Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Bloc Party's Lissack and Okereke on stage in Cardiff in October 2005. Bloc Party's debut album, Silent Alarm, was released in February 2005 and was met with universal critical acclaim. [12] It was voted 'Album of the Year' for 2005 by NME, [13] and reached number 3 on the UK Albums Chart before being certified platinum.
Rowland Kelechukwu "Kele" Okereke // ⓘ (born 13 October 1981), also known mononymously as Kele, is an English singer, songwriter, and musician.He is best known as the lead singer and rhythm guitarist of the indie rock band Bloc Party. [1]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Pages in category "Bloc Party members" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. M. Gordon Moakes; O.
Moakes shared co-writing credits with Okereke on some of the band's earlier lyrics. In the early days of the band, he contributed lyrics mostly to the band's more political songs, and he composed the song "Diet". Moakes added new instruments to his repertoire on Bloc Party's second and third albums, A Weekend in the City and Intimacy respectively.
Alpha Games is the sixth studio album by English indie rock band Bloc Party, released on 29 April 2022.It is the first studio album by the band since 2016's Hymns.It is notably the first album with drummer Louise Bartle, who joined the band after drum sessions for Hymns had been completed, [3] and the first to feature significant songwriting input from Bartle and bassist Justin Harris with ...
Silent Alarm is the debut studio album by English rock band Bloc Party.Recorded in Copenhagen and London in mid-2004 with Paul Epworth as producer, it was released on 2 February 2005, by Wichita Recordings.
The quartet's first release was the Bloc Party EP in 2004; the first single, "She's Hearing Voices", was released and it failed to chart in the United Kingdom. The next EP, Little Thoughts was released the same year only in Japan; it included Bloc Party's first UK Top 40 entry, the double A-side "Little Thoughts/Tulips", which peaked at number 38.