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EditJames Righton
current & founder memberJamie Reynolds
current & founder memberSimon Taylor-Davis
current & founder memberSteffan Halperin
current & founder memberIn the News
17th March 2009
by Ed @ SoundUnwound 17 March 2009Record labels and artists don't always see eye-to-eye. Famously, Motown chief Berry Gordy initially refused to release Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On," but when he relented and it sold over two million copies he admitted his mistake. Sometimes when an artist says they are delaying a new album to record new material, it's because their label has told them to, because the original material wasn't good enough. In Britain, that seems to have been what's happened to Mercury prize-winning band Klaxons, who have admitted that their label has sent them back to the drawing board because they didn't like their "really heavy" sophomore record. "It isn't the right thing for us, I understand that," singer Jamie Reynolds said, adding that he was now aware that the synth-heavy nu-ravers were "first and foremost a pop band." That's code for "we can't take risks, we have to sell," which is unsurprising in these tough economic times, but perhaps Klaxons should've been more discreet about it. If version two of their second album disappoints, critics won't be slow to question their integrity, fairly or not.
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