Hard-Fi

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Hard-Fi

Background information
Origin Flag of England Staines, Surrey, England
Genre(s) Alternative Rock
Indie Rock
Punk
Years active 2001—present
Label(s) Necessary Records / Warner (UK),
Atlantic Records (US)
Website www.hard-fi.com
Members
Richard Archer
Kai Stephens
Ross Phillips
Steve Kemp

Hard-Fi are a English indie rock band formed in Staines, Surrey in 2003. The band's continual members have been Richard Archer (vocals), Kai Stephens (bass guitar), Ross Phillips (guitar) and Steve Kemp (drums). Staines is a suburban location 16 miles (26 km) southwest of Central London that has significantly influenced their musical style and lyrics.

Hard-Fi achieved chart success with their third single, "Hard to Beat"[1] and then followed by other successful singles such as "Cash Machine"[2] and "Living for the Weekend",[3] which all reached top 15 in the UK Singles Chart.[4] Their debut album Stars of CCTV was released on 4 July 2005,[5] and although receiving critical acclaim (NME called it album of the year and was nominated for the Mercury Prize and two BRIT Awards, Best British Group and Best British Rock Act[6]), it didn't reach #1 in the UK albums chart until six months later on 22 January 2006.[7] It originally peaked at number 6.[8] The band's second album, Once Upon a Time in the West, was released on 3 September 2007[9] and reached number 1 in its first week.[10]

They are generally considered part of the indie rock scene,[11] alongside bands such as Franz Ferdinand, however, they have been noted for straying away from the indie genre. The band have made it clear that they don't even listen to indie, they prefer listening to soul and ska. When the band were doing an Xfm Residency, the majority of the songs they picked were either soul or stuff from the likes of The Clash.

Contents

The Clash were one of the many influential artists on Hard-Fi.
The Clash were one of the many influential artists on Hard-Fi.

Hard-Fi's musical style is a mix of post-punk, indie and a Clash style of punk rock. They also take inspiration from other genres such as ska, most apparent in the song "We Need Love", and R&B, most notably in the song "Can't Get Along (Without You)". On Stars of CCTV, they had a very raw sound, loud guitars, and frequent use of guitar, in contrast to Once Upon A Time In The West, on which there is a lot more orchestration, the use of strings is very apparent, most notably in the song "Watch Me Fall Apart".

Upon starting out, Hard-Fi often listened to music through the medium of radio and the internet, read magazines and watched music videos as a band, to them, no up-and-coming bands really connected their lytics to their own lives and this is what Hard-Fi wanted to change. Lead singer Archer explains.

Y'know, it was all about singer/songwriter this, The Libertines that, tragic hero, y'know, all of that. No one ever said anything about our lives and we wanted to say something.[12]
Songs like "Suburban Knights" just celebrate the amazing people who live in the real world. You have to be creative living in suburbia and we wanted to celebrate that.

When making a song, Archer said:

I write the songs on an acoustic guitar or piano; you'll get different natural chord shapes on a guitar, so sometimes it can be interesting to go and do it on a piano, where you might play a different progression. So I'll do a demo of it and take it to the guys who will turn it into a Hard-Fi tune really; they'll put their spin on it. We'll edit it live together, mix and cut it up a lot as we go, and record it. We owe as much to hip hop and dance techniques as rock as we've grown up as part of the dance generation.[13]

Hard-Fi's lyrics are based mostly on working class life, the band themselves coming from a suburban lifestyle [14], living with little money and hope being the only thing to help them get on. Most notable in tracks such as "Suburban Knights" ("Those bills keep dropping through my door") and "Living for the Weekend" ("I've been working all week I'm tired"), while other songs such as "Tonight", despite still being about suburban life, focus more on ambitions. Some songs are also based on social realism, "Feltham is Singing Out" tells of a friend who began stealing from family members, moving on to larger victims such as shops. He is eventually sent to the Feltham Young Offenders' Institution where he suffers from bullying and eventually commits suicide due to the incapability of dealing with the stress.

