Floating Me
Floating Me (sometimes stylised as FLOATINGME) were a progressive rock group from Sydney, Australia, featuring Lucius Borich from Cog, Jon Stockman of Karnivool and Andrew Gillespie, Antony Brown and Tobias Messiter from the '90s grunge/metal band Scary Mother.[1] Their 2011 debut album entered the ARIA album chart at #90.[2] HistoryGuitarist Antony Brown, singer Andrew Gillespie and keyboards-player Tobias Messiter had all previously worked together in the Sydney band Scary Mother. Also featuring bassist Dorian West and drummer Tim Burcham, Scary Mother formed in 1991 and released several singles and the album Tai Laeo (1994) before further progress stalled and the group parted ways. Some years later, Gillespie, Brown and Messiter began working on new material. Lucius Borich from Cog, who had known all three from his history touring with them in Juice and The Hanging Tree, was invited to collaborate on some material. By late 2009 it had become apparent to Borich that Cog was winding down as a full-time band, and so he joined FloatingMe permanently. During 2010 FloatingMe's album was ready to be recorded but the band still lacked a bass player. Jon Stockman of Karnivool was asked to record the bass parts and as Karnivool was taking a break to allow for singer Ian Kenny to concentrate on Birds of Tokyo, he too signed on to the new band. The album was recorded with producer Forrester Savell and released in April 2011. The song "Sugar" was launched on the band's MySpace page as an introductory single in late 2010 and in early 2011 FloatingMe performed live for the first time, opening for Shihad in Wollongong. The band toured with Dead Letter Circus and in July 2011 co-headlined a three-date tour with Clint Boge of The Butterfly Effect's latest band Thousand Needles in Red. FloatingMe's self-titled album was nominated for an ARIA Award in the Hard Rock/Heavy Metal Album category. Band members
Past members
DiscographyAlbums
Awards and nominationsARIA Music AwardsThe ARIA Music Awards are a set of annual ceremonies presented by Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), which recognise excellence, innovation, and achievement across all genres of the music of Australia. They commenced in 1987.
References
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