Gold & Youth are an indie rock and electronic band based in Vancouver and Toronto. Signed to Arts & Crafts in 2011, they released their debut album titled Beyond Wilderness on 14 May 2013. The release of their debut record has garnered them significant critical acclaim, particularly in the UK.
Gold & Youth | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Vancouver, British Columbia and Toronto, Ontario |
Genres | Indie rock, post-punk revival, Electronic music |
Years active | 2011–present |
Labels | Arts & Crafts, EMI, Paper Bag Records |
Members | Matthew Lyall Louise Burns Murray Mckenzie Jeff Mitchelmore |
Past members | Ted Gowans |
Website | goldandyouth |
History
editThe band was formed by Matthew Lyall, Murray Mckenzie and Jeff Mitchelmore in 2011 after the demise of their previous project The Racoons.[1] Arts & Crafts announced the signing of Gold & Youth in early 2012, along with the debut of their first single Time To Kill.[2] At this time it was also announced that Louise Burns had joined the band as a permanent member, having previously provided guest vocals on several recordings as well as lead vocals on their third single titled Jewel.[3] The band spent 2012 finishing the recording of their debut record Beyond Wilderness as well as making early international festival appearances at SXSW, The Great Escape, NXNE, CMW, and Big Sound (Australia), with their live appearances garnering critical acclaim from NME and The Guardian.[4][5]
In November 2012 they released their first EP, a 7-inch single featuring the singles Time to Kill and City of Quartz to positive critical acclaim coinciding with a national tour of Canada with Diamond Rings.[6] In March 2013, the band released their third single Jewel and announced the release date of 14 May 2013 for their debut album Beyond Wilderness.[7]
They selected their name upon suggestion from fellow Canadian musician Buck 65. The name itself is a same-sounding (homophonous) phrase with: Golden Youth, a character from the Mad Max film series.[8]
The band posted a series of updates to their social media in 2020 stating they are working on a new record.[9]
On 27 August 2021, the band released a new single "The Worse The Better" and announced their sophomore record Dream Baby would be released 5 November 2021 through Paper Bag Records.[10] The single "Maudlin Days (Robocop)" was released 22 September 2021,[11] and the single "Dying In LA" followed on 13 October 2021.[12]
Beyond Wilderness
editGold & Youth's first full-length record, titled Beyond Wilderness, was released internationally on 14 May 2013, by Arts & Crafts and EMI. The album was produced and recorded by Colin Stewart (Black Mountain, New Pornographers, Destroyer) and mixed by Gareth Jones (Depeche Mode, Interpol, Grizzly Bear) and Damian Taylor (Björk, Robyn, Arcade Fire).[13] According to the official band bio, the album is "built with dark, expansive synthetic textures, punctuated by programmed drums and interwoven with melancholy vocals, detuned synth melodies and understated guitars".[14]
Members
editCurrent members
edit- Matthew Lyall – guitar, keyboards, vocals
- Jeff Mitchelmore – drums, Drum sequencer
- Murray Mckenzie – guitar, keyboards, vocals
- Louise Burns – bass guitar, vocals, Synthesizer
Former members
edit- Ted Gowans – bass guitar, keyboards backing vocals
Discography
editAlbums
edit- Beyond Wilderness (Arts & Crafts / EMI) – 14 May 2013
- Dream Baby (Paper Bag Records) – 5 November 2021
EPs
edit- Time to Kill/City of Quartz (Arts & Crafts / EMI) – 17 November 2012
Singles
edit- Time to Kill (Arts & Crafts / EMI) – 28 February 2012
- City of Quartz (Arts & Crafts / EMI) – 15 October 2012
- Jewel (Arts & Crafts / EMI) – 5 March 2013
- The Worse The Better (Paper Bag Records) – 27 August 2021
- Maudlin Days (Robocop) (Paper Bag Records) – 22 September 2021
- Dying in LA (Paper Bag Records) – 13 October 2021
Compilation appearances
edit- Arts & Crafts Record Store Day LP (Arts & Crafts / EMI) – 21 April 2012
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "The Rise and Fall". CBC Radio 3.
- ^ "Gold & Youth Sign to Arts & Crafts". Exclaim.
- ^ "Stream Gold & Youth's Jewel". Fader.
- ^ Lester, Paul (21 May 2012). "New Band of the Day". The Guardian. London.
- ^ "Gold & Youth Time to Kill video". NME.
- ^ "Album Review: Gold & Youth, 7". BlogTO.
- ^ "Listen to Gold & Youth's Industrial, Ethereal New Single, "Jewel"". Vice / Noisey.
- ^ "Gold & Youth Interview". Diamond Youth.
- ^ @GoldandYouth (16 April 2020). "We've got new music coming out soon and here is what a small part of it sounds like. ❤️" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ "Gold & Youth share 'the feel bad hit of the summer' 'The Worse the Better'". 26 August 2021.
- ^ "A Feeling of Alienation Inspires Gold & Youth's New Single, "Maudlin Days (Robocop)"". 22 September 2021.
- ^ "Premiere: Gold & Youth Share New Single "Dying in LA"".
- ^ "Arts & Crafts Press Release". Arts & Crafts. Archived from the original on 25 April 2013. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
- ^ "Gold & Youth Bio". Arts & Crafts. Archived from the original on 25 April 2013. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
External links
edit- Gold & Youth official website
- Arts & Crafts Website Archived 12 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Label Site