Other songs, such as "Better Do Better" and "Move on Now", are centred around the premise of how hard romantic relationships can be. Once Hard-Fi were becoming successful Archer's mother had passed away, the song "Help Me Please" is about how difficult it was for him having his dreams come true after many unsuccessful bands but realises he has no parents to share the joy with. Similarly, "The King" is about Archer returning to Staines and finding everything completely different, and realising everything of which he knew and loved had disappeared. Archer describes "Little Angel" as Christina Aguilera having a fight with The Clash in a northern Soul club. [15]

Following the release of Once Upon a Time in the West, the band sometimes receives criticism for still singing about "bills dropping through their doors" despite not being poor anymore. Other publications label the lyrics as bland, such as the NME review of the album.[16]

See also: Hard-Fi members

"I wanna be successful." says Richard Archer. "I don't see the point in being just another fuckin' indie band, I wanna sell records in the States. I'm not in competition with Razorlight and The Killers - I like those bands. I'm in competition with fuckin' Eminem. What's the point of being parochial and small-time? You've got to think big." However he also said "People think we wanna have a fight with Eminem, we don't, we respect and admire his music, we just want to be as big as he is now".

Richard Archer was dragged back to his hometown of Staines, crushed by the lack of success his former band Contempo had seen and the death of his father after his struggle against cancer. "I moved back to Staines because I ran out of money and it was quite a shock," he says. "There's no record shops, there's no decent pubs, there's no venues, there's no decent clothes shops. Look around, it's quite pleasant but if you're a young person living here then you're into a certain type of music - chart house - and a certain fashion, and if you're not into that there is nothing here for you. Here, you can't get home if you're out in central London after eleven. There's no night bus, there's no late train, you have to get a cab if you can find one and that'll charge you eighty quid to get home from central London. A lot of people live like that."[17]

While Archer was making demos to produce an album, he went inside the Staines hi-fi shop where Ross Phillips worked, wanting to buy equipment, simply so he could listen to his latest demos on the shop's best stereo gear. Philips apparently told Archer his demos were 'rubbish', and was therefore recruited to play guitar for the new group. Steve Kemp was already an old friend of Richard and Kai took little persuasion to leave his job as a "pest killer".

In the wake of Richard Archer's previous band, Contempo, splitting up, Archer claims that music business insiders tried to dissuade the band's manager Warren Clarke (not the actor of the same name) from managing him. When Archer asked his publishers for some money to record the some new songs that he had written, they terminated his contract instead. "People told him, don't bother with Archer, he's damaged goods, you're wasting your time'."[14][18]

When talking about how the band met, Archer said, "I kind of started the band. I got introduced to the drummer by a guy who remixed our debut album. We then put an add in the NME, Loot and all the places to find musicians. Loads of people got back to us. None of them were right. Some of them literally couldn't play a note.

I knew Kai from back in Staines. After a bit of ringing around I got in contact with him. He still played bass but worked for Rentokill. He turned up at our studio a few days later having learnt all the songs I sent him. He was great and he was in! Also he had a van to move stuff about. You can't get clamped in a Rentokill van!

Ross worked in the local Hi-Fi store. I'd go in there to listen to my mixes. One day he came over to me and said who's playing guitar on this? Its me. He said it was shit. So I said come on then. After looking for people all over the country we found a band that all came from Staines. It gives us a real sense of indentity."[19]

The band were signed to newly formed independent label, Necessary Records, owned by Clarke. The majority of Stars of CCTV was recorded in a variety of unusual acoustic environments - in bedrooms, in pubs, and played back in their producer, Wolsey White's, BMW. 1000 copies of this record were pressed with only 500 going on public sale, and the initial plan was to sell 1000 each time. However, it quickly sold out, receiving critical acclaim and radio play, proving a lot more successful than the band had imagined. In a disused mini cab office, which cost them about £300, is where most the album was recorded and is known to this day as the "Cherry Lips" Studio. The band used to try and make their music sound more environmental by putting a microphone in the corridor, this added echoe, however, people would walk passed whistling or humming as well as the fact that planes would fly by and could be heard while the band recorded the album, and, if listened to carefully, can still be heard on the record as the band could not get rid of it. The band used the TL Audio Fatman compressor for the album, Archer said "It's alright, it's cheap, you don't have to know what you're doing...".

