birthdays...
Gavin - October 30, 1967
Nigel - April 11, 1965
Robin - September 10, 1966
Dave - July 2, 1966
Winston - March 4, 1989 (I
believe)
(this is an old bio, which now is outdated, but it gives a good view of bush's start)
Formed nearly two years ago, the London-based Bush met as painters, the obvious beginnings of musical talent. "I thought, if we could paint and whistle and talk so well together, we might as well start a band," says guitarist/vocalist Gavin Rossdale. "The other three were such really good painters, really good."
Since then, playing and hanging and playing and playing is what Gavin, guitarist Nigel Pulsford, bassist Dave Parsons and drummer Robin Goodridge do, and do so well. Their debut show was an outdoor car park converted into a fantasy birthday setting for a friend. Hotter, darker shows followed suspicious places to hungry audience.
"We played a gig in a really
rundown pub in South London," says Gavin. "As we were playing, the place
got robbed - people were stealing money from the till and taking it from
behind the bar.
Then about twelve to fifteen
police ran through, and we didn't know what to do so we just kept playing."
Friendlier gigs include the occasional glamorous guest star. "My favorite
guest appearance is by my dog," Gavin continues. "I like to bring him on,
and he sits there and just kind of hangs out."
Meanwhile, back in Los Angeles,
Rob Kahane and Paul Palmer of Trauma Records were being told of this interesting
band from London by some large and trusted ears. A few months later
Trauma signed Bush -- and
boldly left them alone. "The record company were great," says Gavin. "We
were left alone to do the
record we wanted, and when
we finished, we gave it to the --boom -- no hassle, no corporate creativity."
Bush's debut release Sixteen
Stone, was recorded pretty much live in a London studio with revered producers
Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley (Elvis Costello, David Byrne). For their
first video,
Everything Zen, Bush hooked
up with Matt Mahurin, the acclaimed video director (Alice in Chains, Metallica,
Peter Gabriel, U2...) rumored to be the last music video he does before
moving into feature films. "I saw Matt ice skating in Central Park, and
he was such a great mover that he seemed great for the job," Gavin says.
Turns out Matt knew how to skate backwards, so they shared a
skate to Nadia's Theme and
it was a done deal.
True to the band's live energy,
Sixteen Stone is explosive in a garagey, sarcastic, yet emotion-filled
sort of way. Behind the cryptic veil of ambiguity, Gavin's subjects are
personal and revealing.
Everything Zen, the relentlessly
catchy song that jump-starts the album, cynically declares general disenchantment
and was recorded in one take. Motivated by the Convent Garden bombing of
a London pub, Bomb explores the incident from the perspective of the man
who died in the bombing with chilling effect. Gavin gets into lots of topics,
including death and dying (Little Things), sexuality (Testosterone), the
ego (Machinehead), losing oneself (Glycerine) and a song about a friend
who joined a cult (Monkey) . "Our songs take on different meaning on different
days," he says. "Listeners can get their own meaning. I'm definitely no
storyteller. Being real is what's important."
Reality for Bush is working
as painters, as moped delivery boys for a kosher-sushi restraurant called
So Sue Me, and driving an ice cream truck. Members were sacked from all
these jobs, but
not before screwing with
The Man for the sake of the band. To get to gigs, Bush would use the ice
cream truck to drive their gear to and from shows, and they funded Bush
by diluting the paint they were given money to buy, then using half the
paint cash to pay for rehearsal time, strings, gas, and the general cost
of band living.
"So if the London Bridge looks a bit thin, you'll know why," says Gavin.