Arts Crafts Sampler Vol 5 Music Is Art Festival 2006

English rock ring

Muse

MuseBristol 050619-118 (48035812973).jpg

Muse performing in 2019. From left: Matt Bellamy, Chris Wolstenholme, Dominic Howard

Background information
Origin Teignmouth, Devon, England
Genres
  • Alternative rock
  • progressive rock
  • infinite stone
  • hard rock
  • fine art stone
  • electronic rock
Years active 1994–present
Labels
  • Helium three
  • Warner
  • Mushroom
  • Taste
  • East West
  • Dangerous
  • Maverick
Associated acts The Jaded Hearts Club
Website muse.mu
Members
  • Matt Bellamy
  • Chris Wolstenholme
  • Dominic Howard

Muse are an English rock band from Teignmouth, Devon, formed in 1994. The band consists of Matt Bellamy (lead vocals, guitar, keyboards), Chris Wolstenholme (bass guitar, backing vocals), and Dominic Howard (drums).

Muse released their debut anthology, Showbiz, in 1999, showcasing Bellamy's falsetto and a melancholic alternative rock style. Their 2nd album, Origin of Symmetry (2001), incorporated wider instrumentation and romantic classical influences and earned them a reputation for energetic live performances.[1] Absolution (2003) saw further classical influence, with strings on tracks such as "Butterflies and Hurricanes", and was the first of six consecutive UK number-1 albums.

Black Holes and Revelations (2006) incorporated electronic and pop elements, displayed in singles such as "Supermassive Black Hole",[one] and brought Muse wider international success. The Resistance (2009) and The second Constabulary (2012) explored themes of government oppression and civil insurgence and cemented Muse as ane of the world'due south major stadium acts. Rolling Rock stated the band possessed "stadium-crushing songs".[ii] Topping the US Billboard 200, their seventh album, Drones (2015), was a concept anthology near drone warfare and returned to a harder rock sound. Their 8th album, Simulation Theory (2018), prominently featured synthesisers and was influenced past science fiction and the simulation hypothesis.

Muse have won numerous awards, including two Grammy Awards, two Brit Awards, v MTV Europe Music Awards and eight NME Awards. In 2012 they received the Ivor Novello Award for International Achievement from the British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors. Every bit of June 2016[update], they have sold over thirty million albums worldwide.[3]

History

Early years (1994–1997)

The members of Muse played in separate schoolhouse bands during their time at Teignmouth Community College in the early 1990s. Guitarist Matt Bellamy successfully auditioned for drummer Dominic Howard's band, Carnage Commotion, becoming its vocalist and songwriter. They renamed the ring Gothic Plague. They asked Chris Wolstenholme – at that time the drummer for Stock-still Penalty – to join every bit bassist; he agreed and took up bass lessons.[4] [5] The ring was renamed Rocket Baby Dolls and adopted a goth-glam image. Effectually this time, they received a £150 grant from the Prince's Trust for equipment.[half-dozen]

In 1994, Rocket Babe Dolls won a local battle of the bands, smashing their equipment in the process.[vii] Bellamy said, "It was supposed to be a protestation, a argument, and so, when nosotros really won, it was a existent shock, a massive shock. Afterward that, we started taking ourselves seriously." The band quit their jobs, changed their name to Muse, and moved abroad from Teignmouth.[8] The ring liked that the new name was curt and thought that it looked good on a affiche.[ix] Co-ordinate to journalist Mark Beaumont, the ring wanted the name to reverberate "the sense Matt had that he had somehow 'summoned up' this ring, the way mediums could summon upwards inspirational spirits at times of emotional need".[10]

First EPs and Showbiz (1998–2000)

