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The Corrs

The Corrs. Sharon (left), Andrea (front), Caroline, and Jim

The Corrs are a folk rock band from Ireland, consisting of three sisters and one brother from the Corr family, who rose to prominence in the late 1990s.

The band

They were all born in Dundalk, Ireland, the children of Gerry and Jean Corr, two musicians.

Jim Corr

Jim Corr (born 31 July 1964) is the oldest member of the band. He mainly plays the guitar, but is also proficient on the keyboards and the piano.

Sharon Corr

Sharon Corr (born 24 March 1970) - violin, backing vocals

Caroline Corr

Caroline Corr, (born 17 March 1973) - drums, percussion, bodhran, piano, backing vocals

Andrea Corr

Andrea Corr (b. 17 May 1974) - tin whistle, lead vocals, backing vocals

Support

Their usual support musicians are Anto Drennan (lead guitar) and Keith Duffy (bass guitar). From 2004, Duffy's brother Jason Duffy joined on percussion, with Kieran Kiely on accordion and keyboards.

Early history

The Corrs were formed to audition for the 1991 film The Commitments. Jim, Sharon, and Caroline got a small part as musicians, while Andrea got a speaking part as Sharon Rabbitte, sister of the main character. It was during the audition of this movie that they were noticed by their manager, John Hughes.

Their music has been released through Atlantic Records, part of the Warner Music Group.

Their first album, Forgiven, Not Forgotten, had its greatest success in Australia. They followed this up with Talk On Corners, which was very popular in Ireland and Britain. Both have been certified gold in the United States and the recent In Blue has been certified platinum by the RIAA. In 2004, they released Borrowed Heaven, which has been very popular in Ireland.

They also recorded Canto Alla Vita with Josh Groban for his self-titled album.

Discography

  • Borrowed Heaven 2004
  • VH1 Presents: The Corrs, Live In Dublin 2002
  • The Best Of The Corrs 2001
  • In Blue 2000
  • The Corrs Unplugged 1999
  • Talk On Corners 1998
  • Forgiven, Not Forgotten 1995

DVD

  • Best Of The Corrs 2002
  • Live In London 2001
  • Live At Lansdowne Road 2000
  • Unplugged 2000
  • Live At The Royal Albert Hall 2000

References

  • The Corrs Rock (fan website with discussion board) (http://www.thecorrsrock.co.uk/)

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They also recorded Canto Alla Vita with Josh Groban for his self-titled album. Books About DEVO:. In 2004, they released Borrowed Heaven, which has been very popular in Ireland. Mark Mothersbaugh, some solo and soundtrack releases:. Both have been certified gold in the United States and the recent In Blue has been certified platinum by the RIAA. As The Wipeouters:. They followed this up with Talk On Corners, which was very popular in Ireland and Britain. As a backup band for others:.

Their first album, Forgiven, Not Forgotten, had its greatest success in Australia. Compilations:. Their music has been released through Atlantic Records, part of the Warner Music Group. Discography:. It was during the audition of this movie that they were noticed by their manager, John Hughes. In the early 21st century, the band did a special version of "Whip It" for Swiffer commercials. Jim, Sharon, and Caroline got a small part as musicians, while Andrea got a speaking part as Sharon Rabbitte, sister of the main character. Gerry Casale, the group's bass player, has directed rock videos by other bands, including Rush and Foo Fighters.

The Corrs were formed to audition for the 1991 film The Commitments. His company, Mutato Muzika, provides employment for Devo guitarists Bob Mothersbaugh and Bob Casale: the former works as a composer, and the latter as a recording engineer. From 2004, Duffy's brother Jason Duffy joined on percussion, with Kieran Kiely on accordion and keyboards. In 1985, he released an elaborately packaged solo cassette, "Musik for Insomniaks," which was later expanded and released as two CDs. Their usual support musicians are Anto Drennan (lead guitar) and Keith Duffy (bass guitar). Mothersbaugh has gone on to considerable success writing and producing music for television programs (starting with Pee Wee's Playhouse), video games, animated cartoons and movies. 17 May 1974) - tin whistle, lead vocals, backing vocals. In 2001, members of Devo formed the surf band The Wipeouters, claiming that it was actually a reunion of the first garage band they started while in their early teens.

