T Shirts Alt J

Live at Red Rocks An Awesome Wave Cassette The Mark Tank Top Juniors The Mark Tank Top (Unisex) This Is All Yours Digital Album Summer Remixes EP Digital Album An Awesome Wave Digital Album An Awesome Wave T-Shirt An Awesome Wave CD Greek Berkeley Poster 16th MSG Sold Out Poster This is Your Koozie This Is All Yours 2xLP This Is All Yours CD An Awesome Wave Vinyl LPThis Is All Yours streaming now on SpotifyThis is ∆ (pronounced alt-J), and they just may be the best band you have not yet heard of. With a hauntingly ethereal sound, alt-J is vaguely reminiscent of both Mumford & Sons and King of Limbs-era Radiohead. The band was formed in 2007 by four friends who met at Leeds University. The four members include: Joe Newman— guitarist and vocalist. Gwil Swainsbury— guitarist and bassist. And finally Thom Green— drummer. The band was originally called “Daljit Dhaliwal,” after British TV presenter, Daljit Dhaliwal.

Their second band name was “Films,” which they changed when they discovered there was already an American band called “The Films.” Their current name ∆, comes from the Greek letter “delta,” which is used as the mathematical symbol for change. However it’s pronounced “alt-J” because if you press alt + j on a Mac computer you get the symbol ∆. It seems as if they picked the right name as their fans have happily embraced the ∆ as a symbol for their intense dedication.
Moving Out Of State Poems — Δ (alt-J) (@alt_J)
How To Hang A Mirror On An Angled Wall Note the general mania below.
Window Cleaning Side Bucket Their fan base even includes a few celebrities. Aaron Paul (aka Jessie from Breaking Bad) loves them.

And they love Aaron Paul. Ellie Goulding is a big fan, too! As is evident by her sick cover of their song, “Tessellate.” Recently they appeared on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon. Oh, and they also wrote a song for the Silver Linings Playbook soundtrack. But celebrities aside, they are INSANELY good live. And there are few light shows quite as sweet. See what I mean? Here’s a longer clip of their live show at 02 Academy Brixton. Watch it, you won’t regret it. Like their shows, their music videos are also pretty visually stunning. But most importantly, they take THE BEST band photos. Look at these guys in their ∆-shaped glasses! I mean come on, this is too cute. Apologies if it’s not cool to be “cute”— but you are— so deal with it. Could they be any more adorable?! The answer is clearly, NO. Also they’re currently on tour, so make sure to check out them out live. Now treat yo’ self and listen to “Something Good.”

See what I did there? Enter your email below and we will send you an email whenever Alt-J releases new merchandise. Don’t worry, we will never ever share your email address or send you more than one email alert a week. Don’t worry, we’ll never sell your address or spam you. New album This Is All Yours out now 348 Photos and videosExplore An Awesome Wave, Style Graphic, and more!An Awesome WaveAlt JWavesAwesomeHoodiesPeopleOn a scale of one to 10 – 10 being excellent – this year must rate in the hundreds for Cambridge-based four-piece Alt-J.Having released their debut album, An Awesome Wave, to a veritable standing ovation from critics and respectable commercial success, the band named after the Apple keyboard shortcut for a delta symbol has already been dubbed "the new Radiohead", and forthcoming headline tours on both sides of the Atlantic are almost sold out. Oh, and their record has just been nominated for the Barclaycard Mercury Prize, having already been odds-on favourite to win it before the nominations were even announced.

This string of achievements is made even more impressive by the fact they are mostly founded on word-of-mouth recommendations. Yet Joe Newman (vocals/guitar), Gwil Sainsbury (bass/ guitar), Thom Green (drums) and Gus Unger-Hamilton (keyboard) are the epitome of modesty when we meet on one of the sunniest days of the year."It's very flattering to be tipped to win [the Mercury], but I don't think we should take it too seriously," says 23-year-old Gus, the youngest of the four. "It's a dream come true for all of us to be nominated and now we're just really looking forward to the night…" he adds. "And we're particularly looking forward to [eating] the chicken in a basket," Gwil jokes.The lads are clearly great mates, almost constantly laughing and completing each other's sentences. Having met at Leeds University around five years ago, it wasn't long before they were writing tracks in between studying for their degrees (three fine art and one English between them)."We worked out pretty quickly that we had a kind of chemistry as friends that we could translate into our music," says frontman Joe.But the band admits they were shy of talking about the music they made.

They insist, as Gwil explains, that they still "never collectively think about bands or what we want to sound like"."It was almost like the love that dare not speak its name," jokes Gus. "We just thought, 'Let's see if it works'. And thankfully, it did." At the cost of their university lifestyle, they spent years cultivating their sound, reaching a turning point when they wrote "Tesselate" – a passionate yet menacing song that uses a geometrical analogy for sex.Alt-J go to great lengths to temper the praise An Awesome Wave has received. But it is an impressive, inventive record that almost feels too mature for a debut, with songs such as "Breezeblocks" exploring the textured themes of love, relationships and mortality, set to a layer cake of creeping synths, clattering beats and haunting vocals."The strange thing about making an album is that you can never ever hear it for the first time, and I still have loads of things I'd like to change," says Gwil. "Ultimately we are really proud of it, but we were aware that plenty of good albums still go unnoticed."

The band is beginning to come to terms with the attention they are receiving from a rapidly growing following of "actual fans", as a wide-eyed Thom describes them. "Some people made T-shirts just for the Reading [festival] show," he says. But Alt-J has also learned to take criticism. "After a gig we're straight on Twitter to look at what people are saying – unashamedly so," says Gus. Gwil agrees: "If you don't want to know what people are saying, I don't know what you're scared of."Most negative comments accuse Alt-J of being pretentious or posh – the latter of which Thom denies outright. "Some of the greatest people in music have been pretentious, and isn't that what being in a band is all about?" says Gus. "Plus we're writing songs about what we think – that's pretty pretentious."Joe – the driving force behind the song-writing process – comes up with the basic outline on acoustic guitar and writes the lyrics before taking it to the band. They write their parts and restructure the song together.

"Then we take it to our producer [Charlie Andrew], who might say this bit isn't working…" It's inevitable that you take the criticism personally…" says Gwil. "I've cried," Gus admits. Gwil agrees that he has too. "For the record – I haven't cried," Joe smiles.The acclaim Alt-J has received, and the hype around the Mercury Prize nomination, "puts quite a lot of pressure on us", says Joe. With an expression that reflects the weight of the expectations now placed on the band, he says he believes the comparisons with Radiohead are "premature"."Radiohead have had an amazing career and we've only just done our first album," he says, pondering the potential pitfalls of the band getting ahead of itself. "We don't ever want to find ourselves writing an album that we don't feel comfortable with. It'd be horrible to hear anyone say, 'Alt-J: First album was great, second album was really good, third album – they just blew it."For the time being, Alt-J can be content with breaking America, even before they've finished breaking the UK and Europe.