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{{short description|New Zealand punk rock band}}
{{Redirect|Die Die Die|the Bone Thugs-n-Harmony song|E. 1999 Eternal}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}
{{Use New Zealand English|date=November 2012}}
{{Use New Zealand English|date=November 2012}}
{{Infobox musical artist
{{Infobox musical artist
|name = Die! Die! Die!
| name = Die! Die! Die!
|image =
| image =
| origin = [[New Zealand]]
|background = group_or_band
| genre = {{hlist|[[Punk rock]]|[[post-punk revival]]|[[noise pop]]}}
|origin = [[New Zealand]]
| years_active = 2003–present
|genre = [[Punk rock]], [[post-punk revival]], [[noise pop]]
| label = [[OK!Relax]]<br />Etch N Sketch<br />Capital Recordings<br />SAF Records<br />Tardus Music<br />Inertia Distribution<br />[[Smalltown America]]<br />[[RedEye Distribution]]<br />[[Flying Nun Records]]
|years_active = 2003–present
| website =
|label = [[OK!Relax]]<br />Etch N Sketch<br />[[Capital Recordings]]<br />SAF Records<br />Tardus Music<br />Inertia Distribution<br />[[Smalltown America]]<br />[[RedEye Distribution]]<br />[[Flying Nun Records]]
| current_members = Andrew Wilson<br/>Michael Prain<br/>Lachlan Anderson
|website = [http://www.diediedie.co.nz www.diediedie.co.nz]
| past_members = Michael Logie<br> Henry Oliver<br />Kane Goulter<br/>[[Rory Attwell]]
|current_members = Andrew Wilson<br/>Michael Prain<br/>Lachlan Anderson
|past_members = Michael Logie<br> Henry Oliver<br />Kane Goulter<br/>[[Rory Attwell]]
}}
}}
'''Die! Die! Die!''' (sometimes styled '''Die!Die!Die!''') is a three-piece [[New Zealand]] [[noise pop]]/[[Punk rock|punk]]/[[post-punk]] band. Formed in late 2003, the band has released seven albums, all backed with extensive international touring. A number of different bass guitarists have played alongside the permanent members, Andrew Wilson (guitar, vocals) and Michael Prain (drums). Lachlan Anderson's second spell with the band began in 2018.

'''Die! Die! Die!''' (sometimes styled '''Die!Die!Die!''') is a three-piece [[New Zealand]] [[noise pop]]/[[Punk rock|punk]]/[[post-punk]] band. Formed in late 2003, they have released six albums, all backed with extensive international touring. A number of different bassists (Lachlan Anderson is currently in his second stint with the band) have played alongside permanent members Andrew Wilson (guitar, vocals) and Michael Prain (drums).


==History==
==History==
===The Drummer Smells Nice, Carriage H and Rawer (1999–2004)===
While at [[Logan Park High School]] in [[Dunedin]], Wilson and Prain were three-time [[Smokefreerockquest|Pepsismokefree Rockquest]] entrants – in 1999 with The Drummer Smells Nice, then twice with Carriage H. They won the national competition in 2001.<ref name="spinoff-15">{{cite web |title=15 years of Die! Die! Die! – the punk band that won't, y'know, die |last=Oliver |first=Henry |url=https://thespinoff.co.nz/music/nz-on-air-music/31-01-2018/15-years-of-die-die-die-the-punk-band-that-wont-yknow-die/ |website=[[The Spinoff]] |accessdate=1 February 2018 |date=31 January 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Idiot Prayer |url=http://nzmusic.org.nz/artists/rock/idiot-prayer/ |publisher=NZ Music Commission |accessdate=4 July 2017}}<br>- {{cite web |title=Pepsismokefree Rockquest 2000 |url=https://www.nzonscreen.com/title/pepsi-smokefreerockquest-2000 |website=[[NZ On Screen]] |accessdate=19 September 2016}}<br>- {{cite web |title=SFRQ History |url=http://smokefreerockquest.co.nz/sfrq-history/ |publisher=Smokefree Rockquest |accessdate=1 February 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180202012417/http://smokefreerockquest.co.nz/sfrq-history/ |archive-date=2 February 2018 |url-status=dead}}<br>- {{cite news |title=Metallers win rockquest |url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10530893 |access-date=29 June 2017 |agency=NZPA |work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] |date=6 September 2008}}</ref> With Wilson playing bass guitar, Prain on drums and the guitarist/vocalist Tim "Tiddy" Smith, Carriage H released one EP, ''Power of Grey Skull'', in 2002 and disbanded shortly afterwards.


Along with the bass guitarist Ricky French, Wilson (who began playing guitar for the first time) and Prain then formed a short-lived Wellington-based group called Rawer.<ref>{{cite news |last=Furlong |first=Brian |title=Andrew Wilson of Die! Die! Die! Talks Their Newest Video "Sinister", Off Album Charm Offensive And Life in New Zealand |work=The Chimera Magazine |url=http://thechimeramagazine.com/2018/03/01/andrew-wilson-die-die-die-talks-newest-video-sinister-off-album-charm-offensive-life-new-zealand/ |accessdate=1 March 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180302164034/http://thechimeramagazine.com/2018/03/01/andrew-wilson-die-die-die-talks-newest-video-sinister-off-album-charm-offensive-life-new-zealand/ |archive-date=2 March 2018 |url-status=dead}}</ref> Henry Oliver (who later became Die! Die! Die!'s second
===The Drummer Smells Nice, Carriage H, and Rawer (1999–2004)===
bass guitarist) saw Rawer perform and recalled the sound as "a sea of pedals and effects".<ref name="spinoff-15" /> In 2003, Wilson and Prain moved again, to Auckland. There they were inspired by the local music scene to form Die! Die! Die! together with Kane Goulter on bass guitar.<ref>{{cite web |last=Andrews |first=Chris |title=Rawer |url=http://thebigcity.co.nz/artists/r/rawer |website=thebigcity |accessdate=29 June 2017}}<br>- {{cite web |last=McDougall |first=Samson |title=Sink Or Swim |url=https://themusic.com.au/features/die-die-die-andrew-watson/BU8WGRgbGh0/02-09-14/ |website=The Music |accessdate=8 June 2020 |date=2 September 2014}}<br>- {{cite web |title=Carriage H |url=http://www.muzic.net.nz/artists/47/carriage-h |website=muzic.net.nz |accessdate=19 September 2016}}<br>- {{cite web |title=Die! Die! Die! |url=http://www.muzic.net.nz/artists/1223/die-die-die |website=muzic.net.nz |accessdate=30 June 2017}}</ref><ref name="stuff-2014">{{cite web |last=Cardy |first=Tom |url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/music/10406111/Theres-still-life-in-Die-Die-Die |title=There's still life in Die! Die! Die! |work=The Stuff|accessdate=28 June 2017}}</ref><ref name="ODT-2010">{{cite news |last=Gilchrist |first=Shane |title=Cutting the fat from the form|url=https://www.odt.co.nz/entertainment/music/cutting-fat-form |work=[[Otago Daily Times]] |accessdate=28 June 2017}}</ref>

While at [[Logan Park High School]] in [[Dunedin]], Andrew Wilson and Michael Prain were three-time [[Smokefreerockquest|Pepsismokefree Rockquest]] entrants – in 1999 with The Drummer Smells Nice, then twice with Carriage H. They won the national competition in 2001.<ref>{{cite web|title=Idiot Prayer|url=http://nzmusic.org.nz/artists/rock/idiot-prayer/|website=NZ Music Commission|accessdate=4 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Pepsismokefree Rockquest 2000|url=https://www.nzonscreen.com/title/pepsi-smokefreerockquest-2000|website=NZ On Screen|accessdate=19 September 2016}}</ref><ref name="spinoff-15">{{cite web|title=15 years of Die! Die! Die! – the punk band that won’t, y’know, die|last1=Oliver|first1=Henry|url=https://thespinoff.co.nz/music/nz-on-air-music/31-01-2018/15-years-of-die-die-die-the-punk-band-that-wont-yknow-die/|website=The Spinoff|accessdate=1 February 2018|date=31 January 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Metallers win rockquest|url=http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:lHkA6I2fv8gJ:www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm%3Fc_id%3D1%26objectid%3D10530893+&cd=5&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=nz|accessdate=29 June 2017|agency=NZPA|work=The New Zealand Herald|date=6 September 2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=SFRQ History|url=http://smokefreerockquest.co.nz/sfrq-history/|website=Smokefree Rockquest|accessdate=1 February 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180202012417/http://smokefreerockquest.co.nz/sfrq-history/|archive-date=2 February 2018|url-status=dead}}</ref> With Wilson playing bass, Prain on drums and guitarist/vocalist Tim "Tiddy" Smith, Carriage H released one EP, ''Power of Grey Skull'' in 2002 and disbanded shortly afterwards.

Along with bassist Ricky French, Wilson (who began playing guitar for the first time) and Prain then formed a short-lived Wellington-based group called Rawer.<ref name="chimera-2018">{{cite web|last1="Furlong"|first1="Brian"|title=Andrew Wilson of Die! Die! Die! Talks Their Newest Video "Sinister", Off Album Charm Offensive And Life in New Zealand.|website="The Chimera Magazine"|url=http://thechimeramagazine.com/2018/03/01/andrew-wilson-die-die-die-talks-newest-video-sinister-off-album-charm-offensive-life-new-zealand/|accessdate=1 March 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180302164034/http://thechimeramagazine.com/2018/03/01/andrew-wilson-die-die-die-talks-newest-video-sinister-off-album-charm-offensive-life-new-zealand/|archive-date=2 March 2018|url-status=dead}}</ref> Henry Oliver (who would later become Die! Die! Die!'s second
bassist) saw Rawer perform and recalled their sound as "a sea of pedals and effects".<ref name="spinoff-15" /> In 2003 Wilson and Prain moved again, to Auckland. There they were inspired by the local music scene to form Die! Die! Die! together with bassist Kane Goulter.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Andrews|first1=Chris|title=Rawer (profile)|url=http://thebigcity.co.nz/artists/r/rawer|website=thebigcity|accessdate=29 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Carriage H|url=http://www.muzic.net.nz/artists/47/carriage-h|website=muzic.net.nz|accessdate=19 September 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Die! Die! Die!|url=http://www.muzic.net.nz/artists/1223/die-die-die|website=muzic.net.nz|accessdate=30 June 2017}}</ref><ref name="stuff-2014" /><ref name="ODT-2010">{{cite web|last1=Gilchrist|first1=Shane|title=Cutting the fat from the form|url=https://www.odt.co.nz/entertainment/music/cutting-fat-form|website=Otago Daily Times|accessdate=28 June 2017}}</ref><ref name="themusic-2014">{{cite web |last1=McDougall |first1=Samson |title=Sink Or Swim |url=https://themusic.com.au/features/die-die-die-andrew-watson/BU8WGRgbGh0/02-09-14/ |website=The Music |accessdate=8 June 2020 |date=2 September 2014}}</ref>