The Muse logo, incorporated importantly since the release of Muse EP in 1998

After a few years building a fanbase, Muse played their start gigs in London and Manchester supporting Skunk Anansie on tour. They had a significant coming together with Dennis Smith, the owner of Sawmills Studio, situated in a converted water factory in Cornwall. He had seen the three boys grow up every bit he knew their parents, and had a production visitor with their time to come director Safta Jaffery, with whom he had recently started the record label Taste Media.[11] The meeting led to their first serious recordings and the release of the Muse EP on 11 May 1998 on Sawmills' in-firm Dangerous label, produced by Paul Reeve.[12] Their 2d EP, the Musculus Museum EP, as well produced by Reeve, was released on 11 Jan 1999. It reached number iii in the indie singles nautical chart and attracted the attention of British radio broadcaster Steve Lamacq and the weekly British music publication NME.[13] Later in 1999, Muse performed on the Emerging Creative person's stage at Woodstock '99 and signed with Smith and Jaffery. Despite the success of their second EP, British record companies were reluctant to sign Muse. After a trip to New York's CMJ Festival, Nanci Walker, then Sr. Director of A&R at Columbia Records, flew Muse to the U.s. to showcase for Columbia Records' and so-Senior Vice-president of A&R, Tim Devine, as well as for American Recording'southward Rick Rubin. During this trip, on 24 December 1998, Muse signed a bargain with American record label Maverick Records.[xiv] Upon their return to England, Gustatory modality Media bundled deals for Muse with various record labels in Europe and Australia, allowing them control over their career in individual countries.[15] John Leckie was brought in alongside Reeve to produce the band's first anthology, Showbiz (1999). The album showcased Muse's aggressive yet melancholic musical fashion, with lyrics well-nigh relationships and their difficulties trying to institute themselves in their hometown.[16]

Origin of Symmetry and Hullabaloo (2000–2002)

During the production of their 2nd album, Origin of Symmetry (2001), Muse experimented with instrumentation such as a church organ, Mellotron, animate being bones, and an expanded drum kit. There was more of Bellamy's falsetto, arpeggiated guitar, and piano playing. Bellamy cites guitar influences such as Jimi Hendrix and Tom Morello (of Rage Confronting the Machine), the latter evident in the more than riff-based songs in Origin of Symmetry and in Bellamy's use of guitar pitch-shifting furnishings. The album features a cover of Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse's "Feeling Good",[17] voted in diverse polls i of the greatest cover versions of all fourth dimension.[18] [19] [20] It was released every bit a double A-side unmarried, "Hyper Music/Feeling Good".

Origin of Symmetry received positive reviews past critics; NME gave the album nine/ten and wrote: "It's amazing for such a young ring to load up with a heritage that includes the darker visions of Cobain and Kafka, Mahler and The Tiger Lillies, Cronenberg and Schoenberg, and brand a sexy, populist album."[21] Maverick, Muse's American label, did not consider Bellamy's vocals "radio-friendly" and asked Muse to rerecord the song for the US release. The ring refused and left Maverick; the album was not released in the United states until September 2005, after Muse signed to Warner Bros.[22] [23]

Origin of Symmetry has made appearances on lists of the greatest rock albums of the 2000s, both poll-based and on publication lists. In 2006, it placed at number 74 on Q magazine's listing of the 100 Greatest Albums of All-Time,[24] while in February 2008, the album placed at number 28 on a list of the Best British Albums of All Time adamant past the mag's readers. Kerrang! placed the album at number 20 in its 100 Best British Stone Albums Ever! List and at number xiii on its 50 Best Albums of the 21st Century list.[25] Acclaimed Music ranks Origin of Symmetry as the 1,247th greatest anthology of all time.[26]

In 2002, Muse released the first alive DVD, Hullabaloo, featuring footage recorded during Muse's two gigs at Le Zenith in Paris in 2001, and a documentary picture show of the band on tour. A double album, Hullabaloo Soundtrack, was released at the same time, containing a compilation of B-sides and a disc of recordings of songs from the Le Zenith performances. A double-A side unmarried was also released featuring the new songs "In Your World" and "Expressionless Star".

