Our Lady Peace Profile

Full Name:Our Lady Peace - Contact Our Lady Peace
Date of Birth: 1992
Place of Birth: Toronto, Canada
Claim to Fame: Album Naveed (1995)

Our Lady Peace News and Gossip

  • PopMatters: The Magazine of Global Culture - Found Mar. 14, 2010
    Our Lady Peace's lead singer opens up about the nearl break-up of his band, the inspiration behind their latest full-length, and how bright the
  • ChartAttack.com - Found Mar. 8, 2010
    We here at CHARTattack learned a great deal about Our Lady Peace bassist Duncan Coutts' likes and dislikes when we sat down to ask him 10 mostly
  • Metronews - Found Mar. 4, 2010
    Our Lady Peace is going back in time for its latest cross-Canada tour beginning Sunday at the Cunard Centre in Halifax.
  • Windsor Star - Found Mar. 17, 2010
    Our Lady Peace performed at the Spitfire & Firkin on Tecumseh Road in Windsor March 17, 2010.
  • Windsor Star - Found Mar. 17, 2010
    Members of Canadian rock band Our Lady Peace will perform at noon today at Spitfire & Firkin, 11828 Tecumseh Rd. E., Tecumseh.
  • Oakland Press - Found Mar. 11, 2010
    Of The Oakland Press When Canadian rockers Our Lady Peace decided to play an album in its entirety on its latest tour, the quartet wasn?t planning
  • Montreal Gazette - Found Mar. 10, 2010
    Our Lady Peace's audience appreciation. And with performances like this one, the band deserves all the reciprocated affection it receives. Our...
  • Times Colonist - Found Mar. 4, 2010
    Our Lady Peace from left to right: Duncan Coutts (bass), Jeremy Taggart (drums), Raine Maida (vocals), Steve Mazur (guitar).
  • Richmond Review - Found Jan. 21, 2010
    January 19, 2010 2:00 PM Updated: January 19, 2010 2:35 PM commentWrite(o) Richmond has added Our Lady Peace to its lineup of entertainers at...
  • Calgary Herald - Found Mar. 3, 2010
    Raine Maida catches himself before claiming Our Lady Peace's imminent Canadian tour - in which the band will play two of its most highly regarded
Our Lady Peace Gossip

Our Lady Peace
Video

Next

Clip So many of you being asking about the lyrics! Here you go! :) I walked around my good intentions And found that there were none I blame my father ... Video
Filename: Our Lady Peace 4am
Clip Somewhere Out There by Our Lady Peace Video
Filename: Our Lady Peace Somewhere Out There
Clip music video to OLPs Clumsy Video
Filename: Clumsy Our Lady Peace
Clip Music video by Our Lady Peace performing Innocent. (C)  02 Sony Music Entertainment (Canada) Inc. Video
Filename: Our Lady Peace Innocent
Clip Yay! More videos! Video
Filename: Our Lady Peace Life
Clip Final Fantasy X   Our Lady Peace   Not Enough Video
Filename: Final Fantasy X Our Lady Peace Not Enough
Clip our lady peace music video Video
Filename: Our Lady Peace, In Repair
Clip our lady peace video Video
Filename: our lady peace thief

Our Lady Peace
extracted from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, distributed under the GNU Free Documentation License

Our Lady Peace

Our Lady Peace members busking in 2008
Background information
Origin Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Genres Alternative rock, post-grunge
Years active 1992–present
Labels Sony (1993–2005)
Relativity (1995–1997) (US only)
Columbia (1997–2005)
Coalition (2009–present)
Associated acts Crash Karma, Pedestrian
Website www.ourladypeace.net
www.ourladypeace.com
Members
Raine Maida
Jeremy Taggart
Duncan Coutts
Steve Mazur
Former members
Mike Turner
Chris Eacrett

Our Lady Peace (known also by its initialism OLP12) is an alternative rock band that formed in Toronto, Ontario, Canada in 1992.3 The band is headed by lead singer Raine Maida; with Jeremy Taggart on percussion, Duncan Coutts on bass, and Steve Mazur as lead guitarist. The band has sold over five million albums worldwide,4 won four Juno Awards, and won ten MuchMusic Video Awards — the most MMVAs ever awarded to any artist or group.5

OLP has released seven studio albums, one live album, and two compilation albums, with their 1997 album Clumsy often being considered their signature and most widely recognized work to date.6 They have enjoyed many hit singles, ranging from "Starseed" in 1994, to "Somewhere Out There" in 2002.

