The Asteroids Galaxy Tour - introduction
The Asteroids Galaxy Tour are musicians on a mission. They are Danes dedicated to taking pop technicolour, having funk get down with folk and forcing old soul to shake its booty to horn stabs and lazy beats.
Formed less than a year ago, The Asteroids Galaxy Tour are heading for fame at a speed even they didnt expect. Their debut gig saw them support Amy Winehouse at the biggest venue in their native Copenhagen, at the special request of the British singers management. In London, a demo found its way to industry veterans David Enthoven and Tim Clark, who have managed the careers of T-Rex, Roxy Music and Robbie Williams. Within half an hour of hearing it, Enthoven was on the phone to band founder Lars Iversen. Within days, he was on his way to Copenhagen to thrash out a deal.
Things have moved unnaturally fast for The Asteroids Galaxy Tour. But Lars,
who composes most of the music and plays bass, spent a long time planning
the sound.
In summer 2007, Lars met up with former band mate and singer Mette to play
her some demos. She went home with a CD and returned the day after with lots of ideas of her own. The pair immediately set to work, spending last summer practically living, recording, eating, composing and sleeping in Larss self-built studio in his one room flat in Copenhagen. Every night after a hard days work, they would end up drunk on Larss balcony until early morning. They were on a constant high, but at the same time slowly building a repertoire and a signature sound of their own.
Formed less than a year ago, The Asteroids Galaxy Tour are heading for fame at a speed even they didnt expect. Their debut gig saw them support Amy Winehouse at the biggest venue in their native Copenhagen, at the special request of the British singers management. In London, a demo found its way to industry veterans David Enthoven and Tim Clark, who have managed the careers of T-Rex, Roxy Music and Robbie Williams. Within half an hour of hearing it, Enthoven was on the phone to band founder Lars Iversen. Within days, he was on his way to Copenhagen to thrash out a deal.
Things have moved unnaturally fast for The Asteroids Galaxy Tour. But Lars,
who composes most of the music and plays bass, spent a long time planning
the sound.
In summer 2007, Lars met up with former band mate and singer Mette to play
her some demos. She went home with a CD and returned the day after with lots of ideas of her own. The pair immediately set to work, spending last summer practically living, recording, eating, composing and sleeping in Larss self-built studio in his one room flat in Copenhagen. Every night after a hard days work, they would end up drunk on Larss balcony until early morning. They were on a constant high, but at the same time slowly building a repertoire and a signature sound of their own.