The Holloways | |
---|---|
Origin | England |
Genres | Indie rock |
Years active | 2004–2011, 2017–present |
Labels | The Orchard (UK) |
Past members | David Jackson Bryn Fowler Rob Skipper Dave Danger Edwin Harris Mike Baker |
The Holloways were an English four-piece indie rock band from North London. Their single "Generator" reached number 14 in the UK Singles Chart on 11 June 2007. They have had five No.1 singles on the UK Indie Chart and several Top 40 singles. Their debut album, So This Is Great Britain?, was awarded an 8 out of 10 by NME.
Former band member Rob Skipper died on 3 October 2014 in Brighton from a heroin overdose.[1][2]
Formation
David Jackson and Bryn Fowler established the band, meeting Rob Skipper at the music venue Nambucca on Holloway Road in North London. Jackson, Fowler, and Skipper jammed together, playing in a room above the venue belonging to Dave Danger. During the session Jackson, Fowler, and Skipper had completed six songs. It was at this point that Dave Danger joined the band.[3]
The Holloways toured with Babyshambles, The Pogues, The Kooks, The Rakes, The Wombats, The Pigeon Detectives and CSS, as well as helping launch careers of Frank Turner, Kid Harpoon and Johnny Lloyd of Tribes inviting them to support their numerous UK tours.
In 2010, Reservoir Media Management acquired 100% of the Holloways publishing assets which had formerly been administered by TVT Music Enterprises, LLC.[4]
Breakup
The Holloways announced their breakup in 2011.[5] They played their final show on 23 May 2011 at the Relentless Garage on Holloway Road in London. During the show, the band reunited with previous band members to play a 70-minute set of songs from throughout their career.[6]
HARES
Founding member and lead guitarist went on to front the short-lived folk rock band Rob Skipper & The Musical Differences, and later fronted HARES, whose Coastlines EP was well received by critics, topping the Music Week Top Ten Playlist and making it to XFM's Exposure Top 5 list. HARES have toured the UK extensively with One Night Only, Pigeon Detectives and The Vaccines, have performed at Glastonbury, T in the Park, Hop Farm, Big Reunion and Strummer of Love festivals. Skipper also played fiddle for The Urban Voodoo Machine and Jamie T.
Burning Beaches
Danger later performed with Burning Beaches alongside singer-songwriter and past Holloways guest Sam McCarthy.[7]
Members
- David 'Alfie' Jackson – guitars, harmonica, vocals (2004–2011, 2017–2020)
- Bryn Fowler – bass, backing vocals (2004–2011, 2017–2020)
- Robert Skipper – guitars, fiddle, vocals (2004–2009)
- Dave Danger – drums, triangle (2004–2009, 2020)
- Edwin D Harris – drums (2009–2011)
- Mike Baker – guitar, backing vocals (2009–2011)
Discography
Albums
- So This is Great Britain? (30 October 2006; special edition: 1 October 2007) No. 54 UK
- No Smoke, No Mirrors (5 October 2009)
EPs
- Sinners & Winners EP (2008)
Singles
- "Generator / Two Left Feet" (2005) Limited release
- "Happiness & Penniless" (2006) Limited release
- "Two Left Feet" (7 August 2006) No. 33 UK, No. 1 UK Independent chart
- "Generator" (16 October 2006) No. 30 UK, No. 1 UK Independent chart
- "Dancefloor" (26 March 2007) No. 41 UK, No. 1 UK Independent chart
- "Generator" (11 June 2007) No. 14 UK, No. 1 UK Independent chart
- "Two Left Feet" (2007) No. 74 UK, No. 1 UK Independent chart
- "Jukebox Sunshine" (2009) No. 4 UK Independent chart
References
- ↑ Daniel Welsh (3 October 2014). "Rob Skipper Dead: The Holloways Guitarist And HARES Frontman Dies, Aged 28". HuffPost. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
- ↑ "The Urban Voodoo Machine: Fiddler died fighting heroin addiction". loudersound. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
- ↑ Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Archived 15 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ "NME News The Holloways announce split and farewell gigs - ticket details - NME.COM". NME.COM. 7 April 2011. Retrieved 3 October 2014.
- ↑ "NME News The Holloways reunite with ex-members for final show before splitting". Nme. 24 May 2011. Retrieved 3 October 2014.
- ↑ "Burning Beaches". Camdenreview.com. Retrieved 3 October 2014.