Peter Kember (born 19 November 1965),[2] also known by his stage name Sonic Boom, is an English singer-songwriter, composer and record producer. He was a founding member, vocalist, guitarist and keyboardist of alternative rock band Spacemen 3, lasting from 1982 until the band's dissolution in 1991.[3] He is now based in Sintra, Portugal.[4]
Peter Kember | |
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Background information | |
Also known as |
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Born | Rugby, England | 19 November 1965
Genres | |
Occupations |
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Instruments | |
Years active | 1982–present |
Labels | SpaceAge |
He provided the production on MGMT's second album Congratulations, Panda Bear's albums Tomboy and Panda Bear Meets the Grim Reaper, and Beach House's album 7.
As a solo artist, Kember has recorded as Spectrum and E.A.R. (Experimental Audio Research), parallel musical projects with recordings under both names occasionally only featuring Kember. He has occasionally performed live under both monikers, most recently in 2008–11 as Spectrum, touring as a band in America and Europe. Kember has played and collaborated with a number of artists, including Stereolab and Yo La Tengo. Kember released his latest album of work, All Things Being Equal, in 2020 under the Sonic Boom name.
Early life and education
editKember lived in Dunchurch during his childhood,[5] and attended Rugby School until he was 16.[6] He later attended Rugby Art College where he met Jason Pierce.[7]
Music career
editInfluences
editIn discussing music that was important to him, Kember mentioned Kraftwerk, Sam Cooke, Laurie Anderson, Pierre Henry & Michel Colombier, Bo Diddley, the Sandpipers, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD) and George Faith.[8]
Spacemen 3
editKember initially came to prominence as a member of the outfit Spacemen 3.
Sonic Boom
editKember's first solo album, Spectrum, was recorded in 1989 while Spacemen 3 were still a going concern, and featured the other members of the group. A second album, All Things Being Equal, was released in 2020.
Spectrum
editKember recruited new musicians Richard Formby, who had previously contributed guitar and keyboards to Sonic Boom's side of the final Spacemen 3 album Recurring, and Mike Stout[9] for the group Spectrum in 1991. Initial Spectrum releases carried on from the sound of late-period Spacemen 3, featuring conventional songs and a regular band. First single "How You Satisfy Me" was an original composition by Kember and Formby reminiscent of 1960s garage bands, based as it was upon the Chip Taylor-penned pop hit "I Can't Let Go". 1992's Soul Kiss (Glide Divine) album was split between songs and longer experimental pieces featuring drones and repetition. Another single from the album, a cover version of Daniel Johnston's "True Love Will Find You in the End" reached number 70 on the UK singles charts.[10] Formby departed the band as soon as the album was released and Stout left not long after. Highs, Lows and Heavenly Blows (1994) featured a new line-up, primarily Scott Riley (guitar/vocals) and Alf Hardy (engineer), but also including former Spacemen 3 bass player Pete Bassman (Pete Bain), was also mainly song-oriented with Scott co-writing and taking lead on Take Your Time. Kember has occasionally collaborated with Jessamine and Silver Apples under the Spectrum name.
Since 1996 the Spectrum name has been used for Kember's solo work, sometimes with Bain and recording engineer/musician Alf Hardy. The music made with Bain and Hardy was often in the same vein as E.A.R., reflecting an increased interest in vintage analogue synthesizers, especially those made by EMS. After issuing 1997's Forever Alien album, there were no further releases of new material under the Spectrum moniker until 2008's Indian Giver collaboration with Jim Dickinson. Kember has also worked with Füxa's Randall Nieman.
During 2008–11, a four-piece Spectrum toured extensively in America and Europe. This included providing main support for the 2008 reformation tour of My Bloody Valentine, and a performance at the All Tomorrow's Parties festival in May 2011. An EP, War Sucks, was released in 2009.