Archer desperately tried to generate publicity for the band through the Staines Observer, however, to no avail. "We sent them a press release and a photo," said Archer. "The press release was all like, the hard-hitting sound of the streets and stuff. And the article came out going, 'Richard Archer, former pupil of Thamesmead School ...' Whatever you say, they seem to be most interested in what school you went to."

The band were then licensed to the Atlantic Records label (a major) in December 2004, where they were given the chance to re-record the album. The band were offered the chance to record in the renowned Abbey Road Studios among other well known studios however, the band went back to the cab office to maintain their sound.

Lee Scratch, a grammy award-winning reggae and dub artist, had a recording studio called "Black Ark"[20], which the sound produced in there, was described as "Hard-Fi". The band being admirers of Lee Scratch's work decided to name the band after that. Archer said "Since then I've been desperately trying to find the biography where I read it; but I may have dreamt it."[21]

Main article: Stars of CCTV
Hard-Fi's debut album, Stars of CCTV. It has won an award for 'Sleeve of the Year'.
Hard-Fi's debut album, Stars of CCTV. It has won an award for 'Sleeve of the Year'.

Their debut album's launch party was scheduled to be 7 July 2005 at Cheekees night club in Staines (where their top ten single "Hard to Beat" was filmed), however this was cancelled due to the ill health of Richard's mother. Her death resulted in the band pulling out of the Glastonbury festival. The launch party was rescheduled for 13 July 2005 and the venue changed to Ladbroke Grove, London. Archer says that he is no longer friends with Cheekee because of an incident involving Archer describing his night club to a newspaper like "a bad wedding" he defended himself by saying "...but everyone likes a bad wedding so I don't see what the problem is". [22]

After a successful marketing campaign by Atlantic, the Stars of CCTV album re-entered the official UK album chart at #4 on 1 January 2006. Two places higher than it originally went in on the week of its release, the album climbed from #33 which was actually the best sales week for the album of 55,000 due to the busy Christmas period. Stars of CCTV finally climbed to #1 on 22 January 2006. The band's re-release of Cash Machine entered the official Top 40 singles chart at #14 on 1 January.

In the band's biography, there is an odd description of the album.

A thoroughly innovative, post-Millennial urban horrorscape. Imagine a young, pill-popping Terry Hall ram-raiding a disco wig factory in a stolen panda car. Now double it.

When Archer was told of this description he seemed rather confused and said, "What's a disco wig factory?"[23][24]

Hard-Fi gained increased prominence in the UK when Stars of CCTV was nominated for the 2005 Mercury Music Prize alongside other albums such as A Certain Trigger by Maxïmo Park and Silent Alarm by Bloc Party.[25] Hard-Fi reached the last two where they just lost out to Antony and the Johnsons.[26]

In February 2006, the band were nominated for two BRIT Awards, Best British Group and Best British Rock Act, alongside international superstars such as Gorillaz, Franz Ferdinand and Oasis. Richard spoke about the nominations, "I don't think we'll win it, especially best group when you've got Coldplay, Franz Ferdinand and Gorillaz in there, they're kind of big hitters, but you never know, Burton drew with Man United".

"Last week I would have probably said "nah it's all rubbish", but now I'm nominated "it's great" but what is good is that there's a real wide spread of stuff there, but there's no Best Dance award and the urban category is more pop than what's quality."[27]

The simple sleeve for the second album Once Upon A Time In The West.
The simple sleeve for the second album Once Upon A Time In The West.

Hard-Fi built their own studio for the follow up to their 2005 debut 'Stars of CCTV'. Having searched fruitlessly for a space, the Staines four-piece have retreated to their hometown for the record, which frontman Richard Archer describes as "darker" and "more expansive".

