Hide And SeekImogen Heap
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Categories: Indie
Submitted by: dubwithmorebass
Imogen Heap
Imogen Heap (born December 9, 1977) is a British singer-songwriter from Romford, Essex, England. She grew up playing music from an early age, and by her eleventh birthday she was writing her own songs. From the age of 15, she studied at the BRIT School Of Performing Arts & Technology in Croydon, South London, recording three tracks for the school’s annual CD between 1994 and 1995, “Aliens” being the title track of the latter.
Heap enjoyed a prestigious live debut, performing four songs (backed by friends Acacia) between sets by The Who and Eric Clapton at the 1996 Prince’s Trust Concert in Hyde Park, London. Her debut album, I Megaphone (an anagram of “Imogen Heap”) was internationally released in 1998 on independent record label Almo Sounds and garnered critical acclaim. However, as production of the album neared completion, it was announced that the record label had been sold and would be shut down. I-Megaphone featured collaborations with Guy Sigsworth and Dave Stewart. In Japan, the regional distributor, Zora, re-released the album in 2002, featuring “Blanket,” her collaboration with Urban Species which was released as a single in the United Kingdom, and a Frou Frou remix of one of her B-sides, a video to which was released exclusively to Japanese media. Following the disbanding of her UK and USA record label, I Megaphone was scarce in circulation, having not been re-printed until November 2006. An independent Brazillian record label has rights to the record, and has issued limited copies, some of which are available on eBay. It has also been released through the iTunes Music Store under the Almo label.
At the same time as the Japanese re-release, Heap was working on new tracks with producer Guy Sigsworth, who had collaborated on “PlayGetting Scared” from I-Megaphone. Together, they formed an electro-pop group Frou Frou, releasing an album called “Details” and singles, “PlayBreathe In”, “PlayIt’s Good to Be in Love” and “PlayMust Be Dreaming.” The album was a full collaboration between the two artists. Frou Frou were approached to cover “PlayHolding Out for a Hero”, originally performed by Bonnie Tyler, for the soundtrack to the highly successful movie Shrek 2. An album track, “PlayLet Go”, was featured in the movie Garden State in 2004.
In December 2003, Heap announced on her web site that she was going to write and produce her second solo album, using her site as an online blog to update fans on progress, even seeking them to be her A&R team for the lyrics to “PlayDaylight Robbery”. Heap set herself a deadline of one year to make the album (she booked the album mastering for December 2004), and re-mortgaged her flat to fund production costs, including the use of studio time and instruments (which she purchased as a birthday present to herself). Having been burned by previous challenges with record labels (Heap had been spurned twice by record companies, when Almo Sounds was sold and when Frou Frou’s label staff focused on promoting other acts), Heap decided to form her own record label on which to release the new record. At the end of 2004, Heap premiered two album tracks online, enabling fans to pay for a digital download, entitled “PlayJust for Now” (which was up for a limited time as a Christmas gift), and “PlayGoodnight and Go”, which had been featured on the second season of hit US TV drama The O.C.
In April 2005, The O.C. season two finale featured another track, the sparse vocodered-vocal track, “PlayHide and Seek”. The track was released immediately to digital download services such as iTunes where it became an instant fixture in the chart. The track was released as a digital download on the 5th July 2005 in the UK and peaked at #8 on the iTunes download chart.
The album, entitled “Speak for Yourself” was then released in the UK on July 18th 2005 on her own record label, Megaphonic Records. The album was also released on iTunes UK, where it entered the top 10, selling strongly. “PlayHide and Seek” also received radio attention from the popular UK radio station BBC Radio One, with DJ Scott Mills featuring it as his “Record of the Week”, and provoking strong reactions (“love it or hate it”) from other DJs at the station. Due to popular demand, the track was commercially released on a special limited edition (1500 copies were printed) 7” vinyl in the UK in September. Speak for Yourself was licensed to Sony BMG imprint RCA Victor in August 2005, enabling the record to be released in the United States, Canada and Mexico. It was released in those territories in November, and Heap appeared on the Hotel Cafe Tour promoting the record. Imogen also performed “PlayGoodnight and Go” on The Late Show with David Letterman on January 11, 2006. Heap is slated to continue touring in 2006 in the US and UK to support the record.
As well as TV soundtracks (Frou Frou and Heap’s solo records have been featured in shows as varied as The O.C. to CSI, among others), Heap has also contributed solo tracks to movie soundtracks. Her cover of the song “Spooky” (made famous by the band Classics IV, and previously covered by Dusty Springfield) for the soundtrack to the Reese Witherspoon movie Just Like Heaven. Heap also wrote a special track entitled “Can’t Take it In” for the soundtrack to The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. She has also appeared on the second soundtrack for the HBO television series “Six Feet Under”, entitled “Six Feet Under Vol. 2: Everything Ends” with a 50-second track that closed the Season 4 episode “I’m A Lonely Little Petunia (In An Onion Patch)”. Three versions were recorded and are available from Heap’s official web site.
