Difference between revisions of "Animal Logic (band)"

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=Quotations and Trivia=
 
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''This section needs more information.''
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* The name [[Animal Logic]] came about after [[Stewart Copeland]] and [[Miles Copeland III]] heard a punk tape where they thought the band was singing "Animal logic! Animal logic!" It turned out they were singing something entirely different, but the name appealed for the band and stuck.[http://www.innerviews.org/inner/animal.html]
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* The cover art for the first album, featuring three dalmations, was a rejected cover for [[The Police]] [[Every Breath You Take:The Singles]] which Stewart liked. When the name [[Animal Logic]] was decided upon for the band, the art was deemed perfect for this album instead.[http://www.innerviews.org/inner/animal.html]
  
 
=See also=
 
=See also=

Revision as of 04:05, 18 March 2008

Animal Logic
Promotional image of the band, circa the release of Animal Logic II
Background information
Origin: Los Angeles, California
Years active: 1987 - 1991
Label(s): I.R.S. Records
Associated acts: The Police
Members
Stewart Copeland
Deborah Holland
Stanley Clarke
Former members
Andy Summers


Band history

Animal Logic began in 1987 as a collaboration between Copeland and Clarke, who had been friends for years going back to Copeland's pre-Police days as tour manager for Joan Armatrading. The two were booked to perform together for a series of dates in South America and, looking to form a mainstream-sounding pop band for the event instead of something more fusion-jazz as might be expected, they listened to hundreds of audition tapes for singers before hearing a two-song demo tape by an as-then unknown piano teacher named Deborah Holland.

Impressed by her voice and songwriting talents, the original band lineup came together and quickly prepared for a tour through Brazil which also featured former Police guitarist Andy Summers. Appearing on this tour under the moniker Rush Hour, Summers departed after this initial effort under concerns that the band would be too closely looked at and compared to The Police. Film scoring and other commitments delayed any further projects for the band for some time, but in 1989, they released their first studio album under the new name, Animal Logic. Holland was the primary songwriter credited on the album, which also featured Steve Howe and Pete Haycock on guitars.

A summer tour of Europe and a fall/winter tour of North America followed in that year and into early 1990. 1991 saw the release of a second album, Animal Logic II, which featured guest appearances by musicians such as Jackson Browne, Glen Phillips, David Lindley and Rusty Anderson. However, the lack of commercial success of the band led to its demise soon thereafter. To some, the combination of Copeland and Clarke's virtuoso talents with Holland's pop songs had been an uncomfortable mix. Holland was not comfortable with the stage and touring aspects of being in the band, particularly when large sections of the audience were there only to see Copeland and Clarke. Both would both appear on Holland's first solo album, Freudian Slip, released in 1994, after which time she left I.R.S. Records and recorded several albums since then, forming a new folk ensemble, The Refugees, in 2007.

Band members

Discography

Main article: Discography (Animal Logic)

Studio albums

Awards & Honors

Summarize major awards here in list format, as well as awards received not specific to a particular album, song, film or other release.

Quotations and Trivia

  • The name Animal Logic came about after Stewart Copeland and Miles Copeland III heard a punk tape where they thought the band was singing "Animal logic! Animal logic!" It turned out they were singing something entirely different, but the name appealed for the band and stuck.[1]

See also

This section needs more information. It should include intra-wiki links to relevant articles that further detail the band's history, including potentially Filmography (BAND NAME), Bibliography (BAND NAME), Performances (BAND NAME). If separate articles on these subjects do not exist, you may wish to add appropriate header sections in this article instead.

External links

This section needs more information.

References