New Yorkshire

http://dbpedia.org/resource/New_Yorkshire an entity of type: Thing

New Yorkshire was a musical movement identified by UK music magazine NME in 2005, in response to the success of Yorkshire bands such as Arctic Monkeys, The Cribs, and Kaiser Chiefs at the time. The bands cited by the magazine included Sheffield guitar-based groups Milburn, Harrisons, Bromheads Jacket, and The Long Blondes, and Leeds bands The Pigeon Detectives, Your Vegas, The Research, and Black Wire. NME identified new crossover genres developing in Leeds, which it described as "disco-punk" and "dance-metal". ¡Forward, Russia!, and The Sunshine Underground are examples of this. rdf:langString
rdf:langString New Yorkshire
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rdf:langString New Yorkshire was a musical movement identified by UK music magazine NME in 2005, in response to the success of Yorkshire bands such as Arctic Monkeys, The Cribs, and Kaiser Chiefs at the time. The bands cited by the magazine included Sheffield guitar-based groups Milburn, Harrisons, Bromheads Jacket, and The Long Blondes, and Leeds bands The Pigeon Detectives, Your Vegas, The Research, and Black Wire. NME identified new crossover genres developing in Leeds, which it described as "disco-punk" and "dance-metal". ¡Forward, Russia!, and The Sunshine Underground are examples of this. Other bands that fall into this genre include Stable, O Fracas, , Dead Disco, Stoney, This Et Al, , Monkey Swallows the Universe, Tiny Dancers, Little Man Tate, Bhuna, , Reverend and The Makers, Duels, , Letters and Colours, , Smokers Die Younger, , and One Night Only (from Ryedale, North Yorkshire). Various Yorkshire-based record labels have worked on DIY releases around the same time, including , Thee Sheffield Phonographic Corporation, and . The Leeds label Dance to the Radio was formed by ¡Forward, Russia!, and its February 2006 release, What We All Want, showcased a number of New Yorkshire bands, including The Playmates, The Lodger, and . The movement was in its prime between 2005 and 2008, where a number of the artists reached national recognition and were successful in the UK charts. However, many disbanded in the following years as they failed to achieve the long-term success seen by some of the more notable acts, with few bands from the region appearing in record charts in the late 2000s and early 2010s.
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