Space March Explained

Space March
Background:solo_singer
Birth Name:Craig Simmons
Origin:Sydney
Years Active:2002–present
Label:Ninthwave Records, Hark Records
Website:www.spacemarch.com
Current Members:Craig Simmons

Space March is the project of Australian singer/songwriter/producer/artist – Craig Simmons. The music of Space March can be described as melodic, layered, dreamy synthpop.

Music career

The debut self-titled Space March album was released in Australia in 2003 and picked up by synthpop label, Ninthwave Records as a US import release in 2004. Space March appeared in the Chicago Reader's 2004 year-end newspaper feature – The Best Music of 2004 with Music Critic, Ann Sterzinger, ranking the release number one in her top ten albums for that year.[1] Sterzinger's top vote was similarly cast in The Village Voice Pazz & Jop poll for 2004. The debut Space March album was quite organic sounding for a synthpop album, combining Beatlesque Britpop and psychedelic electronics, with the Chicago Reader describing the album as mixing "The Magnetic Fields, Erasure, and a dollop of Momus".[1]

Ninthwave Records digitally released the follow-up Space March album Without This You Can Never Change in 2006. The following year, the labels Ninthwave Records and Death By Karaoke released a remixed and repackaged version of the album both digitally and on CD.[2] Without This You Can Never Change was more electro orientated than the debut but still retained a melodic, pop sensibility.

The third Space March album, Monumental, was released in September 2011.[3] For this album, Simmons collaborated with multi-platinum record producer/mixer Mark Saunders whose production credits include: Erasure Wild!;[4] The Cure Wish;[5] Tricky Maxinquaye;[6] A-ha The Foot of the Mountain.[7] Monumental exhibited strong references to early 80s synthpop production which was noted in some reviews favourably.[8]

Hark Records released the fourth Space March album, Mountain King, in February 2013.[9] The title track incorporates the melodic theme from "In The Hall of the Mountain King" by Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg, written for the play, Peer Gynt in 1874–76.

In May 2014, Space March released an album of covers – It Must Be Obvious through Hark Records.[10] The album features covers of songs by Pet Shop Boys, Muse, The Beatles, New Order, Duran Duran, The Cure, The White Stripes, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, The Velvet Underground, David Bowie, Depeche Mode and John Barry.

Space March released the sixth studio album in June 2018, titled – Future Memories.[11] The ten track album is a mix of synthpop, electropop and synthwave.

The seventh studio album, Algorithm was released on 24 September 2021.[12] This synthpop album consists of six unreleased tracks and four new mixes/versions of recent singles.[13]

Prior to Space March, Simmons was the founding member of the synthpop duo, ElectroSquad which released two albums: Espionage (2000) and Operation: k (2001) on Hark Records.[14]

Discography

Studio albums

Art and Design career

Craig Simmons co-created the bandit.fm online music store for Sony Music,[15] which was launched in Australia in 2008 and in several other countries over the following years.

Early in his design career, Simmons contributed graphic design and illustration to Midnight Oil's internationally released Earth and Sun and Moon Album.[16] [17]

In September 2011, Space March exhibited a series of large canvas artworks for each song on the Monumental album at blank_space Gallery in Sydney.[18] Space March Art mixes modernism, geometry, graphics and pop art.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Best Music of 2004 . . 6 January 2005 .
  2. Web site: Without This You Can Never Change . .
  3. Web site: Monumental . .
  4. Web site: Erasure Producers . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070213001747/http://www.erasureinfo.com/links/producers.html . 13 February 2007 . dmy-all .
  5. Web site: Credits: The Cure – Wish . .
  6. Web site: Credits: Tricky – Maxinquaye . .
  7. Web site: Credits: A-ha – Foot of the Mountain . .
  8. Web site: Coozer . Adam . Space March – 'Monumental' . Read Junk . 15 October 2012.
  9. Web site: Mountain King . .
  10. Web site: It Must Be Obvious . .
  11. Web site: Future Memories . .
  12. Web site: Algorithm . .
  13. Web site: Space March . .
  14. Web site: ElectroSquad . .
  15. Web site: bandit.fm . .
  16. Web site: Midnight Oil – Earth and Sun and Moon . .
  17. Web site: Midnight Oil – Earth and Sun and Moon . .
  18. Web site: Space March Art Exhibition . . 19 August 2011 .