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Musical Information

  Name End of Fashion
  Img Eof_group_pressshotjpg
  Background group_or_band
  Origin Perth , Western Australia , Australia
  Genre Rock
  Years Active 2004 –present
  Label Hello Cleveland! (2004)<br/> Capitol Records / EMI (2004-present)
  Associated Acts The Sleepy Jackson
  URL Official website
  Current Members Justin Burford<br />Rodney Aravena<br />Tom King<br />Nick Jonsson
  Past Members Malcolm Clark, Jonathon Dudman, Mareea Paterson, Vanessa Thornton, Mike Hobbs, Hugh Jennings


End of Fashion are a rock band from Perth, Western Australia . The band consists of Justin Burford (vocals/guitar), Rodney Aravena (guitar), Tom King (bass) and Nick Jonsson (drums).


HISTORY

The band was originally formed as a side project by guitarists Justin Burford and Rod Aravena from the The Sleepy Jackson together with Malcolm Clark (drums) and Jonathon Dudman (bass). After two years, Justin and Rodney split from The Sleepy Jackson , reformed as End of Fashion and - after a series of bass players and drummers including Vanessa Thornton (from Jebediah ), Mike Hobbs and Hugh Jennings - finally settled on current line up with Nick Jonsson (drums) and Tom King (bass).

They also have ties to other Perth bands as Justin was dating Katy Steele , lead singer of Little Birdy and sister of The Sleepy Jackson's frontman, Luke Steele and she also features on the album track, "Oh Strain". Nick's cousin Olga Hermanniusson also plays bass in the unclassifiable Perth indie rock band Snowman .

In 2003 they started work on their first recording, a four track EP '' Rough Diamonds / Anything Goes '' with former Midnight Oil guitarist Jim Moginie as producer. The EP was released through independent label Hello Cleveland! / EMI .

Radio station, Triple J added both singles "Anything Goes" and "Rough Diamonds" to high rotation across the board in the first week of the release of the EP and following sell out shows during their five week national tour supporting Little Birdy and Betchadupa , concluding with their own headline shows to overwhelming fan response, commercial stations began follow to suit. The raunchy "Rough Diamonds" video was also well received by Channel V , video hits and ABC TV's Rage (TV Program) . The EP was released in March 2004 and debuted at #57 on the Australian ARIA Singles Chart . After performing at SXSW in 2004 they were picked up by EMI / Capitol Records for a worldwide distribution contract.

On the 25th August 2005, End of Fashion released their self titled, debut album, which was recorded in Oxford, Mississippi and produced by Dennis Herring, a veteran who has worked with Elvis Costello , Counting Crows and Modest Mouse . The album went Gold in Australia and New Zealand and was released in the United States in May 2006.

The band name ''End of Fashion'', which is reported to have been suggested by Justin's mother, is the aim and moral of the band members.

"I want to break down the walls - within that context, that image, we can do anything we want no matter whether it’s super cheesy or punk, I want to kill fashion, see the end of it." - Justin Burford


The band's first single " O Yeah " reached #21 on the ARIA Singles Chart , number 8 on Triple J's Hottest 100 For 2005 , won two ARIA Awards and was nominated for the prestigious APRA 'Song of the Year'. The fourth single "The Game" debuted on the ARIA Singles Chart at a career high #13 in 2006.

Their songs have been on the games '' Thrillville '' (which feaured "She's Love" and "Lock Up your Daughters" on the in-game radio) and '' FIFA Street 2 '' (which featured "O Yeah").


PERFORMANCES


The band has a large festival history, having performed at Homebake , Triple J 's Home and Hosed and One Night Stand festivals, the Come Together Music Festival , Falls Festival in Lorne , Victoria and Marion Bay , Tasmania and also Big Day Out . They've also made several live appearances on tv shows such as Rove Live , Channel V Australia and MTV Australia.

They've also played the South By Southwest festival twice and have supported Metric in the US and Snow Patrol for a show in Canada.

In 2006 they supported fellow Australian band ' The Living End ' on their national 'All States Of Emergency' tour, and also performed on the Coca Cola Live & Local tour alongside Evermore , The Veronicas , After The Fall & The Hot Lies . The band then finished the year with performances at Pyramid Rock Festival on Phillip Island , Gloucester Park in Perth and Beats On The Beach at Byron Bay .


CRITICISMS

End of Fashion have been criticised for copying the guitar riff from the Pixies ' "Where Is My Mind?" for their song " O Yeah ".

In a review ,
Jonathon Miller wrote
"End of Fashion are having no problem appealing to the 95% of people that haven't heard (and still remember) the Pixies' "Where Is My Mind?" and have never experienced a truly exciting live show, and if that's what the band is aiming for, then they are a complete success."


In some of their later live shows, Justin Burford has taken to inserting lyrics from the Pixies song at the end of " O Yeah ", as a tongue-in-cheek move against the critics and on occasion has played the entire "Where Is My Mind?" breaking straight into " O Yeah ".


DISCOGRAPHY


Albums


  Image:RDAGcoverjpg'''''<center> "http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/information/entry/Rough_Diamonds/Anything_Goes_(EP)" class="copylinks">Rough Diamonds / Anything Goes '''''<br>( March 1 2004 )
  Image:TOOCLcoverjpg'''''<center> "http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/information/entry/Too_Careful_(EP)" class="copylinks">Too Careful '''''<br>( November 1 2004 )
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