In 2002, Muse threatened Celine Dion with legal action when she planned to name her Las Vegas show "Muse", as Muse have worldwide performing rights to the name. Dion offered Muse $fifty,000 for the rights, but they turned it down and Dion backed downwards. Bellamy said: "We don't desire to plough upward there with people thinking we're Celine Dion's backing band."[27]

Absolution (2003–2005)

Chris Wolstenholme of Muse performing at the Modernistic Club Theatre, Toronto in 2004. The international Absolution tour included the band'due south starting time shows in Northward America since 1999.

Muse'due south third album, Absolution, produced past Rich Costey, Paul Reeve and John Cornfield was released on xv September 2003. It debuted at number one in the Great britain[28] and produced Muse's first top-10 hit, "Time Is Running Out", and iii top-twenty hits: "Hysteria", "Sing for Absolution" and "Butterflies and Hurricanes". Absolution was somewhen certified gold in the US.[29] Muse undertook a year-long international bout in support of the album, visiting Australia, New Zealand, the U.s.a., Canada, and French republic. On the 2004 United states leg of the tour, Bellamy injured himself onstage during the opening show in Atlanta;[30] the tour resumed afterwards Bellamy received stitches.[31]

In June 2004, Muse headlined the Glastonbury Festival, which they afterward described every bit "the best gig of our lives".[32] [33] Howard'south father, William Howard, who attended the festival to watch the band, died from a heart attack shortly afterwards the performance. Bellamy said: "It was the biggest feeling of achievement we've ever had after coming offstage. It was well-nigh surreal that an 60 minutes afterward his dad died. It was almost not believable. We spent about a week sort of just with Dom trying to support him. I call up he was happy that at least his dad got to see him at probably what was the finest moment and then far of the ring'southward life."[34]

Muse won two MTV Europe awards, including "All-time Alternative Act", and a Q Award for "Best Live Act",[35] [36] and received an honor for "Best British Alive Act" at the Brit Awards.[36] On two July 2005, they participated in the Live 8 concert in Paris.[37] In 2003, the band successfully sued Nestlé for using their cover "Feeling Skilful" for a Nescafé advertising without permission and donated the money won from the lawsuit to Oxfam.[38] An unofficial DVD biography, Manic Depression, was released in Apr 2005.[39]

Muse released some other alive DVD on 12 December 2005, Absolution Tour, containing edited and remastered highlights from their Glastonbury performance unseen footage from their performances at London Earls Courtroom, Wembley Arena, and the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles. During the 2004 Absolution bout, Bellamy smashed 140 guitars, a world record for the most guitars smashed in a bout.[40]

Black Holes and Revelations and HAARP (2006–2008)

In 2006, Muse released their 4th album, Black Holes and Revelations, co-produced over again with Rich Costey. The album's championship and themes reverberate the band'southward involvement in science fiction.[41] [42] The album charted at number one in the UK, much of Europe, and Australia.[43] [44] [45] In the Usa, it reached number nine on the Billboard 200.[43]

Before the release of the new album, Muse made several promotional Tv appearances starting on 13 May 2006 at BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The Black Holes and Revelations Tour started before the release of their anthology and initially consisted generally of festival appearances, including a headline slot at the Reading and Leeds Festivals in August 2006.[46] The ring's main touring itinerary started with a bout of N America from late July to early August 2006. After the last of the summer festivals, a tour of Europe began, including a big loonshit tour of the United kingdom.[46]

Blackness Holes and Revelations was nominated for the 2006 Mercury Music Prize, simply lost to Chill Monkeys.[47] It earned a Platinum Europe Award after selling ane million copies in Europe.[48] The first single from the album, "Supermassive Black Hole", was released as a download in May 2006. In August 2006, Muse recorded a live session at Abbey Route Studios for the Alive from Abbey Road television show. The 2nd single, "Starlight", was released in September 2006. "Knights of Cydonia" was released in the US every bit a radio-only unmarried in June 2006 and in the U.k. in November 2006. The fourth single, "Invincible", was released in April 2007.[49] Another unmarried, "Map of the Problematique", was released for download only in June 2007, post-obit the ring's performance at Wembley Stadium.[fifty]