While the band's first four albums were often praised for their distinctly unique sound and style, their fifth album, Gravity, is sometimes noted to have been a "radical departure"7 from this distinctive style, and has been criticized as being "too mainstream".8 Lead singer Maida has confirmed the difference, calling Gravity "vastly different" than their previous records.9 The coincidental 2001 departures of both founding member Mike Turner and longtime-producer Arnold Lanni, in combination with influence from then-new producer Bob Rock,10 is sometimes credited as a main factor in the style change.

After nearly breaking up during the recording of their sixth studio album Healthy in Paranoid Times in 2005,4 the band took a prolonged hiatus before releasing their seventh album, Burn Burn, in June 2009.1112 The band recently began a North American tour featuring both their 1997 album Clumsy and their 2000 album Spiritual Machines in entirety,13 and have also begun work on their eighth album, which they hope to finish and release within 2010.14

Contents

History

Raine Maida co-founded the band with Mike Turner in 1992.

Early years (1992–2001)

In 1992, guitarist Mike Turner placed a "musicians wanted" ad in Toronto-based Now Magazine looking to form a new band. Michael Maida, a criminology student at the University of Toronto,15 was the first to reply. The two formed a band called As If with Jim Newell playing drums and a friend of Mike Turner's, Paul Martin, playing bass. Having played a number of gigs in Oshawa with sets containing a mix of original and cover material, Turner's friend departed and the band placed a "musicians wanted" ad for a replacement bass player. Chris Eacrett, a business student at Ryerson University, replied and was accepted after the audition. During that time, Turner and Maida attended a music seminar where they met songwriter and producer Arnold Lanni, the owner of Arnyard Studios. The band, with Lanni, commenced writing new material and recorded some material under the As If name.

To better reflect the new musical direction, the name of the band was changed to Our Lady Peace, and with encouragement from Lanni and his management team, they performed some gigs in Eastern Ontario and Montreal with the assistance of D.J. Williams (a Ridley College alumnus and classmate of Maida, also a Ridley College alumnus), in conjunction with The Tea Party. During this time, Maida began using the name Raine to reduce the confusion of having two Mikes in the band. An independent video of the song "Out of Here" was also created during this time period by Sam Siciliano, a Ryerson University film student and friend of Mike Turner, who produced, edited, and directed the video. The video was aired on MuchMusic on their Indie show.

After returning to Arnyard Studios to continue writing and recording material, Jim Newell departed the band. Writing and recording continued with session drummer John Bouvette. With managers Rob Lanni and Eric Lawrence of Coalition Entertainment representing the band, and temporary drummer Jody Wilson, short showcases were arranged with Warner Music Canada, EMI Canada, and Sony Music Canada. Sony Music Canada head of A&R, Richard Zuckerman, liked what he heard and saw the potential of the producer, the band, and band's management. Thanks in large part to the vision of Richard Zuckerman the band signed a record deal with Sony Music Canada and a publishing deal with Sony/ATV. The band commenced writing additional material for a debut album, as well as placing a "musicians wanted" ad for a drummer which was answered by then 17-year-old Jeremy Taggart, and the producer and band asked that he join.

Success with Naveed and Clumsy

After additional material was written and recorded, with the continued assistance of John Bouvette on several tracks and guitarist Phil X contributing tracks, Our Lady Peace released its debut album Naveed in 1994 under Sony Music Canada. Following the release of the album, the band toured Canada supporting acts I Mother Earth and 54-40. The record was later picked up and released in the United States in March 1995 by a Sony Music indie label, Relativity Records, from which the band completed the year touring as the opening act for Van Halen's Balance summer tour and four shows opening for Page & Plant. Touring of the album resumed in 1996 with time spent touring with Canadian Alanis Morissette. The title track, "Naveed", became a hit in Canada, while "Starseed" became a hit in Canada and charted in the United States. "Starseed" would later be added on the Armageddon film soundtrack.

In early 1997, Our Lady Peace was offered an American signing with Columbia Records, expanding their horizons within Sony Music Entertainment. After touring the album Naveed, the band began work on their second studio album for Columbia. As the writing process ensued, bassist Chris Eacrett and the band parted ways due to musical differences. Rob Coutts, a Ridley College alumni and classmate of Raine Maida, joined the band as Duncan Coutts on bass during the recording of their second album.