Andrea Corr (b. After the release of Smooth Noodle Maps in 1990, the band folded, although it has been revived on several occasions for one-off performances and short tours in 1996, 2000 and 2004. Caroline Corr, (born 17 March 1973) - drums, percussion, bodhran, piano, backing vocals. Their popularity and sales slipped over the next few years, however, although they produced the albums New Traditionalists (1981), Oh, No! It's Devo (1982), Shout and Total Devo (1988). Sharon Corr (born 24 March 1970) - violin, backing vocals. Devo remained popular in many countries and they had a large and loyal following in Australia, where the '70s-'80s pop TV Countdown was one of the first in the world to broadcast their video clips. He mainly plays the guitar, but is also proficient on the keyboards and the piano. In 1982, they appeared in the Neil Young film "Human Highway.".

Jim Corr (born 31 July 1964) is the oldest member of the band. They also recorded "E-Z Listening Muzak" versions of their own songs to play before their concerts. They were all born in Dundalk, Ireland, the children of Gerry and Jean Corr, two musicians. In concert, Devo often performed as the opening band for themselves, pretending to be a Christian soft-rock group called "Dove (the Band of Love)". The Corrs are a folk rock band from Ireland, consisting of three sisters and one brother from the Corr family, who rose to prominence in the late 1990s. Devo actively embraced the Church of the SubGenius in the early 1980s. The Corrs Rock (fan website with discussion board) (http://www.thecorrsrock.co.uk/). Although they started out with a mixture of traditional rock instruments and electronic effects, during the early 1980s Devo adopted mostly or entirely synthetic instrumentation, becoming one of the first American acts to perform on stage using only synthesizers; they were also one of the first groups in the world to regularly use radio microphones and microphone headsets on stage.

Live At The Royal Albert Hall 2000. They scored a major success in 1980 with their third album Freedom of Choice and the single 'Whip It', which became a big hit thanks to regular MTV screenings of its unique music video. Unplugged 2000. Devo might have remained a cult attraction but for the advent of American cable TV music station MTV. Live At Lansdowne Road 2000. Their first album, Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo was produced by Eno and featured a radical cover of the Rolling Stones' (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction and the controversially titled Mongoloid. Live In London 2001. By this time Alan Myers had replaced Jim Mothersbaugh as drummer and Gerry Casale's brother (also called Bob) joined as second guitarist (dubbed 'Bob II').

Best Of The Corrs 2002. Devo's big break came in 1976 when their short film The Truth About De-Evolution won a prize at the Ann Arbor Film Festival; it was then seen by David Bowie and Iggy Pop, who championed them and enabled Devo to secure a recording contract with Warner Brothers Records. Forgiven, Not Forgotten 1995. The first lineup formed in 1972 with Gerry Casale, Mark Mothersbaugh and Mark's two brothers Jim on homemade electronic drums and Bob (aka Bob I) on lead guitar. Talk On Corners 1998. (Gerry) Casale, the group's bassist and main songwriter. The Corrs Unplugged 1999. The core members of the group are Mark Mothersbaugh, the band's lead singer, guitarist and synthesizer player, and Gerald V.

In Blue 2000. This metaphor is carried throughout Devo's work as an abstraction of modern society. The Best Of The Corrs 2001. Formed in 1972, Devo's original inspiration came from Oscar Kiss Maerth's "The Beginning Was the End": a pseudoscientific anthropological thesis which attributes the rise of man as an evolutionary accident caused by a species of sex-crazed, cannibalistic apes who developed tools to exploit each other sexually and feed on each others' brains. VH1 Presents: The Corrs, Live In Dublin 2002. They were one of the first American groups to use the services of noted British producer, musician and artist Brian Eno, who produced several landmark American New Wave music groups including Talking Heads. Borrowed Heaven 2004. Other likely influences were American rock iconoclasts Frank Zappa and Captain Beefheart.

