Enter Shikari
SaffronJava
02 Aug 2007
Enter Shikari are:
Rou – Vox / Electronics
Chris – Bass / Vox
Rory – Guitar / backing Vox
Rob - Drums
In early 2003 four standard geezers from St. Albans City, a standard area just north of London, formed a band.
They formed a band that they hoped would reignite unity into the music scene and ultimately into people lives. And this was no hidden agenda as they started by fusing many different genres and styles together to form their own sound. They essentially mould together the passion of hardcore and punk with the passion of euphoria and trance amongst many other influences.
Enter Shikari translates from Indian as “Enter the Hunter”. ‘The Hunter' is a character in a play Rou wrote before the band even existed, a character that gets used as a metaphor for positive aggression. In life you have to experience the lows to appreciate the highs, right? Shikari is that strength inside all of us, that hauls us out of those lows. Shikari is the hope that gives us the energy to continue and hunt for the panacea to our problems.
Primarily a hardcore punk band with strong DIY ethics, they toured solid for 3 years with no press, no agents, no management, no help whatsoever. This was because no one was interested. Afraid? Maybe. Repulsed? Maybe.
They naively believed this was the proper way, probably because they didn't know any better. They believed it was the only way for them personally to get their music out there. With the little money they had they bought and converted a red ex-postal office van (AKA the Shikari mobile/ The Shikari-Ferrari (R.I.P)) to tour in and transformed Chris' garage into a make-shift recording studio. It was in this garage that they worked on Rou's bedroom recordings and recorded all the early E.P.s.
After a full ‘year out' to concentrate on the band and then a first year at Uni juggling studying and playing shows, their hard work began to pay off. As word of their manic live shows began to spread around the underground scene, people were returning to shows and attendances were notably increasing up and down the country. This quiet growth in popularity continued under the radar of media attention and hype.
It is live that you witness such a passion in their performance and music that you can't help but feel involved. They've always encouraged as much crowd participation as possible be it in the form of gang vocals, human pyramids, stage dives/invasions, these four lads have always seen the audience more as a collective fifth member than as a group of spectators. With an incredibly intense stage presence that reflects the euphoric aspects of the music, they are definitely a must see live band. In those three years Enter Shikari never really played any big billed shows (not that they had any choice); they always stuck to playing intimate venues with local bands like themselves.
Then in the second half of 2006 things began to take off when they played Download Festival. With the Gibson tent overflowing they rose to the challenge and killed it. The media then began to pay attention. After a few more UK tours, they then became the second ever unsigned band to sell out the London Astoria.
They have only ever properly released two singles and chose to make only one of them chart eligible. After four years their debut album 'Take to the Skies' is finally out and they look towards the summer for more touring and festivals.
- From the Enter Shikari Official Website
Rou – Vox / Electronics
Chris – Bass / Vox
Rory – Guitar / backing Vox
Rob - Drums
In early 2003 four standard geezers from St. Albans City, a standard area just north of London, formed a band.
They formed a band that they hoped would reignite unity into the music scene and ultimately into people lives. And this was no hidden agenda as they started by fusing many different genres and styles together to form their own sound. They essentially mould together the passion of hardcore and punk with the passion of euphoria and trance amongst many other influences.
Enter Shikari translates from Indian as “Enter the Hunter”. ‘The Hunter' is a character in a play Rou wrote before the band even existed, a character that gets used as a metaphor for positive aggression. In life you have to experience the lows to appreciate the highs, right? Shikari is that strength inside all of us, that hauls us out of those lows. Shikari is the hope that gives us the energy to continue and hunt for the panacea to our problems.
Primarily a hardcore punk band with strong DIY ethics, they toured solid for 3 years with no press, no agents, no management, no help whatsoever. This was because no one was interested. Afraid? Maybe. Repulsed? Maybe.
They naively believed this was the proper way, probably because they didn't know any better. They believed it was the only way for them personally to get their music out there. With the little money they had they bought and converted a red ex-postal office van (AKA the Shikari mobile/ The Shikari-Ferrari (R.I.P)) to tour in and transformed Chris' garage into a make-shift recording studio. It was in this garage that they worked on Rou's bedroom recordings and recorded all the early E.P.s.
After a full ‘year out' to concentrate on the band and then a first year at Uni juggling studying and playing shows, their hard work began to pay off. As word of their manic live shows began to spread around the underground scene, people were returning to shows and attendances were notably increasing up and down the country. This quiet growth in popularity continued under the radar of media attention and hype.
It is live that you witness such a passion in their performance and music that you can't help but feel involved. They've always encouraged as much crowd participation as possible be it in the form of gang vocals, human pyramids, stage dives/invasions, these four lads have always seen the audience more as a collective fifth member than as a group of spectators. With an incredibly intense stage presence that reflects the euphoric aspects of the music, they are definitely a must see live band. In those three years Enter Shikari never really played any big billed shows (not that they had any choice); they always stuck to playing intimate venues with local bands like themselves.
