Everything about The Strokes totally explained
The Strokes are an
American rock band formed in 1998 that rose to fame in the early 2000s as a leading group in the
garage rock revival. The band consists of
Julian Casablancas (
lead vocals,
songwriting),
Nick Valensi (
lead guitar),
Albert Hammond Jr. (
rhythm guitar),
Nikolai Fraiture (
bass guitar) and
Fabrizio Moretti (
drums and
percussion).
NME made
Is This It their Album of the Year. Since then, the band has maintained a large fan base, notably in the UK, US and Australia.
History
Beginnings and The Modern Age EP: 1998-2001
Lead
singer-songwriter Julian Casablancas,
guitarist Nick Valensi, and
drummer Fab Moretti started playing together while attending
Dwight School in
Manhattan.
Bassist Nikolai Fraiture had been friends with Casablancas and was attending the
Lycée Français de New York. At age 13, Casablancas was sent to
Le Rosey, a boarding school in
Switzerland to resolve his drinking problems and improve his academic performance. In
Switzerland, Casablancas met
guitarist Albert Hammond, Jr..
Later, when Hammond came to New York to attend
New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, he shared an apartment with Casablancas. They started a band which performed on the
Lower East Side of New York, and at Manhattan's popular
Mercury Lounge.
Ryan Gentles, the Mercury Lounge's booker, quit his job to become the band's manager.
The band began rehearsing a twelve song set which included "
Last Nite", "
The Modern Age", "This Life" (an early version of "Trying Your Luck"), "
New York City Cops", "Soma" and "
Someday". Most of these songs now feature different
lyrics.
The Modern Age EP was released in 2001, and sparked a bidding war among
record labels; the largest for a rock and roll band in years. The Strokes became the subject of enormous hype, causing a great divide among rock fans.
Is This It: 2001-2003
The Strokes released their debut album
Is This It in the US in October 2001 on
RCA after some delay due to changes made from the UK-released version (released 27th August 2001). The cover of the latter features a
black-and-white photo of a gloved hand on a woman's naked backside, shown in semi-profile, and is said to reference
Spinal Tap's fictitious
Smell the Glove. The naked model on the cover was photographer Colin Lane's girlfriend at the time. The North American version replaces this with an image of particle collisions consisting of a curious blue and anzac and the replacement of the song "New York City Cops" with "When It Started". The replacement of "New York City Cops", which contains the refrain "New York City Cops, they ain't too smart", was made in good faith following the
September 11 attacks.
The melodic
garage rock sound of
Is This It received positive reviews from both mainstream and independent publications, including 4 stars from
Rolling Stone, and a 9.1 from
Pitchfork Media; it made many critics' top 10 lists, and was named the best album of the year by
Entertainment Weekly and
TIME.
NME, in an article previewing summer concerts, urged readers to attend their shows, claiming that the band was touring on the strength of some of the "best pop songs ever". The influence of 1970s
CBGB stalwarts
Television was noted by many reviewers, although The Strokes themselves have stated that they're not fans of the band.
After the release of
Is This It, the band toured around the world, featuring dates in
Japan,
Australia,
New Zealand,
Europe, and
North America staging for the
Rolling Stones. The band headlined UK's
Carling Weekend festivals in 2002, largely chronicled by a relatively hard-to-find mini-documentary entitled "In Transit" which was released to members of the now-defunct "Alone, Together" fan club.
In August 2002, the band played at New York's
Radio City Music Hall on a bill with
The White Stripes.
Jack White joined the Strokes on stage to perform the guitar solo on "New York City Cops". During that period, the band also appeared as musical guests on various late-night talk shows.
Is This It yielded several singles and music videos, all of which were directed by
Roman Coppola.
The group began recording their follow-up in 2002 with producer
Nigel Godrich (best known for his work with
Radiohead), but later split with him in favor of Gordon Raphael, the producer of
Is This It. Recordings with Godrich were never revealed. In August 2003, the band toured Japan, playing a couple of the upcoming songs: "Reptilia", "Meet Me In The Bathroom", "The Way It Is", "Between Love & Hate" (formerly known as "Ze Newie") and "" (formerly known as "Supernova"). The band also played
Paul Anka's "My Way" with Japanese lyrics.
As of 2007,
Is This It has sold over 3.5 million copies worldwide.
Room on Fire: 2003-2005
They released their second album
Room on Fire in October 2003, to good reviews, but to less success commercially, although it still went gold. The album's sound maintained the Strokes' familiar reference points, while also evoking groups such as
The Cars,
Bob Marley, and
Blondie. In the process, they made the cover of
Spin Magazine for the second time, with each member receiving his own cover. They also made the cover of
Rolling Stone for the first time. Additional media coverage of the band came from the relationship between Moretti and actress
Drew Barrymore, which ended in January 2007.
