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Kid British

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Kid British
Kid British - Left to right: Dominick, Sean, Simeon (centre), Matt, Adio & Mykey
Kid British - Left to right: Dominick, Sean, Simeon (centre), Matt, Adio & Mykey
Background information
OriginManchester, England
GenresSka, indie rock, hip hop, reggae
Years active2007–2012
LabelsMercury
Modern English
LAB Records
Past membersAdio Marchant
Dominick Allen
Mykey Wilson
Matt Herod
Sean Mbaya
Simeon McLean
James Mayer
Tom Peek
Websitewww.kidbritish.net

Kid British, often styled as KiD BRiTiSH, were an English 6-piece music group, hailing from Manchester, England. The band was composed of Adio Marchant (vocals), Simeon McLean (vocals), Sean Mbaya (vocals/guitar/keyboard), Dominick Allen (vocals/rhythm guitar), Mykey Wilson (drums) and Tom Peek (bass guitar).

Former members were James Mayer (vocals), Tom Peek (bass) who both left for personal reasons. Adio Marchant has since developed his own indie pop side project called Bipolar Sunshine. His debut EP, Aesthetics, was released on 18 June 2013, and the single Rivers was iTunes free single of the week, in the week commencing 14 July 2013.

History

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Kid British came into existence when Sean Mbaya from Prestwich (who worked as a producer under the name Kid British) worked with a band called Action Manky - made up of schoolmates Adio Marchant from Chorlton and Simeon McLean and James Mayer from Withington - all joined forces in 2007 to form the band, initially known as Kid British & the Action Manky, but soon shortened to simply Kid British.[1][2] The band signed to Mercury Records in May 2008,[3] signed a long-term publishing deal with EMI Music Publishing in June,[4] and released their first single "Elizabeth" (7" vinyl only) on the 'Another Music Another Kitchen' label in the October of that same year.[5] Their first Mercury release followed in the form of the Leave London (10" vinyl & digital download) EP featuring the tracks "She Will Leave", "Lost in London" and "Elizabeth", which was promoted by ten "guerilla gigs" in one day at various London tube stations, which led to the band playing an impromptu version of one of the tracks from the EP in front of Mayor Boris Johnson when they found themselves in the same train carriage.[6][7] The four core members were joined in the band by musicians Tom Peek (bass guitar), Dominick Allen (rhythm guitar), and Mikey Wilson (drums).[8]

The band received regular airplay from BBC Radio One's Chris Moyles and also played support slots with The Enemy (2007), The Specials (2009) & UB40 (2010).[2][9][10]

The band released the single "Our House Is Dadless", which samples the Madness track "Our House" on 7 July 2009,[10] peaking at number 63 in the UK Singles Chart in its first week of release.[11] The band's It Was This Or Football First Half EP reached number 67 in the UK in its first week of release, dropping out of the top 75 entirely the following week.[11] The mooted Second Half, originally advertised within the liner notes of the 'First Half' as being due for release in September 2009,[12] remains unreleased, and the full twelve-track album that combined the two was not commercially released, although promotional copies were issued.[13] In February 2010, the band announced that they were recording new tracks for the album and that it was now planned to be released in Summer 2010.[14]

The band released the single "Winner" on 28 June, less than 12 hours after the England football team's 4–1 defeat to Germany at the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa, which resulted in their elimination from the first round of the bracket phase. It was their first release since being dropped by Mercury Records. It failed to reach the top 100 of the singles chart, but was featured in Electronic Arts' tie-in World Cup video game.

In 2011 they released an EP called "Northern Stories" as a free download, they also did the 'Northern Stories' tour around Manchester, Stoke-upon-Trent, Birmingham, London, Wakefield, Leicester, Carlisle & Oswestry.

During the early part of their career they worked with famed sound engineer and producer John Pennington, who has worked for many bands since leaving Strawberry studios including Moby. During the last three years of their career they took on Pete Poweron Smith as their sound engineer, Pete has written and produced as Big Arm, done sound with A Certain Ratio and now[when?] does sound for Lewis Watson, Bipolar Sunshine and Mayer.

Back with a new line-up, on 24 June 2012 released an EP called You Can't Please Them All on LAB Records with a headline tour due to follow later. On 27 March 2012, it was confirmed that Kid British would support The Stone Roses at their Heaton Park concert in Manchester on 29 June 2012.[15] It was confirmed on 29 June 2012 that Kid British will be doing an intimate UK tour called 'You Can't Please Them All' with six dates taking place. Glasgow, York, London, Southampton, Birmingham and the last date being at their hometown of Manchester.

A statement was released along with their final ever Kid British video for the new single "You Against The World" on 17 September 2012 that they were going their separate ways. Having to cancel three of their dates on the You Can't Please Them All tour in Glasgow, York and Southampton for personal reasons.

Kid British played their final gig in Manchester in December 2012.

Musical style

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With their witty social commentary and lively performances, Kid British were often compared to the likes of The Specials, Madness, Blur and The Streets.[by whom?]

The band combine indie rock, ska and hip hop. Arwa Haider of Metro described their sound as "a very modern mishmash of styles – indie rock, r'n'b, rap, ska revival – and bring a cuddly blokeishness to their jaunty tunes".[12]

Discography

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Album

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EPs

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Singles

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  • "Elizabeth" (2008), Mercury
  • "Sunny Days" (2009), Mercury
  • "Our House Is Dadless" (2009), Mercury
  • "Winner" (2010), Modern English
  • "Until Monday" (2012), LAB
  • "You Against the World" (2012), LAB

References

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  1. ^ Ryan, Kathryn (30 July 2009). "Band proving to be best of British". Salford Advertiser.
  2. ^ a b Mugan, Chris (2009) "Kid British - New Kids on the block", The Independent, 6 March 2009, retrieved 13 April 2010
  3. ^ "Kid British Chat About Influences and X-Men", FemaleFirst, 14 January 2009, retrieved 13 April 2010
  4. ^ "Kid British conclude publishing deal", Music Week, 21 June 2008, retrieved 13 April 2010
  5. ^ "Kid British to rock Introducing", BBC, 11 June 2009, retrieved 13 April 2010
  6. ^ Geddes, Clarke (2009) "Kid British for Tube Station Tour: band to play ten stations in London", Clash, 19 January 2009, retrieved 13 April 2010
  7. ^ "Kid British confront Boris Johnson during London tube 'gig'", NME, 21 January 2009, retrieved 13 April 2010
  8. ^ Lester, Paul (2008) "new Band of the Day No. 352: Kid British", The Guardian, 18 July 2008, retrieved 13 April 2010
  9. ^ Petridis, Alexis (2009) "Kid British: It Was This or Football", The Guardian, 17 July 2009, retrieved 13 April 2010
  10. ^ a b Savage, Mark (2009) "Talking Shop: Kid British ", BBC, 3 July 2009, retrieved 13 April 2010
  11. ^ a b Kid British, Chart Stats, retrieved 11 April 2010
  12. ^ a b Haider, Arwa (2009) "Kid British smells like team spirit", Metro, 20 July 2009, retrieved 13 April 2010
  13. ^ Smith, David (2010) "Kid British: It Was This or Football", PopMatters, 18 January 2010, retrieved 13 April 2010
  14. ^ "KiD BRiTiSH: LETS AV IT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! kid british Album !!!!!!!!!", Facebook posting, 23 February 2010: "we will be releasing a single around the world cup which will be followed by our album "it was this or football" shortly after"
  15. ^ "The Stone Roses". Thestoneroses.org. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
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