Add N to (X)

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Add N to (X)
Background information
Origin London, England, United Kingdom
Genres Electroclash, Electronic music
Years active 1994–2003
Labels Blow Up Records
Satellite
Mute Records, Rocket Girl
Website Official Add N to (X) Website
Members
Barry Smith (1994–2003)
Ann Shenton (1994–2002)
Andrew Aveling (1994–1996)
Steven Claydon (1997–2003)

Add N to (X) were a three-piece British band specializing in electronic music performed on analogue synthesizers, formed in London in 1994.

The original band members were Andrew Aveling, Barry Smith (aka Barry 7) and Ann Shenton. Steven Claydon replaced Aveling in 1997.

After several releases on small labels, they turned down offers from major labels and signed to large independent label Mute Records in 1998, and achieved a modest commercial success before splitting in 2003.

Several of their songs and video clips have been adult/sex-related; the video for "Metal Fingers in My Body" is an animated short featuring a woman having sex with a robot, and their video for "Plug Me In" is famous for featuring porn actresses playing with sex toys.

Contents

[edit] Biography

In 1994 Andrew Aveling met Justin Anderson from Freaky Realistic[citation needed] and together they started a band named Radix Couplment[citation needed]. Andrew was dating Ann Shenton at this time[citation needed] and got her involved on the project[citation needed]. Andrew then asked his friend Barry (Former Radio Prague DJ Smith)[1] if he too would be interested in joining[citation needed]. They then spent some time gigging under this name before a fall out which led to Justin's departure from the band. There being only three remaining Andrew then renamed the group Add N to X[citation needed]. They released Vero Electronics (1996) on the Blow Up label, and after did many other recordings for the next album.

They kept the name but placed brackets around the X due to legal reasons. They then enlisted Steven Claydon who remained with the group until its dissolution.

1997 saw the band twice awarded Single of the Week by the NME (for The Black Regent and King Wasp).[1]

Second album On the Wires of Our Nerves was released in 1998, and was described as "like Stereolab/Suicide with a rocket shoved up their rectum".[1] The album was played heavily by BBC Radio 1 DJ Mary Anne Hobbs on her show, The Breezeblock.[1]

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, based in part on the movie and book Demon Seed

The band signed to Mute Records and released three more albums, 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 fired.[citation needed] In 2003 Smith and Claydon continued touring the United States without Shenton. The band broke up shortly thereafter. Barry Smith runs the Horseglue Records store and label with his partner Ethan Reid. Ann Shenton has formed a new group, Large Number. and record label White Label Music. Steven Claydon is now known for his artwork and in 2006 was included in a group show at Tate Modern.

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

[edit] Singles

  • "The Black Regent" (1997) Satellite
  • "King Wasp" (1997) Satellite
  • "Demon Seed" (1997) Piao! (split with Fridge)
  • "Little Black Rocks in the Sun" (1998) Mute
  • "Metal Fingers in My Body" (1999) Mute
  • "Revenge of the Black Regent" (1999) Mute
  • "Live 1940" (1999) Slut Smalls
  • "Plug Me In" (2000) Mute
  • "The Poke 'Er 'Ole" (2001) Mute
  • "And Another Thing" (2001) Rocket Girl (as ADD N TO FUXA)
  • "Take Me To Your Leader" (2002) Mute

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Strong, Martin C. (2002) The Great Rock Discography (6th Edition), Canongate, ISBN 1-84195-312-1

[edit] External links

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