Writing in 2018, Oliver recalled being in the crowd at a Die! Die! Die! gig in the summer of 2003–2004. "It was meant to be their last show", and after the apparent disbanding of Die! Die! Die!, Wilson, Prain and Oliver (who had been a member of So To Speak) started a new band – the latter pulling out of a Masters in Cultural Studies to do so.<ref name="Audioculture-hamilton-hardcore">{{cite web|last1=Shute|first1=Gareth|title=The Hardcore/Punk Scene in Auckland and Hamilton, 1994–2004|url=http://www.audioculture.co.nz/scenes/the-hardcore-punk-scene-in-auckland-and-hamilton-1994-2004|website=Audioculture|accessdate=1 March 2018|date=18 January 2018}}</ref><ref name="spinoff-pace">{{cite web |last1=Oliver |first1=Henry |title=What the Pace scheme did for me |url=https://thespinoff.co.nz/politics/29-05-2020/what-the-pace-scheme-did-for-me/ |website=The Spinoff |accessdate=2 June 2020 |date=29 May 2020}}</ref> Initially Wilson and Oliver both played guitar, but the latter ended up as bassist.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Andrews|first1=Chris|title=Die! Die! Die! (profile)|url=http://thebigcity.co.nz/artists/d/die-die-die|website=thebigcity|accessdate=29 June 2017}}</ref>
Writing in 2018, Oliver recalled being in the crowd at a Die! Die! Die! gig in summer 2003–2004. "It was meant to be their last show," and after the apparent disbanding of Die! Die! Die!, Wilson, Prain and Oliver (who had been a member of So To Speak) started a new band – the latter pulling out of a Masters in Cultural Studies course to do so.<ref name="Audioculture-hamilton-hardcore">{{cite web|last=Shute|first=Gareth|title=The Hardcore/Punk Scene in Auckland and Hamilton, 1994–2004|url=http://www.audioculture.co.nz/scenes/the-hardcore-punk-scene-in-auckland-and-hamilton-1994-2004|website=Audioculture|accessdate=1 March 2018|date=18 January 2018}}</ref><ref name="spinoff-pace">{{cite web |last=Oliver |first=Henry |title=What the Pace scheme did for me |url=https://thespinoff.co.nz/politics/29-05-2020/what-the-pace-scheme-did-for-me/ |website=[[The Spinoff]] |accessdate=2 June 2020 |date=29 May 2020}}</ref> Initially Wilson and Oliver both played guitar, but the latter ended up as bass guitarist.<ref>{{cite web |last=Andrews |first=Chris |title=Die! Die! Die! |url=http://thebigcity.co.nz/artists/d/die-die-die |website=thebigcity |accessdate=29 June 2017}}</ref>


<blockquote>"We immediately started practising four or five times a week and soon decided to continue the name Die! Die! Die!. I always liked the name, people already knew the band, and they had recently received NZ On Air funding for a single which was still to be released, so, why start at the bottom of the hill again?" – Henry Oliver, 2018<ref name="spinoff-15"/></blockquote>
<blockquote>"We immediately started practising four or five times a week and soon decided to continue the name Die! Die! Die!. I always liked the name, people already knew the band, and they had recently received NZ On Air funding for a single which was still to be released, so, why start at the bottom of the hill again?" – Henry Oliver, 2018<ref name="spinoff-15"/></blockquote>
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Within weeks of this new incarnation of Die! Die! Die! forming, the band began touring. At first they performed four dates around the North Island, then a national tour followed before they travelled to Australia. "We existed in a constant state of momentum" and within two years had also taken in the UK, Europe, and the USA.<ref name="spinoff-15"/>
Within weeks of this new incarnation of Die! Die! Die! forming, the band began touring. At first they performed four dates around the North Island, then a national tour followed before they travelled to Australia. "We existed in a constant state of momentum" and within two years had also taken in the UK, Europe, and the USA.<ref name="spinoff-15"/>


Henry Oliver recalled that, "we played shows in every town in the country that would have us and eventually, tiny clubs and dive bars around the world. The band wasn’t lazy, daydreamy or unreliable. From the beginning, we practised at least four days a week when we weren’t on tour. When we were, we did it relentlessly, playing everywhere we could, as many times as we could. Unlike other bands I’d been in, it wasn’t a hobby. It was fun, but it wasn’t ''for fun''. It wasn’t a job because it didn’t pay. It was a vocation."<ref name="spinoff-pace" />
Oliver recalled that, "we played shows in every town in the country that would have us and eventually, tiny clubs and dive bars around the world. The band wasn’t lazy, daydreamy or unreliable. From the beginning, we practised at least four days a week when we weren’t on tour. When we were, we did it relentlessly, playing everywhere we could, as many times as we could. Unlike other bands I’d been in, it wasn’t a hobby. It was fun, but it wasn’t ''for fun''. It wasn’t a job because it didn’t pay. It was a vocation."<ref name="spinoff-pace" />


Recorded releases quickly followed the formation of this touring trio, starting with their first EP, ''Die! Die! Die!'' in 2005. A [[Die! Die! Die! (album)|debut, self-titled album]] was recorded the same year, during the band's first trip to the US, at [[Electrical Audio]] in Chicago with [[Steve Albini]], whom the band met through fellow Dunedinites [[High Dependency Unit (band)|HDU]], producing. Wilson later recalled that "we did the first album in two days". It was released in New Zealand in January 2006.<ref name="vine-2010">{{cite web|last1=McMillen|first1=Andrew|title=Die! Die! Die! – interview|url=http://www.thevine.com.au/music/interviews/die!-die!-die!-_-interview.aspx|website=The Vine|accessdate=2 February 2018|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120329233445/http://www.thevine.com.au/music/interviews/die!-die!-die!-_-interview.aspx|archivedate=29 March 2012|date=17 April 2010}}</ref><ref name="stuff-2014" /> An international release followed soon after (including North America on [[SAF Records]]).<ref>{{cite web|title=Die! Die! Die! – Die! Die! Die! (album, master page)|url=https://www.discogs.com/Die-Die-Die-Die-Die-Die/master/318800|publisher=discogs|accessdate=1 February 2018}}</ref>
Recorded releases quickly followed the formation of this touring trio, starting with their first EP, ''Die! Die! Die!'' in 2005. A [[Die! Die! Die! (album)|debut, self-titled album]] was recorded the same year, during the band's first trip to the US, at [[Electrical Audio]] in Chicago with [[Steve Albini]], whom the band met through fellow Dunedinites [[High Dependency Unit (band)|HDU]], producing. Wilson later recalled that "we did the first album in two days". It was released in New Zealand in January 2006.<ref name="vine-2010">{{cite web|last=McMillen|first=Andrew|title=Die! Die! Die! – interview|url=http://www.thevine.com.au/music/interviews/die!-die!-die!-_-interview.aspx|website=The Vine|accessdate=2 February 2018|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120329233445/http://www.thevine.com.au/music/interviews/die!-die!-die!-_-interview.aspx|archivedate=29 March 2012|date=17 April 2010}}</ref><ref name="stuff-2014" /> An international release followed soon after (including North America on [[SAF Records]]).<ref>{{cite web|title=Die! Die! Die! – Die! Die! Die! (album, master page)|url=https://www.discogs.com/Die-Die-Die-Die-Die-Die/master/318800|publisher=discogs|accessdate=1 February 2018}}</ref>


=== Locust Weeks (2006) ===
=== Locust Weeks (2006) ===
In 2006 a second EP, ''[[Locust Weeks (EP)|Locust Weeks]]'', followed. It was co-produced by Kevin McMahon at Marcata Studios in upstate New York. All four tracks of ''Locust Weeks'' were added into the British release of the album ''Die! Die! Die!'', on [[Pet Piranha Records]].
In 2006 a second EP, ''[[Locust Weeks (EP)|Locust Weeks]]'', followed. It was co-produced by Kevin S. McMahon at Marcata Recording in New Paltz, New York. All four tracks of ''Locust Weeks'' were added into the British release of the album ''Die! Die! Die!'', on [[Pet Piranha Records]].


Die! Die! Die! returned to the United States for a tour that included the 2006 edition of Austin, Texas' [[South By Southwest]] festival, where they played "the last slot of the night on the closing night of the festival".<ref name="real-groove-06-sxsw">{{cite magazine |last=Hill |first=Charlotte |date=May 2006 |title=Beers, Steers & Queers |page=38 |magazine=Real Groove |location=New Zealand |publisher=Real Groovy |issue=148 |issn=1172-2096}}</ref> "The ''[[Austin Chronicle]]'' warned that you would lose all indie street cred if you missed them play, and influential UK industry mag ''[[MusicWeek]]'' ended up picking them as one of their ten highlights of SXSW."<ref name="real-groove-06">{{cite magazine |last=Pero |first=Matt |date=May 2006 |title=Resurrection Daze |page=40 |magazine=Real Groove |location=New Zealand |publisher=Real Groovy |issue=148 |issn=1172-2096}}</ref>
Die! Die! Die! returned to the United States for a tour that included the 2006 edition of the Austin, Texas, [[South By Southwest]] festival, where they played "the last slot of the night on the closing night of the festival".<ref name="real-groove-06-sxsw">{{cite magazine |last=Hill |first=Charlotte |date=May 2006 |title=Beers, Steers & Queers |page=38 |magazine=Real Groove |location=New Zealand |publisher=Real Groovy |issue=148 |issn=1172-2096}}</ref> "The ''[[Austin Chronicle]]'' warned that you would lose all indie street cred if you missed them play, and influential UK industry mag ''[[MusicWeek]]'' ended up picking them as one of their ten highlights of SXSW."<ref name="real-groove-06">{{cite magazine |last=Pero |first=Matt |date=May 2006 |title=Resurrection Daze |page=40 |magazine=Real Groove |location=New Zealand |publisher=Real Groovy |issue=148 |issn=1172-2096}}</ref>


Soon after South By Southwest, and fuelled at least in part by connections made at that festival, the band toured with [[Wolfmother]] and played in the UK, mainland Europe, and Japan.<ref name="real-groove-06" /> Henry Oliver, writing in 2016, said, "At the time, Die! Die! Die! existed on a kind of low-budget neverending tour. We’d leave New Zealand for as long as possible, play as many shows we could get in a row and then decamp somewhere until we booked another bunch of shows." He left the band during a month-long break from touring in 2006, going on to law school and eventually becoming a journalist.<ref name="spinoff-pace" /> He was replaced in the band by Australian Lachlan Anderson.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Oliver|first1=Henry|title=About that time I was on Flight of the Conchords|url=https://thespinoff.co.nz/tv/25-06-2017/about-that-time-i-was-on-flight-of-the-conchords/|website=The Spinoff|accessdate=28 June 2017}}</ref><ref name="spinoff-15" />
Soon after South By Southwest, and fuelled at least in part by connections made at that festival, the band toured with [[Wolfmother]] and played in the UK, mainland Europe, and Japan.<ref name="real-groove-06" /> Oliver, writing in 2016, said, "At the time, Die! Die! Die! existed on a kind of low-budget neverending tour. We'd leave New Zealand for as long as possible, play as many shows we could get in a row and then decamp somewhere until we booked another bunch of shows." He left the band during a month-long break from touring in 2006, going on to law school and eventually becoming a journalist.<ref name="spinoff-pace" /> He was replaced in the band by the Australian Lachlan Anderson.<ref>{{cite web|last=Oliver|first=Henry|title=About that time I was on Flight of the Conchords|url=https://thespinoff.co.nz/tv/25-06-2017/about-that-time-i-was-on-flight-of-the-conchords/|website=[[The Spinoff]] |date=25 June 2017 |accessdate=28 June 2017}}</ref><ref name="spinoff-15" />


===''Part Time Punks'' and ''Promises, Promises'' (2007–2008)===
===''Part Time Punks'' and ''Promises, Promises'' (2007–2008)===
On 8 April 2007, Die! Die! Die! played a show at [[The Echo (venue)|the Echo]] in Los Angeles. The resulting six-track live recording, ''Part Time Punks'', included two songs from the ''Die! Die! Die!'' album and one from ''Locust Weeks''. Closing track "Blue Skies" (which dates back to Henry Oliver's time with the band) hadn't been released before, but a studio version would appear as the final track of ''Promises, Promises'' later in the year.
On 8 April 2007, Die! Die! Die! played a show at [[The Echo (venue)|the Echo]] in Los Angeles. The resulting six-track live recording, ''Part Time Punks'', included two songs from the ''Die! Die! Die!'' album and one from ''Locust Weeks''. The closing track, "Blue Skies", (which dates back to Oliver's time with the band) had not been released before, but a studio version did appear as the final track of ''Promises, Promises'' later in the year.


