Paul Banks (singer)
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Paul Banks | |
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File:Interpol - Rock am Ring 2015-9006.jpg
Paul Banks in 2015
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Background information | |
Birth name | Paul Julian Banks |
Also known as | Julian Plenti DJ Fancypants |
Born | Clacton-on-Sea, Essex, England |
3 May 1978
Genres | Indie rock, alternative rock, post-punk revival |
Instruments | Vocals, guitar, piano, drums, bass guitar |
Years active | 1997–present |
Labels | Capitol, EMI, Matador |
Associated acts | Interpol, No Planes in Space, Chad Hugo, RZA |
Website | bankspaulbanks |
Notable instruments | |
Gibson Les Paul Custom Fender Jaguar Gibson Flying V Gibson ES-175 |
Paul Julian Banks (born 3 May 1978) is an English American musician, singer, songwriter and DJ. He is best known as the lead vocalist, lyricist and guitarist of the rock band Interpol. Banks previously released an album named Julian Plenti is... Skyscraper in early August 2009 under the name Julian Plenti. His solo material is now recorded under the name of Paul Banks. As a singer, Banks' voice lies in the baritone range.[1]
Contents
Early life and personal life
Banks was born in Clacton-on-Sea, Essex, England.[2] His family left England when he was three years old, moving to Bloomfield Hills, Michigan,[2] and then to Spain.[citation needed] His father was later transferred to Mexico, where Banks finished high school at the American School Foundation,[3] where he was involved in theatre productions, and played the lead role in the musical South Pacific.[citation needed] He speaks fluent Spanish with a Castilian and Mexican accent.
After high school, Banks attended New York University where he studied English and Comparative Literature,[4] and after graduating, he worked at magazines such as Gotham and Interview.[citation needed] Banks later took a job in data entry,[5] and then in a café,[6] in order to devote more of his time to music. Banks was inspired to become a musician by the group Nirvana.[7]
In contrast to Interpol's smooth and melancholic sound Paul Banks has been a fan of hip hop music since he was in seventh grade.[8] He has worked as a hip-hop DJ, under the pseudonym DJ Fancypants.[8]
In an October 2012 interview, former supermodel Helena Christensen described Banks as her boyfriend and said that she was often traveling to Panama to watch Banks surf on a volcanic beach far away from everything.[9]
Interpol
Banks joined the band in the summer of 1997 when he ran into Daniel Kessler, whom he had met on a study abroad program in Paris. When asked to join Interpol, Banks initially refused, but after listening to the type of music they were writing, he joined.
Banks' voice, singing style, and lyrics have been strongly compared to, most notably, Ian Curtis of Joy Division. Banks has said that he does not try to emulate his greatest influences because he thinks he cannot live up to them, saying "I would never try to sing like Frank Black or Kurt Cobain because you just can't do it".[10]
Since the recording of the newest Interpol album El Pintor Banks has assumed bass duties, and in the new music video for the song "All The Rage Back Home" Banks can be seen playing a Fender Precision Bass.
Solo project
Banks released a solo album under the name Julian Plenti on 4 August 2009 entitled Julian Plenti Is... Skyscraper. Banks claims to have multiple solo projects and monikers in mind. He released a five song EP entitled Julian Plenti Lives... on 26 June 2012.[11][12] His second full-length studio album, Banks was announced on 6 August 2012[13][14] and was released on 22 October 2012.
- Julian Plenti Is... Skyscraper (2009)
- Julian Plenti Lives... (2012)
- Banks (2012)
- Everybody on My Dick Like They Supposed to Be (2013; with contributions by Talib Kweli, El-P, High Prizm and Mike G)[15]
Instruments
During Interpol's early years Banks typically played a black Les Paul Custom guitar. He then started using a Fender Jaguar and a Gibson Flying V (for a time with the word "breasts" spelled out in white tape on it [16][17]) for songs from Our Love to Admire and his Les Paul for songs from Antics and Turn on the Bright Lights, although some songs like "Obstacle 1" were played with Banks' Fender Jaguar because of the impracticality of switching and songs like "Mammoth" were recorded using his Les Paul for the same reason. Paul Banks did use his Fender Jaguar as his primary guitar for the end leg of the Our Love to Admire tour and was also seen using a Gibson ES-135 for songs such as "Not Even Jail", but since the 2010 tour leg, he has not been since using the Jaguar or Gibson ES-135 and has only been since using his traditional Les Paul, though the Flying V can be seen in the music video for Barricade with the tape no longer present. His Gibson ES-135 however, was his primary guitar during his live performances as his alter-ego Julian Plenti. Recently during live shows of his solo work he has been playing a Fender Stratocaster with two humbucker pickups and a middle position single coil possibly so he doesn't have to change guitars between songs for the diverse sounds on his solo records.
In the studio and for the latest album, Banks has been seen using a black Fender Precision Bass with a maple fretboard.
His pedalboard includes:
- BOSS TU-2
- Z.Vex Super Duper 2 in 1
- EHX Micro POG
- MXR Micro Amp
- MXR Bass Octave Deluxe
- Way Huge Swollen Pickle
- Ibanez TS9DX
- BOSS DN-2
- 2 MXR Carbon Copy Analog Delay (one set at higher repeats)
His pedalboard on the Julian Plenti tour:
- BOSS TU-2
- Way Huge Aqua-Puss
- BOSS DN-2
- EHX POG 2
- Blackstar HT Dual Tube Distortion
- MXR Carbon Copy
Since Antics (2004) he uses two Fender Pro Reverb amplifiers.
References
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paul Banks. |
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- Use dmy dates from June 2013
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with hCards
- Articles with unsourced statements from June 2015
- Articles with unsourced statements from August 2009
- Commons category link is locally defined
- 1978 births
- English emigrants to the United States
- English baritones
- English male singers
- English rock guitarists
- English rock singers
- English singer-songwriters
- English songwriters
- Living people
- New York University alumni
- People from Clacton-on-Sea
- Interpol (band) members