Muse spent November and much of December 2006 touring Europe with British ring Noisettes as the supporting act. The bout continued in Australia, New Zealand, and Southeast Asia in early 2007 before returning to England for the summertime.[51] At the 2007 Brit Awards in February, Muse received their second award for Best British Live Act.[52] They performed 2 gigs at the newly rebuilt Wembley Stadium on 16 and 17 June 2007, where they became the outset ring to sell out the venue.[53] Both concerts were recorded for a DVD/CD, HAARP, released in early 2008.[54] It was named the 40th greatest live album of all time past NME.[55]

The tour continued across Europe in July 2007 before returning to the Us in August, where Muse played to a sold-out crowd at Madison Foursquare Garden, New York Urban center.[56] [57] They headlined the second night of the Austin City Limits Music Festival on xv September 2007, and performed at the October 2007 Vegoose in Las Vegas with bands including Rage Against the Machine, Daft Punk and Queens of the Stone Age.[56] Muse continued touring in Eastern Europe, Russia, Scandinavia, Australia, and New Zealand in 2007[51] before going to Southward Africa, Portugal, Mexico, Argentine republic, Chile, Republic of colombia, Brazil, Republic of ireland, and the U.k. in 2008.[58] On 12 April, they played a 1-off concert at the Royal Albert Hall, London in assist of the Teenage Cancer Trust.[59]

Muse performed at Rock in Rio Lisboa on 6 June 2008, alongside bands including Kaiser Chiefs, The Offspring and Linkin Park.[60] They likewise performed in Marlay Park, Dublin, on thirteen Baronial.[61] A few days afterwards, Muse headlined the 2008 V Festival, playing in Chelmsford on Saturday xvi August and Staffordshire on Sun 17 Baronial.[62] On 25 September 2008, Bellamy, Howard and Wolstenholme all received an Honorary Doctorate of Arts from the University of Plymouth for their contributions to music.[63] [64]

The Resistance (2009–2011)

During the recording of Muse's fifth studio anthology The Resistance, Wolstenholme checked into rehab to bargain with his alcoholism, which was threatening the ring's future. Howard said: "I've always believed in band integrity and sticking together. There's something about the fact we all grew up together. We've been together for 18 years now, which is over half our lives."[65]

The Resistance was released in September 2009, the first album produced by Muse,[66] with engineering by Adrian Bushby and mixing by Mark Stent.[67] Information technology topped album charts in 19 countries, became the band's 3rd number i album in the UK,[68] and reached number three on the Billboard 200.[69] Reviews were mostly positive, with praise for its ambition, classical influences and the iii-role "Exogenesis: Symphony".[70] The Resistance beat its predecessor Blackness Holes and Revelations in album sales in its debut week in the UK with approximately 148,000 copies sold.[71] The first single, "Insurgence", was released seven days earlier.[72] On 13 September, Muse performed "Uprising" at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards in New York City.[73]

The Resistance Tour began with A Seaside Rendezvous in Muse'south hometown of Teignmouth, Devon, in September 2009. It included headline slots the following year at festivals including Coachella,[74] Glastonbury,[75] Oxegen,[76] Hovefestivalen,[77] T in the Park, Austin City Limits and the Australian Big Day Out.[78] Betwixt September and Nov, Muse toured North America.[79]

Muse provided the atomic number 82 single for the motion picture The Twilight Saga: Eclipse, "Neutron Star Collision (Honey Is Forever)", released on 17 May 2010.[80] In June, Muse headlined Glastonbury Festival for the second fourth dimension; later U2 canceled their headline slot post-obit singer Bono's dorsum injury, U2 guitarist the Edge joined Muse to play the U2 rail "Where the Streets Have No Name".[81]

