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The Farm

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Wikimp3 information about the music of The Farm. On our website we have 22 albums and 70 collections of artist The Farm. You can find useful information and download songs of this artist. We also know that The Farm represents Pop genres.

Biography

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One of the stranger overnight success stories in pop history, the chameleon-like Farm was formed in Liverpool, England in 1983 by singer Peter Hooton, a one-time youth worker searching for a musical outlet to voice his political concerns. Rounded out by guitarist Stevie Grimes, bassist Phil Strongman and drummer Andy McVann, the first incarnation of the Farm recalled both the leftist identity and horn-powered sound of the Redskins; dubbed "the Soul of Socialism," the group promoted its music not only through live appearances but also via The End, a soccer fanzine published by Hooton.

Despite a handful of independent singles and the addition of a full-time brass section comprised of Anthony Evans, Steve Levy, George Maher, and John Melvin, the Farm found little interest in their pop-flavored Northern soul. Still they soldiered on, even weathering the 1986 death of McVann, who perished in a car crash after attempting to outrun the police. With drummer Roy Boulter installed as McVann's replacement and bassist Carl Hunter substituting for the newly exited Strongman, the Farm dropped their horn section and added keyboardist Benjamin Leach and second guitarist Keith Mullen, resulting in a move toward synth pop; 1988's "Body and Soul," their fourth overall single and the first from their new lineup, became a minor club hit.

Still, the Farm struggled; finally, in 1990 they approached dance producer Terry Farley, who agreed to produce a sample-heavy cover of the Monkees' "Stepping Stone." The single fell just shy of the Top 40, and suddenly the group found themselves aligned with the baggy pants club culture movement promoted by the likes of Happy Mondays and the Soup Dragons. The Farm's next single, "Groovy Train," hit the U.K. Top Ten, while the anthemic follow-up, "All Together Now" — based on the melody of Pachelbel's Canon — landed in the Top Five and sold over 500,000 copies.

Eight years after their inception, the Farm finally issued their debut LP, Spartacus, in 1991; the album entered the British charts at number one, and international deals with Sony and Sire quickly followed. The band's moment in the limelight was a brief one, however; their next two singles, "Don't Let Me Down" and "Mind," both failed to penetrate the Top 30, and 1991's quickly produced follow-up LP, Love See No Colour, sank without a trace. Aside from a Top 20 cover of the Human League's "Don't You Want Me?" in 1992, the Farm essentially vanished from sight, releasing 1994's Hullabaloo to minimal notice. Although the band continued to tour, they made very few visits to the recording studio, issuing only a 2004 remix of "All Together Now," released as the anthem of the England national team at Euro 2004.

Title: Gone - Single

Artist: The Farm

Genre: Rock

Title: Farm

Artist: The Farm

Genre: Rock, Punk Rock

Title: Feel The Love (Single)

Artist: The Farm

Genre: Pop

Title: Mud - Single

Artist: The Farm

Genre: Country

Collections

Title: One Hit Wonders CD 3

Genre: Pop

Title: Relics Vol 2

Genre: Psychedelic

Title: 100 Percent 90s CD1

Genre: Pop

Title: Britpop Anthems

Genre: Rock, Pop

Title: Seriously 90s (CD2)

Genre: Pop

Title: Techno Pop (CD1)

Genre: Techno, Pop

Title: 100 Hits Dad (CD4)

Genre: Rock

Title: 100 Hits: Dad

Genre: Rock

Featuring albums

Title: Just Say Anything

Artist: Just Say Yes

Genre: Rock, Pop

Title: UK Sound

Artist: Various Artists

Genre: Rock, Punk Rock

Genres