Hot Hot Heat
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Hot Hot Heat | ||
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Background information | ||
Origin | ![]() |
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Genre(s) | Alternative rock, Garage rock | |
Label(s) | Sire, Warner Bros. | |
Website | HotHotHeat.com | |
Members | ||
Steve Bays Paul Hawley Dustin Hawthorne Luke Paquin |
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Former members | ||
Matthew Marnik Dante DeCaro |
Hot Hot Heat is a band from Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. The band currently comprises Steve Bays (vocals and keyboards), Paul Hawley (drums) and Dustin Hawthorne (bass). Luke Paquin (guitar) is currently touring with the band.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Hawthorne and Bays had been in many different bands together since 1995 and met Hawley in 1998. In 1999, Hawley bought a Juno 6 keyboard and asked Bays to try playing it, as no one else knew how. Hawley took over the drums from Bays and Hawthorne played bass. Matthew Marnik, who was a friend of the band, sang vocals. The band's original sound can be considered synthpunk.
The band soon changed direction to a more melodic, pop-influenced style, losing Marnik and adding guitarist Dante DeCaro. Strongly influenced by the New Wave sound of 1980s bands XTC, The Clash, and Elvis Costello and the Attractions, the new lineup, with Steve on vocals, quickly released a series of 7" singles and toured extensively in Canada and the American Pacific Northwest, joining up with similarly-styled indie rock bands such as Les Savy Fav, The French Kicks, Radio 4, Ima Robot, and Pretty Girls Make Graves, and opening for established Canadian rockers Sloan on a national tour.
The band's touring exposure attracted the interest of Seattle record label Sub Pop, who signed Hot Hot Heat in 2001, leading to the early 2002 release of EP Knock Knock Knock, produced in part by Chris Walla of Death Cab for Cutie. That release was followed up quickly by the band's first full-length release, Make Up the Breakdown, produced by Nirvana and Soundgarden producer Jack Endino.
That album quickly found critical acclaim, and its singles "Bandages" and "Talk to Me, Dance With Me" received regular airplay on MTV and radio, including influential Los Angeles, California station KROQ, on whose charts both reached No. 1.
However, their track "Bandages" was removed from radio in the UK, from the playlist at BBC Radio 1, in the light of the war in the Middle East. This was thought to have hindered its position at #25 in the UK charts. The track had been on the B list on the station, guaranteeing 15 plays a week and a potential audience of millions. It was removed because of a "prevalence of the word 'bandages' in the song", a spokesperson said.[1]
In 2003 the band re-released the 2001 album of tracks recorded prior to their Sub Pop recordings, Scenes One Through Thirteen, on the OHEV Records label. Reflecting the band's transition period between their original sound and the present, and thus very much unlike what fans had heard on Knock Knock Knock and Make Up the Breakdown.
In 2004 Make Up the Breakdown won "Favorite Album" at the Canadian Independent Music Awards by popular vote. Guitarist Dante DeCaro announced his departure from the band in October 2004, but stayed to complete their next album. That album Elevator, the band's major label debut, was released commercially by Warner Bros. in April 2005. Dante handed over to replacement guitarist Luke Paquin when the band started their 2005 tour.
The follow up to Elevator, Happiness Ltd., is expected to be released in May 2007. In late March 2007 the band posted the song "Give Up?" on their Myspace page as a sample of the album.
[edit] Discography
Albums
- Hot Hot Heat Split The Red Light Sting (2000)
- Scenes One Through Thirteen (2001)
- Make Up the Breakdown (2002) #146 US
- Elevator (2005) #34 US
- Happiness Ltd. (to be released May 2007)
EPs
- 4 Song 7" (1999)
- 3 Song 7" (2001)
- Knock Knock Knock (2002)
[edit] Singles
Year | Title | Chart positions | Album | |
US Modern Rock | UK Singles Chart | |||
2003 | "Bandages" | #19 | #25 | Make Up the Breakdown |
2003 | "Talk to Me, Dance with Me" | #33 | Make Up the Breakdown | |
2004 | "No, Not Now" | #38 | Make Up the Breakdown | |
2005 | "Goodnight, Goodnight" | #27 | #36 | Elevator |
2005 | "Middle of Nowhere" | #23 | #47 | Elevator |
2005 | "You Owe Me An I.O.U." | #18 | Elevator |
[edit] Trivia
- Their song "You Owe Me An IOU" appears on the soundtrack to the video game EA Sports MVP Baseball 2005, and "Pickin' It Up" appears in the video games Madden NFL 06 and SSX on Tour and "Goodnight Goodnight" appears in EA Sports MVP Baseball 2004. Also, "Talk to me, Dance With Me" is on NHL 2K7.
- Their song No, Not Now was on the soundtrack of the snowboard-movie, the Shaun White Album. This is a biography snow and skate film of the famous snowboarder, Shaun White.
- The song "Bandages" was featured on the National Lacrosse League's video, "War on the Floor"
- The song "Elevator" was featured on an Absolut Vodka television commercial.
- The song "Goodnight Goodnight" was in the movie John Tucker Must Die.
- The song "Elevator" was featured on the BBC's television coverage of the Winter Olympics in Torino.
[edit] External links
- Official Site
- Hot Hot Heat's Myspace
- Le Le Low--The Unofficial Fansite
- Live Pictures of HHH In Edmonton
- Hot Hot Heat at New Music Canada
- Hot Hot Heat at Sub Pop
- Hot Hot Heat on PureVolume
- OHEV Records
- Ache Records
- Hot Hot Heat at Last.fm
- Download 'Bandages' Free at Rocklouder