Over the European summer, a reunited [[Slint]] toured Europe with Die! Die! Die! in support.<ref name="spinoff-15" /><ref>{{cite web|title=Slint tour statistics, 2007|url=https://www.setlist.fm/stats/concert-map/slint-6bd6fae6.html?year=2007|website=setlist.fm|accessdate=1 February 2018}}</ref>
Over the European summer, a reunited [[Slint]] toured Europe with Die! Die! Die! in support.<ref name="spinoff-15" /><ref>{{cite web|title=Slint tour statistics, 2007|url=https://www.setlist.fm/stats/concert-map/slint-6bd6fae6.html?year=2007|website=setlist.fm|accessdate=1 February 2018}}</ref>


''[[Promises, Promises (Die! Die! Die! album)|Promises, Promises]]'' was the band's second full-length album. It was recorded near [[New Paltz, New York]] in sessions that Andrew Wilson later described as "ten days in a barn". [[Shayne Carter]] ([[Straitjacket Fits]], [[Dimmer (band)|Dimmer]]) was invited to produce the record by Die! Die! Die!, and as of 2020 it is still the only time he has played that role for another band.<ref name="vine-2010" /><ref name="RNZ-2007" />
''[[Promises, Promises (Die! Die! Die! album)|Promises, Promises]]'' was the band's second full-length album. Returning to work in [[New Paltz, New York]] the album was recorded, and mixed by Kevin S. McMahon at his Marcata Recording in sessions that Wilson later described as "ten days in a barn". [[Shayne Carter]] ([[Straitjacket Fits]], [[Dimmer (band)|Dimmer]]) was invited to produce the record by Die! Die! Die!, and it is still the only time he has played that role for another band.<ref name="vine-2010" /><ref name="RNZ-2007" />


New Zealand saw an October 2007 release for the album, followed by releases around the world (February 2008 in the US). The album saw the band move away from the more hardcore tendencies of their first record towards a more bass- and drum-heavy sound – partly due to the influence of new bassist Lachlan Anderson, but also because a broken hand limited Wilson's guitar-playing.<ref name="stuff-2014" /><ref name="spinoff-15" /> Carter had seen the band at SXSW and said, "Andrew had his broken hand at that point and I said to him, bro you should use that as a weapon, you know? Just make it more minimalist." When he was brought on as producer later, he wanted to remove "bells and whistles" and keep the sound minimalist.<ref name="RNZ-2007">{{cite web |last1=RNZ Music |title=Die! Die! Die! and Shayne Carter (audio) |url=https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/nat-music/audio/2530489/die-die-die-and-shayne-carter |website=RNZ |accessdate=4 June 2020 |date=12 October 2007}}</ref>
New Zealand saw an October 2007 release for the album, followed by releases around the world (February 2008 in the US). The album saw the band move away from the more hardcore tendencies of their first record towards a more bass- and drum-heavy sound – partly due to the influence of the new bass guitarist Lachlan Anderson, but also because a broken hand limited Wilson's guitar-playing.<ref name="stuff-2014" /><ref name="spinoff-15" /> Carter had seen the band at SXSW and said, "Andrew had his broken hand at that point and I said to him, bro you should use that as a weapon, you know? Just make it more minimalist." When he was brought on as producer later, he wanted to remove "bells and whistles" and keep the sound minimalist.<ref name="RNZ-2007">{{cite web |last=RNZ Music |title=Die! Die! Die! and Shayne Carter (audio) |url=https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/nat-music/audio/2530489/die-die-die-and-shayne-carter |website=[[RNZ]] |accessdate=4 June 2020 |date=12 October 2007}}</ref>


In a four-star [[NME]] review, Camilla Pia says that ''Promises Promises'' "is all squeals and yelps, tornado riffs and frantic battered drums – and if that’s not enough for you, it’s emotional, danceable and catchy to boot."<ref>{{cite web|last1=Pia|first1=Camilla|title=Album review: Die! Die! Die!, Promises Promises|url=https://www.nme.com/reviews/album/reviews-die-die-die-9938|website=NME|accessdate=29 June 2017}}</ref> [[The Guardian]], calling Die! Die! Die! "a peculiarly lip-smacking band" also gave four stars.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Rogers|first1=Jude|title=Pop & rock review: Die! Die! Die!, Promises Promises|url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2008/nov/07/die-die-die-promises|accessdate=2 February 2018|work=The Guardian|date=7 November 2008}}</ref>
In a four-star '[[NME]]'' review, Camilla Pia wrote that ''Promises Promises'' "is all squeals and yelps, tornado riffs and frantic battered drums – and if that's not enough for you, it's emotional, danceable and catchy to boot".<ref>{{cite news |last=Pia |first=Camilla |title=Album review: Die! Die! Die!, Promises Promises |url=https://www.nme.com/reviews/album/reviews-die-die-die-9938 |work=NME |accessdate=29 June 2017}}</ref> ''[[The Guardian]]'', calling Die! Die! Die! "a peculiarly lip-smacking band" also gave four stars.<ref>{{cite news |last=Rogers |first=Jude |title=Pop & rock review: Die! Die! Die!, Promises Promises |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2008/nov/07/die-die-die-promises |accessdate=2 February 2018 |work=[[The Guardian]] |date=7 November 2008}}</ref>


===''Form'' (2009–10)===
===''Form'' (2009–10)===
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''Form'' was released in July 2010 during a 13-date tour of New Zealand, then shows in Australia, UK, Europe, and USA followed. Wilson called it "dense sounding".<ref name="ODT-2010" /><ref>{{cite web|title=Album Review: Die! Die! Die! – Form|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/utr/more/NID/2395/Album-Review-Die-Die-Die---Form.utr|website=Under The Radar|accessdate=2 February 2018|date=19 July 2010}}</ref><ref name="spinoff-15"/><ref name="stuff-noiseniks" />
''Form'' was released in July 2010 during a 13-date tour of New Zealand, then shows in Australia, UK, Europe, and USA followed. Wilson called it "dense sounding".<ref name="ODT-2010" /><ref>{{cite web|title=Album Review: Die! Die! Die! – Form|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/utr/more/NID/2395/Album-Review-Die-Die-Die---Form.utr|website=Under The Radar|accessdate=2 February 2018|date=19 July 2010}}</ref><ref name="spinoff-15"/><ref name="stuff-noiseniks" />


It debuted at number 1 on New Zealand's independent charts and number 19 on the National Album charts. The New Zealand Herald gave it a 5/5 rating and called it "certainly their best lot of songs to date".<ref>{{cite web|title=Album Review: Die! Die! Die! Form|url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=10660451|work=The New Zealand Herald|accessdate=2 February 2018|date=22 July 2010}}</ref> Under The Radar judged it "one of the most exciting albums of the year."<ref>{{cite web|last1=Meade|first1=Gareth|title=Album Review: Form by Die! Die! Die!|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/utr/review/CID/359/N/Form.utr|website=Under the Radar|accessdate=2 February 2018|date=19 July 2010}}</ref> In 2011 ''Form'' received [[2011 New Zealand Music Awards|New Zealand Music Award]] nominations for Best Alternative Album and Best Producer, and a [[Taite Music Prize]] nomination.<ref>{{cite web|title=NZ Music Awards 2011 Winners|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/utr/more/NID/4330/NZ-Music-Awards-2011-Winners.utr|website=Under the Radar|accessdate=24 October 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Taite Music Prize|url=http://www.indies.co.nz/imnz/taite-music-prize-in-search-of-the-years-finest-new-zealand-album/|website=indies.co.nz|publisher=Independent Music NZ|accessdate=24 October 2017}}</ref>
It debuted at number 1 on New Zealand's independent charts and number 19 on the National Album charts. The New Zealand Herald gave it a 5/5 rating and called it "certainly their best lot of songs to date".<ref>{{cite web|title=Album Review: Die! Die! Die! Form|url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=10660451|work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] |accessdate=2 February 2018|date=22 July 2010}}</ref> Under The Radar judged it "one of the most exciting albums of the year."<ref>{{cite web|last=Meade|first=Gareth|title=Album Review: Form by Die! Die! Die!|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/utr/review/CID/359/N/Form.utr|website=Under the Radar|accessdate=2 February 2018|date=19 July 2010}}</ref> In 2011 ''Form'' received [[2011 New Zealand Music Awards|New Zealand Music Award]] nominations for Best Alternative Album and Best Producer, and a [[Taite Music Prize]] nomination.<ref>{{cite web|title=NZ Music Awards 2011 Winners|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/utr/more/NID/4330/NZ-Music-Awards-2011-Winners.utr|website=Under the Radar|accessdate=24 October 2017}}<br>- {{cite web |title=Taite Music Prize |url=http://www.indies.co.nz/imnz/taite-music-prize-in-search-of-the-years-finest-new-zealand-album/ |publisher=Independent Music NZ |accessdate=24 October 2017 |archive-date=4 April 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140404035228/http://www.indies.co.nz/imnz/taite-music-prize-in-search-of-the-years-finest-new-zealand-album/|url-status=dead}}</ref>


Die! Die! Die! had signed with a "re-emerging" [[Flying Nun Records]] in 2010, the year after founder Roger Shepherd (with help from others) regained control by buying the label from Warner Music. ''Form'' was only the second album on the newly independent label, and Die! Die! Die!'s only release on it.<ref name="stuff-noiseniks" /><ref name="ODT-2012">{{cite web |last1=Gilchrist |first1=Shane |title=<!--ACTUAL ARTICLE TITLE BELONGS HERE! original text: www.odt.co.nz/entertainment/music/never-say-die--> |website=Otago Daily Times |accessdate=3 June 2020 |date=14 July 2012}}</ref>
Die! Die! Die! had signed with a "re-emerging" [[Flying Nun Records]] in 2010, the year after founder Roger Shepherd (with help from others) regained control by buying the label from Warner Music. ''Form'' was only the second album on the newly independent label, and Die! Die! Die!'s only release on it.<ref name="stuff-noiseniks" /><ref name="ODT-2012">{{cite web |last=Gilchrist |first=Shane |url=https://www.odt.co.nz/entertainment/music/never-say-die |title=Never say die |publisher=[[Otago Daily Times]] |date=14 July 2012 |access-date=28 November 2021}}</ref>


By the time these nominations were received, work had begun on Die! Die! Die!'s next album. Before their next release the band would abandon these early songs and sessions, record something almost entirely different, disband, lose another bassist, leave Flying Nun, and find a new manager.
By the time these nominations were received, work had begun on Die! Die! Die!'s next album. Before their next release the band abandoned these early songs and sessions, recorded something almost entirely different, disbanded, lost another bass guitarist, left Flying Nun, and found a new manager.


===Hiatus and ''Harmony'' (2010–2013)===
===Hiatus and ''Harmony'' (2010–2013)===
Recording sessions for the band's next album had begun before ''Form'' was even released. In April 2010 Wilson had said "we’ve pretty much got a whole good chunk of almost another album done", but nothing from these sessions was ever released.
Recording sessions for the band's next album had begun before ''Form'' was even released. In April 2010 Wilson had said "we’ve pretty much got a whole good chunk of almost another album done", but nothing from these sessions was ever released.


