Ash


Irish punk-pop trio Ash will be second on the bill as another huge name for this year's Hevy Music Festival.

First formed in 1992, childhood mates Tim Wheeler (guitar/vocals), Mark Hamilton (bass), and Rick "Rock" McMurray (drums) shared a love for the raw British punk of the Buzzcocks and crafted their musical talents to take the Brit-pop scene by storm at the start of the decade. NME was swooning over these 'teen punkers from Belfast', and by 1994 Ash had signed to Infectious Records to issue the Trailer EP later that fall.

Their glossy youth was undoubtedly alluring, yet their Irish roots exuded a bit of an American flair similar to the likes of Pavement and the Lemonheads. They weren't even out of high school before three singles hit the Top Five in the U.K. indie charts. A year later marked Ash's full-length debut with '1977' and a deal with Reprise Records in the U.S. Named in honor of the year Star Wars was released, '1977' displayed Wheeler and Hamilton's full-fledged love for all things extraterrestrial and science fiction-related. Sharp guitar hooks and exact production work by Owen Morris (Oasis, New Order, Paul Weller) gained the band members the fame they'd been wishing for since childhood.

They were headlining major festivals - T in the Park, Glastonbury, Roskilde, and Reading - and playing countless club dates across the globe. In fall 1997, female guitarist Charlotte Hatherley was added to the all-male lineup, a definite change for the band's sound and image and a step that led Ash's fan base to expand into more of what the band had been looking for since the beginning.

With a new bandmate and the end of their teenage years, Ash welcomed anything that came their way. The late '90s marked a maturation for Ash as a unit as well as individually. Their sound featured heavier guitars while Wheeler's lyrical content experienced a much grittier shift. Their next controversial album, 'Nu-Clear Sounds' (1998), had Garbage's Butch Vig (Smashing Pumpkins, Nirvana) at the mixing board which delivered a much darker record.

'Free All Angels' followed in April 2001, although it didn't even see a U.S. release until the following summer. 'Meltdown', the band's first stateside release for Record Collection, arrived in spring 2005. A year later, and after nine years with Ash, Charlotte Hatherley announced her departure from the band. In 2007 the group released 'Twilight of the Innocents', the album they claimed would be their last. 

Interestingly, however, they also assured their fans that they were not breaking up; instead, they would only release singles in response to consumer trends.

Ash

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Find out more about Ash

Find out more at www.ash-official.com