When Radiohead came along, everyone said they sounded like REM. It pissed them off. They proved otherwise. When Muse came along, everyone said they sounded like Radiohead. It pissed them off. They proved otherwise. When Fear Of Music came along, everyone said they sounded like Muse. See how this works? And the chain goes back from REM to the birth of rock╞n╞roll. But rather tha... (展开全部) When Radiohead came along, everyone said they sounded like REM. It pissed them off. They proved otherwise. When Muse came along, everyone said they sounded like Radiohead. It pissed them off. They proved otherwise. When Fear Of Music came along, everyone said they sounded like Muse. See how this works? And the chain goes back from REM to the birth of rock╞n╞roll. But rather than a lineage of influence, it╞s a lineage of Greatness. And Fear Of Music √ coming your way this year √ have everything in place to achieve the very same. This is their story. Fear Of Music are Jo Rose (vocals/guitar), Ali Esmaail (bass), Mike Ward (guitar) and Rick Morgan (drums). They formed as schoolfriends, took their name from a seminal Talking Heads album, and together, they╞re out to give British rock its soul and spirit back, and power up their hometown of Manchester with some rocket-fuel riffs. With the spirit of The Smashing Pumpkins, the screech of Placebo, the scale of Muse and the conscience of Manic Street Preachers, but also the grace of Jeff Buckley and the hysteria of Pixies, Fear Of Music mine a virgin sound all of their own. You might have heard of Fear Of Music before, from the huge noise they made coming out of Manchester╞s seminal Blowout nights, when their early gigs and demo recordings let the genie out of the bottle sooner than anyone could have guessed. Over three EPs, µFear Of Music╞ and µFast Faster Fastest╞ and µWe Are Not the Enemy╞, they built up an organic, devoted fanbase and everything was set for them to be Britrock╞s grea