''Harmony'' began to take shape in five days in May 2011 (during a European tour in support of ''Form''), when Die! Die! Die! and producer Chris Townsend completed most of the recording at Black Box, a studio on a French farm. In this new setting, and with Townsend a new contributor, "they threw out most of what they'd planned to record and came up with a whole lot of new material."<ref name="vine-2010" /><ref name="herald-2012">{{cite web|last1=Jenkin|first1=Lydia|title=Die!Die!Die!'s tough times end in Harmony|url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=10818868|website=The New Zealand Herald|accessdate=2 February 2018|date=12 July 2012}}</ref> Two more days of recording happened in Auckland in July shortly before "the band disintegrated".<ref name="stuff-noiseniks" />
''Harmony'' began to take shape in five days in May 2011 (during a European tour in support of ''Form''), when Die! Die! Die! and producer Chris Townsend completed most of the recording at Black Box, a studio on a French farm. In this new setting, and with Townsend a new contributor, "they threw out most of what they'd planned to record and came up with a whole lot of new material."<ref name="vine-2010" /><ref name="herald-2012">{{cite web|last=Jenkin|first=Lydia|title=Die!Die!Die!'s tough times end in Harmony|url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=10818868|website=[[The New Zealand Herald]] |accessdate=2 February 2018|date=12 July 2012}}</ref> Two more days of recording happened in Auckland in July shortly before "the band disintegrated".<ref name="stuff-noiseniks" />


Some of their last shows together were their first in China. After an "amazing...but really gruelling" tour Lachlan Anderson left the band and moved to Melbourne.<ref name="spinoff-15" /> Prain and Wilson also needed a break, which ended up lasting nine months.<ref name="stuff-noiseniks" />
Some of their last shows together were their first in China. After an "amazing...but really gruelling" tour, Anderson left the band and moved to Melbourne.<ref name="spinoff-15" /> Prain and Wilson also needed a break, which ended up lasting nine months.<ref name="stuff-noiseniks" />


<blockquote>"Having been touring almost non-stop for six years when they returned to NZ in June [2011], despite having an album's worth of songs under their belt, they thought Die!Die!Die! was finished. Anderson wanted to move to Melbourne, and Prain and Wilson were sick of each other too."<br />- New Zealand Herald, 12 July 2012<ref name="herald-2012" /></blockquote>
<blockquote>"Having been touring almost non-stop for six years when they returned to NZ in June [2011], despite having an album's worth of songs under their belt, they thought Die!Die!Die! was finished. Anderson wanted to move to Melbourne, and Prain and Wilson were sick of each other too."<br />- New Zealand Herald, 12 July 2012<ref name="herald-2012" /></blockquote>
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As well as being under personal pressure ("We were so close, and it gets to the point where you just need a break. And we all wanted new things from our lives,") the band were unhappy with their Flying Nun contract. With no band and ''Harmony'' still not released, Wilson stepped away from full-time musicianship. He took a job to pay debt, and Die! Die! Die! considered themselves finished.<ref name="herald-2012" /> They cancelled shows in 2011, including what would have their first appearance in Russia.<ref name="spinoff-15" />
As well as being under personal pressure ("We were so close, and it gets to the point where you just need a break. And we all wanted new things from our lives,") the band were unhappy with their Flying Nun contract. With no band and ''Harmony'' still not released, Wilson stepped away from full-time musicianship. He took a job to pay debt, and Die! Die! Die! considered themselves finished.<ref name="herald-2012" /> They cancelled shows in 2011, including what would have their first appearance in Russia.<ref name="spinoff-15" />


During this hiatus, Wilson met bFM station manager Manu Taylor, who became the band's manager and encouraged Wilson to return to the ''Harmony'' recordings.<ref name="herald-2012" /><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/|title=Manager of bFM stands down|last=Drinnan|first=John|date=2015-01-14|work=The New Zealand Herald|access-date=2018-03-06|issn=1170-0777}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.mmf.co.nz/mentors-pages/2016/7/16/manu-taylor|title=Manu Taylor|work=MMF NZ|access-date=2018-03-06}}</ref>
During this hiatus, Wilson met bFM station manager Manu Taylor, who became the band's manager and encouraged Wilson to return to the ''Harmony'' recordings.<ref name="herald-2012" /><ref>{{Cite news |url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/|title=Manager of bFM stands down |last=Drinnan |first=John |date=2015-01-14 |work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] |access-date=2018-03-06|issn=1170-0777}}<br>- {{Cite web |url=http://www.mmf.co.nz/mentors-pages/2016/7/16/manu-taylor |title=Manu Taylor |website=Music Managers Forum Aotearoa |access-date=2018-03-06}}</ref>


<blockquote>"The band was sick of each other and ended. I finished ''Harmony'' on my own and there was no DDD for nine months. I didn’t know if I could be bothered releasing an album with no band. Then Manu Taylor put the pieces back together". – Andrew Wilson, [[AudioCulture]] interview<ref name="audioculture-bio" /></blockquote>
<blockquote>"The band was sick of each other and ended. I finished ''Harmony'' on my own and there was no DDD for nine months. I didn’t know if I could be bothered releasing an album with no band. Then Manu Taylor put the pieces back together". – Andrew Wilson, ''[[AudioCulture]]'' interview<ref name="audioculture-bio" /></blockquote>


Wilson, working without a band, took a different approach to ''Harmony'' than Die! Die! Die!'s previous albums.
Wilson, working without a band, took a different approach to ''Harmony'' than Die! Die! Die!'s previous albums.
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<blockquote>"''Harmony'', that was when the band wasn’t really around. I was just working on my own with different people. I recorded the vocals with Shayne Carter in Dunedin and then re-recorded the vocals in Tasmania and then Chris Townsend, who mastered this album, he really encouraged…not my indulgence, but encouraged what I was doing on guitar in particular. And I think that worked really well." – Andrew Wilson, 2018<ref name="spinoff-15" /></blockquote>
<blockquote>"''Harmony'', that was when the band wasn’t really around. I was just working on my own with different people. I recorded the vocals with Shayne Carter in Dunedin and then re-recorded the vocals in Tasmania and then Chris Townsend, who mastered this album, he really encouraged…not my indulgence, but encouraged what I was doing on guitar in particular. And I think that worked really well." – Andrew Wilson, 2018<ref name="spinoff-15" /></blockquote>


When Die! Die! Die! reformed in early 2012, Michael Logie ([[The Mint Chicks]], F in Math), whom the band had already known for years, became the new bassist.<ref name="stuff-2014" /> He joined only ten days before playing his first live show.<ref name="stuff-noiseniks" /> Wilson said that "Manu, our band manager and good friend, he booked us for some shows and then told us he'd booked them."<ref name="stuff-noiseniks">{{cite news |last1=Anderson |first1=Vicki |title=Dunedin noiseniks recover from tough year |url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/entertainment/7359258/Dunedin-noiseniks-recover-from-tough-year |accessdate=3 June 2020 |publisher=Stuff |date=27 July 2012}}</ref>
When Die! Die! Die! reformed in early 2012, Michael Logie ([[The Mint Chicks]], F in Math), whom the band had already known for years, became the new bass guitarist.<ref name="stuff-2014" /> He joined only ten days before playing his first live show.<ref name="stuff-noiseniks" /> Wilson said that "Manu, our band manager and good friend, he booked us for some shows and then told us he'd booked them."<ref name="stuff-noiseniks">{{cite news |last=Anderson |first=Vicki |title=Dunedin noiseniks recover from tough year |url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/entertainment/7359258/Dunedin-noiseniks-recover-from-tough-year |accessdate=3 June 2020 |website=[[Stuff (website)|Stuff]] |date=27 July 2012}}</ref>


Fourth album ''Harmony'' finally came out in New Zealand in August 2012 on the band's own label, Records Etcetera. They played live shows, including a support slot for [[The Smashing Pumpkins]] at Auckland's Vector Arena, that month. A UK release followed in March 2013 (UK).<ref name="audioculture-bio">{{cite web|last1=Steel|first1=Gary|title=Die! Die! Die! Profile|url=http://www.audioculture.co.nz/people/die-die-die|website=[[Audioculture]]|accessdate=29 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Album Preview: Die! Die! Die! – Harmony|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/news/5430/Album-Preview-Die-Die-Die---Harmony.utr|website=Under The Radar|accessdate=29 June 2017}}</ref> [[Rolling Stone]] and the New Zealand Herald both gave ''Harmony'' four stars.<ref>{{cite web|last1=McMillen|first1=Andrew|title=Rolling Stone album review: Die! Die! Die! ‘Harmony’, August 2012|url=http://andrewmcmillen.com/2012/08/07/rolling-stone-album-review-die-die-die-harmony-august-2012/|website=Andrew McMillen|accessdate=2 February 2018|date=September 2012}}Republished on the author's personal site, including scanned clipping of the review in Rolling Stone</ref>
The fourth album, ''Harmony'', finally came out in New Zealand in August 2012 on the band's own label, Records Etcetera. They played live shows, including a support slot for [[The Smashing Pumpkins]] at Auckland's Vector Arena, that month. A UK release followed in March 2013.<ref name="audioculture-bio">{{cite web|last=Steel|first=Gary|title=Die! Die! Die! Profile|url=http://www.audioculture.co.nz/people/die-die-die|website=[[Audioculture]]|accessdate=29 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Album Preview: Die! Die! Die! – Harmony|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/news/5430/Album-Preview-Die-Die-Die---Harmony.utr|website=Under The Radar|accessdate=29 June 2017}}</ref> ''[[Rolling Stone]]'' and the ''New Zealand Herald'' both gave ''Harmony'' four stars.<ref>{{cite magazine |last=McMillen |first=Andrew |title=Die! Die! Die! 'Harmony' |url=http://andrewmcmillen.com/2012/08/07/rolling-stone-album-review-die-die-die-harmony-august-2012/ |magazine=Rolling Stone |accessdate=2 February 2018 |date=September 2012}} (Republished on the author's personal site, including scanned clipping of the review in ''Rolling Stone''.)</ref>


The band played their fourth [[South By Southwest]] festival in 2013, as part of what Wilson described to national broadcaster [[Radio New Zealand]] as "a pretty filthy tour, pretty full on" with pre-festival shows in Los Angeles, Las Vegas and San Antonio.<ref>{{cite web|title=SXSW 2013 (segment of Music 101)|date=23 March 2013|accessdate=5 March 2018|publisher=Radio New Zealand|url=http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/nat-music/audio/2550026/sxsw}}</ref>
The band played its fourth [[South By Southwest]] festival in 2013, as part of what Wilson described to the national broadcaster [[Radio New Zealand]] as "a pretty filthy tour, pretty full on" with pre-festival shows in Los Angeles, Las Vegas and San Antonio.<ref>{{cite web|title=SXSW 2013 (segment of Music 101)|date=23 March 2013|accessdate=5 March 2018|publisher=[[Radio New Zealand]] |url=http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/nat-music/audio/2550026/sxsw}}</ref>


===''S W I M'' (2014–2015)===
===''S W I M'' (2014–2015)===
''S W I M'' (short for "Someone Who Isn't Me") was released in August 2014.<ref>{{cite web|last=Larsen|first=Paul|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/review/982/S-W-I-M.utr|title=S W I M album review|website=Under The Radar|accessdate=28 June 2017}}</ref> Recording of the album was split across Auckland and London, and it was mixed in Tasmania. Like ''Harmony'', it was produced by Chris Townsend. A heavy touring schedule followed, including three trips to Europe in a year.<ref name="stuff-2014"/>

''S W I M'' (short for "Someone Who Isn't Me") was released in August 2014.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Larsen|first1=Paul|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/review/982/S-W-I-M.utr|title=S W I M album review|website=Under The Radar|accessdate=28 June 2017}}</ref> Recording of the album was split across Auckland and London, and it was mixed in Tasmania. Like ''Harmony'', it was produced by Chris Townsend. A heavy touring schedule followed, including three trips to Europe in a year.<ref name="stuff-2014">{{cite web|last1=Cardy|first1=Tom|URL=http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/music/10406111/Theres-still-life-in-Die-Die-Die|title=There's still life in Die! Die! Die!|website=Stuff|accessdate=28 June 2017}}</ref>


