomer quit the band, sold his guitars, purchased a keyboard, a four-track recorder, and started from the bottom, trying to unleash the music languishing among the wreckage in his head.
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