For their live performances, Muse received the O2 Silver Clef Award in London on ii July 2010,[82] presented past Roger Taylor and Brian May of Queen; Taylor described the trio as "probably the greatest alive human action in the world today".[83] On 12 September 2010, Muse won an MTV Video Music Honor in the category of Best Special Effects, for the "Uprising" video.[84] On 21 Nov, Muse took home an American Music Award for Favorite Artist in the Alternative Rock Music Category.[85] On 2 Dec, Muse were nominated for three awards for the 53rd Grammy Awards on xiii February 2011, for which they won the Grammy Award for All-time Rock Anthology for The Resistance.[86]

Based on having the largest airplay and sales in the US, Muse were named the Billboard Alternative Songs and Rock Songs artist for 2010 with "Uprising", "Resistance" and "Undisclosed Desires" achieving 1st, 6th and 49th on the yr terminate Alternative Vocal chart respectively.[87] [88] On 30 July 2011, Muse supported Rage Against the Machine at their only 2011 gig at the L.A. Rising festival. On 13 August, Muse headlined the Outside Lands Music and Arts Festival in San Francisco.[89] Muse headlined the Reading and Leeds Festivals in Baronial 2011.[90] To gloat the 10th anniversary of their second studio album Origin of Symmetry (2001), the band performed all eleven tracks.[91] Muse too headlined Lollapalooza in Chicago's Grant Park in Baronial 2011.[92]

The 2nd Law and Alive at Rome Olympic Stadium (2012–2013)

In an April 2012 interview, Bellamy said Muse's side by side anthology would include influences from acts such equally French house duo Justice and Britain electronic rock group Does It Offend You, Yes?.[93] On 6 June 2012, Muse released a trailer for their next album, The 2d Law, with a inaugural on the band's website. The trailer, which included dubstep elements, was met with mixed reactions.[94] [95] On vii June, Muse announced a European Loonshit bout, the first leg of The second Law Tour. The leg included dates in France, Spain and the UK.[96] The beginning single from the album, "Survival", was the official song of the London 2012 Summertime Olympics,[97] and Muse performed information technology at the Olympics closing ceremony.[98]

Muse revealed the 2d Law tracklist on 13 July 2012.[99] [100] The 2d single, "Madness", was released on 20 August 2012, with a music video on v September. Muse played at the Roundhouse on 30 September equally role of the iTunes Festival. The second Law was released worldwide on 1 October, and on 2 October 2012 in the U.s.a.; it reached number ane in the United kingdom Albums Chart, and number two on the US Billboard 200.[101] [102] The song "Madness" earned a nomination in the Best Rock Vocal category and the anthology itself was nominated for the Best Rock Album at the 55th Grammy Awards, 2013. The band performed the anthology'due south opening song, "Supremacy", with an orchestra at the 2013 Brit Awards on 20 February 2013.[103] The album was a nominee for All-time Rock Anthology at the 2013 Grammy Awards. The song "Madness" was likewise nominated for Best Rock Song.[104] The album listed at number 46 on Rolling Stone 'southward list of the acme 50 albums of 2012, maxim "In an era of diminished expectations, Muse make stadium-burdensome songs that mix the legacies of Queen, Male monarch Crimson, Led Zeppelin and Radiohead while making nigh every other electric current ring seem tiny."[2]

Muse released their quaternary live anthology, Alive at Rome Olympic Stadium, on 29 Nov 2013 on CD/DVD and CD/Blu-ray formats. In November 2013, the film had theatrical screenings in 20 cities worldwide. The anthology contains the band's performance at Rome'southward Stadio Olimpico on 6 July 2013, in front of over threescore,000 people; it was the first concert filmed in 4K format.[105] The concert was a part of the Unsustainable Bout, Muse's mid-2013 tour of Europe.[105]