In 2015 the band broke up for about six months:
In 2015 the band broke up for about six months:


<blockquote>"We had been doing this for quite a long time, and you get in a holding pattern. Sometimes the music is not really enough, and you are too close to it to realise that you are not really enjoying it at all. It is also the nature when you are doing it more as a business than as enjoyment." – Andrew Wilson, Die! Die! Die!<ref name="break-EP">{{cite web|last1=Galuskza|first1=Jono|title=Die!Die!Die! back from the death with boat-rocking EP|url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/music/75500369/diediedie-back-from-the-death-with-boatrocking-ep|website=Stuff|publisher=Fairfax New Zealand|accessdate=28 June 2017}}</ref> </blockquote>
<blockquote>"We had been doing this for quite a long time, and you get in a holding pattern. Sometimes the music is not really enough, and you are too close to it to realise that you are not really enjoying it at all. It is also the nature when you are doing it more as a business than as enjoyment." – Andrew Wilson, Die! Die! Die!<ref name="break-EP">{{cite web|last=Galuskza|first=Jono|title=Die!Die!Die! back from the death with boat-rocking EP|url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/music/75500369/diediedie-back-from-the-death-with-boatrocking-ep|website=[[Stuff (website)|Stuff]] |publisher=Fairfax New Zealand|accessdate=28 June 2017}}</ref> </blockquote>


===''What Did You Expect'' and ''Charm. Offensive.'' (2016–2018)===
===''What Did You Expect'' and ''Charm. Offensive.'' (2016–2018)===
<blockquote>"And through it all, the constant is Andrew and Mikey, two high school friends that have been making music together for nearly 20 years – an amazing feat for any act, let alone a band that has thrived on instability, uncertainty and unpredictability." – Henry Oliver, bass guitarist (2004–06), 2018.<ref name="spinoff-15" /></blockquote>


Bass guitarist Mike Logie had reunited with his former Mint Chicks bandmate Kody Nielson in new band Opossum, so when Wilson and Prain decided to start playing together again they recruited Rory Attwell into the reformed Die! Die! Die!. Attwell was one half of the team behind Lightship95, a recording studio on a boat moored in the Thames, where in 2015 the band recorded five tracks in a single day (with Attwell producing). They were released as an EP, ''What Did You Expect''.<ref name="break-EP" /><ref>{{cite web|last=Hughes|first=Paddy|title=Rory Attwell: All Aboard The Lightship95|url=http://www.clashmusic.com/features/rory-attwell-all-aboard-the-lightship95|website=Clash Music|date=11 January 2013 |accessdate=7 July 2017}}</ref>
<blockquote>"And through it all, the constant is Andrew and Mikey, two high school friends that have been making music together for nearly 20 years – an amazing feat for any act, let alone a band that has thrived on instability, uncertainty and unpredictability." – Henry Oliver, former bassist (2004–06), 2018.<ref name="spinoff-15" /></blockquote>

Bassist Mike Logie had reunited with former Mint Chicks bandmate Kody Nielson in new band Opossum, so when Wilson and Prain decided to start playing together again they recruited Rory Attwell into the reformed Die! Die! Die!. Attwell was one half of the team behind Lightship95, a recording studio on a boat moored in the Thames, where in 2015 the band recorded five tracks in a single day (with Attwell producing). They were released as an EP, ''What Did You Expect''.<ref name="break-EP" /><ref>{{cite web|last1=Hughes|first1=Paddy|title=Rory Attwell: All Aboard The Lightship95|url=http://www.clashmusic.com/features/rory-attwell-all-aboard-the-lightship95|website=Clash Music|accessdate=7 July 2017}}</ref>


Die! Die! Die! and Attwell's history dated back to 2009, when Attwell's band [[KASMs]] were a UK support act.<ref name="noisey-2017" /> Their previous recording sessions included ''Form'' demos as well as work on ''Harmony'' and parts of ''S W I M''. He remained UK-based, unlike the other two members, so there were only short windows of time during which all three members could get together to record.<ref name="RNZ-2017">{{cite web|title=Die! Die! Die! aren't dead just yet|date=21 October 2017|url=https://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/nat-music/audio/2018618803/die-die-die-aren-t-dead-just-yet|accessdate=5 March 2018|publisher=[[Radio New Zealand]]}}</ref>
Die! Die! Die! and Attwell's history dated back to 2009, when Attwell's band KASMs were a UK support act.<ref name="noisey-2017" /> Their previous recording sessions included ''Form'' demos as well as work on ''Harmony'' and parts of ''S W I M''. He remained UK-based, unlike the other two members, so there were only short windows of time during which all three members could get together to record.<ref name="RNZ-2017">{{cite web|title=Die! Die! Die! aren't dead just yet|date=21 October 2017|url=https://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/nat-music/audio/2018618803/die-die-die-aren-t-dead-just-yet|accessdate=5 March 2018|publisher=[[Radio New Zealand]]}}</ref>


<blockquote>"It’s changed with Rory, because we never planned to do another record. [...] We had a bit of a break, got offered a couple of shows, did those, and then Rory’s always been a recording engineer and producer so that was a really good asset for us to be able to set up anywhere and do anything. We just started getting a few songs together each time we played." – Mikie Prain, 2018<ref name="spinoff-15" /></blockquote>
<blockquote>"It’s changed with Rory, because we never planned to do another record. [...] We had a bit of a break, got offered a couple of shows, did those, and then Rory’s always been a recording engineer and producer so that was a really good asset for us to be able to set up anywhere and do anything. We just started getting a few songs together each time we played." – Mikie Prain, 2018<ref name="spinoff-15" /></blockquote>
Line 114: Line 110:
In the latter half of 2016, at sessions that were originally intended as rehearsals for upcoming shows, the trio recorded the bulk of their sixth album, ''Charm. Offensive.'', at Lightship95 with Attwell both playing bass and producing. They finished the year with shows in China (including the Concrete and Grass festival), Europe, and the UK before returning to New Zealand for a 10-date summer tour.<ref>{{cite web|title=New Zealand post punk band Die! Die! Die! announce Asian tour|url=https://uniteasia.org/new-zealand-post-punk-band-die-die-die-announce-asian-tour/|website=Unite Asia|accessdate=1 February 2018|date=16 August 2016}}</ref> Another week's recording took place in Dunedin, and the final vocal and guitar parts were recorded at SpaceMonster in Whanganui the morning before a show in Wellington.<ref name="UTR Charm" /><ref name="spinoff-15" />
In the latter half of 2016, at sessions that were originally intended as rehearsals for upcoming shows, the trio recorded the bulk of their sixth album, ''Charm. Offensive.'', at Lightship95 with Attwell both playing bass and producing. They finished the year with shows in China (including the Concrete and Grass festival), Europe, and the UK before returning to New Zealand for a 10-date summer tour.<ref>{{cite web|title=New Zealand post punk band Die! Die! Die! announce Asian tour|url=https://uniteasia.org/new-zealand-post-punk-band-die-die-die-announce-asian-tour/|website=Unite Asia|accessdate=1 February 2018|date=16 August 2016}}</ref> Another week's recording took place in Dunedin, and the final vocal and guitar parts were recorded at SpaceMonster in Whanganui the morning before a show in Wellington.<ref name="UTR Charm" /><ref name="spinoff-15" />


''Charm. Offensive.'' missed a May release date 2017, and was preceded by single "How Soon Is Too Soon (It's Not Vintage, It's Used)" in July. In September Die! Die! Die! played the China Hardcore Music Festival in Wuhan, then the album came out in October.<ref>{{cite web|date=16 August 2017|last1=Unite Asia|title=China’s biggest annual hardcore event CNHC Fest announce full lineup|url=https://uniteasia.org/chinas-biggest-annual-hardcore-event-cnhc-fest-announce-full-lineup/|accessdate=1 February 2018}}</ref> A tour of New Zealand followed.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Mather|first1=Mike|title=From punk rockers to The Mockers: Touring bands making tracks for Hamilton|url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/music/88122487/From-punk-rockers-to-The-Mockers-Touring-bands-making-tracks-for-Hamilton|website=Stuff|accessdate=28 June 2017}}</ref><ref name="UTR Charm">{{cite web|title=Premiere: Die! Die! Die! Unveil 'How Soon Is Too Soon' + Announce New Album|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/news/12863/Premiere-Die-Die-Die-Unveil-How-Soon-Is-Too-Soon--Announce-New-Album.utr|website=Under the Radar|accessdate=7 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Die! Die! Die! Announce Nationwide 'Charm. Offensive' Album Release Tour|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/news/13062/Die-Die-Die-Announce-Nationwide-Charm-Offensive-Album-Release-Tour.utr|website=Under The Radar|accessdate=18 August 2017}}</ref>
''Charm. Offensive.'' missed a May release date 2017, and was preceded by a single, "How Soon Is Too Soon (It's Not Vintage, It's Used)", in July. In September, Die! Die! Die! played at the China Hardcore Music Festival in Wuhan and the album came out in October.<ref>{{cite web|date=16 August 2017|website=Unite Asia|title=China's biggest annual hardcore event CNHC Fest announce full lineup|url=https://uniteasia.org/chinas-biggest-annual-hardcore-event-cnhc-fest-announce-full-lineup/|accessdate=1 February 2018}}</ref> A tour of New Zealand followed.<ref name="UTR Charm">{{cite web |title=Premiere: Die! Die! Die! Unveil 'How Soon Is Too Soon' + Announce New Album |url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/news/12863/Premiere-Die-Die-Die-Unveil-How-Soon-Is-Too-Soon--Announce-New-Album.utr |website=Under the Radar |accessdate=7 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Mather |first=Mike |title=From punk rockers to The Mockers: Touring bands making tracks for Hamilton |url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/music/88122487/From-punk-rockers-to-The-Mockers-Touring-bands-making-tracks-for-Hamilton |website=[[Stuff (website)|Stuff]] |accessdate=28 June 2017}}<br>- {{cite web |title=Die! Die! Die! Announce Nationwide 'Charm. Offensive' Album Release Tour |url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/news/13062/Die-Die-Die-Announce-Nationwide-Charm-Offensive-Album-Release-Tour.utr |website=Under The Radar |accessdate=18 August 2017}}</ref>


Reflecting on the album's lyrics, Wilson said, "I have struggled a lot with my mental health over the years so I would be lying if I said that didn’t play a huge part in the making of this record. This album really was a mix of some of the best times of my life and some of the worst."<ref name="paperboy-17">{{cite web|last1=Hendrikse|first1=India|title=How Post-Punk Indie Bank Die Die Die Continue The Buzz|url=http://www.noted.co.nz/culture/music/how-post-punk-indie-band-die-die-die-continue-the-buzz/|website=Noted|publisher=Paperboy|accessdate=5 March 2018|date=13 October 2017}}</ref> In terms of musical style, Martin Pepperell wrote for Noisey (Vice) that the eclectic album is "a stylistic conversation between post-punk, noise pop, shoegaze, lo-fi, experimental electronica and punk rock".<ref name="noisey-2017">{{cite web|last1=Pepperell|first1=Martin|title=Die! Die! Die! Prove to Be More Than Just a Noise Punk Band from Dunedin|url=https://noisey.vice.com/en_au/article/a3d948/die-die-die-prove-to-be-more-than-just-a-noise-punk-band-from-dunedin|website=Noisey|publisher=Vice|accessdate=5 March 2018|date=24 July 2017}}</ref>
Reflecting on the album's lyrics, Wilson said, "I have struggled a lot with my mental health over the years so I would be lying if I said that didn’t play a huge part in the making of this record. This album really was a mix of some of the best times of my life and some of the worst."<ref name="paperboy-17">{{cite web|last=Hendrikse|first=India|title=How Post-Punk Indie Bank Die Die Die Continue The Buzz|url=http://www.noted.co.nz/culture/music/how-post-punk-indie-band-die-die-die-continue-the-buzz/|website=Noted|publisher=Paperboy|accessdate=5 March 2018|date=13 October 2017}}</ref> In terms of musical style, Martin Pepperell wrote for Noisey (Vice) that the eclectic album is "a stylistic conversation between post-punk, noise pop, shoegaze, lo-fi, experimental electronica and punk rock".<ref name="noisey-2017">{{cite web|last=Pepperell|first=Martin|title=Die! Die! Die! Prove to Be More Than Just a Noise Punk Band from Dunedin|url=https://noisey.vice.com/en_au/article/a3d948/die-die-die-prove-to-be-more-than-just-a-noise-punk-band-from-dunedin|website=Noisey|publisher=Vice|accessdate=5 March 2018|date=24 July 2017}}</ref>


