Birds of Wales

Birds of Wales
Origin Ontario, Canada
Genres Folk rock, indie rock, pop
Years active 2005–2011
Labels Sparks Music/Emi
Associated acts Morgan Cameron Ross
Website birdsofwales.com
Members Morgan Cameron Ross
Past members Mike Caputo
Ben Standage
Paul Barry
Scott Christian
Mike Tersigni
Daniel Taylor
Benjamin Keith

Birds of Wales is an indie folk rock band based in Ontario.

Birds of Wales have toured Europe five times with everyone from Xavier Rudd to Dragonette to The Sadies, had their video for "Cinderella" on full rotation on MuchMoreMusic, received extensive radio play across North America and the UK. Birds of Wales are headquartered out of Toronto, Canada, and inevitably spend most of their time on the road.

Tracks from Birds of Wales' first CD received significant airplay on Canadian commercial & college radio, and have been broadcast across North America on XM and Sirius Satellite Radio. Bow song, My Lady; in July was the most played song on "The Verge," XM's new music station, in June 2006. Birds of Wales has also earned the attention of fans in Europe, releasing their Fall of the 49 CD in the UK and Spain on Invisible Hands Music (Thomas Dolby, The JAM) following five successful European tours in 16 months time. The first single from this disc, Cinderella (Has Nothing on You), was featured on a compilation CD - 560,000 copies of which were distributed throughout Ireland earlier this year. The video for Cinderella also was on full rotation on MuchMoreMusic in Canada.

Birds of Wales released their first full length album, Belgravia Hotel, on Sparks Music/Emi in Canada on April 13, 2010. The first single off the record is the song, Uninteresting.

Birds of Wales' lead singer, Morgan Cameron Ross, is also the front man of band, Bellwoods. Morgan Cameron Ross is also a songwriter known for writing for/with such artists as Ryan Cabrera, Bobby Bazini,[1] Sarah Slean, Hawksley Workman, Ron Sexsmith and many others.

Band members

Interviews

Footnotes

  1. IXDaily Article

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, February 28, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.