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The duo are producers, remixers and Djs, active on the global dance scene whose debut long-player has just been signed to Great Stuff/Ministry of Sound for release in early 2007.
The duo are producers, remixers and Djs, active on the global dance scene whose debut long-player has just been signed to Great Stuff/Ministry of Sound for release in early 2007.


After some cult success in the house scene, their next song "We Interrupt This Programme" (Data/Great Stuff/Frontier) re-defined house music in 2005, with its glitchy, "edit-orientated" take on a party tune. The sound crossed boundaries and borders becoming popular with Djs and clubbers from almost every scene in dance, and even being championed by radio jocks normally associated with rock and alternative sounds. Coburn became very popular with "We Interrupt This Programme" on the internet, being featured on many entertainment websites. "We Interrupt This Programme" has had many remixes; it has become hard to find the original mix.
After some cult success in the house scene, their next song "We Interrupt This Programme" (Data/Great Stuff/Frontier) re-defined house music in 2005, with its glitchy, "edit-orientated" take on a party tune. The sound crossed boundaries and borders becoming popular with Djs and clubbers from almost every scene in dance, and even being championed by radio jocks normally associated with rock and alternative sounds. Coburn became very popular with "We Interrupt This Programme" on the internet, being featured on many entertainment websites. Most known on the website [http://www.YTMND.com YTMND], being placed with an image of a cat called the "NEDM" fad, or "Not Even Doom Music". "We Interrupt This Programme" has had many remixes; it has become hard to find the original mix. Several myspaces have been made under Coburn name but none appear to be official.


Coburn's follow up single, the Moroder-esque "Give me love" pummelled dance-floors around the world in 2006, and its flip, "Razorblade" also featuring the delicate Icelandic vocals of Heidrun (ex-Gloss, Cicada) has been licensed for release this autumn on Great Stuff, and has been described as "Kylie on acid".
Coburn's follow up single, the Moroder-esque "Give me love" pummelled dance-floors around the world in 2006, and its flip, "Razorblade" also featuring the delicate Icelandic vocals of Heidrun (ex-Gloss, Cicada) has been licensed for release this autumn on Great Stuff, and has been described as "Kylie on acid".

Revision as of 15:43, 27 November 2006

Coburn is a London, UK based electronic band. Its members are Pete Martin and Tim Healey.

The duo are producers, remixers and Djs, active on the global dance scene whose debut long-player has just been signed to Great Stuff/Ministry of Sound for release in early 2007.

After some cult success in the house scene, their next song "We Interrupt This Programme" (Data/Great Stuff/Frontier) re-defined house music in 2005, with its glitchy, "edit-orientated" take on a party tune. The sound crossed boundaries and borders becoming popular with Djs and clubbers from almost every scene in dance, and even being championed by radio jocks normally associated with rock and alternative sounds. Coburn became very popular with "We Interrupt This Programme" on the internet, being featured on many entertainment websites. Most known on the website YTMND, being placed with an image of a cat called the "NEDM" fad, or "Not Even Doom Music". "We Interrupt This Programme" has had many remixes; it has become hard to find the original mix. Several myspaces have been made under Coburn name but none appear to be official.

Coburn's follow up single, the Moroder-esque "Give me love" pummelled dance-floors around the world in 2006, and its flip, "Razorblade" also featuring the delicate Icelandic vocals of Heidrun (ex-Gloss, Cicada) has been licensed for release this autumn on Great Stuff, and has been described as "Kylie on acid".

The success of their recent output has led them to flood of DJ and live bookings, and they continue to entertain at the world's top night-spots and festivals.

As Djs their free-style club sound celebrates "The very best in electro-house, beats, breaks and booties, with a healthy sprinkling of indie-rock".

The accessibility of Coburn music in the United States at this time is extremely limited due to no full length album yet to be released over-seas.

Releases

  • Coburn's Theme (2003)
  • How To Brainwash Your Friends EP (2003)
  • Give Me Love (2005)
  • Sugar Lips (2005)
  • We Have The Technology (2005)
  • We Interrupt This Program (2005)
  • Give Me Love (2006)
  • Superstar (2006)

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