Foje Explained

FOJE
Landscape:yes
Origin:Vilnius, Lithuania
Genre:Alternative rock, new wave
Years Active:1983–1997, 2013

Foje was one of the most successful and best known rock bands in Lithuania.

History

Foje was formed in the present-day Antakalnis Secondary School in Vilnius by Andrius Mamontovas, Arnoldas Lukošius and Darius Tarasevičius in 1983 under the name of Sunki Muzika ("Hard Music"), few months later Algis Kriščiūnas joined the band. In 1984 it was renamed to Foje (literal meaning: "foyer"). Through its years, the band survived a number of lineup changes, and released over 10 albums.

The group cited several influences, including the sound of the Stranglers, as well as the 1980s post-punk movement (for example the notable nod to Depeche Mode on Foje's 1989 electronica album Žodžiai į Tylą). These influences were combined with the often gloomy, desperate lyrics of the band's leader Andrius Mamontovas.

In 1997 the band performed three farewell gigs in the Lithuanian cities of Klaipėda, Kaunas and Vilnius, with attendance of 60,000 in the final performance on 17 May in Vingis Park of Vilnius.[1] After disbanding Mamontovas started a solo career.

Two of the band's songs - "Laužo šviesa" ("The Light of the Bonfire") (1986) and "Meilės nebus per daug" ("There will not be too much love") (1994) - were voted by the media professionals into the Top 20 best Lithuanian songs of the 20th century in 2000.[2]

Members

Discography

  1. Web site: Foje official website . 2006-12-04 . 2021-02-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210201213417/http://www.foje.lt/istorija.html/ . dead .
  2. http://whatson.delfi.lt/archive/article.php?id=209 "Radiocentras" išdalino apdovanojimus
  3. Released in 1995.
  4. Released in 1993.

External links