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CHVRCHES (stylised CHVRCHΞS and pronounced "Churches") are a Scottish synth-pop band from Glasgow, formed in September 2011. [1] The band consists of Lauren Mayberry , Iain Cook , Martin Doherty [ 2 ] and, unofficially since 2018, Jonny Scott. [ 3 ]
"He Said She Said" is a song recorded, written and produced by Scottish synthpop band Chvrches. The song was released on 19 April 2021, as the lead single of their fourth studio album, Screen Violence .
The Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary suggests the first pronunciation. Similarly, this pronunciation markup guide will choose the most widely used form. NOTE: This guide is designed to be simple and easy to use. This can only be achieved by giving up scope and freedom from occasional ambiguity.
Recover EP is the debut EP by Scottish synth-pop band Chvrches. It was released on 25 March 2013 in the UK via Goodbye and Virgin Records and 26 March 2013 in the US via Glassnote Records. [1] The song "Recover" was issued as the second single from their debut studio album The Bones of What You Believe and it reached number 91 in the UK Singles ...
Scottish indie pop outfit CHVRCHES and The Cure's Robert Smith have teamed up for "How Not to Drown," which also happens to be the first song off the band's upcoming fourth studio album, Screen ...
The post CHVRCHES Reboot appeared first on SPIN. Lauren Mayberry was recently stuck in traffic, as is often the case in Los Angeles. With time on her hands, she decided to listen to a playlist of ...
Scottish synth-pop band Chvrches have released four studio albums, three extended plays (EPs), 21 singles, two promotional singles and 19 music videos.Chvrches was formed in Glasgow in 2011 and consists of Lauren Mayberry (lead vocals, additional synthesisers, samplers), Iain Cook (synthesisers, guitar, bass, vocals), and Martin Doherty (synthesisers, samplers, vocals).
"Never Say Die" is a downtempo electro song that "features robust, linear-patterned synths that maintain the song's energy". [2] [3] Despite the band's well-known "airy synths", there is "a more abrasive-sounding synth that leads the charge during the bridge leading into the anthemic chorus", according to Derrick Rossignol of Uproxx. [4]