Soft Play
English punk rock band From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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English punk rock band From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Soft Play (stylised in all caps) are an English punk rock duo formed by Isaac Holman (lead vocals, drums) and Laurie Vincent (backing vocals, guitar, bass) in Royal Tunbridge Wells in 2012.[1] They were known as Slaves until 2022, when they changed their name due to their original name's unwanted connotations.[2]
Soft Play | |
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Background information | |
Also known as | Slaves (2012–2022) |
Origin | Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England |
Genres | |
Years active | 2012–present |
Labels |
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Members |
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Website | softplayband |
The band was formed as a duo after Holman and Vincent failed to recruit other musicians to join their punk band, and began sharing songwriting duties. Vincent later stated that this was an unexpected benefit as they could tour easily and cheaply in a small van due to only needing two people's worth of equipment.
As Slaves, the band released their first EP, Sugar Coated Bitter Truth, under Boss Tuneage Records in 2012. Their first single, "Where's Your Car Debbie?", was released by Fonthill Records in early 2014; they were then signed by Virgin EMI.[3] They released their first single under Virgin, "Hey", in November 2014, and released "The Hunter" later that month. They gained more exposure in late 2015 when "The Hunter" was featured on the Sky One series You, Me and the Apocalypse. They also appeared on Later... with Jools Holland and were nominated for the BBC's Sound of 2015.[4][5]
In May 2015, The Fader featured the group in an article about provocative names for music artists.[6] Vincent told The Fader that criticism of the name came as a surprise to them, describing how they chose the name while trying to think of "an abrasive sounding word, like Clash". He further said, "We just liked the word. We weren't trying to provoke."[7] The two also addressed the controversy around their name in a statement on Facebook: "Our band name relates to people not being in control of their day to day lives. Slaves was our way of getting off the paths we didn't want to walk down anymore. The music we make is motivational and aimed at people personally as well as collectively."[6]
The duo released their debut album Are You Satisfied? on 1 June 2015.[8] It reached No. 8 in its first week on the UK Albums Chart.[9] The album was nominated for the 2015 Mercury Music Prize and has since gone Silver in the UK.[10][11][12] They released their second album Take Control on 30 September 2016. Beastie Boys member Mike D produced the album, and was featured on the track "Consume or Be Consumed". The album fared better in the charts than the first, climbing to No. 6 in its first week on the UK Albums Chart.[13] They released their third album Acts of Fear and Love on 17 August 2018, which reached number 8 on the UK album charts.[14] In July 2019, the band released a four-track EP titled The Velvet Ditch and played a headline set at Truck Festival.
In December 2022, they changed their name to Soft Play. They explained, "The name 'Slaves' is an issue [and] doesn't represent who we are as people or what our music stands for any longer."[2] Their fourth studio album (and first under their new name) Heavy Jelly was released on 19 July 2024.[15]
They have stated that their earliest mutual influences include the Clash, Rancid, Ramones, Gang of Four, Billy Childish, and Talking Heads.[16]
As Slaves
Title | Details | Peak chart positions | Certifications | |
---|---|---|---|---|
UK [17] |
SCO [17] | |||
Are You Satisfied? |
|
8 | 13 | |
Take Control |
|
6 | 9 | |
Acts of Fear and Love |
|
8 | 8 |
As Soft Play
Title | Details |
---|---|
Sugar Coated Bitter Truth |
|
The Velvet Ditch |
|
Title | Year | Album |
---|---|---|
As Slaves | ||
"Where's Your Car Debbie?"[20] | 2014 | Non-album single |
"Hey"[21] | Are You Satisfied? | |
"The Hunter"[22] | ||
"Feed the Mantaray" | 2015 | |
"Cheer Up London"[23] | ||
"Sockets"[24] | ||
"Spit It Out"[25] | 2016 | Take Control |
"Take Control"[26] | ||
"Cut and Run"[27] | 2018 | Acts of Fear and Love |
"Chokehold"[28] | ||
"Magnolia"[29] | ||
"One More Day Won't Hurt"[30] | 2020 | The Velvet Ditch |
As Soft Play | ||
"Punk's Dead"[31] | 2023 | Heavy Jelly |
"Mirror Muscles"[32] | 2024 | |
"Act Violently" | ||
"Everything and Nothing" |
Title | Year | Peak chart positions |
Album |
---|---|---|---|
UK [17] | |||
"Control"[33] (Chase & Status featuring Slaves) |
2016 | – | Tribe |
"Momentary Bliss" (Gorillaz featuring Slowthai & Slaves) |
2020 | 58 | Song Machine, Season One: Strange Timez |
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory. |
Title | Year | Artist(s) | Album | Contribution | Written with: | Produced with: |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
"Missing"[34] | 2019 | Slowthai | Nothing Great About Britain |
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