Titled Clumsy, the band's second album was released in January of 1997. It features the hit songs "Superman's Dead", "4 AM", "Automatic Flowers", "Carnival" and the title track "Clumsy". It established Our Lady Peace as a leading band in the Canadian rock scene. The album cover was based on a song called "Trapeze", which was initially going to be the name of the album. They decided to leave the song off the album but still performed it live. In February 2001, Clumsy became a diamond-certified album in Canada. In 1998, Our Lady Peace founded the Summersault festival that toured across Canada in 1998 and 2000, with lineups that included Foo Fighters, A Perfect Circle and The Smashing Pumpkins.

Happiness, touring and Spiritual Machines

In 1999 the band released their third album titled Happiness...Is Not a Fish That You Can Catch. The album included such hits as "Thief", a song about a young girl named Mina Kim that the band met who had cancer, as well as "One Man Army" and "Is Anybody Home?". Legendary jazz drummer Elvin Jones was featured on the song "Stealing Babies". Multi-instrumentalist Jamie Edwards was brought in 1996 for the sessions for the album and remained an unofficial member of the band until 2001 when he was asked to officially join the band to finish the album Gravity. Shortly after the completion of the record, Jamie chose to leave the band, returning briefly to stand in for Mike Eisenstein during the Canadian tour of Gravity. The band also played an eleven song set at Woodstock 1999.

Lead guitarist Mike Turner left the band in 2001, citing creative differences.

In 2000, the band released Spiritual Machines, a concept album inspired by Ray Kurzweil's book The Age of Spiritual Machines. During the recording of the album, drummer Jeremy Taggart was sidelined with an ankle injury; Matt Cameron, Pearl Jam's drummer and former member of Soundgarden, played drums on "Right Behind You (Mafia)" and "Are You Sad?" in his place. The album featured the singles "In Repair", "Life" and "Right Behind You (Mafia)". "Life" was also featured in the soundtrack for the Canadian sports comedy film Men with Brooms. Spiritual Machines was less commercially successful than its predecessors.

Changes in direction (2001–present)

By the early 2000s, the band was becoming restless, feeling a "numbness" with their popularity as well as the "over-saturation" of their songs on Canadian radio, which resulted in them almost breaking up after completing their Spiritual Machines tour.1617 In December 2001, having dropped original producer Arnold Lanni, the band met with new producer Bob Rock to start work on their fifth album. Later that month, founding guitarist Mike Turner left the band, citing "creative differences".181920 According to the band members the separation was amicable.

Lead singer Raine Maida said of the departure, "The last two records we've been yearning for a guitar player that can really stand up and have a strong voice and Mike just wasn't that kind of guitar player17." Turner later formed the bands Fair Ground and Crash Karma. Turner's last performance with the band was for Music Without Borders at Toronto's Air Canada Center on October 21, 2001.21

Gravity, live album, and Healthy in Paranoid Times

In April 2002, after a global call for a replacement for Turner, Steve Mazur was announced as the new guitarist for the band and recording of their new album was completed.22 OLP's fifth studio album, Gravity, was released in June 2002 to mixed reviews. Some critics and fans contended that the album was a radical departure from the band's musical style, adopting an increasingly mainstream sound. Percussionist Jeremy Taggart disclosed in a 2002 interview that the new direction was intentional, and that Gravity was "by far their best album".7

The album's chart-topping first single, "Somewhere Out There", became the band's biggest international hit to date. The second single released off, "Innocent", was also very popular and regained popularity in 2008 after a cover performance on American Idol. "Made of Steel" was also a hit across North America.

On June 24, 2003, Our Lady Peace released their first live album titled Live, which contains some of the band's greatest hits as played throughout tours in Canada. Notable differences as compared to the studio versions are Naveed / Life, which was played as one single song throughout the supporting tour.

In August 2005, the band released their sixth album Healthy in Paranoid Times, which included the tracks "Angels/Losing/Sleep", "Will the Future Blame Us", and "Where Are You?" Shortly after recording the album, the band disclosed that during the making of the album, they nearly broke up.4 According to Rolling Stone, it took 1165 days to create it, and its twelve tracks were chosen from forty-five that the band had written and produced. Maida has since criticized Healthy in Paranoid Times, saying that "(the) record was total excess, total bullshit in the sense of, we finally had succumbed to a label: making us record that many songs, trying to find the right singles for American radio and MTV."10

Compilations, hiatus, and Burn Burn

In November 2006, Columbia Records released a greatest hits compilation titled A Decade following the band's departure from the label. There were two previously unreleased songs on the album, "Kiss On The Mouth" and "Better Than Here". Steve Mazur wrote in a blog on the band's fan club that the new songs on the disc were two unreleased songs from the Healthy in Paranoid Times sessions. The collection also included a bonus DVD containing live concert footage and exclusive interviews at the Massey Hall concert. The single "Kiss On The Mouth", the first off A Decade, has received play on radio stations across Canada.