The first single taken from
Room on Fire was the song "12:51", which used distinct keyboard-like sounds produced by Valensi's guitar. The video was also directed by Roman Coppola, and was inspired by the futuristic look of the 1980s film
Tron. This consisted of a mainly black scene, with instances of glowing picton blue and riptide. In November 2003, The Strokes played on
Late Night with Conan O'Brien, performing "
Reptilia", "What Ever Happened", "Under Control" and "I Can't Win". During the 2003/2004 "
Room on Fire Tour", the band played with
Kings of Leon as support act and
Regina Spektor. While on tour, Spektor and the Strokes recorded the song "
Modern Girls & Old Fashion Men", released as a B-side on the "Reptilia" single. Also during the tour, the band included
The Clash's "Clampdown" as a cover, which was released as the B-side for
The End Has No End.
In late 2004, The Strokes revealed plans to release a live album. The
Live in London LP was planned for release in October 2004, but was abandoned, reportedly due to recording quality problems. The chosen gig was one held at the legendary
Alexandra Palace in northern London. In February 2005, Julian Casablancas wed long-time friend and assistant band manager
Juliet Joslin. The Strokes had a three-concert South American tour in October 2005, with dates in Brazil, Chile, and Argentina.
First Impressions of Earth: 2005-2007
In late September 2005, "
Juicebox", the first single from The Strokes then unreleased third album, was leaked online, forcing the single's release date to be advanced. The single was then released as an exclusive on online download services. "Juicebox" became The Strokes' second UK Top 10 hit, as well as their second US Modern Rock Top 10 success. During November and December 2005 the Strokes did a promotional tour for the still unreleased album, which involved doing one-off shows in major cities around the world.
Their third album,
First Impressions of Earth, was released in January 2006 to mixed reviews and debuted at number four in the US and number one in the UK, a first for the band. In Japan it went gold within the first week of release. It was also the most downloaded album for two weeks on
iTunes. Fraiture claimed that the album was "like a scientific breakthrough". In January 2006, the band then made their second appearance on
Saturday Night Live playing "Juicebox" and "
You Only Live Once".
In 2006, the band played 18 sold-out shows during their UK tour. In February 2006, The Strokes won "Best International Band" at the
NME Awards. In March, the band returned to the US with their longest tour yet. The second single off
First Impressions of Earth, "Heart in a Cage", was released in March 2006.
During the summer of 2006, The Strokes played several festival dates in Europe, including the
Hultsfred Festival in Sweden,
Roskilde Festival in Denmark, the
Oxegen Festival in Ireland (during this concert they were to be followed by
The Who but due to the overwhelming reaction of the crowd they ended up staying on longer than scheduled), the
Montreux Jazz Festival in
Switzerland, the FIB (
Festival Internacional de Benicàssim) in Benicàssim (Spain) and
Fuji Rock Festival in Japan. They then toured Australia and Mexico in late August and early September, followed by the second leg of the United States tour. While in the US, The Strokes opened for
Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers for five shows during their Highway Companion tour.
The Strokes went on to complete another US tour. During this final tour Casablancas stated to fans that the band would be taking an extensive break after it finished. An e-mail was sent out soon afterwards by Strokes manager Ryan Gentles, confirming that a "much needed break" would be taken. A new band website went online in May 2007 along with the release of an alternate video to their single "
You Only Live Once" directed by Warren Fu. The video also featured a brief interlude with "
Ize of the World", also from "
First Impressions of Earth". In late 2007, the song "You Talk Way Too Much" was used in a commercial for the
Ford Sync. Aleks Cisneros became the Strokes new assistant manager in late 2007.
Fourth Album
The band has recently announced that that'll begin work on their fourth album sometime soon. Bassist Nikolai Fraiture posted on the band's website that "we just need to work out a few technical kinks".
In an interview with NME, the band stated that they're currently in the studio working hard. They hope to have the album out by late 2008 or early 2009.
Discography
Studio albums
Awards and nominations
2002Won
ASCAP Pop Awards – College Vanguard Award
BRIT Awards – Best International Band
Meteor Ireland Music Awards – Best International Album (Is This It)
NME Awards – Best Album (Is This It), Band of the Year, Best New Act
Nominated
MTV Video Music Awards – MTV2 Award (Last Nite)
MTV Video Music Awards - MTV2 Award (Sam Mason Bell)
MTV Europe Music Awards – Best New Act
Q Awards – Best Live Act
2003Nominated
NME Awards – Best International Band
2006Won
NME Awards – Best International Band
Nominated
MTV Europe Music Awards – Best Rock Band
2007Nominated
NME Awards – Best International Band
Samples
Further Information
Get more info on 'The Strokes'.
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