vocals - Harriet Wheeler
guitars - David Gavurin
bass - Paul Brindley
drums - Patrick Hannan
Their Bio Brief by Geffen Records, Inc.
The Sundays have won fans the world over for their lilting modern pop. Harriet Wheeler's winsome vocals and David Gavurin's chiming guitar continue to define the band, though they've slightly retooled their creative approach with Static & Silence (DGC Records), their self-produced third album. Says Gavurin: "We regard the songs as quite simple and intimate. We wanted the treatment they received in the studio to reflect that." Lyrically, too, Static & Silence is more personal and straightforward than the band's previous work. Gavurin concludes, "We don't feel part of the current trends in British music -- we're just plowing our own furrow somewhere to the side of what's going on." (Released Date: Sept. 23, 1997)
- In 1988 songwriters Gavurin and Wheeler moved from Bristol to London, where they teamed with bassist Paul and drummer Patrick Hannan to form the Sundays. The band was "Discovered" by the press at their valley first show.
- After wading through a slew of offers, the Sundays signed with the independent Rough Trade label in the U.K. and DGC Records in the U.S. Their debut, Reading Writing, and Arithmetic, appeared in 1990. The band toured internationally in support of the disc, which went gold in both the U.K. and U.S.
- The Sundays followed up in 1992 with Blind (released on Parlophone in the U.K., DGC in the U.S.), another gold in America. The band then took to the road, traversing the globe once more.
- After returning from the Blind tour, the quartet took a much-deserved break. During this hiatus, Gavurin and Wheeler had their first child and put together their own recording facility, at which the Sundays wrote and recorded Static & Silence.