Band History
- Tootho and the Ring of Confidence, with band members including Simon McLean and Clint Small
- The Obsessions, with band members including Simon McLean and Graham Pitt
- The Young Charlatans, with band members including Ollie Olsen
- The Boys Next Door: members Nick Cave, Mick Harvey, Tracy Pew, and Phill Calvert
- The Birthday Party, with the same band members
- Honeymoon In Red, released as a Lydia Lunch album, Lydia Lunch, Nick Cave, Mick Harvey, J.G. Thirlwell, Thurston Moore, Murray Mitchell, Tracy Pew, Genevieve McGuckin (Nick Cave and Mick Harvey are uncredited on the album)
- Crime & the City Solution, with band members Simon Bonney, Bronwyn Adams, Mick Harvey, Alexander Hacke, Epic Soundtracks, Harry Howard
- These Immortal Souls, with band members Genevieve McGuckin, Harry Howard, Epic Soundtracks
- Nikki Sudden and the Jacobites
- Teenage Snuff Film, (Rowland S. Howard solo album featuring Mick Harvey and Brian Hooper)
- Pop Crimes, (Rowland S. Howard's second solo album featuring Mick Harvey, JP Shilo and Jonnine Standish of HTRK)
Read more about this topic: Rowland S. Howard
Famous quotes containing the words band and/or history:
“What passes for identity in America is a series of myths about ones heroic ancestors. Its astounding to me, for example, that so many people really seem to believe that the country was founded by a band of heroes who wanted to be free. That happens not to be true. What happened was that some people left Europe because they couldnt stay there any longer and had to go someplace else to make it. They were hungry, they were poor, they were convicts.”
—James Baldwin (19241987)
“The steps toward the emancipation of women are first intellectual, then industrial, lastly legal and political. Great strides in the first two of these stages already have been made of millions of women who do not yet perceive that it is surely carrying them towards the last.”
—Ellen Battelle Dietrick, U.S. suffragist. As quoted in History of Woman Suffrage, vol. 4, ch. 13, by Susan B. Anthony and Ida Husted Harper (1902)