====Critical reception of ''Charm. Offensive.''====
====Critical reception of ''Charm. Offensive.''====
In a four-star review for ''[[The New Zealand Herald]]'', George Fenwick called ''Charm. Offensive.'' "a return to form" and "perhaps their most seamless and confident record to date." He noted that "there's a dynamic rhythm in the song structures and their order that gives the album an engaging depth."<ref>{{cite news|last=Fenwick|first=George|title=Album review: Die Die Die, Charm. Offensive|url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=11938951|accessdate=5 March 2018|work=[[The New Zealand Herald]] |date=2 November 2017}}</ref>


===''O'' and ''This Is Not an Island Anymore'' (2018–2022)===
In a four-star review for [[the New Zealand Herald]], George Fenwick called ''Charm. Offensive.'' "a return to form" and "perhaps their most seamless and confident record to date." He noted that "there's a dynamic rhythm in the song structures and their order that gives the album an engaging depth."<ref>{{cite news|last1=Fenwick|first1=George|title=Album review: Die Die Die, Charm. Offensive|url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=11938951|accessdate=5 March 2018|work=The New Zealand Herald|date=2 November 2017}}</ref>
2018 began with the return of Anderson (bass guitarist on ''Promises, Promises'', ''Form'' and ''Harmony''), initially for four January shows in New Zealand including Auckland's Laneways Festival, then five in Australia in early February.<ref>{{cite web|title=Die! Die! Die! Tour Information|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/tour/7658/Die-Die-Die.utr|website=Under the Radar|accessdate=2 February 2018|date=January 2018}}</ref> His return to the band became permanent.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Hartung |first1=Silke |title=Die! Die! Die!: In Seventh Heaven |url=https://nzmusician.co.nz/features/die-die-die-in-seventh-heaven/ |website=NZ Musician |access-date=20 September 2024 |date=2022}}</ref>


In 2019, a 4-track EP, ''O'', was released online and in a limited run of vinyl pressings. It was recorded in Melbourne and was the first Die! Die! Die! recording with Anderson since the ''Harmony'' sessions in 2011.<ref>{{cite web |title=O {{!}} Die! Die! Die! |url=https://diediedie.bandcamp.com/album/o |website=Bandcamp |accessdate=28 May 2020}}</ref>
===''O'' (2018–2020)===
2018 began with the return of Lachlan Anderson (bassist on ''Promises, Promises'', ''Form'', and ''Harmony''), initially for four January shows in New Zealand including Auckland's Laneways Festival, then five in Australia in early February.<ref>{{cite web|title=Die! Die! Die! Australian tour|url=https://www.facebook.com/tours/349499962126174/|via=Facebook|accessdate=2 February 2018}}{{Primary source inline|date=September 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Die! Die! Die! Tour Information|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/tour/7658/Die-Die-Die.utr|website=Under the Radar|accessdate=2 February 2018|date=January 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last1=Die! Die! Die!|title=Post announcing Lachlan Anderson's return|url=https://www.facebook.com/diediedieband/photos/a.10151785737878589.1073741827.19217848588/10155231271793589/?type=3&theater|via=Facebook|accessdate=2 February 2018|date=2 January 2018}}{{Primary source inline|date=September 2020}}</ref> His reinclusion in the band became permanent.


In 2020, another short release, "I Seek Misery" b/w "450", and in early 2022 ''This Is Not an Island Anymore'', came out. It is the band's seventh album and debuted at number 32 on the New Zealand album charts.<ref>{{cite web |title=Tāmaki Punks Die! Die! Die! Announce New Album 'This Is Not An Island Anymore' |url=https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/CU2111/S00189/tamaki-punks-die-die-die-announce-new-album-this-is-not-an-island-anymore.htm |website=Scoop |access-date=25 January 2022 |date=November 19, 2021}}<br>- {{cite web |title=Official New Zealand Top 40 Albums - #4132 - 28 February 2022 |url=https://www.muzic.net.nz/charts/c110029/official-new-zealand-top-40-albums |website=Muzic.net.nz |access-date=20 July 2022 |date=28 February 2022}}</ref>
In 2019 a new 4-track EP, ''O'', was released online and in a limited run of vinyl pressings. It was recorded in Melbourne and was the first Die! Die! Die! recording to feature Anderson since the ''Harmony'' sessions in 2011.<ref>{{cite web |title=O {{!}} Die! Die! Die! |url=https://diediedie.bandcamp.com/album/o |website=Bandcamp |accessdate=28 May 2020}}</ref>

==Live shows==
Die! Die! Die! toured with [[Franz Ferdinand (band)|Franz Ferdinand]], [[Slint]], [[The Brian Jonestown Massacre]], [[The Pixies]] and [[The Blood Brothers (band)|The Blood Brothers]], and played at several major festivals around the world including spots at [[SXSW]], [[Incubate (festival)|Incubate]], China Hardcore Music Festival and Concrete and Grass.<ref name="spinoff-15" />


==Members==
==Members==
;Current members
*Andrew Wilson – lead vocals, guitar <small>(2003–present)</small>
*Michael Prain – drums <small>(2003–present)</small>
*Lachlan Anderson – bass guitar, backing vocals <small>(2006–2012, 2018–present)</small>


;Former members
*Andrew Wilson (guitar, vocals)
*Kane Goulter – bass guitar <small>(2003)</small>
*Michael Prain (drums)
*Henry Oliver – bass guitar, guitar <small>(2003–2006)</small>
*Lachlan Anderson (bass)
*Michael Logie – bass guitar <small>(2012–2016)</small>

*Rory Attwell – bass guitar, backing vocals, production <small>(2016–2018)</small>
===Former bassists===

*Kane Goulter
*Henry Oliver (2003–06, including the ''Die! Die! Die!'' EP and album)
*Lachlan Anderson (''Promises, Promises''; ''Form''; ''Harmony'')
*Mike Logie (''S W I M'')
*Rory Attwell (''What Did You Expect''; ''Charm. Offensive'')

==Live shows==

Die! Die! Die! have toured with [[Franz Ferdinand (band)|Franz Ferdinand]], [[Slint]], [[The Brian Jonestown Massacre]], [[Wolfmother]] and [[The Blood Brothers (band)|The Blood Brothers]], and have played several major festivals around the world including spots at [[SXSW]], [[Incubate (festival)|Incubate]], China Hardcore Music Festival, and Concrete and Grass.<ref name="spinoff-15" />


==Discography==
==Discography==
'''Albums'''
{| border="2" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 1em 1em 1em 0; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;"
* [[Die! Die! Die! (album)|''Die! Die! Die!'']] (2006)
|-
* [[Promises, Promises (Die! Die! Die! album)|''Promises, Promises'']] (2008)
!align="center" valign="top"|Date of Release
* ''Form'' (2010)
!align="center" valign="top"|Title
* ''Harmony'' (2012)
!align="center" valign="top"|Label
* ''S W I M'' (2014)
!align="center" valign="top"|Country
* ''Charm. Offensive'' (2017)
!align="center" valign="top"|Cat. Number
* ''This Is Not an Island Anymore'' (2022)
|-
'''EP's'''
|-
* ''[[Die! Die! Die! (EP)]]'' (2005)
|- bgcolor="#DDDDDD"
* ''[[Locust Weeks]]'' (2006)
| colspan=8 align=center | '''Albums'''
* 7" split with High Dependency Unit (2007)
|-
* Part Time Punks: At the Echo ''–'' April 8th, 2007 (2007)
|2006
* What Did You Expect (2015)
|''[[Die! Die! Die! (album)|Die! Die! Die!]]''
* O (2019)
|[[Capital Recordings]], Pet Piranha Records, SAF Records
* Smelter (2022)
|[[New Zealand]], [[Australia]], [[UK]], [[United States]]
|CREC1034<br/>PP020<br/>SAF15
|-
|2008
|''[[Promises, Promises (Die! Die! Die! album)|Promises, Promises]]''
|Tardus Music, SAF Records
|New Zealand, United States
|SAF20
|-
|2010
|''Form''
|[[Flying Nun Records]], Golden Antenna Records
|New Zealand, Australia, Europe
|FNCD504
|-
|2012
|''Harmony''
|Records Etcetera, Golden Antenna Records, Smalltown America<ref name="Contact review Harmony">{{cite web|last1=Gourlay|first1=Dom|title=Die! Die! Die! – Harmony Album Review|url=http://www.contactmusic.com/die-die-die/music/die-die-die-harmony|website=Contact Music|accessdate=29 June 2017}}</ref>
|New Zealand, Europe, UK
|REC012
|-
|2014
|''S W I M''
|Black Night Crash Records, Sounds of Subterrania
|New Zealand, Australia, Europe
|
|-
|2017
|''Charm. Offensive.''
|
|
|
|-
|- bgcolor="#DDDDDD"
| colspan=7 align=center | '''EPs'''
|-
|2005
|''[[Die! Die! Die! (EP)|Die! Die! Die!]]''
|[[Unstable Ape Records]]
|New Zealand, Australia
|UAR 041
|-
|2006
|''[[Locust Weeks (EP)|Locust Weeks]]''
|Tardus Music
|New Zealand, Australia
|TAR 010
|-
|2007
|''7" Split with High Dependency Unit''
|Independent Release
|New Zealand
|HDUDDD
|-
|2007
|''Part Time Punks: At the Echo – April 8th, 2007''
|Kufala Recordings
|United States
|KUF0187
|-
|2015
|''What Did You Expect''
|Bad Health
|New Zealand, Australia, Europe
|
|-
|2019
|''O''
|
|New Zealand, Australia
|}


== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist|30em}}
{{reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.diediedie.co.nz Official]
* {{official|http://www.diediedie.co.nz}}
* [http://diediedie.bandcamp.com Bandcamp]
* ''[http://diediedie.bandcamp.com Bandcamp]''
* [http://www.myspace.com/diediedienz MySpace]
* ''[http://www.myspace.com/diediedienz MySpace]''



{{Authority control}}
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[[Category:New Zealand punk rock groups]]
[[Category:New Zealand punk rock groups]]
[[Category:Flying Nun Records artists]]
[[Category:Flying Nun Records artists]]
[[Category:Musical groups from Dunedin]]

Latest revision as of 23:03, 30 December 2024

Die! Die! Die!
OriginNew Zealand
Genres
Years active2003–present
LabelsOK!Relax
Etch N Sketch
Capital Recordings
SAF Records
Tardus Music
Inertia Distribution
Smalltown America
RedEye Distribution
Flying Nun Records
MembersAndrew Wilson
Michael Prain
Lachlan Anderson
Past membersMichael Logie
Henry Oliver
Kane Goulter
Rory Attwell

Die! Die! Die! (sometimes styled Die!Die!Die!) is a three-piece New Zealand noise pop/punk/post-punk band. Formed in late 2003, the band has released seven albums, all backed with extensive international touring. A number of different bass guitarists have played alongside the permanent members, Andrew Wilson (guitar, vocals) and Michael Prain (drums). Lachlan Anderson's second spell with the band began in 2018.

