Dead Pony

Scottish pop punk band From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dead Pony, formerly known as Crystal, is a band from Glasgow, Scotland, formed in 2015. Initially a duo comprising Anna Shields and Blair Crichton, the pair formed Crystal with three of their university classmates. Two years later, Shields and Crichton formed a new quartet with Lizzie Reid and Aidan McAllister and released numerous singles as Crystal, before Liam Adams replaced Reid. The band changed their name to Dead Pony in 2020.

Also known asCrystal (2015–2020)
OriginGlasgow, Scotland
Genres
Years active2015–present
Quick facts Background information, Also known as ...
Dead Pony
Dead Pony performing in 2024
Dead Pony performing in 2024
Background information
Also known asCrystal (2015–2020)
OriginGlasgow, Scotland
Genres
Years active2015–present
Label
Members
  • Anna Shields
  • Blair Crichton
  • Liam Adams
  • Euan Lyons
Past members
  • Lewis Clarke
  • George McGarrity
  • Ross Taylor
  • Aidan McAllister
  • Lizzie Reid
Websitedeadponyband.com
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After Euan Lyons replaced McAllister, the band released the EP War Boys and the album Ignore This; the latter charted at No. 8 on the Scottish Album Charts. They have variously been inspired by Kathleen Hanna, Hayley Williams, Nirvana, the Breeders, Wolf Alice, Fleetwood Mac, Courtney Barnett, N.E.R.D., Justin Timberlake, Limp Bizkit, and the Prodigy. Their music has been described as a combination of pop-punk, nu metal and rock.[1]

History

2015–2019: Formation and early releases

In 2015,[2] Anna Shields, seeking a guitarist to make music with, contacted Blair Crichton.[3] The pair bonded over their love of 1990s grunge bands,[2] and eventually began making music as a duo.[3] They chose the name Crystal after an early track reminded Shields of a Spyro the Dragon sound effect triggered by Spyro collecting gems and crystals.[2] Shields and Crichton were later joined by Lewis Clarke, George McGarrity, and Ross Taylor, who Shields was studying alongside at the University of the West of Scotland.[a] The band won a competition to support Paolo Nutini at a BBC Scotland's Hogmanay concert[5] and released the singles "Passed Down"[3] and "Sugar Sweet" in 2017.[6]

The band diversified into blues rock and then into grunge; around this time, Clarke, McGarrity, and Taylor left.[2] Shields and Crichton would later form a quartet with Lizzie Reid and Aidan McAllister.[2] In 2018, they released "Heaven", a track written from the perspective of a theist questioning their belief system, alongside a music video.[5] The group released "Sex Rich" in January 2019[7] and re-released "Sugar Sweet" in April 2019.[8] After winning the Pirate Prodigy 2019 contest, they released "Speak of the Devil".[9] Reid then left the band[10] and was replaced by Liam Adams in late 2019.[11]

2020–2022: Name change and War Boys

"A horse – a pony – is one of the most beautiful, majestic creatures on the planet, and there's something really tragic about the idea of it lying there dead. That sense of waste, and the anger and confusion it brings, reflects what we've been feeling recently – but coming to terms with it has kinda' become the vibe of this band." [sic]

Shields talking to The Sunflower Lounge in 2023[12]

In April 2020,[12] the band renamed themselves "Dead Pony", which was the original title of their then-unreleased track "Everything is Easy".[10] The song is an attempt at conveying the feelings of betrayal the band had felt as children when they were told that Santa Claus was fictional.[13] By changing the name of the band, Shields and Crichton sought to tighten up its image.[14] "Everything is Easy" was released on 1 May 2020, their first release on LAB Records.[10] A subsequent track, "Sharp Tongues", focusing on rumours and those who start them, was released in July,[15] with a self-shot music video released that September.[16] In November 2020, the band were nominated for "Best Rock/Alternative Act" at the Scottish Alternative Music Awards,[17] an award won by Fauves;[18] they were later nominated for that award ceremony's Sound of Young Scotland Award in 2022, which was won by Berta Kennedy.[19]

Later that month, the band announced that they were working on an EP and released "23, Never Me",[17] a punk rock track[20] about ending unhealthy friendships.[17] Euan Lyons replaced McAllister in mid-2021.[b] The band then released a further single in March 2022, "Bullet Farm",[23] which was based around a riff from a chase scene in Mad Max: Fury Road (2015).[21] That June, they released "Zero" and announced their debut EP, War Boys,[24] which was entirely Mad Max-themed;[25] they released the EP's title track and then the EP that September,[26] followed by a cover version of Nelly Furtado's "Maneater" in December.[27]

2023–present: Ignore This

Vocalist Anna Shields in 2024

In June 2023, they released "MK Nothing", a track Shields wrote after dreaming of a woman brainwashed by MKUltra to assassinate villains,[28] alongside a music video.[29] This was followed by "Mana" in July, a track describing survival in a post-apocalyptic ghost town,[30] "Cobra" in August, a combination of rock music and break beats,[31] and the lost love ballad "About Love" the month after that.[32] In November, the band won the P&J Live Spotlight Award at the Scottish Music Awards.[33]

