Indie rockers Veronica Falls know people in the right places
Indie rockers Veronica Falls have had a few helping hands along the way, writes Charlie Carter
It's not what you know but who you know.
For Veronica Falls, had it not been for the help of some influential friends, the British indie rockers may never have enjoyed the level of success that has resulted in a headline Asian tour that brings them to Hong Kong this month.
To those uninitiated in the finer points of indie music, gigs with Crystal Stilts and The Pains of Being Pure at Heart, plus the patronage of Scottish popsters Teenage Fanclub, may mean little. But to the genre's cognoscenti, such connections are tantamount to nods from Paul McCartney or Robbie Williams among mainstream acts.
"Our friends sort of helped us out, which is nice," says frontwoman Roxanne Clifford.
Clifford, 30, met drummer Patrick Doyle at art college in Glasgow. Their love of music ushered them into the city's band scene that spawned the likes of The Jesus and Mary Chain and the Creation label that signed Primal Scream and Oasis. They formed Veronica Falls in 2009.
"The music scene in Glasgow is really small," says Clifford. "Just from going to gigs and being in a band and going to record shops, you become friends with people with the same interests. Everybody really helps each other. It's the same in New York."
The band has been compared to the so-called "twee" bands of the mid-1980s who played harmonised, melodic guitar pop typified by the now-legendary tape issued by the in 1986. Featuring an early incarnation of Primal Scream and The Pastels and The Shop Assistants, the emphasis was on gentle melodies.