CODY
At least four bands by the name Cody:
1. CODY - Come On Die Young (Denmark)
2. Cody (Oxford, UK)
3. The "Eurobeat" Cody
4. Cody (Manchester, UK).
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1. CODY - Come On Die Young (Denmark)
Nordicana from Copenhagen.
Inspirations might include Neil Young, Damien Jurado, Sixteen Horsepower, Sparklehorse, Ryan Adams, Mogwai, Johnny Cash and Paul Simon.
An EP was put out in January 2009 and an album was released in September same year. The band is currently working on new material. CODY has been invited to support bands like The National, Band Of Horses, Tindersticks and many others.
Management & Booking World Wide: Merger Management
Label: Slow Shark Records
Booking in Denmark: Beatbox Booking
Links:
codyfromdenmark.com
sonicbids.com/codydk
myspace.com/codysongs
facebook.com/comeondieyoung
twitter.com/codydk
Contact: info@codyfromdenmark.com
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2. Cody (UK)
An Oxford (UK) based 4-piece, Cody originally formed in 1996 to play a strange mid-fi mix of synthpop, post-punk and indie rock that gained them a single on local label Shifty Disco. "Simple", released in August 1997, was an 8-minute droning partly-spoken epic that gained gushing reviews and comparisons to Stereolab, Cabaret Voltaire and Arab Strap. The band were hotly-hyped around the time of BBC Radio 1's 1997 "Sound City" week in Oxford, but their awkward and uncertain live shows (where the band had slides projected over them rather than engage with the audience), together with a move towards more electronic, programmed sounds, seemed to confuse their media supporters. The hype moved elsewhere.
By the time the band released their 2000 debut album "Stillpoint Primer" on the Shinkansen label, they had moved towards an eclectic mix of shoegazing, Daft Punk rhythms, post-rock electronica, and jangling indie-pop, with lyrical themes that ranged from the overtly political to the opaquely arcane. "My Bloody Valentine meets Tortoise" was a typical reaction.
Cody were now recording their music at home and mailing their contributions to one another, which made it less of an issue when the members began to leave Oxford (and, in one case, leave the UK altogether). But this made promotion of their second album, 2002's "Distance Learning", somewhat difficult. The album was their best work - with more confident and memorable songs, and complex arrangements sometimes reminiscent of New Order, Boards Of Canada and Steely Dan (!). Its lack of success eventually led to Cody calling it a day in early 2004 when recordings for a proposed third album began to fizzle out. A sad end for a band who found it hard to fit in in their day, but whose shoetronic sound has many contemporary echoes.
Cody recordings available on demand on the "albums" page:
Simple / Dark Blue / Anticyclone / Rounder / Uplift (singles and EPs)
Stillpoint Primer / Distance Learning (full albums)
Any other albums or songs are by the other Codys. . .
ex-members of the band now record as Cathode ( http://www.last.fm/music/Cathode) and Alphonse Allais (check MySpace for their music)
Cody guitarist Steve Jefferis now appears as half of the hotly-tipped Warm Digits - http://www.last.fm/music/warm+digits
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3. Can anyone fill us in on the Cody of "Die Die Die" and "Fighting" fame? Info please!
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4. Cody (Manchester, UK)
Formed in Manchester in 2004 (and now disbanded), Cody were a record store sales assistant, a student, a writer, a chainsaw expert and a former DJ. In a smoky room in a dark satanic mill, they carved out a sound that was compared to Elbow, Sigur Ros, Radiohead, Mogwai, Sonic Youth and Oceansize. They gigged around Manchester for a few years before deciding to part ways.
A previous incarnation of the band was When Animals Attack. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
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