Drones (2014–2016)

Muse began writing their seventh album shortly after the Rome concert. The band felt that the electronic side of their music was condign also ascendant, and wanted to return to a simpler rock sound.[106] [107] After self-producing their previous two albums, the band hired producer Robert John "Mutt" Lange and then they could focus on performance and spend less time mixing and reviewing takes.[107] Recording took identify in the Vancouver Warehouse Studio from October 2022 to April 2015.[108] [109]

Muse announced their seventh anthology, Drones, on xi March 2015. The following day, they released a lyric video for "Psycho" on their YouTube channel,[110] and made the song bachelor for instant download with the album pre-gild. Another single, "Dead Inside", was released on 23 March.[111]

From 15 March to sixteen May, Muse embarked on a short tour in small venues throughout the Uk and the The states, the Psycho Tour.[111] Alive performances of new songs from these concerts are included on the DVD accompanying the anthology along with bonus studio footage.[112] On 18 May 2015, Muse released a lyric video for "Mercy" on their YouTube aqueduct, and made the song bachelor for instant download with the album pre-club.[113]

Drones was released on 8 June 2015.[111] A concept album nigh the dehumanisation of modern warfare,[114] it returned to a simpler rock sound with less elaborate production and genre experimentation.[107] [115] [116] It topped the album charts in the Britain, the US, Australia and most major markets.[117] [118] [119] Muse headlined Lollapalooza Berlin on 13 September 2015.[120] On 15 February 2016, Drones won the Grammy Award for Best Rock Album at the 58th Grammy Awards.[121] On 24 June, Muse headlined the Glastonbury Festival for a 3rd time, becoming the offset human action to accept headlined each mean solar day of the festival (Fri, Saturday and Sunday).[122] On 30 November 2016, Muse were announced to headline Reading and Leeds 2017.[123]

Simulation Theory and reissues (2017–2021)

Muse performing in Sydney, Australia in December 2017

In 2017, Muse toured Northward America supported by 30 Seconds to Mars and PVRIS.[124] Howard confirmed in February that the ring were back in the studio.[125] On 18 May, Muse released "Dig Down", the first single from their eighth album.[126] In Nov, they performed at the BlizzCon festival.[127] "Thought Contamination", the second single, was released on 15 February 2018,[128] accompanied by an 1980s-styled music video.[129] [130] In June, Muse opened the Rock In Rio festival.[131] On 24 February, they played a 1-off evidence at La Cigale in French republic with a setlist voted for fans online.[132] A concert video, Muse: Drones World Tour, was released in cinemas worldwide on 12 July 2018.[133]

On xix July 2018, Muse released the third single from their upcoming anthology, "Something Human".[134] [135] On thirty August 2018, they appear their eighth studio album, Simulation Theory, to exist released on 9 Nov. The announcement was accompanied by another single and video, "The Dark Side".[136] The fifth single, "Pressure", was released on 27 September.[137] The Simulation Theory World Tour began in Houston on 3 February 2022 and concluded on fifteen October in Lima.[138] [139] A film based on the album and tour, Muse – Simulation Theory, combining concert footage and narrative scenes, was released in Baronial 2020.[140]

In December 2019, Muse released Origin of Muse, a box set comprising remastered versions of Showbiz and Origin of Symmetry plus previously unreleased material.[141] For the 20th ceremony of Origin of Symmetry in June 2021, Muse released a remixed and remastered version, Origin of Symmetry: XX Anniversary RemiXX.[142]

Will of the People (2022–present)

On 13 January 2022, Muse released the single "Won't Stand up Down", which marked a return to the band's heavier early sound.[143] [144]

On 9 March 2022, Muse posted a 35-second clip across various social media platforms depicting large busts of the band members being torn down and farther hinting the proper noun of the upcoming anthology to be Will of the People.[145]

On 17 March 2022, Muse appear their upcoming anthology, Will of the People, with a release date of 26 August 2022. Muse besides released a single titled "Compliance".[146]

