Boards
Bitch Magnet Extra show announced for Bristol, UK
Bitch Magnet are to play one extra UK date!
Thursday 8 December 2011 at 7:30pm
Fleece
12 St. Thomas Street
Bristol BS1 6JJ
Damnably & Go Ape Present Bitch Magnet @ The Fleece, Bristol
Tickets £12.50 adv via
Wegottickets http://www.wegottickets.com/event/139994
Ticketweb http://www.ticketweb.co.uk/user?query=search®ion=xxx&category=misc&search=bitch+magnet&x=12&y=10
Gigantic http://www.gigantic.com/gigantic/home_bitch_magnet.html
Bristol Ticket Shop
Bitch Magnet
with support from smallgang, FU
Monday, December 12, 2011
The Lexington
96-98 Pentonville Road,
London, UK N1 9JB [map]
7:30pm - 18+
Ticketweb: http://www.ticketweb.co.uk/user/?region=gb_london&query=detail&event=471611&interface
Wegottickets:http://www.wegottickets.com/event/137632
Gigantic: http://www.gigantic.com/gigantic/home_bitch_magnet.html
Following the announcement that Bitch Magnet’s original recorded lineup will reunite to perform -- for the first time since 1989 -- at All Tomorrow’s Parties’ “Nightmare Before Christmas" festival on December 10, 2011, Damnably are excited to announce a headline London show for the band on December 12, at The Lexington!
Bitch Magnet was formed by bassist/vocalist Sooyoung Park and Fine at Oberlin College in 1986; drummer Orestes Morfin joined shortly thereafter. Immediately following the release of its debut Star Booty in 1988, the band garnered rapturous reviews and established itself among the top-tier of America’s independent music underground. The band’s reputation continued to grow with tours of the US and Europe, and the subsequent releases of Umber (prominently included by Mojo on its list of “Lost Albums You Must Own”) in 1989 and Ben Hur in 1990. The latter two have been frequently cited as a key inspiration for what would become known as “post-rock,” a term that baffled and amused the members of Bitch Magnet when it first surfaced, and still does today.
Along with their contemporaries in Slint, in the years following their breakup,
Bitch Magnet has been recognized as a significant influence on generations of
aggressive and musically complex bands, including Don Caballero, Mogwai,
Rodan, June of 44 and Battles.