History

[edit]

The Drummer Smells Nice, Carriage H and Rawer (1999–2004)

[edit]

While at Logan Park High School in Dunedin, Wilson and Prain were three-time Pepsismokefree Rockquest entrants – in 1999 with The Drummer Smells Nice, then twice with Carriage H. They won the national competition in 2001.[1][2] With Wilson playing bass guitar, Prain on drums and the guitarist/vocalist Tim "Tiddy" Smith, Carriage H released one EP, Power of Grey Skull, in 2002 and disbanded shortly afterwards.

Along with the bass guitarist Ricky French, Wilson (who began playing guitar for the first time) and Prain then formed a short-lived Wellington-based group called Rawer.[3] Henry Oliver (who later became Die! Die! Die!'s second bass guitarist) saw Rawer perform and recalled the sound as "a sea of pedals and effects".[1] In 2003, Wilson and Prain moved again, to Auckland. There they were inspired by the local music scene to form Die! Die! Die! together with Kane Goulter on bass guitar.[4][5][6]

Writing in 2018, Oliver recalled being in the crowd at a Die! Die! Die! gig in summer 2003–2004. "It was meant to be their last show," and after the apparent disbanding of Die! Die! Die!, Wilson, Prain and Oliver (who had been a member of So To Speak) started a new band – the latter pulling out of a Masters in Cultural Studies course to do so.[7][8] Initially Wilson and Oliver both played guitar, but the latter ended up as bass guitarist.[9]

"We immediately started practising four or five times a week and soon decided to continue the name Die! Die! Die!. I always liked the name, people already knew the band, and they had recently received NZ On Air funding for a single which was still to be released, so, why start at the bottom of the hill again?" – Henry Oliver, 2018[1]

First tours and the Die! Die! Die! EP and album (2004 – early 2006)

[edit]

Within weeks of this new incarnation of Die! Die! Die! forming, the band began touring. At first they performed four dates around the North Island, then a national tour followed before they travelled to Australia. "We existed in a constant state of momentum" and within two years had also taken in the UK, Europe, and the USA.[1]

Oliver recalled that, "we played shows in every town in the country that would have us and eventually, tiny clubs and dive bars around the world. The band wasn’t lazy, daydreamy or unreliable. From the beginning, we practised at least four days a week when we weren’t on tour. When we were, we did it relentlessly, playing everywhere we could, as many times as we could. Unlike other bands I’d been in, it wasn’t a hobby. It was fun, but it wasn’t for fun. It wasn’t a job because it didn’t pay. It was a vocation."[8]

Recorded releases quickly followed the formation of this touring trio, starting with their first EP, Die! Die! Die! in 2005. A debut, self-titled album was recorded the same year, during the band's first trip to the US, at Electrical Audio in Chicago with Steve Albini, whom the band met through fellow Dunedinites HDU, producing. Wilson later recalled that "we did the first album in two days". It was released in New Zealand in January 2006.[10][5] An international release followed soon after (including North America on SAF Records).[11]

Locust Weeks (2006)

[edit]

In 2006 a second EP, Locust Weeks, followed. It was co-produced by Kevin S. McMahon at Marcata Recording in New Paltz, New York. All four tracks of Locust Weeks were added into the British release of the album Die! Die! Die!, on Pet Piranha Records.

Die! Die! Die! returned to the United States for a tour that included the 2006 edition of the Austin, Texas, South By Southwest festival, where they played "the last slot of the night on the closing night of the festival".[12] "The Austin Chronicle warned that you would lose all indie street cred if you missed them play, and influential UK industry mag MusicWeek ended up picking them as one of their ten highlights of SXSW."[13]

Soon after South By Southwest, and fuelled at least in part by connections made at that festival, the band toured with Wolfmother and played in the UK, mainland Europe, and Japan.[13] Oliver, writing in 2016, said, "At the time, Die! Die! Die! existed on a kind of low-budget neverending tour. We'd leave New Zealand for as long as possible, play as many shows we could get in a row and then decamp somewhere until we booked another bunch of shows." He left the band during a month-long break from touring in 2006, going on to law school and eventually becoming a journalist.[8] He was replaced in the band by the Australian Lachlan Anderson.[14][1]

Part Time Punks and Promises, Promises (2007–2008)

[edit]

On 8 April 2007, Die! Die! Die! played a show at the Echo in Los Angeles. The resulting six-track live recording, Part Time Punks, included two songs from the Die! Die! Die! album and one from Locust Weeks. The closing track, "Blue Skies", (which dates back to Oliver's time with the band) had not been released before, but a studio version did appear as the final track of Promises, Promises later in the year.

Over the European summer, a reunited Slint toured Europe with Die! Die! Die! in support.[1][15]

Promises, Promises was the band's second full-length album. Returning to work in New Paltz, New York the album was recorded, and mixed by Kevin S. McMahon at his Marcata Recording in sessions that Wilson later described as "ten days in a barn". Shayne Carter (Straitjacket Fits, Dimmer) was invited to produce the record by Die! Die! Die!, and it is still the only time he has played that role for another band.[10][16]

New Zealand saw an October 2007 release for the album, followed by releases around the world (February 2008 in the US). The album saw the band move away from the more hardcore tendencies of their first record towards a more bass- and drum-heavy sound – partly due to the influence of the new bass guitarist Lachlan Anderson, but also because a broken hand limited Wilson's guitar-playing.[5][1] Carter had seen the band at SXSW and said, "Andrew had his broken hand at that point and I said to him, bro you should use that as a weapon, you know? Just make it more minimalist." When he was brought on as producer later, he wanted to remove "bells and whistles" and keep the sound minimalist.[16]

In a four-star 'NME review, Camilla Pia wrote that Promises Promises "is all squeals and yelps, tornado riffs and frantic battered drums – and if that's not enough for you, it's emotional, danceable and catchy to boot".[17] The Guardian, calling Die! Die! Die! "a peculiarly lip-smacking band" also gave four stars.[18]

Form (2009–10)

[edit]

After touring for almost three years worldwide, the band began working on a third album in Dunedin. After writing and rehearsing, mainly at Chicks Hotel in Port Chalmers, they recorded Form over nine days in Auckland with producer Nick Roughan (Skeptics) in August 2009. It was their first album recorded in New Zealand.[6] In April 2010 Wilson said that Form was "finished...in November", although it wasn't released for another half a year.[10]

Even while Form was in production and work had begun on its successor, Die! Die! Die! kept touring. What seemed to the band like a reduced schedule for 2009–10 was summarised as:

"We haven’t done much touring this year. Last year we only did about three tours or so. We did one two-month European tour and one month in Europe. We did a couple of New Zealand tours and I think we only went to Australia twice last year. I think we only played Brisbane once and that was with Wolfmother." – Andrew Wilson, April 2010[10]

Form was released in July 2010 during a 13-date tour of New Zealand, then shows in Australia, UK, Europe, and USA followed. Wilson called it "dense sounding".[6][19][1][20]

It debuted at number 1 on New Zealand's independent charts and number 19 on the National Album charts. The New Zealand Herald gave it a 5/5 rating and called it "certainly their best lot of songs to date".[21] Under The Radar judged it "one of the most exciting albums of the year."[22] In 2011 Form received New Zealand Music Award nominations for Best Alternative Album and Best Producer, and a Taite Music Prize nomination.[23]

Die! Die! Die! had signed with a "re-emerging" Flying Nun Records in 2010, the year after founder Roger Shepherd (with help from others) regained control by buying the label from Warner Music. Form was only the second album on the newly independent label, and Die! Die! Die!'s only release on it.[20][24]

By the time these nominations were received, work had begun on Die! Die! Die!'s next album. Before their next release the band abandoned these early songs and sessions, recorded something almost entirely different, disbanded, lost another bass guitarist, left Flying Nun, and found a new manager.

Hiatus and Harmony (2010–2013)

[edit]

Recording sessions for the band's next album had begun before Form was even released. In April 2010 Wilson had said "we’ve pretty much got a whole good chunk of almost another album done", but nothing from these sessions was ever released.

Harmony began to take shape in five days in May 2011 (during a European tour in support of Form), when Die! Die! Die! and producer Chris Townsend completed most of the recording at Black Box, a studio on a French farm. In this new setting, and with Townsend a new contributor, "they threw out most of what they'd planned to record and came up with a whole lot of new material."[10][25] Two more days of recording happened in Auckland in July shortly before "the band disintegrated".[20]

Some of their last shows together were their first in China. After an "amazing...but really gruelling" tour, Anderson left the band and moved to Melbourne.[1] Prain and Wilson also needed a break, which ended up lasting nine months.[20]

"Having been touring almost non-stop for six years when they returned to NZ in June [2011], despite having an album's worth of songs under their belt, they thought Die!Die!Die! was finished. Anderson wanted to move to Melbourne, and Prain and Wilson were sick of each other too."
- New Zealand Herald, 12 July 2012[25]

As well as being under personal pressure ("We were so close, and it gets to the point where you just need a break. And we all wanted new things from our lives,") the band were unhappy with their Flying Nun contract. With no band and Harmony still not released, Wilson stepped away from full-time musicianship. He took a job to pay debt, and Die! Die! Die! considered themselves finished.[25] They cancelled shows in 2011, including what would have their first appearance in Russia.[1]

During this hiatus, Wilson met bFM station manager Manu Taylor, who became the band's manager and encouraged Wilson to return to the Harmony recordings.[25][26]

"The band was sick of each other and ended. I finished Harmony on my own and there was no DDD for nine months. I didn’t know if I could be bothered releasing an album with no band. Then Manu Taylor put the pieces back together". – Andrew Wilson, AudioCulture interview[27]

Wilson, working without a band, took a different approach to Harmony than Die! Die! Die!'s previous albums.

