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The three humans behind the suggestive sound barrage of Add N To (X) -
Barry 7,
Ann Shenton,
Steve Claydon &
Dean Honer - plugged in their equipment in 1993 with the intention of creating music that would be highly unconventional, profoundly evocative, and open to wild ideas. With what amounted to a political will to oppose dull and predictable use of machine as well as organic instruments, and a revulsion at the rise of coffee table electronic music, they were bound to be intriguing. What they have achieved in just over half a decade has, however, demolished all expectations and built a purposefully deranged sonic edifice on top, visible from all corners of the planet.
Over three albums and a multitude of accompanying singles, videos and world tours, they have established a body of work edgier, ruder, more extrovert and coherently schizoid than any other functioning band. Their dirty and joyful beat noise, sinister analog-ola and robo-dada diskorganisation has excavated an underground city of possibilities. On and off record they've proved themselves to be the least culturally pre-set of all bands with an inspired co-mingling of dildos and theramins, kick drums and punch ups, triggering finches and speaker distending dissension.
If all Add N To (X) music onwards from their NME championed debut singles in 1997 sounded as if the synthesisers had been given as much input as the humans (assuming the synths were of a horny and unstable seditionary inclination) the third album, 2000's acclaimed "Add Insult To Injury" indicated that the compromise did not always have to be fractious.
They signed to independent electronic label
Mute Records in 1997, and achieved a modest commercial success before splitting in 2003.
Their debut album was recorded for Satellite records and released in 1998. On signing to Mute in the same year they issued the extreme bass analogue acid bath single 'Little Black Rocks In The Sun', playing a live show in a disused nuclear bunker to coincide. Six months of touring in America and Europe saw them turn into one of the most stimulating and unpredictable live bands. In 1999 they released 'Metal Fingers in My Body', the first single to be lifted from their powerful second album "Avant Hard", soon followed by 'Revenge of the Black Regent'.
The group performed live regularly, often augmenting their core three-piece line up with either one or two acoustic drummers, and sometimes additional musicians playing extra synths and/or electric guitar.
They often utilized distinctive artwork for the videos and record sleeves, a fetishistic collage of sexual imagery with analogue electronic equipment.
The band's members were Ann Shenton, Steven Claydon, and Barry Smith. Shenton and Smith met in 1993, and discovered a shared affinity for vintage synthesizers. Original bandmate Andrew Aveling joined them for the group's debut release, Vero Electronics. Steven Claydon replaced Aveling sometime thereafter, and remained with the group until its dissolution.
The band released four more albums, On The Wires of Our Nerves, Avant Hard, Add Insult to Injury, and Loud Like Nature. They also released the single Little Black Rocks In The Sun, which was issued on 10 inch hexagonal vinyl. Shenton was reportedly overwhelmed by the pressures of the Loud Like Nature tour, and either left the group or was kicked out. In 2003 Smith and Claydon continued touring the United States without Shenton. The band broke up shortly thereafter. Barry Smith runs the
Mute Irregulars label, an off-shoot of
Mute with his son Sam Kilcoyne and music pr Andy Fraser. Ann Shenton has formed a new group,
Large Number.
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