Sidi Bou Said | |
Background: | group_or_band |
Origin: | Lewisham, London, England |
Label: | Ultimate Recording Company |
Past Members: |
|
Sidi Bou Said were a British rock band formed in 1990 by Claire Lemmon (guitar and vocals), Gayl Harrison (bass guitar) and Melanie Woods (drums and vocals). Their music combined an indie rock/folk sound with complex arrangements and literate lyrics. They were often compared to Throwing Muses and the Pixies, with whom they shared a taste for sometimes uncomfortable lyrical themes—murder, religion, the workings of the human body and surrealist stories and films.[1] Their name comes from a town in Tunisia.
Sidi Bou Said's debut album was produced by Tim Friese-Greene. Their next two albums were produced by members of Cardiacs, and they were regular contributors to their stage shows and recordings. In 2001, they briefly reformed, with an additional guitarist under the name Tetra, and played a one-off reunion gig as Sidi Bou Said on 15 December 2005 at The Water Rats, London.
Sidi Bou Said was formed in 1990 by guitarist and vocalist Claire Lemmon, bass guitarist Gayl Harrison and drummer and vocalist Melanie Woods.[2] They were joined by vocalist and guitarist Lee Howton until summer 1994. All four women are from Lewisham, London, England. Their name comes from a town in Tunisia.
In 1993, Sidi Bou Said's first single, "Twilight Eyes" was released with a music video for MTV.[3] On 1 November 1993,[4] Sidi Bou Said released their debut album, Broooch, recorded at Chapel Studios and Ed's Plaice.[5] It was produced by Tim Friese-Greene, described by AllMusic as "among the most innovative — albeit underrecognized — producers of his era". The band was presumably how Tim and Lee Friese-Greene, now a couple, may have met.
Sidi Bou Said were guests on Moonshake's second full length project in 1994.[6]
Sidi Bou Said released their second album Bodies in 1995. According to AllMusic's John Bush, the album "shows the group as staunch environmentalists and concerned with women's issues, while still displaying their own British wit and identity."[7] That year, the band Cardiacs recorded their album Sing to God (1996) after returning from a tour with Sidi Bou Said, which Tim Smith was producing;[8] on the album, the song "Dog Like Sparky" is the first of several to feature backing vocals from Lemmon.[9]
Sidi Bou Said released their third and final studio album, Obsessive, in 1997.
After Sidi Bou Said disbanded in 1998, Lemmon recorded a solo album, Clearner, released in 1999 on BoogleWonderland Records. The album includes Woods on drums and was engineered by Harrison.[10]
In 2001, the final line-up of Sidi Bou Said briefly formed a new band with an additional guitarist under the name Tetra. Woods subsequently joined the North Sea Radio Orchestra, a contemporary chamber group formed in October 2002 by composer Craig Fortnam and his wife Sharron.[11] She performed vocals on the ensemble's first two albums—North Sea Radio Orchestra (2006) and Birds (2008)—as part of the North Sea Chorus,[12] [13] which drew plaudits from classical publications and indie music magazines.
In 2004, Lemmon and Woods joined the expanded Cardiacs line-up as vocalists alongside Sharron Fortnam and percussionists Cathy Harabaras and Dawn Staple. The band started work on new compositions and recordings for an album provisionally titled LSD, releasing the single "Ditzy Scene" in 2007 and touring until winter of that year.[14] [15] Tim Smith, Cardiacs' leader, had a cardiac arrest on 25 June 2008 which left him with the condition dystonia, leaving LSD unfinished. Woods was in the band's formation when they stopped their activities that year.[16]
Sidi Bou Said recorded for the album (2010).[17] [18]
In 2020, Tim and Lee Friese-Greene formed the group Short-Haired Domestic.[19] They released the double A-side single "A Song in Latin... A Song in Hindi" on 5 June, featuring the tracks "A Song in Latin About the Importance of Comfortable Shoes" and "A Song in Hindi for Insomniacs" as preview of the duo's eponymous album. On 30 March 2021, Cleaner was reissued on Bandcamp.
Title | Album details | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
Broooch |
|
| |
Bodies |
|
| |
Entertain |
|
| |
Obsessive |
|
|