"Somewhere Only We Know" by Keane
Keane Album Player: audio
Keane formed in 1997 when they were at school together.
In 2002, after the loss of their guitarist and a period of time honing
their
sound, Keane decided that they needed to get out and play gigs again.
They
booked two acoustic shows, one at the 12 Bar Club, another at the
Betsey
Trotwood. Fierce Panda mini-mogul Simon Williams caught the Betsey
Trotwood
gig, and asked Keane to put out a single on his label.
They chose 'Everybody's Changing', a sweeping, majestic ode to feeling
utterly lost when everyone else seems to know the score, which was
recorded
for zero pence. "The recording session was a little rough and ready -
the
song was literally made in a room in someone's house," Tom laughs. "And
we
had to go round to a different house to mix it, because the speakers
broke."
It would be difficult to find origins more desperately indie, yet
'Everybody's Changing' sounded like a Number One chart hit before you
even
got to the chorus, and it immediately began turning heads. Steve Lamacq
decided that it was one of the best singles in Fierce Panda's entire
history
- not bad for a label, which housed early releases from Coldplay,
Idlewild
and Supergrass. He declared that Keane were "somewhere between a
scuffed
Coldplay and a frankly bewildered Beautiful South", hammering the
single on
his show and eventually calling the band in for a session on BBC
6Music.
Xfm were on the case, too, with Clare Sturgess requesting a session
from the
band, while a Sunday Times profile noted that Keane were responsible
for
"three and a half minutes of pure pop loveliness". NME wrote that
'Everybody's Changing' was "indisputably mighty" and compared Keane
with
"'Kid A'-era Radiohead covering A-ha".
By the time spring 2003 rolled around, the boys were out on the road
again,
and labels were already putting offers on the table. "All we were
after was
the opportunity to make the right record with the right people," Tom
shrugs
- which is where Island stepped in. "We've never wanted to be a small,
cult
band," Tom adds. "We want to get our music heard by as many people as
we
possibly can, because that's why we're making it."
Throw in a startling appearance in the New Bands tent at the Reading
and
Leeds Carling Weekend, more plaudits for the boys' second single 'This
Is
The Last Time'. And, once again, it sounds like all the bands who've
ever
meant anything to anyone, but at the same time it only sounds like
Keane.
"People often say that they wish they'd been around in the 60s," Tom
says.
"But we're happy just where we are. We love rock's back catalogue, and
now
we've got a chance to add to it. After all, tunes never go out of
fashion."
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