Cay (band) explained

Cay
Origin:Camden Town, London, England
Genre:Alternative Rock
Label:Org Records, EastWest
Associated Acts:Feeder
Past Members:Anet Mook
Nicky Olofsson
Tom Harrison
Mark Bullock
Chris Hall
Jonny Nothard
Ed Sonsino

Cay were a London-based alternative rock band (containing members from the Netherlands, Sweden, England and Northern Ireland) who were active in the late 1990s. The band released one album and recorded several radio sessions for the BBC.

History

Cay formed in Camden Town, London in the mid-1990s around the nucleus of Dutch singer/rhythm guitarist Anet Mook and Swedish guitarist/pianist Nicky Olofsson, who were musical and romantic partners. The lineup solidified with the addition of London bass guitarist Tom Harrison and Northern Irish drummer Mark Bullock.[1] [2] The band name was hastily improvised from the initials of one of their demo tracks ("Cool As You") when Mook was talking to a record company.[3]

Cay drew on a variety of influences, predominantly "punky, grungy" material such as Nirvana, Sonic Youth and The Sex Pistols (which, in tandem with Mook's hoarse and lacerating vocals, brought them comparisons to Hole which they ultimately found unwelcome).[4] However, the band would also cite more diverse influences (such as Robert Fripp, or Mook's childhood love of diva singers including Diana Ross, Barbra Streisand and Billie Holiday).[5] [6] The band's approach was often more technically exploratory than many of their peers, leading to further comparisons with bands such as Gang of Four and Nomeansno.

Cay's first release was the Better Than Myself EP, released on Org Records in 1998, with the band's first Peel Session for BBC Radio 1 being broadcast on 20 September. The single and session (and the band's appearance at that year's in the City music festival in Manchester) attracted the attention of various record labels including EastWest Records, who signed the band. Two further singles followed on EastWest in early 1999 - "Neurons Like Brandy" and "Princes & Princesses" – with the band gaining further press attention.[7] NME reviewed a London gig in January commenting that "Cay are simply following in that great Camden tradition of stealing what's best from America and coating it in north London grime." Cay's debut (and only) album, Nature Creates Freaks was released in July 1999. Reviews were favourable, with the band being compared to the likes of Sonic Youth, Robert Fripp and The Breeders and the NME commenting "this is the album (which Hole's) Celebrity Skin should have been. It's the most genuinely angry album you'll hear this year," as well as describing the band's sound as being "like the devil's own daughter gargling razor blades over the rawest hardcore."[8] [9] The album was followed by a third EastWest single, also called "Nature Creates Freaks". On 3 June 1999, the band recorded its second Peel Session (this time in the "Nearly Live" sequence) at the Queen Elizabeth Hall as part of the Sound City events.[10] The band also won the Best British Newcomer award at the 1999 Kerrang! Awards.

Despite Cay's early promise, the band had by now become dogged by substance abuse and infighting which ultimately disrupted their activities and career to such an extent that by the following year the band had been dropped by both their label and their management. In April 2000, both Bullock and Harrison left the band.[11]

Mook and Olofsson recruited a new rhythm section for Cay (Chris Hall on drums and Ed Sonsino on bass guitar) and returned to Org Records, who issued their final single "Resurrexit". The single received airplay on Radio 1 and the band played at the Glastonbury festival on 23 June (with their performance being recorded for a third Peel Session, broadcast the following day), followed by an appearance at Guildford Live Festival in July.[12] However, the band's internal problems remained unresolved. After a final Peel Session recording on 22 November 2000 (broadcast on 5 December) featuring four new songs – "Sun Through the Rain", "Flying Fools Through Icy Attitudes", "FUNY (A Celebration of New York)" and "Part of the Show" - Cay simply disappeared.

There was no formal notification of a split and the Cay songs unveiled in the final Peel Session were never released. The band's former drummer Mark Bullock would go on to play on Feeder's Australian tour in 2000 (he would also play on the band's Top of the Pops performance of the "Just A Day" single in late 2001). Despite ongoing curiosity about the whereabouts of Anet Mook and Nicky Olofsson, or news of subsequent musical projects, further news on either was rare (or insubstantial) over the course of the following decade.

On 15 June 2011, Org Records founder Sean Organ announced on his Organart site that he had been informed in an e-mail from Mark Bullock of Anet Mook's death. Mook had been struck by a moving vehicle in the Netherlands. On 16 June 2011, Mark Bullock confirmed in his blog, "Sink of Swirling Stars", that Mook had died the previous week, adding that she had struggled with drug addiction for many years. Bullock later clarified the cause of Mook's death by stating that she was struck by a train and was sober and of sound mind at the time. Her funeral was held on the day of Bullock's posting.[13]

Discography

Singles

Albums

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Radio 1 - Keeping It Peel - Cay . BBC . 2014-08-20.
  2. Web site: The Organ's Thing of the Day June 15th 2011 . Organart.com . 2014-08-20 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150519065042/http://www.organart.com/organthing190.html . 19 May 2015.
  3. Web site: Interview with Cay in Cream fanzine issue 4 . Cream fanzine . 2010-06-17.
  4. Web site: Cay: live review at the Red Eye, Islington, London . New Musical Express . 12 September 2005 . 2010-06-17.
  5. Web site: Glastonbury Festival 2000 . eFestivals.co.uk . 2014-08-20.
  6. Web site: GrrlsInRock . 18 June 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090109061802/http://www.btinternet.com/~virtuous/planetgrrlmusic/anetmook.htm . 9 January 2009 . bot: unknown . - writer Sarah interviews Anet Mook for PlanetGrrlMusic e-zine
  7. Web site: NIGHTSHIFT Coming Your Way - October '99 . Nightshift.oxfordmusic.net . 2014-08-20 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110823073458/http://nightshift.oxfordmusic.net/oct99/coming.html . 23 August 2011.
  8. "Cay - Nature Creates Freaks", NME, 5 June 1999
  9. Perry, Tim (1999) "Album Reviews: Cay - Nature Creates Freaks", The Independent, 3 July 1999
  10. Web site: peel sessions: band index: c . Homepage.ntlworld.com . 1996-03-20 . 2014-08-20 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100711065859/http://homepage.ntlworld.com/jmsmall/peel/bands/c.html . 11 July 2010 . dead .
  11. Web site: Mark Bullock . Sink Of Swirling Stars: Anet Mook: 19?? - 2011 . Sinkofswirlingstars.blogspot.com . 2011-06-16 . 2014-08-20.
  12. Web site: Live Reviews 3 . Ashamed.cream.org . 2014-08-20.
  13. Web site: Now is not the time for hysteria...: RIP Anet . Soundofdrowning.blogspot.com . 2014-08-19 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140318123700/http://soundofdrowning.blogspot.com/2011/06/rip-anet.html . 18 March 2014.