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LONDON CALLING YOUNG, LOUD AND BRITISH, BRASH NEW BANDS MAKE THEIR RUN AT AMERICAN AUDIENCES.


Byline: Sandra Barrera Staff Writer

It's not an invasion yet. But yet another wave of limeys have secured a beachhead beach·head  
n.
1. A position on an enemy shoreline captured by troops in advance of an invading force.

2. A first achievement that opens the way for further developments; a foothold:
 on American shores.

And like the first British juggernaut of the 1960s, this next wave has come to regenerate pop culture with a classic kind of rock, one that harkens back to an earlier, simpler time - in this case, the '60s, '70s and '80s. OK, while those decades were far from uncomplicated, they certainly predated the dominance of hip-hop, which is the key ingredient left out of the music these new lads are into.

``If you're not expecting it, our music can be a bit of a shock,'' says Robert Harvey Robert Harvey may refer to:
  • Robert Harvey (footballer) (born 1971), Australian rules footballer
  • Robert Harvey (musician) (born 1983), British musician
  • Robert Harvey (UK politician) (born 1953), British Conservative politician, former MP for Clwyd South West (1983-87)
, singer of Leeds-based the Music, which opens for the Vines tonight at the Henry Fonda Theatre. The show is followed by an appearance April 26 at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival The Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival (commonly known as Coachella) is a three-day (formerly a one or two-day) annual music and arts festival held at the Empire Polo Fields in Indio, California.  in Indio. The four-man band of school chums, all barely in their 20s, is descending from the attic with a sound that boomers could easily appreciate: voluminous, driven guitars, heavy drums and classic rock melodies. Think Led Zeppelin Led Zeppelin, English pop music group formed in 1968 by guitarist Jimmy Page (1944–), singer Robert Plant (1948–), bassist John Paul Jones (1946–), and drummer John "Bonzo" Bonham (1948–80).  with some '90s Jane's Addiction Jane's Addiction was an American rock band featuring Perry Farrell (vocalist), Dave Navarro (guitarist), Eric Avery (bassist), and Stephen Perkins (percussionist). The band formed in Los Angeles in the mid-1980s and dissolved in 1991.  thrown in for good measure.

They couldn't come at a better time.

With the accelerating revival of garage rock, the doors could now be opening for bands like the Music and their countrymen such as Fiction Plane, the London-based band that draws from '80s rock and plays the Viper Room Coordinates:  The Viper Room is a nightclub located along the Sunset Strip in West Hollywood, California. It was opened in 1993 and was partly owned by actor Johnny Depp until 2004.  on Wednesday. But more on this band later.

The fact is that there are many more of these guitar-heavy bands storming America, including the Libertines, who hail from the same rock lineage that gave us the Kinks, the Sex Pistols and the Jam. In fact, the London-based band behind the Sanctuary Records Sanctuary Records is a record label based in the United Kingdom and a subsidiary of Universal Records.[1] Until June 2007, it was the largest independent record label in the UK and the largest independent music management company in the world.  release ``Up the Bracket'' is another that performs in April at Coachella. Also hailing from London is Feeder, a fuzzed-up pseudo-industrial band now preparing for the May release of its follow-up to last year's intensely personal ``Comfort in Sound,'' a response to the suicide of drummer Jon Lee in January 2002.

Perhaps the strangest of the bunch is Liverpool's the Coral, whose eponymous debut on Sony has it being compared to the eccentric '60s prog- rocker Captain Beefheart.

``There's a move back to guitar-based bands in the last couple of years, and the Strokes' success has certainly helped open that door,'' says Nic Harcourt, music director and host of ``Morning Becomes Eclectic'' at Santa Monica-based public radio giant KCRW-FM (89.9).

``The American audience has always liked its music a little more muscular than perhaps some of the music that's been coming out of England, but I think that's shifting.''

The proof can be found in the Music's eponymous Capitol Records debut, which ``lives up to all the fuss,'' according to Vanity Fair, and continues to receive overwhelming praise from critics everywhere. For Guitar Player magazine, the album signals that ``psychedelic guitar is alive and well.'' Rolling Stone, meanwhile, trumpets the album for its ``stentorian sten·to·ri·an  
adj.
Extremely loud: a stentorian voice. See Synonyms at loud.



[After Stentor, a loud-voiced Greek herald in the Iliad.
 cries of Led Zep and U2 driven by the block-rockin' beats of heavy electronica.''

