Samstag, 11. Januar 2014

The Wanton Bishops







The Wanton Bishops



http://www.thewantonbishops.com/

 

 
The Wanton Bishops | Sleep With The Lights On (Official Video) 
 BAND
Nader Mansour (vocals, harmonica, guitar) and Eddy Ghosein (guitar, backing vocals)

On stage:
Drums: Anthony Abi Nader
Bass: Faisal Itani


The Wanton Bishops is a Lebanese rock band formed in Beirut, Lebanon in 2011. The group consists of Nader Mansour (vocals, guitar, harmonica, keyboards) and Eddy Ghossein (guitar, backing vocals, banjo). The duo began as an independent act founded after Mansour and Ghossein met outside a bar in Beirut and eventually bonded over their mutual appreciation for blues music. The Wanton Bishops was eventually formed and emerged among a second wave of popular garage rock revival and are considered today to be one of the leading bands in the Middle East.
After signing with young talent promoters Keeward, the group released its debut EP, Bad Rhyme (2012), which was recorded in Beirut. The record forged the group's raw blues rock sound and earned them a good standing amongst rock crowds in Lebanon. Over the next year, the Wanton Bishops built an underground fanbase through near-constant touring of small clubs, a viral presence on social media, media appearances, and extensive licensing of their songs. The international media eventually caught on to their soaring fame in countries such as France, Turkey and Sweden, and it wasn't long before the band started accumulating international date tours. Today, the band has just completed a tour in Turkey and is scheduled for tours in France, Dubai, and Scandinavia.
Nader Mansour (b. 1983) and Eddy Ghossein (b. 1984) were born and raised in Lebanon. The young men both graduated from Lebanese high schools and went on to pursue their degrees in economics and finance but maintained their presence in the music scene by playing in local bands and cultivating their passion for music. Mansour headed for Paris after high school and graduated from Paris School of Business (ESG Paris) with a degree in finance, at which point he decided to make a strong career shift and enroll in the Parisian CIM Ecole de Jazz, the first Parisian jazz and contemporary music school, to focus on his music. On the other hand, Ghossein stayed in Beirut and graduated from Saint Joseph University (USJ) with a degree in economics. Shortly after graduation, he worked in banking jobs and eventually decided to forsake his corp
Ghossein was first hired as the guitarist for Mansour's blues cover band Funky Nad, 'Nad' being short for Mansour's first name Nader, the covers included tracks originally by blues musicians Muddy Waters, Junior Kimbrough, and R. L. Burnside. For a year and a half, they played in local venues as a cover band, and eventually decided to take a year off to work on their songs. “I was writing stuff – mainly useless and meaningless,” Mansour said to Rolling Stone Magazine. “But when Eddy came along, I decided this was the dude. That’s when it took form.” [1] The duo thus started working on some of Mansour's original songs, which he had been writing during the time he spent in Paris, trying to find the common ground between Ghossein's English rock and Chicago Blues background and Mansour's stompy swamp blues and wailing harmonica. The year finished with a release of their first EP "Bad Rhyme."
The EP showed off the Wanton Bishops' solid Blues Rock Revival sound, a middle ground between acoustic and electric sounds, between garage rock and the blues, which often draws comparisons to The Black Keys—sometimes as a derivative act—since both groups have two-piece lineups and bluesy sounds. Indeed, both Mansour and Ghossein count The Black Keys as an influence, as well as the Black Rebel Motorcycle Club (BRMC).
The duo's fame caught like wildfire, and it was only a matter of time before their songs topped national radio charts, and they sold out concerts in the venues of Beirut.[2] Media in Jordan, France, Dubai and Turkey amongst others, started covering the act's footsteps and the Wanton Bishops started booking mini international tours.
By the end of 2012, the duo had added four tracks to their EP and released their LP Sleep with the Lights On, which is also the name of their most famous single to date. The album earned them a tour in Turkey in two different cities and three different venues in March 2013. The Turkish press called them "the best band you've never heard of"[3]
When asked what they write about, the duo says that they're "influenced by mostly inevitably clichéd stuff. Things like; love and the lack of it, money and the lack of it, or even loneliness and the abundance of it!” [4]
Although they admit that the Wanton Bishops is "just a name",[5] the Wanton Bishops state that their music is about seduction and surrender, heart and stomp, which should explain their viral success.

  • Nader Mansour – vocals, guitar, harmonica, keyboards (2010–present)
  • Eddy Ghossein – guitar, backing vocals, banjo (2010–present)

  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wanton_Bishops

 

 

The Wanton Bishops - Oh Wee



 Sleep With the Lights On   The Wanton Bishops 23. Dezember 2012

 

 http://www.amazon.de/Sleep-With-Lights-Wanton-Bishops/dp/B00AUK6DMO/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1389384161&sr=8-1&keywords=the+wanton+bishops

 

 
Beirut Jam Sessions - The Wanton Bishops - Bad Rhyme




 http://www.arte.tv/de/the-wanton-bishops/7538338,CmC=7538350.html

 

Beirut Jam Sessions - The Wanton Bishops - Whoopy

 

 

http://videos.arte.tv/fr/videos/tracks-the-wanton-bishops--7579192.html 

 