The first single from the album was Suburban Knights, released on 20 August. The single had its first play on 18 June 2007 at 19:20 (BST) on Radio 1. The album Once Upon A Time In The West was released on 3 September 2007. The band launched the album on the midnight of release at Virgin Megastore in Oxford Street, London with a performance of a selected number of songs followed by a CD signing.[28] The following day, to launch the album the band performed at Maida Vale Studios to a small audience who earned their tickets through promotion. [29][30]

The album cover of Once Upon A Time In The West has a plain yellow background with the album title at the top, and NO COVER ART written in large, white letters below. The artwork for their single, Suburban Knights, similarly features a plain black background, with, EXPENSIVE BLACK AND WHITE PHOTO OF BAND NOT AVAILABLE written on the front in yellow writing. The artwork itself has received mixed criticism, mostly bad and has been slated as one of the worst of all time,[31][32] however, top cover art designer Peter Saville has described it as "a 'White Album' for the digital culture."[33][34]

On Sunday 9 September, 'Once Upon A Time In The West' went straight in at #1 in the Album Charts giving the band a second #1 album following Stars of CCTV. However, the album was met with a mixed response from fans, those who loved the punk-ish "in your face rock" of the first album were left slightly disappointed, however, most were pleased with the more dark tone of the album as it was a bit of a change.[35] It also received mixed reviews from as high as a five star review (Observer Music Monthly)[36] to as low as a two star review from The Times Online who also named it the second worst album of 2007.[37]

This album has gone even further in the world than their debut album "Stars of CCTV" as it has reached Japan's Top 10 chart. Mexico, Argentina, Brazil and Central America have began to show interest in the band and the first single from the album "Suburban Knights" charted in all of their respective charts, alongside their second single "Can't Get Along (Without You)" which reached #1 in Peru.[citation needed]

Hard-Fi at the Hurricane Festival, June 2006
Hard-Fi at the Hurricane Festival, June 2006

Hard-Fi's first live performance was in Manchester in 2003 before the band were signed.

Hard-Fi usually begin their concerts with all lights turning off and "The Man With a Harmonica" by Ennio Morricone playing in the background. Once the track picks up pace the band come on and usually play "Middle Eastern Holiday", this is then usually followed by "Gotta Reason". For encore the band usually play "Living for the Weekend" and more recently acoustic renditions of "The King" and "Stars of CCTV".

Hard-Fi's first full-length tour of 2006 sold out in just 15 minutes,[38] with calls for more dates to be added. They played London's Brixton Academy from 14-18 May, making them one of the few bands to play five consecutive nights there.[39] After such rough times, success of the Stars of CCTV album and of hit single Hard to Beat allowed them to end up in an unlikely mini-reunion of the Specials, performing Ghost Town with Jerry Dammers and Neville Staples at the Love Music Hate Racism gig.[40] Mick Jones of the Clash is a renowned fan of the band, while Paul Weller[41] has actually turned up to their rehearsal rooms and jammed a version of A Town Called Malice, something of which Kai Stephens says "gives us bragging rights over all of Staines" All of these artists were actually quite inspirational towards Hard-Fi while they were recording Stars of CCTV, perhaps the Specials and the Clash being the larger influences.[42]

Despite being just a live DVD, In Operation reached a respectable #62 in the UK charts
Despite being just a live DVD, In Operation reached a respectable #62 in the UK charts

Big Audio Dynamite also appeared with them doing E=MC². He had previously helped produce tracks by Richard Archer's prior band, Contempo.[43]

The other artists to have had 5 sold out consecutive nights in Brixton Academy were The Clash, Bob Dylan, Massive Attack, and The Prodigy. However, Hard-Fi were the only band to do it off the back of their debut album.[44]

Hard-Fi supported Green Day at their two massive gigs at Milton Keynes Bowl, England performing in front of a crowd of approximately 65,000 people. [45]