Musical style

Described equally an alternative rock,[147] [148] [149] progressive stone,[150] [151] [152] infinite rock,[153] [154] [155] hard rock,[156] [157] art rock,[158] [159] electronic rock,[144] progressive metallic,[160] and pop.[152] Muse mix sounds from genres such as electronica,[161] R&B,[161] progressive metal,[160] and art rock,[158] [159] and forms such equally classical music, rock opera and many others.[162] In 2002, Bellamy described Muse as a "trashy 3-slice".[163] In 2005, Pitchfork described Muse's music as "firmly ol' skool at heart: proggy hard stone that forgoes any pretensions to restraint ... their songs use full-stacked guitars and thunderous drums to evoke God's footsteps".[156] [164] AllMusic described their sound equally a "fusion of progressive rock, glam, electronica, and Radiohead-influenced experimentation".[165] On the ring'south clan with progressive stone, Howard said: "I acquaintance it [progressive rock] with 10-minute guitar solos, but I guess we kind of come up into the category. A lot of bands are quite aggressive with their music, mixing lots of different styles – and when I run across that I think information technology's great. I've noticed that kind of matter becoming a bit more mainstream."[166]

For their 2nd album, Origin of Symmetry (2001), Muse wanted to arts and crafts a more than aggressive sound. In 2000, Wolstenholme said: "Looking dorsum, there isn't much difference sonically betwixt the mellow stuff and the heavier tracks [on Showbiz]. The heavy stuff really could accept been a lot heavier and that'due south what we want to do with [Origin of Symmetry]."[167] Their third album, Absolution (2003), features prominent cord arrangements and drew influences from artists such equally Queen.[168] Their fourth anthology, Black Holes and Revelations (2006) was influenced by artists including Depeche Style and Lightning Bolt, every bit well equally Asian and European music such as Naples music. The band listened to radio stations from the Eye East during the album's recording sessions.[169] Queen guitarist Brian May has praised Muse'south work, calling the band "extraordinary musicians", who "allow their madness show through, always a skillful thing in an artist."[170]

Muse'due south sixth anthology, The second Law (2012) has a broader range of influences, ranging from funk and film scores to electronica and dubstep. The 2nd Law is influenced by stone acts such every bit Queen and Led Zeppelin (on "Supremacy") as well equally dubstep producer Skrillex and Nero (on "The 2nd Law: Unsustainable"[171] and "Follow Me", with the latter being co-produced by Nero), Michael Jackson, Stevie Wonder (on "Panic Station" which features musicians who performed on Stevie Wonder'due south "Superstition"[172]) and Hans Zimmer.[173] The album features ii songs with lyrics written and sung past bassist Wolstenholme, who wrote most his battle with alcoholism.[174] It features extensive electronic instrumentation, including Modular synthesisers and the French Connectedness, a synthesiser controller similar to the ondes martenot.[175]

Musicianship

Many Muse songs are recognisable by singer Matt Bellamy'southward use of vibrato, falsetto, and melismatic phrasing, influenced past Jeff Buckley.[176] Equally a pianist, Bellamy oft uses arpeggios. Bellamy'south compositions often suggest or quote late classical and romantic era composers such as Sergei Rachmaninov (in "Space Dementia" and "Butterflies and Hurricanes"), Camille Saint-Saëns (in "I Vest to You (+Mon Cœur S'ouvre a ta Voix)") and Frédéric Chopin (in "United States of Eurasia").[177] As a guitarist, Bellamy ofttimes uses arpeggiator and pitch-shift effects to create a more "electronic" sound, citing Jimi Hendrix and Tom Morello as influences.[178] His guitar playing is also influenced past Latin and Spanish guitar music; Bellamy said: "I just think that music is actually passionate...It has and so much feel and flair to it. I've spent important times of my life in Spain and Hellenic republic, and various deep things happened there – falling in dear, stuff similar that. And so maybe that rubbed off somewhere."[179]