Devo were strongly influenced by the German Krautrock genre and the music of European groups such as Neu!, Can and the production work of Conny Plank, and they are certainly one of the few American acts who were able to incorporate these influences while still achieving widespread mainstream commercial and critical success. Devo created and directed many of their own videos, and the band have cited the video for the song "Beautiful World" as their favourite example of their video work. They also pioneered the use of long-form promotional video cassettes with releases such as The Truth About De-Evolution and The Men Who Make The Music, which mixed self-produced conceptual video clips with live performance footage and mock-documentary segments. Devo were pioneers of the music video — the video for 'Whip It' became an early staple of MTV — and their many promotional films and video clips are important landmarks in the development of this genre.

The character featured in many stage performances and video clips, as did Booji Boy's father, General Boy (played by Mothersbaugh's own dad), who satirised American authority figures. Mothersbaugh also donned a baby mask to create his famous alter-ego, Booji Boy (pronounced Boogie Boy), who symbolised the infantile regression that Devo saw in so much of American culture. Devo was probably as well known for their image as for their music, donning uniforms that mocked industrial culture and pop consumerism, such as the yellow chemical-protection suits during the early Q: Are We Not Men? period, matching plastic hairdos, masks and the signature "flower pot" hats (energy domes) for Freedom of Choice. The band's deliberately constructed 'geeky' image also enabled them to expound often provocative commentaries about the state of American society and, like Frank Zappa, beneath the clownish exterior there was serious musicianship, and social and political content -- founder member Gerry Casale had witnessed the killing of students at Kent State University when National Guard troops infamously opened fire on demonstrators in 1970.

They proved hugely influential on new wave music, and to a lesser extent on punk rock and geek rock. Devo (The De-Evolution Band) was a rock music band from Akron, Ohio whose music mingled kitsch science fiction themes, deadpan surrealist humor, satirical social commentary and thinly veiled sexual allusions in discordantly synthesized pop songs that often featured unusual time signatures. This first-ever book about DEVO provides an extensively researched account focusing largely on the band's formative years, and is available at DEVObook.com. Are We Not Men? We Are Devo! by Jade Dellinger & David Giffels (SAF Publishing Ltd./UK).

The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2005). Music for Edward Gorey, a private release of 300 handmade CD-R discs. Mystery Men. The Rugrats Movie.

The Royal Tenenbaums. Rushmore (1999). Joyeux Mutato (1999), Christmas music (released in two different versions). Musik for Insomniaks, Volumes 1 and 2 (1988).

P'Twaaang!!! (2001). Martini Ranch: Holy Cow (1988) (Bob Casale produced How Can the Labouring Man Find Time for Self-Culture? while Mark Mothersbaugh contributed backup vocals.). David Byrne: Feelings (1997) (backup on Wicked Little Doll). Toni Basil: Word of Mouth (1983) (backup on covers of Devo's own Space Girls, Be Stiff and Pity You).

Jermaine Jackson: Let Me Tickle Your Fancy (1982) (backup on title song). Recombo DNA (2000), a compilation of music demos and rarities (only available through Rhino Handmade). Pioneers Who Got Scalped (2000). Hardcore Devo, Volumes 1 & 2.

Devo's Greatest Misses. Devo's Greatest Hits. Smooth Noodle Maps (1990). Now It Can Be Told (1989).

Total Devo (1988). E-Z Listening Disc (1987). Shout (1984). Oh, No! It's Devo (1983).

New Traditionalists (1981). Freedom of Choice, featuring the single "Whip It", probably the band's best known song (1980). Duty Now for the Future (1979). This debut album featured a mechanized interpretation of The Rolling Stones hit "Satisfaction", as well as "Jocko Homo", Devo's theme song and anthem.

Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! (1978).