For twenty years, Tony Reed has been working with electronic music. His sound is a potent mixture of old school new wave song structure and modern day productionFor twenty years, Tony Reed has been working with electronic music. His sound is a potent mixture of old school new wave song structure and modern day production.
Never content to write simple love songs, Tony's lyrics tend to center on the struggles of working-class people whether they be in the political realm, or in destructive relationships.
This seemingly contradictory fusion of thought-provoking lyrics and high-energy dance music is made even more intriguing by Tony's propensity to write catchy hooks. These radio-frindly ditties will stick in your head long after you've heard them.
Tony began writing electronic pop in the mid-eighties.
In the early nineties, he joined the political-punk band "Cafe Graffiti" and recorded an albums worth of material.
Through this time he longed to return to electronic music and finally released "Liquid" in 1999.
Soon after came "Love" to tremendous critical acclaim.
After a long time of nothing more than an occasional contribution to a compilation, Tony is finally back in top form with "Lost".
"Lost" also shows Tony returning to the political relevance of his work with "Cafe Graffiti". The result is very thoughtful music that can pack a dancefloor.
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You could make a sequel to "Please" called "Thank You, " except that "thank you" has two words in it, and that breaks your one-word rule.
Who made the song "Prayer of Hope?" That can't be you. "Prayer" maybe, or even "Hope." I'd settle with "Of" even, but the full title surely wasn't crafted by you.