The Machine Room
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The Machine Room

Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom

Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom
Band Rock Pop

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This band has not uploaded any videos
This band has not uploaded any videos

Music

Press


"Midweek Mixtape // 12th October 2011"

FINALLY: The Machine Room inevitably make mechanical music, although there’s a strangely appealing weft and weave in their music, where the strict rhythms bow to an indie sensibility, and vice-versa. A pleasant, epic-sounding curio. - A New Band a Day by Joe Sparrow


"DIY Local: Edinburgh"

Another like-minded Edinburgh group making inventive pop tinged electronica are The Machine Room. This five-piece are very much in their infancy but already sound incredibly self-assured, and their beguiling mix of understated melodic pop and hazy electronica is particularly enthralling. The band’s debut single ‘Camino De Soda’ is an especially exciting debut that shows a band full of promise building up to their debut album in 2012. They also have a great subtle take on New Order’s ‘Bizarre Love Triangle’ available to download on their Soundcloud page that's very much worth a listen. - Fake DIY - 9th January 2012 by Martyn Young


"The Machine Room – Camino de Soda Review"

Winter in Scotland is never a pretty affair. That is unless you’ve been listening to The Machine Room’s new single.

With hooks to kill and vocals that could warm the coldest of December nights, the Edinburgh based five-piece have created a truly engaging track. Already creating quite the buzz on the city’s music scene, the band have made something to rightly get excited about.
Pieced together by former-Vivians bassist, John Bryden, the boys have already received national radio play and firmly outgrown their ‘Art School’ roots.

Kicking off with an unexpected intro, the rhythm section and soaring synths build a cinematic base of euphoria. Bryden’s tranquil vocals sit perfectly on top of these foundations, creating an eerie masterpiece that sounds part New Order, part Electronic and wholly outstanding.
It might still rain and snow but winter will seem a happier place with ‘Camino de Soda’ in it. - Edhinburgh Reporter - December 2, 2011 by Mark Mckinlay


"The Machine Room - Love From A Distance EP"


Influences; all bands have them. They can be a source of inspiration, ideas to take, twist and develop as your own, something to aspire to, a challenge to match. Alternatively they can be ripped off, cheaply watered down and just plain old stolen as a cash-in. How influences are used can make or break a band, and also save them from, or condemn them to, a critical mauling. For every group genre-mashing/borrowing geniuses such as The Horrors or The Go! Team there are half a dozen facsimiles like The Pigeon Detectives. Edinburgh's The Machine Room have selected their sonic weapons from the past and, crucially, they know how to use them. Debut EP 'Love From A Distance' isn't quite on a par with the first two bands mentioned, but it pisses from a great height on the likes of the third.

Previous single 'Camino de Soda' chucks in a spattering of baggy to some Rapture-inspired dance floor beats and cowbells. It may be a touch '2003' but due to some killer hooks and glistening synths this doesn't matter a jot. 'Cost Of Progress' is another frantic electro-indie stomper of the sort that Delphic should have made more of, and the airy dreampop of 'Picking Holes' drifts along in a relaxing haze, driven by crashing drums and chiming guitars that recall the poppier moments from Chapterhouse, Slowdive and others of that ilk. 'Your Head On The Floor Next Door' again blends similar elements from the past, throwing The Postal Service into the mix. Whatever a scan through The Machine Room's record collection may reveal, the most important fact is that the basis of this EP is great songs and a skilful knack with a tune. Some superb reinventions from a very promising synth-pop band. - Sounds XP - by Kev W - Jan 26, 2012


Discography

Releases:

‘Girly’
Tape Singles club.
23rd May 2010

‘Camino de Soda’
Single - self-release
5th December 2011

‘Love from a Distance’
EP - self-release
5h March 2012

Radio Plays:
Ally McCrae (BBC Radio 1 & BBC Introducing Live
Session)
Vic Galloway (BBC Radio Scotland)
Tom Robinson (BBC 6, introducing)
Jim Gellatly (Amazing Radio, Radio Magnetic)
Beth Elfyn (BBC Radio Wales, Amazing Radio)
Richard Brant (Amazing Radio)
Fresh Air FM
Morary Firth Radio

Podcasts:
Jim Gellatly’s New Music Podcast
Radar Scotsman
Glasgow Podcart
Indie-STRY
Best in British Music with Tara O

Photos

Bio

Already regarded as one of the most exciting bands to
arrive on the Edinburgh music scene of late, dream
quintet ‘The Machine Room’ are influenced, equally, by
the succinct and bittersweet rhythms of “New Order”
and the jangly Pre- Britpop wonder of “The House of
Love”. They are ethereal, vulnerable and strikingly pop
all at once. Retro pads, modern arpeggios, hooky bass
and beautiful guitar lines set the backdrop for John
Bryden’s falsetto delivery of lyrical honesty, packing a
brutal love punch.

With a live session for BBC Radio 1 Introducing barely
in the proverbial can, support slots with Ghostpoet, The
Heartbreaks and Twin Sister, and debut EP ‘Love from
a distance’ set for release in March, it would appear
that The Machine Room are a band answering all the
right questions and are a definite one to watch for 2012.

Press:

‘The Machine Room are all about strong, hook-driven
songwriting backed up by expertly textured
arrangements and varied and danceable rhythms.’
Scotsman: On the radar

'This five-piece are very much in their infancy but
already sound incredibly self-assured, and their
beguiling mix of understated melodic pop and hazy
electronica is particularly enthralling.'
Fake DIY

‘The Machine Room walk the edge of emotional despair
wonderfully’
Ringmaster Review

‘Gorgeous blissed out tracks with lush and euphoric
atmospheres. Brilliant, look out for the Edinburgh band,
they are fantastic.’
BBC Radio, Bethan Elfyn

‘There’s a strangely appealing weft and weave in their
music, where the strict rhythms bow to an indie
sensibility, and vice-versa. A pleasant, epic-sounding
curio.’
A new band a day (Joe Sparrow)