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The Darkness

THE DARKNESS
Karaoke has a lot to answer for. Following the demise of his synth-pop band Empire, singer-guitarist Justin Hawkins found himself belting out a version of Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" at his local pub on New Years' Eve, 1999. Watched by his younger, guitar-playing brother Dan, the seeds of The Darkness were planted.

The brothers were soon augmented by drumming schoolfriend Ed Graham and bassist Frankie Poullain and the newly-christened The Darkness proceeded to plunder the deeply unfashionable sounds and looks of late 70s hard to unleash on an unsuspecting public.

Draping himself in Aerosmith-style leotards, copping moves and high-kicks from Van Halen's Dave Lee Roth and the high-frequency falsetto of Freddie Mercury, The Darkness hit London's pub circuit with a vengeance. Dismissed by certain sections of the music press as a joke band, The Darkness nonetheless developed a loyal and devoted following through a combination of devastating live shows, accessible material and feverish word of mouth amongst gig goers.

Having struggled to secure a deal, The Darkness put their money where their mouths were and in August 2002 independently released their debut EP "I Believe In A Thing Called Love" . Coupled with all-important support slots with Deep Purple and Def Leppard, The Darkness rollercoater began to gain momentum and, following the release of the single "Keep Your Hands Off My Woman", secured a major label deal with Atlantic Records in March 2003.

Following legendary performances at the Glastonbury and T In The Park Festivals, their debut album "Permission to Land" entered the charts at Number 1. Just over a year later, The Darkness found themselves headlining Friday night at the Reading Festival and embarked on a major UK tour at the end of 2004.

At the beginning of 2005, it was announced that bassist Frankie Poullain had left the band due to the time honoured reason of "creative differences" but the futue of the band was never in any doubt as proved by the soon-to-be-released sophomore album.

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Nickelback

NICKELBACK
Self-belief is an amazing thing. Borrowing $4,000 from his step-father, singer-guitarist Chad Kroeger took his guitarist brother Mike and bassist Ryan Vikedel to Vancouver, Canada in 1996 and recorded their debut EP, "Hesher". Through tireless self-promotion and solid gigging, Nickelback soon moved up to the next level.

Their debut album, the post-grunge "The State" was picked up on the strength of the single "Leader of Men" which garnered unprecedented Canadadian radioplay. Nickelback toured the album relentlessly and after 200 or so gigs found themselves playing stadium-sized crowds. Such was their pulling power that the album went on to sell 500,000 copies.

Nickelback's next album, "Silver Side Up" was a more direct affair, largely due to the nature of Kroeger's lyrics which dealt with the pain of growing up. The lead-off single "How You Remind Me" was a global hit and raised the band's profile in Britain and Europe.

Taking a break from Nickelback, Kroeger worked with Saliva vocalist Josey Scott on the Spiderman soundtrack before returning in 2003 with the album "The Long Road" , a meditation on the presssures of touring.

Nickelback are now poised to strike again with new album "All The Right Reasons".

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