Difference between revisions of "Vicky Cryer"

MuseWiki, wiki for the band Muse
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
 
(26 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Dom stated in a tweet that he is performing with a band called Vicky Cryer in LA on July, 14, 2011.<ref>https://twitter.com/#!/muse/status/91573624200372224</ref>
[[File:Vicky Cryer.jpg| thumb | right | Vicky Cryer (Left to right: Alex Carapetis, [[Dominic Howard]], Jeff Kite, Mark Stoermer, Nick Fyffe, Sam Gendel and Jason Hill)]]


Vicky Cryer's Sound Cloud can be found here: http://soundcloud.com/vicky-cryer/sets/vicky-cryer-expensive-love
Vicky Cryer was an American alternative/electro rock supergroup, based in Los Angeles, formed in 2011. Their first album, called The Synthetic Love of Emotional Engineering, was released in 2011, shortly after the release of the EP, Expensive Love, which contained five tracks that all ended up on the album. The band was active between 2011 and 2012, and, for a brief moment, in 2015. The band's line-up included members of The Killers, Jamiroquai and Flaming Lips, amongst others. Dom Howard served as their drummer and was joined by his co-drummer, Alex Carapetis.


The Band includes members of the Killers, Silversun Pickups and Flaming Lips. <ref>http://plancast.com/p/5zk7/vicky-cryer-concert</ref>
On July 14th, 2011, Dom stated in a Tweet via Muse's official Twitter, that he'd be performing with Vicky Cryer in Los Angeles on July 14th, 2011.<ref>[https://x.com/muse/status/91573624200372224 Twitter]</ref> The band ended up playing a few shows in 2011 and 2012, up until Muse started working on [[The 2nd Law (album)|The 2nd Law]]. Vicky Cryer later performed an acoustic set on 11th January in 2015 in North Park, San Diego.
Members:
 
Alex Carapetis
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5sZox5oLykw Here] you can see the footage of Dominic Howard and Alex Carapetis recording the song "I'll Take The Pain" in tandem.
Mark Stoermer (from Killers)
 
Ray Suen (Flaming Lips)
'''Members:'''
Sam Gendel on Sax
* Alex Carapetis (The Voidz) - Drums
Jason Hill (Louis XIV)
* [[Dominic Howard]] (Muse) - Drums
* Jeff Kite (The Voidz) - Keyboards
* Jason Hill (Louis XIV) - Guitar/Vocals
* Mark Stoermer (The Killers) - Bass
* Nick Fyffe (Jamiroquai) - Bass/Guitar
* Sam Gendel (Clown Core) - Saxophone
* Ray Suen (Lorde, Vampire Weekend) - Guitar
 
==References==
<references/>
 
== See Also ==
 
* [https://open.spotify.com/artist/4QnUWsX4T9uHDqQazbnD1Q?si=Io3UOWm7QM2Eni79GSTsmQ Vicky Cryer on Spotify]
 
[[Category:Side projects]]

Latest revision as of 21:46, 11 August 2024

Vicky Cryer (Left to right: Alex Carapetis, Dominic Howard, Jeff Kite, Mark Stoermer, Nick Fyffe, Sam Gendel and Jason Hill)

Vicky Cryer was an American alternative/electro rock supergroup, based in Los Angeles, formed in 2011. Their first album, called The Synthetic Love of Emotional Engineering, was released in 2011, shortly after the release of the EP, Expensive Love, which contained five tracks that all ended up on the album. The band was active between 2011 and 2012, and, for a brief moment, in 2015. The band's line-up included members of The Killers, Jamiroquai and Flaming Lips, amongst others. Dom Howard served as their drummer and was joined by his co-drummer, Alex Carapetis.

On July 14th, 2011, Dom stated in a Tweet via Muse's official Twitter, that he'd be performing with Vicky Cryer in Los Angeles on July 14th, 2011.[1] The band ended up playing a few shows in 2011 and 2012, up until Muse started working on The 2nd Law. Vicky Cryer later performed an acoustic set on 11th January in 2015 in North Park, San Diego.

Here you can see the footage of Dominic Howard and Alex Carapetis recording the song "I'll Take The Pain" in tandem.

Members:

  • Alex Carapetis (The Voidz) - Drums
  • Dominic Howard (Muse) - Drums
  • Jeff Kite (The Voidz) - Keyboards
  • Jason Hill (Louis XIV) - Guitar/Vocals
  • Mark Stoermer (The Killers) - Bass
  • Nick Fyffe (Jamiroquai) - Bass/Guitar
  • Sam Gendel (Clown Core) - Saxophone
  • Ray Suen (Lorde, Vampire Weekend) - Guitar

References

See Also