
Snow Patrol
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Web site | www.snowpatrol.com |
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Origin | Dundee |
United Kingdom | |
Dundee | |
Scotland | |
Members | Gary Lightbody |
Johnny McDaid | |
Nathan Connolly | |
Jonny Quinn | |
Genres | Alternative Rock |
Power Pop | |
Post-Britpop | |
Indie Rock | |
Official site | snowpatrol.com |
Skos genre | Alternative/Indie |
Career start | Dundee, United Kingdom |
Labels | Fiction |
A&M | |
Polydor | |
Geffen | |
Interscope | |
Island | |
Jeepster | |
Electric Honey | |
Listen artist | www.youtube.com |
Songs | 2006 |
List | Chasing CarsEyes Open · 2006 |
2003 | |
2006 | |
Albums | Eyes Open |
Final Straw | |
Wildness | |
Fallen Empires | |
Upcoming events | Frankfurt, Germany |
Hanover, Germany | |
Luxembourg | |
Düsseldorf, Germany | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 615802 |
About Snow Patrol
Snow Patrol are a Northern Irish–Scottish rock band formed in 1994 in Dundee, Scotland. They consist of Gary Lightbody, Nathan Connolly, Paul Wilson, Jonny Quinn, and Johnny McDaid. Initially an indie rock band, Snow Patrol rose to prominence in the early– mid-2000s as part of the post-Britpop movement.
Snow Patrol 'heartbroken' as two members quit

...By Rebekah WilsonBBC News NITwo members of Snow Patrol are leaving the band, but the other three will continue as a trio...
Latitude Festival: Frankie Boyle questions the existence of cancel culture

... This is such a wholesome festival! " The event continues at Henham Park on Sunday, with sets from Snow Patrol, Mark Owen, Fontaines DC and Manic Street Preachers...
Latitude Festival: Lewis Capaldi says he's 'too lazy' for new album

... Latitude continues for the next two days, with appearances from Foals, Little Simz, Mark Owen, Frankie Boyle, Aisling Bea and Snow Patrol...
Sir David Attenborough appointed Knight of the Grand Cross

... In Windsor on Wednesday, as well as Sir David, Snow Patrol singer Gary Lightbody collected his OBE for services to music and to charity in Northern Ireland, while actor Toby Jones also received the same accolade for services to drama...
Ed Sheeran: Copyright case was about honesty, not money

... In their first interview following the verdict, Sheeran and his co-writer, Snow Patrol s John McDaid, told Newsnight of the " extraordinary strain" the case had exerted on them...
Ed Sheeran wins Shape of You copyright case

... It was co-written with Sheeran s collaborators, Snow Patrol s John McDaid and producer Steven McCutcheon, who also denied allegations of copying...
Concert For Ukraine: Refugee stories centre stage as show raises £12m

... Nile Rodgers, Snow Patrol, Anne-Marie, Becky Hill, Gregory Porter, Paloma Faith and the Kingdom Choir also appeared, some with blue and yellow backdrops on screens, and performing next to piles of sunflowers...
Ed Sheeran's co-writer John McDaid calls plagiarism 'abhorrent'

...Snow Patrol s Johnny McDaid has described the idea of stealing other people s work as " abhorrent" during the copyright trial over a song he wrote with Ed Sheeran...
Ed Sheeran wins Shape of You copyright case
Ed Sheeran has won a High Court copyright battle over his 2017 hit Shape of You.
A judge ruled on Wednesday that the singer-songwriter had not plagiarised the 2015 song Oh Why by Sami Chokri.
Chokri, a grime artist who performs under the name Sami Switch , had claimed the " Oh I" hook in Sheeran's track was " strikingly similar" to an " Oh why" refrain in his own track.
Sheeran said he did not remember hearing Oh Why before the legal case.
Shape of You was the UK's best-selling song of 2017 in the UK and is Spotify's most-streamed ever.
It was co-written with Sheeran's collaborators, Snow Patrol 's John McDaid and producer Steven McCutcheon, who also denied allegations of copying.
Legal proceedings were launched in 2018 and resulted in an 11-day trial in London last month.
Giving evidence, Sheeran denied that he " borrows" ideas from unknown songwriters without acknowledgement, insisting he was always " completely fair" in crediting people who contribute to his work.
Andrew Sutcliffe QC, representing Chokri and his co-writer Ross O'Donoghue, labelled Sheeran a " magpie" claiming he " habitually copies" other artists and that it was " extremely likely" he had previously heard Oh Why.
Forensic musicologists were called by both sides to argue the case, One said the songs were " distinctly different" but The Other argued they contained " significant similarities".
Ian Mill QC, representing Sheeran, said for The Star and his collaborators, while Chokri described The High Court case " the worst few weeks of my life".
Source of news: bbc.com