Looper are a Scottish indie-pop band, fronted by Stuart David, former Belle and Sebastian bassist. The band formed in 1998 for a show at the Glasgow School of Art, and released their first single "Impossible Things" on the Subpop label a few months later.

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dbpedia-owl:MusicalArtist/background
  • group_or_band
dbpedia-owl:Person/activeYearsEndDate
  • 1998-01-01 00:00:00 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:Person/activeYearsStartDate
  • 1998-01-01 00:00:00 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:activeYearsEndDate
  • 1998-01-01 00:00:00 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:activeYearsStartDate
  • 1998-01-01 00:00:00 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:background
  • group_or_band
dbpedia-owl:genre
dbpprop:abstract
  • Looper are a Scottish indie-pop band, fronted by Stuart David, former Belle and Sebastian bassist. The band formed in 1998 for a show at the Glasgow School of Art, and released their first single "Impossible Things" on the Subpop label a few months later. Originally comprising of Stuart and his wife Karn (who was mainly responsible for visual elements in the live shows, such as video projections, super 8 films, kinetic sculptures and photographic projections), they soon became a fully fledged band, adding Ronnie Black (guitarist) and Scott Twynholm (keyboards) to their line up. Their first full length album Up a Tree (1999) was released on Subpop in the US and Jeepster in the rest of the world, and was followed by The Geometrid in 2000, on the same labels. After touring the US for three months with The Flaming Lips in 2000 they signed to Mute Records for five albums. They recorded and released one, The Snare, and then walked away from Mute; shocked by the conservative approach of the once cutting-edge label, which sold itself to EMI during Looper's tenure. Since then, Looper have been releasing their music free to the public at their Looperama website, funding this experiment by licensing the use of their songs in high-profile Hollywood films and ad campaigns, including the film Vanilla Sky and a Xerox campaign. Other films their songs have appeared in include The Edukators, The Girl Next Door, Out Cold, and Dog Park. Their most recognizable song is "Mondo '77". This song is featured in the film Vanilla Sky along with the track "My Robot", and in The Girl Next Door. These two songs are also featured in the Xbox game Project Gotham Racing. Both of these tracks were taken from Looper's second album The Geometrid. "Mondo '77" also appears on the American Dad episode "All About Steve". It has also been featured in American television commercials for Xerox and Partnership for a Drug-Free America. The song "Burning Flies", from the album Up a Tree, is part of the soundtrack to the Mission Hill episode "Stories of Hope and Forgiveness".
dbpprop:background
  • group_or_band
dbpprop:currentMembers
  • Stuart David Karn David Ronnie Black Scott Twynholm
dbpprop:genre
dbpprop:id
  • 1a93096e-62a6-4c6f-8f78-72e752c0d6f0
dbpprop:label
  • None
dbpprop:myspaceMusicProperty
  • Looper
  • looperama
dbpprop:name
  • Looper
dbpprop:origin
  • Glasgow, Scotland
dbpprop:reference
dbpprop:url
dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbpprop:wordnet_type
dbpprop:yearsActive
  • 1998 -
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • Looper are a Scottish indie-pop band, fronted by Stuart David, former Belle and Sebastian bassist. The band formed in 1998 for a show at the Glasgow School of Art, and released their first single "Impossible Things" on the Subpop label a few months later.
rdfs:label
  • Looper (band)
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  • Looper
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