Difference between revisions of "Negative Eh"

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[[image:Negative_Eh_Cafe_Oto_Performance.jpg|right|thumb|500px|Cafe Oto gig flyer (London, 2008)]]
 
[[image:Negative_Eh_Cafe_Oto_Performance.jpg|right|thumb|500px|Cafe Oto gig flyer (London, 2008)]]
Band from the late 1990s, featuring [[Richard Whyte]] (guitar), [[Rick Jensen]] (guitar/vocals) and [[Dean Brown]] (drums). They competed in the [[Contact 89FM]] [[Battle of the Bands 1997|Battle of the Bands]] in 1997. While in Hamilton they self-released the albums ''[[What the Fuck is Fahrenheit?]]'' (1997) and ''[[Hotel/Motel]]'' (1998) and a number of EPs. Between 1999 and 2000 all three members moved to Wellington, and since 2002 have released four albums under the name [[Nova Scotia]]. Brown and Jensen then moved to England, meaning that the band seldom has opportunities to play together. In 2008 they played a show at Cafe Oto in London (with Ben Spiers and Alex Mein Smith) and a split-12" with Dunedin band Eye is planned for release in 2011.
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Band from the late 1990s, featuring [[Richard Whyte]] (guitar), [[Rick Jensen]] (guitar/vocals) and [[Dean Brown]] (drums). They competed in the [[Contact 89FM]] [[Battle of the Bands 1997|Battle of the Bands]] in 1997. While in Hamilton they self-released the albums ''[[What the Fuck is Fahrenheit?]]'' (1997) and ''[[Hotel/Motel]]'' (1998) and a number of EPs. Between 1999 and 2000 all three members moved to Wellington, and since 2002 have released four albums under the name [[Nova Scotia]]. Brown and Jensen then moved to England, meaning that the band seldom had opportunities to play together. In 2008 they played a show at Cafe Oto in London (with Ben Spiers and Alex Mein Smith) and a split-12" with Dunedin band Eye is planned for release in 2011.
  
 
They also have numerous current solo projects: Dean Brown plays solo as [http://www.discogs.com/artist/Little+Skull Little Skull], Rick Jensen formed [http://www.myspace.com/therickjensentrio The Rick Jensen Trio/Quartet] and [http://www.myspace.com/theinsectexplosion The Insect Explosion], while Richard Whyte also performs as [http://soundcloud.com/dickwhyte Dick Whyte and his Golden Guitar] and [http://www.myspace.com/supercomposition Dick Whyte: Supercomposer].
 
They also have numerous current solo projects: Dean Brown plays solo as [http://www.discogs.com/artist/Little+Skull Little Skull], Rick Jensen formed [http://www.myspace.com/therickjensentrio The Rick Jensen Trio/Quartet] and [http://www.myspace.com/theinsectexplosion The Insect Explosion], while Richard Whyte also performs as [http://soundcloud.com/dickwhyte Dick Whyte and his Golden Guitar] and [http://www.myspace.com/supercomposition Dick Whyte: Supercomposer].

Revision as of 23:52, 7 April 2011

Cafe Oto gig flyer (London, 2008)

Band from the late 1990s, featuring Richard Whyte (guitar), Rick Jensen (guitar/vocals) and Dean Brown (drums). They competed in the Contact 89FM Battle of the Bands in 1997. While in Hamilton they self-released the albums What the Fuck is Fahrenheit? (1997) and Hotel/Motel (1998) and a number of EPs. Between 1999 and 2000 all three members moved to Wellington, and since 2002 have released four albums under the name Nova Scotia. Brown and Jensen then moved to England, meaning that the band seldom had opportunities to play together. In 2008 they played a show at Cafe Oto in London (with Ben Spiers and Alex Mein Smith) and a split-12" with Dunedin band Eye is planned for release in 2011.

They also have numerous current solo projects: Dean Brown plays solo as Little Skull, Rick Jensen formed The Rick Jensen Trio/Quartet and The Insect Explosion, while Richard Whyte also performs as Dick Whyte and his Golden Guitar and Dick Whyte: Supercomposer.

Reviews

  • Where Ghosts Go To Die review on the Insample website; "Latest installment from this trio sees them evolving into free-psyche territory on this limited lathe-cut release. Newest in a continuous line of NZ bands who may be the best in the world?"
  • Oceanography review from the Headshy website; "Wellington trio Negative Eh embark on a voyage over gentle waves of feedback, sailing on a fair easterly drumbeat, encountering remote islands of fuzz."
  • Review of Nova Scotia's Tangiwai by Bruce Russell; "Proof that there is a genuine groundswell of this abstract music, these youngsters from Nowhere NZ take on all comers and come out of their corner sluggin'. This has a great sound, murk used cleverly to differentiate certain passages, then the sound leaps to the foreground in a genuinely scarey way. I have no idea how or really why this was all done, and to me that's the highest praise I can bestow. There are new things in heaven and earth, Horatio. Foreigners note - Tangiwai was a terrible NZ rail disaster in 1953, when the main trunk express was washed out by a lahar with the loss of 153 lives. Relevance uncertain." (Corpus Hermeticum print catalogue)

Releases (as Negative Eh)

Releases (as Nova Scotia)

External Links

Negative Eh/Nova Scotia on Audio Foundation
Nova Scotia on MySpace

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