Then in the second half of 2006 things began to take off when they played Download Festival. With the Gibson tent overflowing they rose to the challenge and killed it. The media then began to pay attention. After a few more UK tours, they then became the second ever unsigned band to sell out the London Astoria.
They have only ever properly released two singles and chose to make only one of them chart eligible. After four years their debut album 'Take to the Skies' is finally out and they look towards the summer for more touring and festivals.
- From the Enter Shikari Official Website
Perpetuated
02 Aug 2007
Way over-rated and over-whored by the scenesters of the UK.
In my opinion, of course.
In my opinion, of course.
SaffronJava
02 Aug 2007
Yes I know what you mean. But I still love em. Going to see them this October
a.sad.song
06 Aug 2007
Perpetuated
08 Aug 2007
Ryan
08 Aug 2007
SaffronJava
08 Aug 2007
In your opinion they are the worst band ever, Ryan.
However, "Adieu" is one of my favourite songs.
However, "Adieu" is one of my favourite songs.
Ryan
08 Aug 2007
SaffronJava, on Aug 8 2007, 12:09 PM, said:
In your opinion they are the worst band ever, Ryan.
However, "Adieu" is one of my favourite songs.
However, "Adieu" is one of my favourite songs.
NO... if i were to say "they are the worst band ever" that would be an opinion, because it's a well known fact they aren't the worst band ever... the worst band ever is in fact Waking The Cadaver
SaffronJava
08 Aug 2007
Ryan
08 Aug 2007
SaffronJava, on Aug 8 2007, 02:28 PM, said:
Haha!! Ye they are awful.
can you believe Waking The Cadaver take themselves seriously? it's just unbelievable bands like Waking The Cadaver consider the noise they produce as music let alone take it seriously... it's just insane...
then their is the fact Waking The Cadaver's lyrics promote and glorify rape, and violence towards women... just wrong if you ask me...
SaffronJava
09 Aug 2007
Nah the worst band to promote hate, and are just a load of noise are Anal C**t!
Really they are awful.
Really they are awful.
Effy
17 Jun 2008
mastershake
18 Jun 2008
SaffronJava, on Aug 9 2007, 05:06 AM, said:
Nah the worst band to promote hate, and are just a load of noise are Anal C**t!
Really they are awful.
Really they are awful.
SaffronJava
19 Jun 2008
mastershake, on Jun 18 2008, 09:16 AM, said:
they rule! your crazy. and their stuff isnt even their serious views on stuff, they just do it cos they can. its just music, its art. if a movie has violence and rape in it people can accept it as not real, why should it be different for music?
Anyways, on to the subject of art now. Movies do have violence and rape in them, but the majority of movies do not promote violence and rape, it is just in the movie. At no point do they say that raping women is a good thing. Anyway, movies which are just constant violence & rape just get boring after a while.
mastershake
19 Jun 2008
SaffronJava, on Jun 19 2008, 05:15 AM, said:
They are musically awful I meant. Their talent lacks on instruments...though there lyrics amuse me greatly, shame I can never understand what the hell the vocalist is saying.
Anyways, on to the subject of art now. Movies do have violence and rape in them, but the majority of movies do not promote violence and rape, it is just in the movie. At no point do they say that raping women is a good thing. Anyway, movies which are just constant violence & rape just get boring after a while.
Anyways, on to the subject of art now. Movies do have violence and rape in them, but the majority of movies do not promote violence and rape, it is just in the movie. At no point do they say that raping women is a good thing. Anyway, movies which are just constant violence & rape just get boring after a while.
SaffronJava
19 Jun 2008
Effy
19 Jun 2008
Ryan
20 Jun 2008
SaffronJava, on Jun 19 2008, 03:15 AM, said:
They are musically awful I meant. Their talent lacks on instruments...though there lyrics amuse me greatly, shame I can never understand what the hell the vocalist is saying.
Anyways, on to the subject of art now. Movies do have violence and rape in them, but the majority of movies do not promote violence and rape, it is just in the movie. At no point do they say that raping women is a good thing. Anyway, movies which are just constant violence & rape just get boring after a while.
Anyways, on to the subject of art now. Movies do have violence and rape in them, but the majority of movies do not promote violence and rape, it is just in the movie. At no point do they say that raping women is a good thing. Anyway, movies which are just constant violence & rape just get boring after a while.
Anal Cunt are pure musical genius. The soul fact that they actually try to make shitty, overly offensive, generic grind, with the worst quality and despite all of this still pull it off with flying colors is in it's own right fucking awesome.
They don't take the music they make seriously, and neither should anyone else. They just have fun with it, and I give them credit for being able to collectively piss off more people than pretty much any other underground band in recent history.
P.S. They've been playing music pretty much all of their lives, if they really wanted to make a serious album they'd be more than able to. I'd also be willing to bet that if they did it would put all of the other buzz word 'grind' and 'modern hardcore' bands to fucking shame.