E.A.R.
editAlthough the first E.A.R. album to be released (Mesmerised, 1994) was Kember on his own, the initial intention of E.A.R. was to record experimental "soundscape" music with collaborators. The second album, Beyond the Pale (1996), which was actually the first to be recorded, in 1992, included Kevin Shields of My Bloody Valentine, Kevin Martin and AMM's Eddie Prévost. The album was remixed by German musician Thomas Köner in 1997, and released as The Köner Experiment. Prévost also appeared on Phenomena 256 (1996) and Millennium Music (1998), both of which included a larger group of musicians. Data Rape (1998) was recorded solely by Kember, using the technique of circuit bending, which he continued to use on the Vibrations EP (2000) and Continuum album (2001). The latter two releases were made with assistance from Delia Derbyshire, formerly of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, who also had a track named after her on the Spectrum album Forever Alien. The most recent E.A.R. release is Worn to a Shadow (2005).
Other musical collaborations
editKember has also played and collaborated with Birmingham band Magnétophone who were signed to 4AD Records, performing with them live on European tours between 2006 & 2007 (he also managed them during this period), The Field Trip, Stereolab, Yo La Tengo, Britta Phillips and Dean Wareham, Cheval Sombre, Cloudland Canyon, and Pat Fish of The Jazz Butcher, The Fields of Hay and with the Italian band Julie's Haircut.
2006 saw Kember mentor The Flowers of Hell through the creation of their self-titled debut, mixing and performing on a track[11] and returning to do the same on the group's 2009 Come Hell or High Water album.[12]
In 2022, Kember collaborated with Black Market Karma on a track The Sour Truth released in 2023.[13] The single is produced by Kember and features him on synth and percussion.
Work as a producer
editKember produced Blair 1523's debut album, Beautiful Debris. He remixed Britta Phillips and Dean Wareham's L'Avventura album, releasing Sonic Souvenirs in 2003. In 2010, Kember undertook superervisory production on MGMT's second album, titled Congratulations. In 2011, he mixed and mastered Panda Bear's fourth album, Tomboy. In 2012 he produced TEEN's record In Limbo. In 2015, he co-produced Panda Bear's fifth album, Panda Bear Meets the Grim Reaper.[14] He also did mixing work on Deakin's first solo work, Sleep Cycle, in 2016. Kember collaborated in the production of 7, the Beach House album released on 11 May 2018. He mixed Moon Duo's 2019 album, Stars Are the Light
Discography
editAs Sonic Boom
editAlbums:
- Spectrum (1990)
- All Things Being Equal (2020)
- Reset (2022; collaboration with Panda Bear)
Singles/EPs:
- Angel (1989)
- Octaves/Tremolos (1990)
- Drone Dream (1991)
- Mechanical Man (1994)
- The Sundowner (2000)
- The Sour Truth (2023) (with Black Market Karma)
As Spectrum
editAlbums:
- Soul Kiss (Glide Divine) (1992)
- Highs, Lows and Heavenly Blows (1994)
- Forever Alien (1997)
- A Lake of Teardrops [Spectrum & Silver Apples LP] (1999) (with Silver Apples)
Compilations and special releases:
- What Came Before After (1994) [compilation]
- A Lake of Teardrops (1999)
- Live Chronicles Vol. 1 (2001) [live recordings]
- Live Chronicles Vol. 2 (2001) [live recordings]
- Refractions: Thru the Rhythms of Time 1989–1997 (2004) [compilation]
- Indian Giver: Spectrum meets Cpt. Memphis (2008) [with Jim Dickinson]
Singles/EPs:
- How You Satisfy Me (1992)
- True Love Will Find You in the End (1992)
- Super Sympathy Spectrum Stocking Stuffer (1992) [split EP with The Field Trip]
- Indian Summer (1993)
- Undo the Taboo (1994)
- California Lullabye (1994)
- Songs for Owsley [EP] (1996)
- A Pox on You [Spectrum and Jessamine EP] (1996) [with Jessamine]
- Feels Like I'm Slipping Away (1997)
- Interface/Come Out to Play (1999) [split EP with Imajinery Friends]
- War Sucks [EP] (2009)
As E.A.R. (Experimental Audio Research)
editAlbums, etc.:
- Mesmerised (1994)
- Beyond the Pale (1996, recorded 1992) [with Kevin Shields]
- Phenomena 256 (1996)
- The Köner Experiment (1997)
- Millennium Music (1998)
- Data Rape (1998)
- Living Sound [E.A.R. & Jessamine] (1999)
- Pestrepeller (1999) (Limited to 1900 copies)
- Vibrations (2000)
- Continuum (2001)
- Worn to a Shadow (2005)[15][16]
Packaging and formats
editSpectrum and E.A.R. releases have often featured elaborate packaging, unusual formats, or limited editions. Some notable examples are:
- The LP version of the Sonic Boom album Spectrum came with a revolving "Op art" sleeve. 2000 copies came with a slip allowing purchasers to also buy a limited 10" coloured vinyl EP. The EP contained experimental drone recordings, with instructions to play at 16, 33, 45 or 78 RPM.