During the bands December 2005, the band played at London's historic Astoria, this whole performance was filmed and the band released it on DVD called In Operation, the performance is in front of an ecstatic hometown crowd, features all the tracks on Hard-Fi's 750,000 selling, #1 debut album 'Stars of CCTV', at the time brand new track 'You And Me', which would go on to appear as a B-Side to Suburban Knights and the band's version of 'Seven Nation Army' by The White Stripes – a massive crowd favourite. It also comes backed with CCTVersions – an exclusive CD which features dubbed versions of album tracks, produced by a host of guests including Roots Manuva and DJ Wrongtom.[46]

Hard-Fi played at The Social on Tuesday 26 April 2006 alongside Boy Kill Boy. [47]

Hard-Fi in concert at Sala Caracol in Madrid, Spain, 2006
Hard-Fi in concert at Sala Caracol in Madrid, Spain, 2006

Hard-Fi played a packed out 'secret' headlining slot on the Leftfield Stage on 23 June 2007 at Glastonbury. Although the band were still mixing the record at the time the crowd got to hear We Need Love, Can't Get Along (Without You) and forthcoming single Suburban Knights before anyone else. The band also included a host of favourites from their debut album Stars of CCTV. The band played a series of sold-out, intimate dates later in July 2007 previewing the record.[48] This event was found so exciting by the UK Festival Awards they actually nominated the event in the category for Most Memorable Moment.[49]

The band also played at Damon Albarn's African Express in Glastonbury. Archer says, "We played on Damon Albarn's Africa Express stage, we weren't the only band there, loads of other artists played. There were western artists and then obviously he'd bought over loads of African artists and I think that was the highlight of the whole of Glastonbury really. The rest you could say was just as commercial as any other festival now whereas that one was really keeping the original spirit of it. That was really just a grand moment, we just showed up and got up there"[50]

Hard-Fi's limited edition live CD, Once Upon a Time in December
Hard-Fi's limited edition live CD, Once Upon a Time in December

Steve cuts Archer to say "We got showed up by some really class musicians"[51]

Archer continues "Y'know, we're buskers in comparison, and I mean really bad buskers"[52]

On December 5, 2007, Hard-Fi began their UK tour playing at the following:[53]

Each concert was recorded in its entirety on Audio CD which could be ordered online through Concert Live or bought at the venue for £20.[54] The CD was titled Once Upon a Time in December. The first 1500 people to pay would receive signed copies, while available to all payers came a bundle of the next single I Shall Overcome which included:[55][56]

All of which were delivered free of charge on day of release (February 25, 2007).[57]

Main article: Hard-Fi members
  • Richard Archer is the group's frontman as the lead singer and principal songwriter. He also plays guitar live occasionally, but more frequently as of late due to more recent tracks requiring more guitar input. He is a music graduate from Kingston University. The influence of Staines is often evident in his lyrics.
  • Ross Phillips contributes guitar and backing vocals. He worked in a local hi-fi shop, in Staines where Archer would come to play his demos on the latest systems. After telling Archer his music was rubbish, Phillips was recruited to play lead guitar for the group.
  • Kai Stephens plays bass and also sings backing vocals. He initially could not travel to the USA due to past misdemeanors. He has finally received his US visa.
  • Steve Kemp plays drums. Originally from Lancashire but moved down in his late teens due to a course and never left.

Main article: Hard-Fi discography

  • Stars of CCTV (2005) - #1 UK, #5 Ireland, #20 Germany, #29 World, #47 Austria, #68 France, #91 Netherlands
  • Once Upon a Time in the West (2007) - #1 UK, #3 Ireland, #21 World, #39 Germany, #49 Switzerland, #51 Austria, #73 Netherlands, #99 France

For Cash Machine the band released an X-rated version of the video for people to download on to their mobiles, featuring scenes that include nudity. It is still available via download on the iTunes Music Store.

