Photo of gavin mart

gavin mart

Music

FEATURED SONG
  1. Play
  2. Play Next
  3. Add to queue
Album:
Released: Dec 19, 2010
Label:
ABSOLUTE_BLISS
CLICK NOW - free download - YOU NEED THIS
"Absolute Bliss" - Microsoft Windows Media Guide

NEW ALBUM GOLDEN

Packing a real punch with his stunning new album 'GOLDEN', Gavin Mart returns to the fray with style... The album is a rare variety of taste, texture and tone, bringing forth the more contemporary post pop title track alongside Art Punk classic 'Baby Boomer' and the Police esque 'Every time I see you', further explorations visit The 'Manic's' with 'Sideways in the dark' and proceed through the limitless fields of 'Walls of Stone'. This album is simply not to be missed...!
..

What is ironic about the avalanche of interest showered on Gavin Mart and the Saturday Vandals is that it comes after years of dues-paying. Far from being a gauche newcomer, Mart spent years serving a grueling musical apprenticeship as a drummer on the European rock scene.  

-

    

Having been born in Sheffield, Gavin was brought up in North Wales. "I was given a break playing drums for singer songwriter Derek Bond..." He commented, "It was the happiest time of my life living there, along the coast, and Derek remains a true friend and musical hero." He continued, "In my late teens and early 20’s I toured with several different bands, firstly my first love 'Fractal Edge' a drum and bass type outfit in London, but the main band was called Dare. They are an established AOR band; the lead singer was Darren Wharton who was Keyboard Player in Thin Lizzy previously.  So I got a fantastic break as a drummer with them.  He and Dare taught me how to ‘go on’ in the music business.  We supported dozens of major acts across Europe including Shirley Bassey,  she was the first woman from Wales to make it in the industry.  Dare introduced me to playing on the ‘pro scene’ with a wide variety of people; Killers, Ten, Motorhead, Asia, Barclay James Harvest, Magnum, Thunder, to kind of set the scene…"

 

Musically, things were in a state of change for Gavin. "I'd moved on [from Dare], I wanted to be a singer rather than a drummer, in my heart of hearts. I knew that there was something different around the corner, and life pulled me to Leeds. I started writing heavily, I was writing about the things around me, about the things I was going through in my own life; somehow I needed to get that out. It needed to be out there, being listened to and being sung by me. It was a natural progression from one thing to another, it was always going to happen, it was just a question of when."

....

        

 

Gavin recorded a single, "Patiently". The songsmith spoke about the song. "It's Ecclesiastical frustration; it's a philosopher's frustration. The song was written about a protest march that happened around 2003 when Britain declared war on Iraq and two million people launched themselves down to London to protest against going to war. My parents went down, my sister went down, a lot of my family went down, and they marched through the streets of London and they said, 'We don't want to do this; we don't believe there are weapons of mass destruction'. I couldn't make it down to London, but what I did do was I went down into my basement in Leeds. I was so frustrated about the march, because I knew nothing was going to come of it, and I sat down and wrote that song in five minutes from start to finish. It's about that march, but the thing is with song writing, once you start to look deep inside. . . 

-

                                                   

Stints with a couple of fledgling bands around Leeds most notably with 'revive' and in Sheffield with Joe Rose, bore only a frustrated fruit and little progress. The idea of such frustrations led to an  EP to which Gavin aptly names 'Progress', six often dark hewn songs, including "Patiently" and a particularly poignant song, "Heriwood", about a young man with learning difficulties with whom Gavin had gone to school and who died a sad and lonely death. Remembered the songwriter, "He had great teachers around him who were giving him good, sound advice but that advice just didn't compute somehow and he made a decision to get out of there. The song is suggesting that there are people who need an extra helping hand and perhaps a different type of education to the one he had, something our educational system often overlooks. I'm trying to defend Heriwood in the song; he was my friend, I don't think he got a hearing in life. He couldn't quite get out of his head what he wanted to say and he killed himself. But he died without a cause and he never said anything to the world apart from in his suicide. I really wanted to write a song which would keep his name in the world somehow. Without that, would anyone speak the name Heriwood again? I wanted to write a song that had such a hook in it that people would sing it over and over and it would be so catchy that it would be about keeping this guy's name alive."

-

....

                       

  

Judging from the popularity of "Heriwood" during Gavin's live performances he has succeeded. Equally powerful is the 'Progress' title track. Explained Gavin, "It's about a man who's trying to find out where he fits in. He's got dreams and ideas and nothing quite seems to happen, nothing seems to land, and he's having a conversation, possibly with God or perhaps just out into the open. He's having a conversation, he's having a rant, and he's having a look back over his young adult years and asking what sorts of things he has bought into. He's got a couple of mortgages, he lives in a society which invests in credit. He's asking, can he exist in that kind of society without having a job? How can he go forward, what's the next step? He's cross about being stuck in a society which is out of his control. He can't control his own circumstances, he doesn't necessarily trust the people that are in charge, or who make the decisions for him in his society."