"Harmony, that was when the band wasn’t really around. I was just working on my own with different people. I recorded the vocals with Shayne Carter in Dunedin and then re-recorded the vocals in Tasmania and then Chris Townsend, who mastered this album, he really encouraged…not my indulgence, but encouraged what I was doing on guitar in particular. And I think that worked really well." – Andrew Wilson, 2018[1]

When Die! Die! Die! reformed in early 2012, Michael Logie (The Mint Chicks, F in Math), whom the band had already known for years, became the new bass guitarist.[5] He joined only ten days before playing his first live show.[20] Wilson said that "Manu, our band manager and good friend, he booked us for some shows and then told us he'd booked them."[20]

The fourth album, Harmony, finally came out in New Zealand in August 2012 on the band's own label, Records Etcetera. They played live shows, including a support slot for The Smashing Pumpkins at Auckland's Vector Arena, that month. A UK release followed in March 2013.[27][28] Rolling Stone and the New Zealand Herald both gave Harmony four stars.[29]

The band played its fourth South By Southwest festival in 2013, as part of what Wilson described to the national broadcaster Radio New Zealand as "a pretty filthy tour, pretty full on" with pre-festival shows in Los Angeles, Las Vegas and San Antonio.[30]

S W I M (2014–2015)

[edit]

S W I M (short for "Someone Who Isn't Me") was released in August 2014.[31] Recording of the album was split across Auckland and London, and it was mixed in Tasmania. Like Harmony, it was produced by Chris Townsend. A heavy touring schedule followed, including three trips to Europe in a year.[5]

In 2015 the band broke up for about six months:

"We had been doing this for quite a long time, and you get in a holding pattern. Sometimes the music is not really enough, and you are too close to it to realise that you are not really enjoying it at all. It is also the nature when you are doing it more as a business than as enjoyment." – Andrew Wilson, Die! Die! Die![32]

What Did You Expect and Charm. Offensive. (2016–2018)

[edit]

"And through it all, the constant is Andrew and Mikey, two high school friends that have been making music together for nearly 20 years – an amazing feat for any act, let alone a band that has thrived on instability, uncertainty and unpredictability." – Henry Oliver, bass guitarist (2004–06), 2018.[1]

Bass guitarist Mike Logie had reunited with his former Mint Chicks bandmate Kody Nielson in new band Opossum, so when Wilson and Prain decided to start playing together again they recruited Rory Attwell into the reformed Die! Die! Die!. Attwell was one half of the team behind Lightship95, a recording studio on a boat moored in the Thames, where in 2015 the band recorded five tracks in a single day (with Attwell producing). They were released as an EP, What Did You Expect.[32][33]

Die! Die! Die! and Attwell's history dated back to 2009, when Attwell's band KASMs were a UK support act.[34] Their previous recording sessions included Form demos as well as work on Harmony and parts of S W I M. He remained UK-based, unlike the other two members, so there were only short windows of time during which all three members could get together to record.[35]

"It’s changed with Rory, because we never planned to do another record. [...] We had a bit of a break, got offered a couple of shows, did those, and then Rory’s always been a recording engineer and producer so that was a really good asset for us to be able to set up anywhere and do anything. We just started getting a few songs together each time we played." – Mikie Prain, 2018[1]

In the latter half of 2016, at sessions that were originally intended as rehearsals for upcoming shows, the trio recorded the bulk of their sixth album, Charm. Offensive., at Lightship95 with Attwell both playing bass and producing. They finished the year with shows in China (including the Concrete and Grass festival), Europe, and the UK before returning to New Zealand for a 10-date summer tour.[36] Another week's recording took place in Dunedin, and the final vocal and guitar parts were recorded at SpaceMonster in Whanganui the morning before a show in Wellington.[37][1]

Charm. Offensive. missed a May release date 2017, and was preceded by a single, "How Soon Is Too Soon (It's Not Vintage, It's Used)", in July. In September, Die! Die! Die! played at the China Hardcore Music Festival in Wuhan and the album came out in October.[38] A tour of New Zealand followed.[37][39]

Reflecting on the album's lyrics, Wilson said, "I have struggled a lot with my mental health over the years so I would be lying if I said that didn’t play a huge part in the making of this record. This album really was a mix of some of the best times of my life and some of the worst."[40] In terms of musical style, Martin Pepperell wrote for Noisey (Vice) that the eclectic album is "a stylistic conversation between post-punk, noise pop, shoegaze, lo-fi, experimental electronica and punk rock".[34]

Critical reception of Charm. Offensive.

[edit]

In a four-star review for The New Zealand Herald, George Fenwick called Charm. Offensive. "a return to form" and "perhaps their most seamless and confident record to date." He noted that "there's a dynamic rhythm in the song structures and their order that gives the album an engaging depth."[41]

O and This Is Not an Island Anymore (2018–2022)

[edit]

2018 began with the return of Anderson (bass guitarist on Promises, Promises, Form and Harmony), initially for four January shows in New Zealand including Auckland's Laneways Festival, then five in Australia in early February.[42] His return to the band became permanent.[43]

In 2019, a 4-track EP, O, was released online and in a limited run of vinyl pressings. It was recorded in Melbourne and was the first Die! Die! Die! recording with Anderson since the Harmony sessions in 2011.[44]

In 2020, another short release, "I Seek Misery" b/w "450", and in early 2022 This Is Not an Island Anymore, came out. It is the band's seventh album and debuted at number 32 on the New Zealand album charts.[45]

Live shows

[edit]

Die! Die! Die! toured with Franz Ferdinand, Slint, The Brian Jonestown Massacre, The Pixies and The Blood Brothers, and played at several major festivals around the world including spots at SXSW, Incubate, China Hardcore Music Festival and Concrete and Grass.[1]

Members

[edit]
Current members
  • Andrew Wilson – lead vocals, guitar (2003–present)
  • Michael Prain – drums (2003–present)
  • Lachlan Anderson – bass guitar, backing vocals (2006–2012, 2018–present)
Former members
  • Kane Goulter – bass guitar (2003)
  • Henry Oliver – bass guitar, guitar (2003–2006)
  • Michael Logie – bass guitar (2012–2016)
  • Rory Attwell – bass guitar, backing vocals, production (2016–2018)

Discography

[edit]

Albums

EP's

  • Die! Die! Die! (EP) (2005)
  • Locust Weeks (2006)
  • 7" split with High Dependency Unit (2007)
  • Part Time Punks: At the Echo April 8th, 2007 (2007)
  • What Did You Expect (2015)
  • O (2019)
  • Smelter (2022)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Oliver, Henry (31 January 2018). "15 years of Die! Die! Die! – the punk band that won't, y'know, die". The Spinoff. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  2. ^ "Idiot Prayer". NZ Music Commission. Retrieved 4 July 2017.
    - "Pepsismokefree Rockquest 2000". NZ On Screen. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
    - "SFRQ History". Smokefree Rockquest. Archived from the original on 2 February 2018. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
    - "Metallers win rockquest". The New Zealand Herald. NZPA. 6 September 2008. Retrieved 29 June 2017.
  3. ^ Furlong, Brian. "Andrew Wilson of Die! Die! Die! Talks Their Newest Video "Sinister", Off Album Charm Offensive And Life in New Zealand". The Chimera Magazine. Archived from the original on 2 March 2018. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  4. ^ Andrews, Chris. "Rawer". thebigcity. Retrieved 29 June 2017.
    - McDougall, Samson (2 September 2014). "Sink Or Swim". The Music. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
    - "Carriage H". muzic.net.nz. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
    - "Die! Die! Die!". muzic.net.nz. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e Cardy, Tom. "There's still life in Die! Die! Die!". The Stuff. Retrieved 28 June 2017.
  6. ^ a b c Gilchrist, Shane. "Cutting the fat from the form". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 28 June 2017.
  7. ^ Shute, Gareth (18 January 2018). "The Hardcore/Punk Scene in Auckland and Hamilton, 1994–2004". Audioculture. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  8. ^ a b c Oliver, Henry (29 May 2020). "What the Pace scheme did for me". The Spinoff. Retrieved 2 June 2020.
  9. ^ Andrews, Chris. "Die! Die! Die!". thebigcity. Retrieved 29 June 2017.
  10. ^ a b c d e McMillen, Andrew (17 April 2010). "Die! Die! Die! – interview". The Vine. Archived from the original on 29 March 2012. Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  11. ^ "Die! Die! Die! – Die! Die! Die! (album, master page)". discogs. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  12. ^ Hill, Charlotte (May 2006). "Beers, Steers & Queers". Real Groove. No. 148. New Zealand: Real Groovy. p. 38. ISSN 1172-2096.
  13. ^ a b Pero, Matt (May 2006). "Resurrection Daze". Real Groove. No. 148. New Zealand: Real Groovy. p. 40. ISSN 1172-2096.
  14. ^ Oliver, Henry (25 June 2017). "About that time I was on Flight of the Conchords". The Spinoff. Retrieved 28 June 2017.
  15. ^ "Slint tour statistics, 2007". setlist.fm. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  16. ^ a b RNZ Music (12 October 2007). "Die! Die! Die! and Shayne Carter (audio)". RNZ. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  17. ^ Pia, Camilla. "Album review: Die! Die! Die!, Promises Promises". NME. Retrieved 29 June 2017.
  18. ^ Rogers, Jude (7 November 2008). "Pop & rock review: Die! Die! Die!, Promises Promises". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  19. ^ "Album Review: Die! Die! Die! – Form". Under The Radar. 19 July 2010. Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  20. ^ a b c d e f Anderson, Vicki (27 July 2012). "Dunedin noiseniks recover from tough year". Stuff. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
  21. ^ "Album Review: Die! Die! Die! Form". The New Zealand Herald. 22 July 2010. Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  22. ^ Meade, Gareth (19 July 2010). "Album Review: Form by Die! Die! Die!". Under the Radar. Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  23. ^ "NZ Music Awards 2011 Winners". Under the Radar. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
    - "Taite Music Prize". Independent Music NZ. Archived from the original on 4 April 2014. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  24. ^ Gilchrist, Shane (14 July 2012). "Never say die". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  25. ^ a b c d Jenkin, Lydia (12 July 2012). "Die!Die!Die!'s tough times end in Harmony". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  26. ^ Drinnan, John (14 January 2015). "Manager of bFM stands down". The New Zealand Herald. ISSN 1170-0777. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
    - "Manu Taylor". Music Managers Forum Aotearoa. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  27. ^ a b Steel, Gary. "Die! Die! Die! Profile". Audioculture. Retrieved 29 June 2017.
  28. ^ "Album Preview: Die! Die! Die! – Harmony". Under The Radar. Retrieved 29 June 2017.
  29. ^ McMillen, Andrew (September 2012). "Die! Die! Die! 'Harmony'". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2 February 2018. (Republished on the author's personal site, including scanned clipping of the review in Rolling Stone.)
  30. ^ "SXSW 2013 (segment of Music 101)". Radio New Zealand. 23 March 2013. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  31. ^ Larsen, Paul. "S W I M album review". Under The Radar. Retrieved 28 June 2017.
  32. ^ a b Galuskza, Jono. "Die!Die!Die! back from the death with boat-rocking EP". Stuff. Fairfax New Zealand. Retrieved 28 June 2017.
  33. ^ Hughes, Paddy (11 January 2013). "Rory Attwell: All Aboard The Lightship95". Clash Music. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  34. ^ a b Pepperell, Martin (24 July 2017). "Die! Die! Die! Prove to Be More Than Just a Noise Punk Band from Dunedin". Noisey. Vice. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  35. ^ "Die! Die! Die! aren't dead just yet". Radio New Zealand. 21 October 2017. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  36. ^ "New Zealand post punk band Die! Die! Die! announce Asian tour". Unite Asia. 16 August 2016. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  37. ^ a b "Premiere: Die! Die! Die! Unveil 'How Soon Is Too Soon' + Announce New Album". Under the Radar. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  38. ^ "China's biggest annual hardcore event CNHC Fest announce full lineup". Unite Asia. 16 August 2017. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  39. ^ Mather, Mike. "From punk rockers to The Mockers: Touring bands making tracks for Hamilton". Stuff. Retrieved 28 June 2017.
    - "Die! Die! Die! Announce Nationwide 'Charm. Offensive' Album Release Tour". Under The Radar. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
  40. ^ Hendrikse, India (13 October 2017). "How Post-Punk Indie Bank Die Die Die Continue The Buzz". Noted. Paperboy. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  41. ^ Fenwick, George (2 November 2017). "Album review: Die Die Die, Charm. Offensive". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  42. ^ "Die! Die! Die! Tour Information". Under the Radar. January 2018. Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  43. ^ Hartung, Silke (2022). "Die! Die! Die!: In Seventh Heaven". NZ Musician. Retrieved 20 September 2024.
  44. ^ "O | Die! Die! Die!". Bandcamp. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
  45. ^ "Tāmaki Punks Die! Die! Die! Announce New Album 'This Is Not An Island Anymore'". Scoop. 19 November 2021. Retrieved 25 January 2022.
    - "Official New Zealand Top 40 Albums - #4132 - 28 February 2022". Muzic.net.nz. 28 February 2022. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
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