In addition to producing her own records, she has also produced a track for Nik Kershaw and has collaborated with artists as diverse as Joshua Radin, Jeff Beck, Temposhark, LHB, Way Out West, Jon Bon Jovi, Mich Gerber, Sean Lennon, Urban Species, Blue October, Jon Hopkins and Acacia.
Imogen Heap (born December 9, 1977) is a British singer-songwriter from Romford, Essex, England. She grew up playing music from an early age, and by her eleventh birthday she was writing her own songs. From the age of 15, she studied at the BRIT School Of Performing Arts & Technology in Croydon, South London, recording three tracks for the school’s annual CD between 1994 and 1995, “Aliens” being the title track of the latter.
Heap enjoyed a prestigious live debut, performing four songs (backed by friends Acacia) between sets by The Who and Eric Clapton at the 1996 Prince’s Trust Concert in Hyde Park, London. Her debut album, I Megaphone (an anagram of “Imogen Heap”) was internationally released in 1998 on independent record label Almo Sounds and garnered critical acclaim. However, as production of the album neared completion, it was announced that the record label had been sold and would be shut down. I-Megaphone featured collaborations with Guy Sigsworth and Dave Stewart. In Japan, the regional distributor, Zora, re-released the album in 2002, featuring “Blanket,” her collaboration with Urban Species which was released as a single in the United Kingdom, and a Frou Frou remix of one of her B-sides, a video to which was released exclusively to Japanese media. Following the disbanding of her UK and USA record label, I Megaphone was scarce in circulation, having not been re-printed until November 2006. An independent Brazillian record label has rights to the record, and has issued limited copies, some of which are available on eBay. It has also been released through the iTunes Music Store under the Almo label.
At the same time as the Japanese re-release, Heap was working on new tracks with producer Guy Sigsworth, who had collaborated on “PlayGetting Scared” from I-Megaphone. Together, they formed an electro-pop group Frou Frou, releasing an album called “Details” and singles, “PlayBreathe In”, “PlayIt’s Good to Be in Love” and “PlayMust Be Dreaming.” The album was a full collaboration between the two artists. Frou Frou were approached to cover “PlayHolding Out for a Hero”, originally performed by Bonnie Tyler, for the soundtrack to the highly successful movie Shrek 2. An album track, “PlayLet Go”, was featured in the movie Garden State in 2004.
In December 2003, Heap announced on her web site that she was going to write and produce her second solo album, using her site as an online blog to update fans on progress, even seeking them to be her A&R team for the lyrics to “PlayDaylight Robbery”. Heap set herself a deadline of one year to make the album (she booked the album mastering for December 2004), and re-mortgaged her flat to fund production costs, including the use of studio time and instruments (which she purchased as a birthday present to herself). Having been burned by previous challenges with record labels (Heap had been spurned twice by record companies, when Almo Sounds was sold and when Frou Frou’s label staff focused on promoting other acts), Heap decided to form her own record label on which to release the new record. At the end of 2004, Heap premiered two album tracks online, enabling fans to pay for a digital download, entitled “PlayJust for Now” (which was up for a limited time as a Christmas gift), and “PlayGoodnight and Go”, which had been featured on the second season of hit US TV drama The O.C.
In April 2005, The O.C. season two finale featured another track, the sparse vocodered-vocal track, “PlayHide and Seek”. The track was released immediately to digital download services such as iTunes where it became an instant fixture in the chart. The track was released as a digital download on the 5th July 2005 in the UK and peaked at #8 on the iTunes download chart.
The album, entitled “Speak for Yourself” was then released in the UK on July 18th 2005 on her own record label, Megaphonic Records. The album was also released on iTunes UK, where it entered the top 10, selling strongly. “PlayHide and Seek” also received radio attention from the popular UK radio station BBC Radio One, with DJ Scott Mills featuring it as his “Record of the Week”, and provoking strong reactions (“love it or hate it”) from other DJs at the station. Due to popular demand, the track was commercially released on a special limited edition (1500 copies were printed) 7” vinyl in the UK in September. Speak for Yourself was licensed to Sony BMG imprint RCA Victor in August 2005, enabling the record to be released in the United States, Canada and Mexico. It was released in those territories in November, and Heap appeared on the Hotel Cafe Tour promoting the record. Imogen also performed “PlayGoodnight and Go” on The Late Show with David Letterman on January 11, 2006. Heap is slated to continue touring in 2006 in the US and UK to support the record.
As well as TV soundtracks (Frou Frou and Heap’s solo records have been featured in shows as varied as The O.C. to CSI, among others), Heap has also contributed solo tracks to movie soundtracks. Her cover of the song “Spooky” (made famous by the band Classics IV, and previously covered by Dusty Springfield) for the soundtrack to the Reese Witherspoon movie Just Like Heaven. Heap also wrote a special track entitled “Can’t Take it In” for the soundtrack to The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. She has also appeared on the second soundtrack for the HBO television series “Six Feet Under”, entitled “Six Feet Under Vol. 2: Everything Ends” with a 50-second track that closed the Season 4 episode “I’m A Lonely Little Petunia (In An Onion Patch)”. Three versions were recorded and are available from Heap’s official web site.
