Keane
Keane – With a new book out and everything

Keane to get the weekend rolling in an orderly direction – recorded live from The Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury on June 29, 2024 by the ever-present BBC 6 Music.

Keane achieved mainstream international success with the release of their debut album Hopes and Fears in 2004. Topping the UK chart, the album won the 2005 Brit Award for Best British Album and was the UK’s second-best-selling album of 2004. It is one of the best-selling albums in UK chart history.[7] Their second album, Under the Iron Sea, released in 2006, topped the UK Albums Chart and debuted at number four on the US Billboard 200. Their third album Perfect Symmetry was released in October 2008 and their EP Night Train was released in May 2010. Their fourth studio album Strangeland was released in May 2012 and peaked at number one on the UK Albums Chart.

In September 2023, the band announced they would undertake a tour of the UK, Europe and the Americas in 2024 to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Hopes and Fears. The tour commenced in May, coinciding with the album’s reissue, and continued on into September,

While guitars have been (minimally) present even in their early work, their appearance in the final mix has always been slight, and while Chaplin has stepped up as an almost full-time guitarist in the band, that instrument is never featured as prominently as to be more than barely noticed. For this matter, they have been dubbed as “the band with no guitars”, thanks to their heavily piano-based sound. By using delay and distortion effects on their pianos and similar keyboards, they often create sounds that aren’t immediately recognizable as piano. Rice-Oxley said during an interview in Los Angeles that they tend to think piano-related music is boring and what they really wanted to do was try something different. He referred to the piano as an odd instrument to form part of a rock band instrumentation, comparing it to the Beatles’ set of instruments. Rice-Oxley’s distortion piano has been key to most of Keane’s multifaceted style and most definitely their most recognizable asset.

Keane have covered songs by artists such as U2, Rufus Wainwright, Depeche Mode, Genesis, the Beatles, the Cult and Queen. Rice-Oxley said “I guess it’s classic song writing that is the main influence rather than one band in particular – we love people like Nick Drake who can convey so much emotion and write songs and albums that will be loved and cherished for many years – the things that will be in people’s record collections for their whole lives.”

Here comes the weekend – chill and tune-out.

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