Releases by history
There are multiple artists on this page.
1. HISTORY (히스토리) is a 5-member South Korean group formed in 2013, under LOEN Entertainment. They debuted on April 26th, 2013 with their first single album “Dreamer”.
The group consists of Jang Yijeong (main vocal), Na Dokyun (main vocal), Kim Jaeho (sub-vocal and rapper), Song Kyungil (leader, sub-vocal, rapper) and Kim Sihyoung (rapper).
2. History is Daisy Caplan (Lung, Foxy Shazam) and Leo Ashline (Street Sects). In 2011, two strangers connected over the internet to collaborate on a set of noisy, bass-driven collage-punk pieces. Written and recorded over two days in a basement in Louisville, KY, the instrumental material was a flash of frustration over the interpersonal conflict Caplan’s former band found itself embroiled in. Ashline was deep in the throes of addiction at the time; much of the vocals were written and recorded under the influence of hard drugs at various locations in Austin, TX. These two worlds almost collided when Ashline briefly moved to Cincinnati to properly start the band while Caplan was on tour in the UK. A series of drug-related episodes exploded the nascent project and sent Leo to his rock-bottom and subsequent rehab, inspiring him to commit to a sobriety that has held strong ever since.
Now, nearly a decade later, these songs finally find a proper release via The Flenser. Swift and manic, the seven tracks on History represent a bridge between two people and two places, both literally and figuratively. It is a transition from hopelessness to hope, from a total lack of self worth to the beginnings of a sense of confidence and newfound purpose.
History may not have existed, but that didn’t stop it from being a hidden influence on the lives of those involved.
3. History was an anonymous electronic studio act from the United Kingdom, best - if not exclusively - known for their downtempo hit 'Afrika' (1990), recorded Q-Tee.
Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.