The Pink Spiders News

Subscribe to feed
Thursday February 7, 2008

Pink Spiders On Tour Now!

The Pink Spiders start touring today with The Horrorpops. Click Here for dates and info.

Read More

Leave a Comment

Filed under: The Pink Spiders Tour

Thursday October 25, 2007

Pink Spiders Add Tour Dates

The Pink Spiders will be on the road beginning tomorrow through November 7th. The band is currently working on a new album. Release date is TBA. Hit "Read More" for dates!

Oct 26 Alston, Massachusetts @ ICC Performance Hall
Oct 27 Orono, Maine @ University of Maine Arena
Oct 28 Danbury, Connecticut @ Billy Baloney’s
Oct ...

Read More

Leave a Comment

Filed under: The Pink Spiders

Showing 2 of 2 articles | next → View All

About

Biography

"the ideal blend of sweetness and crunch" -Entertainment Weekly

The Pink Spiders stormed onto the Nashville music scene with their eyes on the prize. In a whirlwind of hustle and clatter, the band seemed an instant iconoclastic frame of French New Wave cinema come to life. Striking figures in pink and jet black, they were distant and aloof, itchy and sex-fueled. The first gunshot came in January ...

"the ideal blend of sweetness and crunch" -Entertainment Weekly

The Pink Spiders stormed onto the Nashville music scene with their eyes on the prize. In a whirlwind of hustle and clatter, the band seemed an instant iconoclastic frame of French New Wave cinema come to life. Striking figures in pink and jet black, they were distant and aloof, itchy and sex-fueled. The first gunshot came in January of 2004 with The Pink Spiders are Taking Over!, a battle cry of an EP that served as a frenetic, precocious primer for the bands pop-punk fascination with decadence, obsession and thwarted lovers.

With an almost Machiavellian sense of ambition, the band calculated, strategized and plotted, signing an indie deal with CI Records in the summer of 2004, touring relentlessly and living the freshly lit cigarettes, stiff drinks and sexual adventure that would fill their upcoming work. Live shows from the period were kinetic and jolting performances marked by in-jokes and brash, swaggering bravado. The band liked to stick it to the crowd, with drummer Bob Ferrari often giving them the finger during a one-handed solo and bassist Jon Decious spitting beer into the front row. "Were The Pink Spiders, and youre not," singer and guitarist Matt Friction once taunted by way of introduction to a packed, unsuspecting audience. Crowds were never quite sure if the band would seduce them or insult them, but they could always be certain the band would dispense their blitzed hyper-driven pop-punk with beer-swilling abandon.

January 2005 brought the stunning full-length Hot Pink and a whirlwind of industry attention. The work is a chillingly well-conceived album that unfurls like a grainy black and white film about fast getaways and fast women. Its doo wop on a bender; catchy, infectious doses of dark, unruly pop for the lust-filled swinger. There is humanity in Frictions clever portraits of love and the human condition, even if his primary concern is for skirt-chasing seduction and the short-lived addiction that inevitably follows. Every tale is a new city, a new girl, a new crush, with an explosive backdrop that gets the blood going – Buddy Hollys pop sensibility cut with a sneer.

The band toured nonstop on the record, battling the elements and chaos offered by life on the road. Not only did their trailer catch fire in Buffalo, but the band slept in New York city subways when they had nowhere to crash, and donated plasma to fund their demanding tour schedule. A mere three months after the record was released, several major-label offers were on the table, and in April of 2005, the band signed with Geffen. The Pink Spiders have since been named as one of Alternative Press "100 Bands you need to know in 2006.”

Their major label debut, Teenage Graffiti, is a fevered, luminous record of rock ‘n’ roll escapades. Produced by Cars front man Ric Ocasek and mixed by Tom Lord-Alge, the record inventories the impulsiveness of summer road trips, the apathy of youth and testosterone-fueled fun. It kicks off with a rebel yell, capturing the feeling of a sweaty club with beer bottles clanking on the ferocious “Soft Smoke.” The song “Saturday Nite Riot” is an instantly infectious sing-along with soaring bubblegum harmonies and a climactic beat. Numbers like “Back to the Middle” show the band packing more fist-pumping punch than three-minute pop boundaries usually permit. Standout track "Little Razorblade" -- an ode to the crush-heavy pang -- gives 60s-flavored pop confections a black eye with its cinematic stagger from love-weary pop song to petulant rock wail.

Teenage Graffiti shows the band achieving its former dynamism with a renewed defiance, rebellion and dexterity. Just as the first EP threatened, The Pink Spiders are indeed taking over – with brighter tones and darker sunglasses.

Read More Collapse Bio

Find more info at:

thepinkspiders.com
Suretone Community
Subscribe to feed

Suretone Mailing List

Be in the know. Get news, exclusives pre-sales, store discounts, and more!

Flux Members

The Crew

Join the Suretone Crew!

Like our bands? Join The Crew - Suretone's Official Street Team. Get exclusives content, chat with fans, and ticket pre-sales you can't find anywhere else!

Flux Videos

Flux Photos

Releases

Teenage Graffiti

The Pink Spiders

“Teenage Graffiti”

Released: 08.01.2006
  1. Soft Smoke
  2. Saturday Nite Riot
  3. Modern Swinger
  4. Hollywood Fix
  5. Little Razorblade
  6. Back To The Middle
  7. Nobody Baby
  8. Hey Jane
  9. Still Three Shy
  10. Adalae
  11. Easy Way Out
  12. Pretend That This Is Fiction
  13. Secret Song

Suretone Store

Mobile Map

0

Navigation