On March 31, 2009, Legacy Recordings released OLP's second compilation album, The Very Best of Our Lady Peace as part of the Playlist series.23 The album includes famed singles such as "Naveed" and "Somewhere Out There", as well as lesser-known songs such as "Car Crash" and "Stealing Babies".23

After the release of their 2006 compilation album, A Decade, the band entered a short hiatus period after having parted ways with Columbia Records. Lead vocalist Raine Maida began work on his first solo album, The Hunter's Lullaby, which was released in 2007, while the remaining members of the band also became preoccupied with other personal endeavors. The hiatus would result in the longest time gap between OLP studio albums to date.

The band began working on Burn Burn, their seventh studio album, in February 2007, completing it in March 2009. Raine Maida has called the new album "huge", and noted it as being a "proper rock album again"—featuring a return to the raw originality of the band's first album Naveed, though a "little more mature".24 Maida solely produced the album, noting his excitement over "not (having had) anybody intrude on (recording) sessions".24 The album was released in North America on July 21, 2009.11 The band toured to promote Burn Burn in July made stops in several cities across North America from July through December.25

Recreation tour and eighth album

In December 2009, the band announced that they would be "recreating"13 both their 1997 album Clumsy and their 2000 album Spiritual Machines by performing them live in their entireties1326 throughout a new tour that began in March 2010.13 The tour is set to span Canada as well as select U.S. cities.13

Band members have also confirmed that a new studio album follow-up to Burn Burn is in the process of being recorded, and that it may be released within 2010.1327 In a March 2010 interview, lead singer Raine Maida noted that after having gone back to re-learn songs from Spiritual Machines and Clumsy in preparation for their tour, he was "brought back to the great things about this band". He added that fans — especially those who are particularly fond of the pre-Gravity albums — should expect to see "a lot of stuff (from those albums) creeping its way back into our music".9

Style and themes

In the band's early years and especially in Naveed, Our Lady Peace's overall sound was often compared to alternative rock bands including Soundgarden, The Smashing Pumpkins and Pearl Jam.28 The band's melodic structure was also said to echo that of bands such as The Beatles and Led Zeppelin.28

Maida's vocals

Lead singer Raine Maida's voice was called "erratic", and "truly unrivaled" in his field.28 In albums Naveed through Spiritual Machines, Maida sang in a countertenor vocal register and was known for his frequent use of falsetto. This singing method, in combination with the band's melody structure, often gave many songs a surreal sound and effect.

Saul Fox theme

After meeting then-70-year-old art model Saul Fox in 1993, the band asked him to pose for Naveed's album cover.29 Since then, Fox has been used on four additional Our Lady Peace album covers: Clumsy, Happiness..., Spiritual Machines and A Decade.

Fox as he appears on five Our Lady Peace albums between 1994 and 2006

According to lead singer Maida in a 1998 interview, Fox "represent(ed) a whole lot of stuff with the band ... he's a very unique individual, a very inspiring individual".29 Fox, when asked about the meaning of his use in Our Lady Peace's artwork, said: "What they have to say inside is difficult for them to express. They don't have the vocabulary. They don't have the ability to express it in words. They have a difficult time even identifying it. All they know is that their soul has a feeling and they've got to express it." 29

When the band changed their musical and artistic direction in 2002, they stopped using Fox on their album covers. On Gravity's album cover, a photo of the band members was used, and on the cover for Healthy in Paranoid Times, a painting of a 20-something man sitting on a chair was used. For the album cover of their 2009 album Burn Burn, the band re-embraced the Saul Fox theme concept, incorporating a middle-aged Fox look-alike30 wearing an outfit similar to the one used by Fox on the cover of the band's 1999 album Happiness... Is Not a Fish That You Can Catch.

