Ox (band)
Ox | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada |
Genres | Alternative country |
Years active | 2003 | –2012
Labels | Weewerk, Cosmic Daves Record Factory |
Members | Mark Browning Ryan Bishops Max Myth Shawn Dicey |
Website | oxtheband |
Ox was a
The core of the band consisted of Mark Browning on lead vocals and
History
Ox was formed in Vancouver in 2003 after Browning and Bishops moved there from Sudbury.[3] The band released its debut album, Dust Bowl Revival, in 2003.[4] The album was popular on Canadian campus radio where it reached No. 1 across Canada (#56 in the USA CMJ Chart), and the band toured across Canada, the United States and Europe to support the album.[5]
In 2005 the band released a joint album with American band Kid Lightning.[6]
They released their second album, American Lo-Fi, in October 2006.
Their third album, Burnout, was released in November 2009,[8] and reached No. 5 in !earshot. Videos were filmed for the tracks "Unknown Legend" and "Prom Queen" by Sudbury filmmaker John Alden Milne.[9]
In the same year Browning launched Cosmic Dave's Sound Emporium, which blended a recording studio, an independent record store, a guitar shop and a live performance venue, in the Donovan neighbourhood of Sudbury.[10]
In 2010 they released Silent Night & Other Cowboy Songs, an album of country renditions of Christmas songs,[11] and Browning and Bishops appeared as guest musicians on Examining the Fallout, the debut album by Sudbury singer-songwriter Brian Dunn.[12]
In 2011 they released the album tUco.[13] This album was intended as the soundtrack for a film project by Milne which never materialized.[14] Milne again directed a music video for the album track "Nico".[15] The album appeared on the !earshot Campus and Community National Top 50 Albums chart in January 2012, along with Silent Night & Other Cowboy Songs.[16] The album was a nominee for Album of the Year, Duo or Group at the 2012 Northern Ontario Music and Film Awards, but lost to Kalle Mattson's Anchors.[17]
The band have not released any new music since tUco. Browning subsequently also opened the Beards coffee shop and bakery and the Tuco's Tacos Lounge taco restaurant in Sudbury, with his wife Jessica Nadel.[18]
Discography
- Dust Bowl Revival (2003)
- IPX No. 6 (2004, split CDwith Kid Lightning)
- American Lo Fi (2006)
- Burnout (2009)
- Silent Night & Other Cowboy Songs (2010)
- tUCo (2011)
References
- ^ Mike Landry, "Ox American Lo Fi". The Coast, December 6, 2007.
- ^ Northern Life, October 4, 2007.
- ^ Steve Newton, "Ox's Browning Discards His 'Folk-Porno' Rulebook". The Georgia Straight, July 22, 2004.
- Pop Matters, August 16, 2005.
- ^ Stuart Derdeyn, "Ox pulls CD onto charts". The Province, February 19, 2004.
- ^ Travis Richey, "Ox/Kid Lightning Intercontinental Pop Exchange No.6". Exclaim!, April 1, 2005.
- ^ "Ox - American Lo Fi". No Depression, December 31, 2006.
- The Uniter, November 13, 2009.
- Sudbury Star, October 29, 2009.
- ^ Jason Schneider, "Browning opts to Burnout rather than fade away". Waterloo Region Record, November 5, 2009.
- Sudbury Star, December 20, 2010.
- Sudbury Star, September 23, 2010.
- Kingston Whig-Standard, October 29, 2011.
- ^ Sarah Greene, "OX - tUCo". NOW, December 8, 2011.
- ^ Alex Hudson, "Ox "Nico" (video)". Exclaim!, December 7, 2011.
- !earshot.
- Sudbury Star, April 27, 2012.
- Sudbury.com, December 11, 2016.