They also have their own video podcast, which is known as 'Hard-Fi: Rockin' the City', that can be downloaded from their official website. In the first episode the bandmates discuss how they formed, and the rise of their successful album Stars of CCTV. They also discuss becoming increasingly more recognised, playing huge gigs with Green Day at the Milton Keynes Bowl, their home-town of Staines, and how it has influenced their music style. This talk is coupled with clips of some of Hard-Fi's music videos such as "Hard to Beat", "Cash Machine", "Tied Up Too Tight" and "Living for the Weekend". Thirteen episodes have been released, so far, on iTunes. They are also available to view on their MySpace and their channel on Youtube.

In 2007, the band's podcast, Hard-Fi: Rockin' the City, was nominated for 'Best Podcast' at the Digital Music Awards.

Hard-Fi have appeared twice on Popworld interviewed by Simon Amstell, in one of these interviews it is found out that Daniel Radcliffe, who plays the role of Harry Potter in the Harry Potter series, is a fan of Hard-Fi's music.[62]

The band have also done an episode of 'Take Over' for MTV2 where an artist is allowed to take over the channel for 1 hour and play some of their favourite tracks, including material from the likes of The Clash and Eminem.

Richard and drummer Steve Kemp also appeared on stv's Entertainment Now programme discussing Once Upon A Time In The West, its origins and the process of its creation.[63]

The band appeared as guests on the Friday Night Project on 10 August 2007 to promote their single Suburban Knights. They did not play live in Series 5, due to missing their flight back into the UK from Ibiza, and were therefore the first band to mime on the show. [64]

As well as The Automatic, Hard-Fi is the only band to have appeared twice as the Guest Band, excluding Razorlight who have appeared in an aired episode and in the show's pilot episode.

The band describe the day as "a real privilege. We played in front of a lot of people and learned a lot. We have a lot of good memories and new fans from these shows as well".

On Friday, November 23, 2007, Hard-Fi appeared on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross where they performed a live rendition of "Tonight".[65][66]

On December 1, 2007, the band performed the song "Television" on Saturday Night Live.[67]

Much like Glaswegian band Franz Ferdinand, the band have a very easy approach to downloading music. They have commented that,

It works both ways really, it's a really great way to discover a band - When we toured America our audience had only heard our material through internet, but this also means music is losing value now.