Harvey, who was raised on the music of Motown, says if people think his band is paying homage to the gods, they're wrong. He offers up a back story that is a virtual algorithm for making a garage tremble and annoying the neighbors:

``We were really young when we started. We just bought pedals and amps and guitars, and we just wanted to make weird noises, you know, and different sounds started coming out,'' says Harvey, a scruffy 19-year-old with long hair and a penchant for flared trousers.

Fiction Plane vocalist Joe Sumner is looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 a more conscious, political audience. He's a young English version of Bono for public radio - at least for now, anyway.

The 24-year-old vocalist has relocated from London to New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 for the next year in order to push ``Everything Will Never Be OK,'' his band's MCA Records debut, which has Billboard hailing ``great songs, insistent melodies, ace playing.''

But Sumner knows it's the audience that ultimately determines whether a young band such as Fiction Plane even has a future. ``I'm definitely fearful that either nothing will happen, or terrible things will happen,'' he says with a chuckle. ``Right now, we're pretty much living in a car.''

It's unlikely that Sumner has to worry about finding a place to crash, since his dad is Gordon Sumner, better-known as Sting. But never mind about that. Fiction Plane already gets some airplay air·play  
n.
The broadcasting of an audio or audiovisual recording on the air over radio or television.


airplay
Noun

the broadcast performances of a record on radio
 on ``Morning Becomes Eclectic'' despite the DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
.

``That's a black mark against him for me. I'm not a big Sting fan,'' Harcourt says, adding that ``he's a step away from Vegas, you know. He has not done anything that's touched me for a long, long time. So when I was told that this was his kid's band, I was really kind of surprised by how much I liked it.''

As a singer, Sumner has been described as a chip off the old block a child who resembles either of his parents.

See also: Chip
 except with a stronger voice. But singing ability isn't all he's inherited. Sumner is also an articulate songwriter who's conscious of his world, as if Julian Lennon had inherited his father's poetic gift and his political courage. He's also got a slightly disturbing obsession with morbid subjects.

``Death is such a strong thing to bounce ideas off of. It's just a very extreme starting point. I'd like to get into more subtle ones, like maybe deal with life,'' he chuckles. ``Maybe next time that will be my starting point.''

``You add that dimension to the band and the fact that they're all such great players, all of a sudden you've got this kind of dynamic that is reminiscent of early U2 records,'' says Jock Elliott, marketing director for MCA Records.

``People are definitely taking to the stuff we've been playing,'' Sumner says of the music off the album, which was produced by David Kahne, who has also worked with Paul McCartney. ``The song that really works without fail is 'Wise,' the last song off the album.

``We always play it last and just completely spaz spaz or spazz   Offensive Slang
n. pl. spazz·es
One who is considered clumsy or inept.

intr.v. spazzed, spazz·ing, spazz·es
To be clumsy or inept.
 out because it's not such a song-song, it's more like a big ominous marching orchestra thing,'' adds Sumner. ``We really rock it out. It doesn't matter if we break all our strings.''

As with any new generation, this new branch in the growing tree of British rock music is part of an evolution, not a revolution. Like its forebears, it's sort of the same but a little bit different - and a better fit for its time.

THE MUSIC, opening for THE VINES

Where: Henry Fonda Theatre, 6233 Hollywood Blvd., Los Angeles.

When: 7 tonight.

Tickets: $23.50. (213) 480-3232; www.ticketmaster.com.

CAPTION(S):

3 photos

Photo:

(1 -- cover -- color) Cool Britannia

A new wave of British bands like The Music and Fiction Plane are establishing a beachhead on American shores

(2) THE MUSIC: PHIL JORDAN, left, STUART Stuart, British royal family
Stuart or Stewart, royal family that ruled Scotland and England. The Stuart lineage began in a family of hereditary stewards of Scotland, the earliest of whom was Walter (d.
 COLEMAN, ROBERT HARVEY and ADAM Adam, the first man, in the Bible
Adam (ăd`əm), [Heb.,=man], in the Bible, the first man. In the Book of Genesis, God creates humankind in his image as a species of male and female, giving them dominion over other life.
 NUTTER

(3) FICTION PLANE: DAN BROWN, left, JOE SUMNER and SETON DAUNT daunt  
tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts
To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay.



[Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin
 
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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Mar 25, 2003
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