- The group Spectrum's first album Soul Kiss (Glide Divine) was originally released in a transparent PVC sleeve, with a blue oil and water mixture contained within it. (These notoriously burst when being shipped to record store). The LP was pressed on transparent vinyl.
- E.A.R.'s first single release was Pocket Symphony, a 5" vinyl record with cover art by Anthony Ausgang.
- E.A.R.'s "Sub Aqua / Tidal / Lunar" (1995) was an 8" vinyl release, a picture disc with a locked groove at the end of the second side.
- "Sputnik" (1997), a split single with Thurston Moore and Don Fleming on the other side, was pressed on glittery 7" vinyl.
- Another 7" single, "Data Rape (Part 9)" has a drawing by artist Savage Pencil scratched onto the B-side instead of music.
- 1998's "Death of a Robot" is pressed on 9" clear vinyl.
References
edit- ^ Matthew Liam Fogg (4 June 2014). "Peter Kember, space rock enigma". HERO magazine. Retrieved 21 July 2019.
- ^ Colin Larkin, ed. (1992). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music (First ed.). Guinness Publishing. p. 2324. ISBN 0-85112-939-0.
- ^ Jason Ankeny (19 November 1965). "Sonic Boom | Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 25 August 2014.
- ^ "The Quietus | News | Sonic Boom Shares New Track, 'The Way That You Live'". The Quietus. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
- ^ ""Interview with Tony Kember"". 2003.
- ^ Morse, Erik (15 December 2009). "Spacemen 3 and the Birth of Spiritualized". Omnibus Press. ISBN 9780857121042.
- ^ " ""Spacemen 3 Biography"".
- ^ Kember, Peter (June 2020). "My Life in Music: Sonic Boom". Uncut. No. 277. p. 118.
- ^ "Sonic Boom - Spectrum". Sonic-boom.info.
- ^ "True love will find you in the end | full Official Chart History". Officialcharts.com.
- ^ Grayson Currin (28 June 2007). "The Flowers of Hell". Pitchfork.
- ^ Ian Gormely (20 April 2009). "The Flowers of Hell". Exclaim!.
- ^ Franklin, Dave. "Black Market Karma and Tess Parks - The Sky Was All Diseased (Flower Power Records)". The Big Takeover.
- ^ Panda Bear Meets the Grim Reaper (Media notes). Panda Bear. Domino Recording Company. 2015.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ "Spectrum, E.A.R., and Sonic Boom Discography". Sonic-boom.info. Retrieved 25 August 2014.
- ^ "Music Search, Recommendations, Videos and Reviews". AllMusic. Retrieved 25 August 2014.
External links
editThis article's use of external links may not follow Wikipedia's policies or guidelines. (December 2019) |
- Official website
- SpaceAge Recordings
- 3ammagazine.com 2002 interview
- Rockedition.com interview, 2011[usurped]
- Alteredzones.com interview, 2011
- interview with Peter Kember in Spain, c. 2010 (Youtube video)
- interview with Peter Kember, c. 2010 (Youtube video)
- 'Soul Kiss (Glide Divine), Spectrum’s timeless masterpiece dismantled…' – Interview with Kember about the LP, 2014