  1. ^ "Music Charts: "Hard-Fi - Hard to Beat". aCharts.us.
  2. ^ "Music Charts: "Hard-Fi - Cash Machine". aCharts.us.
  3. ^ "Music Charts: "Hard-Fi - Living for the Weekend". aCharts.us.
  4. ^ "Music Charts: "Hard-Fi". aCharts.us.
  5. ^ http://www.hard-fi.com/discography.php
  6. ^ Hard-Fi battle to beat Mercury odds. BBC.
  7. ^ "Music Charts: "Hard-Fi - Stars of CCTV". aCharts.us.
  8. ^ "Music Charts: "Hard-Fi - Stars of CCTV". aCharts.us.
  9. ^ http://www.hard-fi.com/discography.php
  10. ^ "Music Charts: "Hard-Fi - Once Upon a Time in the West". aCharts.us.
  11. ^ www.myspace.com/hardfi
  12. ^ http://www.orange.co.uk/glastonbury/3524.htm
  13. ^ http://www.ilikemusic.com/interviews/Hard_Fi_Interview-1768/4
  14. ^ a b Hard-Fi flash (Flash). Hard-Fi.
  15. ^ NME TV - Hard-Fi track by track album interview (HTML). NME.
  16. ^ http://www.nme.com/reviews/hard-fi/8934
  17. ^ Fender.co.uk (HTML). Fender.
  18. ^ Hard-Fi - Rockin' The City Video Podcast Part One (HTML). Hard-Fi.
  19. ^ http://www.leftlion.co.uk/articles.cfm/id/652
  20. ^ http://www.blackark.com/
  21. ^ http://www.leftlion.co.uk/articles.cfm/id/652
  22. ^ Hard-Fi on Popworld again video interview with Simon Amstell
  23. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ToPH8YPy840
  24. ^ http://www.hard-fi.com/flash.html
  25. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/music/4207346.stm
  26. ^ http://drownedinsound.com/articles/13058
  27. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ny9ubamcv98
  28. ^ The Wild West Comes To Virgin (HTML). Hard-Fi HQ.
  29. ^ WIN TICKETS TO INTIMATE RADIO 1 SHOW (HTML). Hard-Fi HQ.
  30. ^ Steve Kemp interview (HTML). Aced Magazine.
  31. ^ http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/music/2007/08/always_judge_an_album_by_its_c.html
  32. ^ http://www.nme.com/news/hard-fi/30190
  33. ^ Hard-Fi Timeline (HTML). Channel 4.
  34. ^ Hard-Fi News (HTML). Crud Magazine.
  35. ^ http://ukforums.infopop.cc/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/751106815/m/77410860201
  36. ^ Once Upon a Time in the West Review (OMM) (HTML). Observer Music Monthly.
  37. ^ http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/article2961411.ece
  38. ^ http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/music/a28671/hard-fi-extend-sold-out-uk-tour.html
  39. ^ http://www.drownedinsound.com/articles/617105
  40. ^ http://www.nme.com/news/hard-fi/23076
  41. ^ http://www.nme.com/news/hard-fi/23076
  42. ^ http://www.nme.com/news/hard-fi/23076
  43. ^ http://www.nme.com/news/hard-fi/23076
  44. ^ http://www.drownedinsound.com/articles/617105
  45. ^ http://www.virtualfestivals.com/artists/gigreviews/2012
  46. ^ http://www.hmv.co.uk/hmvweb/displayProductDetails.do?ctx=12;1;58;-1&sku=501650
  47. ^ Hard Fi @ The Social 26/04.05
  48. ^ http://www.lovemusichateracism.com/news/2007/06/19/lmhr-glasto-show-headliner-revealed-today/
  49. ^ http://www.festivalawards.com/index.cfm?section=awards.nominees&method=view&year=2007&eventid=598
  50. ^ http://www.orange.co.uk/glastonbury/3524.htm?linkfrom=%3C!--linkfromvariable--%3E&link=box_left_pos_4_1_link_title&article=glastonburynewhomesell5
  51. ^ http://www.orange.co.uk/glastonbury/3524.htm?linkfrom=%3C!--linkfromvariable--%3E&link=box_left_pos_4_1_link_title&article=glastonburynewhomesell5
  52. ^ http://www.orange.co.uk/glastonbury/3524.htm?linkfrom=%3C!--linkfromvariable--%3E&link=box_left_pos_4_1_link_title&article=glastonburynewhomesell5
  53. ^ http://www.hard-fi.com/news.php?newsID=46
  54. ^ http://www.concertlive.co.uk/Live%20CDs/Hard-Fi/Once%20Upon%20a%20Time%20in%20December.aspx#productheader
  55. ^ http://www.hard-fi.com/news.php?newsID=51
  56. ^ http://www.concertlive.co.uk/Live%20CDs/Hard-Fi/Once%20Upon%20a%20Time%20in%20December.aspx#productheader
  57. ^ http://www.concertlive.co.uk/Live%20CDs/Hard-Fi/Once%20Upon%20a%20Time%20in%20December.aspx#productheader
  58. ^ http://www.nme.com/news/hard-fi/23076
  59. ^ DJ Wrongtom's Myspace Blog
  60. ^ http://www.nme.com/news/hard-fi/23076
  61. ^ Hard-Fi Rockin' the City: Episode 1
  62. ^ Hard-Fi on Popworld again video interview with Simon Amstell
  63. ^ Hard-Fi: Still working Hard video interview with stv.tv/music
  64. ^ Hard-Fi on the Friday Night Project
  65. ^ TV.Com, Daniel Craig, Jack Dee, Russell Brand, Hard Fi.
  66. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pZWbVzQtxUY
  67. ^ http://www.hard-fi.com/news.php?newsID=48

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The search engines that are used in your metasearch may allow companies to pay to have their Web sites included within the results. To view the Paid Inclusion policy for a specific search engine, please visit their Web site. Search.com does not accept payment or share revenue with any search engine partner for listings in this section.