In addition to producing her own records, she has also produced a track for Nik Kershaw and has collaborated with artists as diverse as Joshua Radin, Jeff Beck, Temposhark, LHB, Way Out West, Jon Bon Jovi, Mich Gerber, Sean Lennon, Urban Species, Blue October, Jon Hopkins and Acacia.
Reverb Festival @ The Roundhouse
Sun, 26 Feb 2012 19:59:01
VENUE: Roundhouse Chalk Farm Rd, London, United Kingdom NW1 8EH
Grammy and Ivor Novello award winner Imogen Heap brings her incredible a cappella soundtrack to the 1928 French surrealist film The Seashell and the Clergyman, performed with acclaimed UK choir the Holst Singers. (Original commission by Birds Eye View Film Festival and the Southbank Centre.)
Alongside this, rising star Ana Silvera brings her own uniquely heartfelt songs, exploring themes of love, war, death and mystery, to the Roundhouse accompanied by the other-worldly Baltic sounds of the Estonian Television Girls Choir in arrangements by electronic artist Max De Wardener and Estonian composer Elo Masing.
The evening finishes with a collaboration between all of the performers in songs by both Imogen Heap – including Hide & Seek – and Ana Silvera, plus music from Estonia.
Alongside this, rising star Ana Silvera brings her own uniquely heartfelt songs, exploring themes of love, war, death and mystery, to the Roundhouse accompanied by the other-worldly Baltic sounds of the Estonian Television Girls Choir in arrangements by electronic artist Max De Wardener and Estonian composer Elo Masing.
The evening finishes with a collaboration between all of the performers in songs by both Imogen Heap – including Hide & Seek – and Ana Silvera, plus music from Estonia.
Imogen Heap - The Seashell & The Clergyman
Mon, 27 Feb 2012 19:30:00
VENUE: The Sage St Mary's Square, Gateshead Quays, Gateshead, United Kingdom NE8 2JR
Imogen Heap - The Seashell & The Clergyman
Monday 27 February 7:30 pm
Venue: Hall One, The Sage GatesheadTickets: A*(first 5 rows): £19.50 A: £17.50 B/C/D/E: £14.50
Award winner Imogen Heap will bring her incredible a cappella soundtrack to the 1928 French surrealist film ‘The Seashell and the Clergyman’. Imogen will perform with members of the acclaimed UK choir, the Holst Singers and a massed choir from The Sage Gateshead.
Alongside this, rising star Ana Silvera brings her own uniquely heartfelt songs with the Estonian Television Girls Choir.
The evening finishes with a collaboration between all of the performers in songs by both Imogen Heap and Ana Silvera, plus music from Estonia.
Monday 27 February 7:30 pm
Venue: Hall One, The Sage GatesheadTickets: A*(first 5 rows): £19.50 A: £17.50 B/C/D/E: £14.50
Award winner Imogen Heap will bring her incredible a cappella soundtrack to the 1928 French surrealist film ‘The Seashell and the Clergyman’. Imogen will perform with members of the acclaimed UK choir, the Holst Singers and a massed choir from The Sage Gateshead.
Alongside this, rising star Ana Silvera brings her own uniquely heartfelt songs with the Estonian Television Girls Choir.
The evening finishes with a collaboration between all of the performers in songs by both Imogen Heap and Ana Silvera, plus music from Estonia.
SXSW Music 2012
Tue, 13 Mar 2012 16:07:01
VENUE: Austin Convention Center 500 East Cesar Chavez Street, Austin, United States 78701
After celebrating 25 years as the world's leading music industry event, the SXSW® Music and Media Conference is back to continue the tradition in 2012. Reaching a quarter of a century of being the biggest and most anticipated convergence of all things music, SXSW is ready to keep the reputation alive by programming an even better event each year.
By day, thousands of conference registrants network in the halls of the Austin Convention Center on their way to do business in the SXSW® Trade Show, sit in on informative panel discussions featuring some of the industry's key players, gain insight from legendary keynote speakers or plan out their abundant party schedules. At night, SXSW showcases roughly 2,000 musical acts from around the globe, representing well over 50 different countries, on over 90 stages in downtown Austin. All this, and so much more, combine to make SXSW one of the most revered music events, year after year.
By day, thousands of conference registrants network in the halls of the Austin Convention Center on their way to do business in the SXSW® Trade Show, sit in on informative panel discussions featuring some of the industry's key players, gain insight from legendary keynote speakers or plan out their abundant party schedules. At night, SXSW showcases roughly 2,000 musical acts from around the globe, representing well over 50 different countries, on over 90 stages in downtown Austin. All this, and so much more, combine to make SXSW one of the most revered music events, year after year.
- female vocalists
- indie
- electronic
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