One Thousand Motels

Music duo From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

One Thousand Motels is a collaboration duo of Rat Scabies (The Damned) and Chris Constantinou (The Wolfmen, Sinéad O'Connor, Adam Ant, The Mutants).

Years active2020–present
MembersChris Constantinou (multi-instrumentalist)
Rat Scabies (drums)
Quick facts Background information, Genres ...
One Thousand Motels
Background information
Genresrock, psychedelia, punk, funk, blues, rock and roll
Years active2020–present
MembersChris Constantinou (multi-instrumentalist)
Rat Scabies (drums)
Websiteonethousandmotels.com
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History

The bassist/multi-instrumentalist Chris Constantinou and drum legend Rat Scabies collaborated for some years as core members of The Mutants rock supergroup. When making the fourth Mutants album, Rat noticed also some other demos Chris was working on and this turned into the project One Thousand Motels, involving only the two of them (quicker and easier to put in practice, considering the logistics around The Mutants musicians as a supergroup).[1][2]

Their music is characterized by Vive Le Rock as "upbeat rock songs with a twist in the lyrical tail"[3][4] and by Midlands Rock as "a match seemingly made in rock ‘n’ roll heaven (or a punky purgatory)".[5] In 2020, they released the album 2% out of Sync, described in reviews as forging new ground.[5][6] The album was co-produced and mixed by Nicholas de Carlo[5][6]

The second album Get In Where You Fit In was released in April 2021, with Sean Wheeler (Josh Homme, Lemmy Kilmister, Robby Krieger) as vocalist. At its creation also participated American musicians like guitarist Hal Lindes (Dire Straits), Marc Franklin and Arthur Edmaiston from Memphis on Horns (Aretha Franklin, Isaac Hayes, Snoop Dogg, Stevie Wonder) and Jonathan Moore with the First Street Choir from Mississippi. The musicians from London are the percussionist Preston Heyman (Kate Bush, Massive Attack, Terence Trent D'Arby), on harmonica Steve 'West' Weston (Roger Daltrey, Wilko Johnson), on slide guitar Dave Ahern, The Specials Brass Section & Su Robinson (The South Brass) and pianist Diz Watson (Dr. John).[4] The album was noticed for its blend of gospel, soul, funk, blues, and rock with Deep South nuances.[7][8]

Discography

References

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