Wolstenholme's basslines provide a motif for many Muse songs; the band combines bass guitar with effects and synthesisers to create overdriven fuzz bass tones.[180] Bellamy and Wolstenholme use bear upon-screen controllers, oft built into their instruments, to control synthesisers and effects including Kaoss Pads and Digitech Whammy pedals.[181]

Lyrics

Most before Muse songs lyrically dealt with introspective themes, including relationships, social alienation, and difficulties they had encountered while trying to constitute themselves in their hometown. However, with the band'due south progress, their song concepts have become more than ambitious, addressing issues such as the fear of the development of technology in their Origin of Symmetry (2001) album. They bargain mainly with the apocalypse in Absolution (2003) and with catastrophic state of war in Blackness Holes and Revelations (2006). The Resistance (2009) focused on themes of regime oppression, uprising, dearest, and panspermia. The anthology itself was mainly inspired by Nineteen Lxxx-Four by George Orwell. Their sixth studio album, The 2nd Constabulary (2012) relates to economics, thermodynamics, and apocalyptic themes. Their 2022 album Drones, is a concept anthology that uses autonomous killing drones as a metaphor for brainwashing and loss of empathy.

Books that take influenced Muse's lyrical themes include Xix Fourscore-Four,[182] Confessions of an Economic Hitman past John Perkins,[183] Hyperspace past Michio Kaku,[184] The twelfth Planet past Zecharia Sitchin,[185] Rule past Secrecy by Jim Marrs[186] and Trance Formation of America by Cathy O'Brien.[187]

Band members

Discography

  • Showbiz (1999)
  • Origin of Symmetry (2001)
  • Absolution (2003)
  • Blackness Holes and Revelations (2006)
  • The Resistance (2009)
  • The 2nd Constabulary (2012)
  • Drones (2015)
  • Simulation Theory (2018)
  • Will of the People (2022)

Concert tours

  • Showbiz Tour (1998–2000)
  • Origin of Symmetry Bout (2000–2002)
  • Absolution Tour (2003–2004)
  • US Campus Invasion Tour 2005 (2005)
  • Black Holes and Revelations Tour (2006–2008)
  • The Resistance Tour (2009–2011)
  • The 2nd Police force Globe Tour (2012–2014)
  • Psycho Tour (2015)
  • Drones World Tour (2015–2016)
  • Northward American Tour (with Thirty Seconds to Mars and Pvris) (2017)
  • Simulation Theory World Tour (2019)

See also

  • Listing of awards and nominations received by Muse
  • List of Muse songs

References

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  2. ^ a b c "Muse, 'The second Law' – fifty Best Albums of 2012". Rolling Stone. v December 2012. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
  3. ^ McCormick, Neil (25 June 2016). "Muse, Glastonbury, review: they are, at heart, an old fashioned heavy rock band who can actually really play". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 11 Jan 2022. Retrieved 27 June 2016.
  4. ^ Buckley, Peter (17 Nov 2003). The Rough Guide to Rock . Rough Guides. ISBN1843531054.
  5. ^ International who's who in popular music, Volume iv p.37. Routledge, 2002
  6. ^ Jools The netherlands interview, 10 October 2018
  7. ^ "Scout "Rocket Baby Dolls" Later Known As Muse Win Battle of the Bands 1994". feelnumb. 22 January 2016. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
  8. ^ "Muse Biography". Artists. Gustation Music. Archived from the original on 8 December 2002.
  9. ^ "Muse: Contour of the Band". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  10. ^ Mark Beaumont (2010). "Out of This Globe: The Story of Muse". Motorbus Press, 2010
  11. ^ "Interview with Safta Jaffery, director for Muse". HitQuarters. Archived from the original on xx April 2014. Retrieved iii September 2010.
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External links

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Muse discography at Discogs

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muse_%28band%29

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