We're sorry, we're unable to process your request. Please try again.
Unfortunately, we did not detect the Flash plug-in on your browser. Installing Flash will let you play content on the site. To download the latest version, click here.
Updating Results...
To edit your Favourites or customize your e-mail preferences, go to My Ticketmaster.
The end of 2006 saw one of THOSE moments in the UK music scene. Unheard of until October of the year, by December, a five-piece band called The Twang was the subject of discussion in the pages of the NME, the message boards of a hundred band sites and the A & R departments of pretty much every record label of size in the UK, whilst their demos were being played on BBC Radio One in the middle of the day.
After some very nice free dinners and compiling an address book filled with the names of the movers and shakers in British music, The Twang signed with B-Unique in December of 2006 and began to record tracks for their debut album.
The end of 2006 saw one of THOSE moments in the UK music scene. Unheard of until October of the year, by December, a five-piece band called The Twang was the subject of discussion in the pages of the NME, the message boards of a hundred band sites and the A & R departments of pretty much every record label of size in the UK, whilst their demos were being played on BBC Radio One in the middle of the day.
After some very nice free dinners and compiling an address book filled with the names of the movers and shakers in British music, The Twang signed with B-Unique in December of 2006 and began to record tracks for their debut album.
With their mish-mash of baggy, dance and melodic tunes, together with swirling guitars and rough'n'ready urban rhymes, the band has been called a mix of The Streets and Happy Mondays, with a bit of Oasis and Stone Roses thrown in. One to watch!