Scott B. Sympathy

Scott B. Sympathy
Birth name Scott Bradshaw
Origin Canada
Genres Indie rock
Country
Occupation(s) singer/songwriter
Years active 1990 present
Labels Ruffianrecords
Associated acts Stratochief

Scott Bradshaw, who records as Scott B. Sympathy, is a Canadian indie rock musician. He released several albums with his eponymously named band in the 1990s, and subsequently became a member of Stratochief following the 1999 death of that band's singer Greg McConnell.

The name "Scott B. Sympathy" was originally intended as the name of the band, with his own stage name simply being "Scott B." However, this was so frequently misunderstood by fans and music journalists that when crediting the band's 1996 album Long Way Down to "The Sympathy" still failed to resolve the confusion, Bradshaw eventually relented and adopted "Scott B. Sympathy" as his own stage name.[1]

His debut album, 1990's Neil Yonge Street, was titled with a pun combining Toronto, Ontario's Yonge Street with the name of one of Bradshaw's idols, Neil Young. His final solo album, "Unfinished Sympathy", was also titled with a pun, referencing Schubert's famous "Unfinished Symphony" (The album title bears no relation to Massive Attack's 1991 single called "Unfinished Sympathy", which Bradshaw was unaware of at the time of the album's release.)

In 2010, he was playing in a duo with former Sympathy member, slide guitarist Gord Cumming, under the name "Massey Harris".

He had one notable hit on the Canadian charts, "Drinking With the Poet" in 1993.

Discography

Scott B. Sympathy

Stratochief

References

  1. Kennedy, Rudyard. "Biography: Scott B. Sympathy". Allmusic. Retrieved 2 July 2010.


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