....

                               

                                        

Gavin lives in central Leeds, he refers to himself as "a protest singer". His songs manage to be thought provoking, enigmatic, politically charged, angry and poignant, often all at the same time. In the meantime things are moving forward for Gavin at a rapid rate of knots. He was recently invited to submit a single to Microsoft's sponsored programme, he's been featured on the Internet's Reverbnation's global front page and has had around 110,000 widget hits; and he's managed in the States by Afton Entertainment.

 

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      

REVIEW

GAVIN MART & THE SATURDAY VANDALS - ....

I'd made a special effort to get to the Performance Café to get to see Jim Jones whose 'Daylight & Stars' is a stunner. But there at the entrance was a hastily chalked notice. Jim Jones wasn't playing, his place being taken by a new-to-me aggregation from Leeds. So it's tribute to them that long before their set closed I was making plans to meet up with this gutsy-voiced songsmith and his expert accompanists. They made a fascinatingly fresh sound.

Gavin Mart calls himself a "protest singer" and I wouldn't argue as he spat out ripostes at he delusions of "Progress" ("What about your lifestyle/Whatever that means/I'm caught up in your ignorance, affluence, reticence/Your fascist regime") though a song about an educationally challenged boy Mart once knew who committed suicide, "Heriwood", is achingly poignant.

Gavin's voice is bluesily passionate throughout while the lack of the band's second guitarist here put particularly emphasis on bassist Daniel Norton (a fine muso who used to play with Bodixa) who responded with some stunning solos and percussionist Robert Hall (whose expertise belied the fact that he was a mere 16 years of age!). The towering set closes with an extremely powerful "Patiently" with its searing climax "Does anybody listen?/Does anybody care?/That every time I speak out/It's just like you're not there." Unforgettable stuff. Tony Cummings

Greenbelt_09_The_Music_Reviews

The life and times of one Gavin Mart will not yet be repeated here... Suffice it to say a musical biography will be suitable, easily. Having studied music and drums throughout his teens and through college, Gavin one day found an old battered acoustic guitar in a church hall cupboard. After much due repair, care and attention to the axe, and ten or so years self teaching and study Gavin would proudly call himself a singer-songwriter, first and foremost. Nothing else for him will do, well some other stuff he does is pretty good fun too (try Googling Gavin Mart) but without his song writing routines and stunningly passionate performances, Gavin's life would simply not be the same.

.. ..

Gavin mart's music is without doubt politically driven through its core, with a hint of dreamy wistfulness and idealism to set the scene, there's a wry sense of displacement and a longing for justice in most of his writing. Dramatic yearnings such as ‘Patiently’ may one day find themselves re-inspiring a generation to vote for change, whilst the gentle simplicities of ‘Spanish Eyes’ acoustically demonstrate a courageous confidence in the power of the honest love song.

Musically able and culturally aware, Gavin Mart and his team of cut throat muso’s, ‘The Saturday Vandals’, avidly gig regularly throughout the year. The local haunts of the Leeds acoustic scene are amongst regular pit stops, whilst a flare for festival invitations and garden party appearances seems to have become quite the norm. With a challenging stage presence and call to duty, Gavin Mart and The Saturday Vandals are quite a match for an unsuspecting audience and heavy hitting headliners alike.

.. ..

His debut EP ‘Progress’ proves his capabilities and stands bravely for the communities he respectfully represents. Songs of the inner city perils and poverty traps balance calmly with the education his extensive travels to developing worlds have gained him. There’s a depth of character lying just under the surface, which comes only from a life of adventure and mischievous longing for equality...

..

Member Since:

January 01, 2007

Influences:

You...

Gavin%20MartQuantcast

Gavin%20MartQuantcast

..


..


..


..


..


..



Quantcast

..
QuantcastBlankMyspace music player

..


Band press kitsQuantcast Gavin%20MartQuantcast Gavin%20MartQuantcast Gavin%20MartQuantcast

                               

Gavin%20MartQuantcast

Gavin%20MartQuantcast

..


..


..


..


..


..



Quantcast

..
QuantcastBlankMyspace music player

..


Band press kitsQuantcast Gavin%20MartQuantcast Gavin%20MartQuantcast Gavin%20MartQuantcast


HEAR THE NEW ALBUM FREE - CLICK NOW!

GRAB SOME GM STUFF


QuantcastBlankMusic press kits

Status and Mood

Login

Forgot password?

Need an account? Sign up