The Wanton Bishops Sleep With The Lights On Paris 2013


 

Wilder Blues aus dem Libanon

The Wanton Bishops spielen den Blues mit derselben Härte wie die Black Keys. Das Besondere daran? Sie stammen aus Beirut, einer Stadt fernab des Mississippi.  (Die Presse)

Vom Aussehen her würde man die beiden nicht unbedingt der arabischen Welt zuordnen: Nader Mansour trägt das Haupthaar wirr, versteckt nicht zu wenig Tätowierungen unter der schweren Lederjacke; sein Kollege Eddy Ghossein hat von den Haaren (akkurat frisiert) und der Kleiderordnung (hochgeschlossen) her unverkennbar Anleihen an den britischen Mods der Sechzigerjahre genommen. Gemeinsam nennen sich die beiden Gitarristen The Wanton Bishops und spielen wüsten, wuchtigen Bluesrock, fast ohne arabische Aromen, der an Genregrößen wie Motor Rebel Cycle Club und The Black Keys erinnert.
Waren das Vorbilder? „Wir lieben sie natürlich“, sagt Ghossein, „aber sie sind weniger Inspiration als Hilfe. Sie machten den Blues wieder hip und sexy. Unsere Inspiration ist aber der afroamerikanische Blues, speziell die Mischformen zwischen ländlichem und urbanem Blues. Etwa Robert Johnson.“
Die Wanton Bishops sind Teil der interessanten Underground-Szene von Beirut, die 1997 entstand, als sich die Soap Kills gründeten und gefährlich zischenden orientalischen Trip-Hop machten. Unter der Jugend des vom Bürgerkrieg (1975 bis 1990) devastierten Landes herrschte damals echte No-Future-Stimmung. Es sollte Jahre dauern, bis sich eine wirkliche Popszene formierte. „Heute haben wir etwa zehn exzellente Bands“, sagt Nader Mansour. „Mashrou'Leila waren nach den Soap Kills die nächsten: Sie mischen arabischen Folk mit Punkelementen und Breakbeats. Dann kamen wir mit unserem rüden Bluesrock-Konzept.“ Obwohl sich in Beirut einiges tut und es schon vereinzelt libanesische Labels gibt, mangelt es an Auftrittsmöglichkeiten und an Airplay. Im libanesischen Radio laufen fast ausschließlich süßliche Arab-Pop-Petitessen. „Für diesen Bubblegum-Pop gibt es ein System in der Region. Damit kann man halbwegs überleben“, sagt Ghossein. „Aber es gibt kein Radio, das unsere Musik spielt“, ergänzt Mansour.

„Wir singen nicht über Politik“

So mussten sich die Wanton Bishops international orientieren. In Schweden und Dänemark schlug ihre Musik schon ein. Nun stehen ein Auftritt in Indien und eine US-Tour an. Dass sie eben von Red Bull Publishing unter Vertrag genommen wurden, ist sicher auch hilfreich. „The shit is getting real“, sagen die beiden frohgemut. Es gibt ganz offensichtlich ein Bedürfnis nach martialischen Riffs, wie sie die Wanton Bishops auf ihrem Debütalbum „Sleep With The Lights On“ servieren, mitunter gewürzt mit psychedelischen Chören oder Anklängen an den Wüstenblues aus Mali und Gnawa-Sounds aus Marokko. Die meisten Songs kommen ohne Zierrat aus. „Wir wollen eine Art Minimalismus.“
Schon an Songtiteln wie „Bad Liver And A Broken Heart“ kann man ablesen, dass sie eher an Universellem interessiert sind als an konkreten Problemen ihrer Heimat. Oft geht's um Liebe, Intimität, Sex. Politisches oder Religionskritisches findet man in ihren Songs nicht. Eine Art innere Zensur? „Ich denke nicht. Wir wollen einfach nicht über Religion und Politik singen“, sagt Ghossein, dessen Familie der Bürgerkrieg übel mitgespielt hat. Gibt es einen gewissen Druck vonseiten der Religiösen? „Viele Leute im Libanon kümmert Religion gar nicht“, sagt Mansour, „die Theologie ist nie das Problem. Das sind vielmehr jene, die sich als religiöse Führer gebärden, aber nur an Macht interessiert sind.“ Das tägliche Leben sei in Beirut mittlerweile erträglich, besonders im Ausgehbezirk Gemmayzeh. „Wir Künstler leben in unserer Blase. Das wird akzeptiert.“ Sollte es doch nicht mit der Musik klappen, können die beiden auf etwas Solides zurückgreifen. „Im Notfall werden wir halt Banker“, lachen sie. Beide haben einen Uni-Abschluss in Wirtschaft.



Beirut Jam Sessions - The Wanton Bishops & Oak - On the road again (cover) 

As we always do following one of our gigs, we get the opening act and the main act to jam together in a random location that we choose. This time The Wanton Bishops & Oak were taken on a bus ride and gave us their rendition of Canned Heat's "On the road again". Watch, listen and enjoy the ride!






The Wanton Bishops | If I Had Possession Over Judgement Day (Robert Johnson Cover) feat. Phil DeAblo

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