In a recent interview, band bassist Duncan Coutts suggested that Saul Fox may have recently died, as his health had been declining.31

Discography

Studio albums

Live and compilation albums

Band member information

Current members

Former members

  • Mike Turner (1992–2001): guitar, backing vocals
  • Chris Eacrett (1992–1995): bass

Record producers

References

  1. ^ OLP - thefreedictionary.comFarlex, Inc.. Retrieved February 17, 2010.
  2. ^ OLP returns to its rootsPique Publishing. Retrieved February 17, 2010.
  3. ^ Our Lady Peace in the Pop EncyclopediaCanoe.ca. Retrieved May 10, 2009.
  4. ^ a b c "Our Lady Peace Get Well". Rolling Stone. 2005-08-01. http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/ourladypeace/articles/story/7596155/our_lady_peace_get_well. Retrieved 2008-07-17. 
  5. ^ ."MuchMusic.com > MMVA06 > REWIND > 97, 98, 00". MuchMusic. http://www.muchmusic.com/events/mmva06/inside/rewind/. Retrieved 2007-01-17. 
  6. ^ "Canada.com article top 100 Canadian albums". Retrieved on July 21, 2008.
  7. ^ a b "New OLP record a radical departure". Canoe. http://jam.canoe.ca/Music/Artists/O/Our_Lady_Peace/2002/02/12/748555.html. Retrieved 2008-07-17. 
  8. ^ Our Lady Peace - Gravity reviewSputnikmusic.com. Retrieved May 10, 2009.
  9. ^ a b The complete Q&A: Raine MaidaMontreal Gazette. Canwest Publishing, Inc. 2010. Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  10. ^ a b "interview with Raine Maida". Montreal Gazette. http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/arts/story.html?id=529733b0-3e18-45b7-81ed-6b61bb12a36c. Retrieved 2008-07-17. 
  11. ^ a b Our Lady Peace set to release their seventh studio album July 21Tradingmarkets.com. Retrieved May 5, 2009.
  12. ^ "Our Lady Peace Launch Album With Exclusive Concert". idiomag. 2009-07-22. http://www.idiomag.com/peek/93012/our_lady_peace. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  13. ^ a b c d e f An Evening with Our Lady PeaceOurladypeace.net. Retrieved December 7, 2009.
  14. ^ a b Our Lady Peace preparing new albumChartattack.com. Retrieved on January 4, 2010.
  15. ^ "Biography". NME. http://www.nme.com/artists/our-lady-peace#biography. Retrieved 17 September, 2009. 
  16. ^ Durham, Victoria. "Our Lady Peace - Weight and Bleed" Rock Sound Nov 2002. Retrieved September 21, 2009.
  17. ^ a b Pacienza, Angela. "Our Lady Peace Finds Gravity in Maui." The Winnipeg Free Press 29 Jun 2002: C6
  18. ^ "Turner leaves Our Lady Peace citing creative differences" The Hamilton Spectator 14 Dec. 2001: D07. Retrieved June 14, 2009.
  19. ^ "The Torch article Our Lady Peace disappoints fans with new release". Retrieved on July 21, 2008.
  20. ^ Anonymous. "Our Lady Peace puts out the call for new guitarist" Toronto Star 19 Feb 2002: A7. Retrieved June 14, 2009.
  21. ^ "New OLP album a radical departure: Our Lady Peace guitarist quits" - article at Jam! Canoe
  22. ^ Anonymous. "Our Lady Peace signs new guitarist" Toronto Star 16 Apr 2002: B8. Retrieved June 14, 2009.
  23. ^ a b Amazon.com: Playlist: The Very Best of Our Lady PeaceAmazon.com. Retrieved March 27, 2009.
  24. ^ a b c "interview with Raine Maida". Canoe. http://jam.canoe.ca/Music/Lowdown/2008/05/13/5551481-ca.html. Retrieved 2008-07-17. 
  25. ^ Our Lady Peace rolls out a scorching summer tourConsequence of Sound. Retrieved July 19, 2009.
  26. ^ Raine MaidaTwitter.com. Retrieved December 7, 2009.
  27. ^ Our Lady Peace: back from the brink. – Glacier Interactive Media. Retrieved February 17, 2010.
  28. ^ a b c Our Lady Peace - Naveed reviewSputnikmusic.com. Retrieved May 10, 2009.
  29. ^ a b c Our Lady Peace: Call 'em Fox's Lady PeaceCanoe, Inc.. Retrieved May 10, 2009.
  30. ^ OURLADYPEACE.NET - BURN BURN - COVER REVEALOurladypeace.net. Retrieved May 10, 2009.
  31. ^ http://acrn.com/features/interviews/?review=10

External links