The band announced their debut album, Ignore This, in December 2023, alongside the release of new videos for "Cobra" and "About Love". The album got its title from the band's experience of being ignored,[34] and was recorded during two weeks in a Scottish Highlands cabin, during which time it rained constantly.[35] On the last day, they wrote the self-empowerment track "Rainbows" after the rain stopped and they saw one in the sky;[36] they released the track as a single that March,[37] followed by its music video the month after.[38] Ignore This was released in April 2024 and featured "MK Nothing", "Mana", "Cobra", "About Love", "Rainbows",[36] four interludes,[39] and seven other tracks.[36] Designed to evoke surfing between VHS tapes,[39] the album charted at No. 8 on the Scottish Albums Chart[40] and was nominated for the Scottish Album of the Year Award.[41] The band released a further single, "Everything Burns", in November 2024,[42] followed by a video for it the month after.[43]

Artistry

Shields stated in an April 2018 interview with The Skinny that she personally took inspiration from Kathleen Hanna, the lead vocalist of Bikini Kill,[5] while Lauren Jack of The Scotsman wrote that Shields "clearly" took inspiration from Paramore's Hayley Williams, even to the point of replicating some of her dance moves.[44] Iain Smith wrote in November 2020 that Shields was "from the pop and indie spheres with elements of grunge" and that Crichton's influences included metal and hard rock.[14] Crichton himself suggested in 2023 that "Nirvana's simple, tasteful chord progressions and interesting note choices" had moulded the band's sound.[45]

"Heaven"'s style was influenced by Nirvana and the Breeders, while the song's vocals were inspired by Wolf Alice and Fleetwood Mac, and its music video was initially inspired by the works of Courtney Barnett and Wolf Alice.[5] Their cover of "Maneater" was inspired by N.E.R.D., Justin Timberlake, and Limp Bizkit, as the band were listening to significant volumes of music from the early 2000s at the time,[27] while "Everything Burns" was inspired by Batman[42] and the musical stylings of "Cobra" were inspired by the Prodigy, who the band described as their "idols" in a 2024 Rock Sound interview.[36]

Emma Flynn of DIY described "23, Never Me" as "menacing" pop-punk and likened its chorus to works by Marmozets,[46] while Alex Curle of When the Horn Blows described War Boys as having "flairs and dabbles of grunge, punk and hard rock with sounds similar to the soft and hard undertones of Wolf Alice and Bikini Kill".[47] Reviewing Ignore This, Samantha Hall of Distorted Sound wrote that the album "features everything from nu-metal riffs to pop-punk energy, as well as classic rock guitar solos and electro-synth".[39] Lizzie Reid deputised on tour for Liam Adams in 2024 after he broke his arm on tour.[48]

Members

Current members

  • Anna Shields – vocals, guitar (2015–present)
  • Blair Crichton – guitar (2015–present)
  • Liam Adams – bass (2019–present)
  • Euan Lyons – drums (2021–present)

Former members

  • George McGarrity – bass (2015–2018)
  • Lizzie Reid – bass (2018–2019)
  • Ross Taylor – keyboards (2015–2018)
  • Lewis Clarke – drums (2015–2018)
  • Aidan McAllister – drums (2018–2021)

Touring members

  • Lizzie Reid – bass (2024)

Timeline

Discography

Albums

More information Title, Album details ...
List of albums, with selected chart positions
Title Album details Peak chart
positions
UK Indie
[40]
SCO
[40]
Ignore This
(Dead Pony)
  • Released: 5 April 2024[49]
  • Format: CD, digital, LP
  • Label: LAB Records
118
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EPs

More information Title, Details ...
Title Details
Youth
(Crystal)
Sex Rich
(Crystal)
War Boys
(Dead Pony)
RAINBOWS
(Dead Pony)
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Singles

As lead artist

More information Title, Year ...
Singles as lead artist
Title Year Album Ref.
"Heaven"
(Crystal)
2018 Non-album single [51]
"Sex Rich"
(Crystal)
2019 Sex Rich [52]
"Sugar Sweet"
(Crystal)
[53]
"Speak of the Devil"
(Crystal)
Non-album single [54]
"Everything is Easy"
(Dead Pony)
2020 [49]
"Sharp Tongues"
(Dead Pony)
[49]
"23, Never Me"
(Dead Pony)
War Boys [49]
"Bullet Farm"
(Dead Pony)
2022 [49]
"Zero"
(Dead Pony)
[49]
"War Boys"
(Dead Pony)
[49]
"Maneater"
(Dead Pony)
Non-album single [49]
"MK Nothing"
(Dead Pony)
2023 Ignore This [49]
"Mana"
(Dead Pony)
[49]
"Cobra"
(Dead Pony)
[49]
"About Love"
(Dead Pony)
[49]
"Rainbows"
(Dead Pony)
2024 [49]
"Generation Gap"
(Mazare & Dead Pony)
The Losers Club[55] [49]
"Everything Burns" Non-album single [49]
"Eat My Dust" 2026 Non-album single [49]
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Other appearances

More information Song, Year ...
Song Year Album Ref.
"Siren"
(Crystal)
2015 Blastproof 2015 [56]
"Paper"
(Crystal)
[56]
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Tours

Headlining

  • Ignore This Tour (2024)[57]

Supporting

Notes

    • For Taylor's name being Ross, see [4].
    • For everything else, see.[3]
    • For the fact that he replaced McAllister, see [21].
    • For mid-2021, see [11].
    • For the fact that his name was in fact Euan Lyons, see.[22]

References

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