Detroit Indie rock popsters The Nice Device were a four-piece, female-fronted band formed in 2000 that bridged the exploding Garage Rock revival scene and the underrated Detroit Power Pop scene with a polished, yet slightly trashy sound filled with hooks akin to The Buzzcocks, The Pixies and Blondie to name a few.
History
During the summer of 2000, local songwriter and accomplished folk artist Alicia Gbur, inspired by the thriving Detroit Rock scene wrote several songs with the intent to record and start a rock band. She asked mutual musician friends Zach Shipps and Matt Aljian to come to the studio and play on the initial recordings. Rehearsals started with Rich Griffith from Ann Arbor on bass. That same month, she met guitarist Matt Lannoo at a party. During the fall of 2000 Gbur, Lannoo and Griffith wrote and rehearsed while auditioning drummers eventually finding Nick Gerhardt. A handful of new songs were written and recorded. In early 2001 the first few shows were at the legendary Gold Dollar club in Detroit's Cass Corridor under the name The Nice Device. A few months later, Griffith was replaced on bass with Zach Shipps. In 2002 The Nice Device entered Ghetto Recorders Studio with producer Jim Diamond and recorded three songs for their first official release, a 7" vinyl single. In 2003 the band began vigorously writing and submitting demos per request of Maverick Records in Hollywood CA. Unfortunately the record label underwent significant changes in staff and the band lost their A&R representation. 2004 saw the band recording their next batch of songs at Grand Studios in Detroit with Brendan Benson. Shipps left the band to tour in The Wellfed Boys and Matt Hatch from The Sights took over on Bass. A video was shot for the single "My Little Birdie" at the historic Michigan Theater in Detroit. They released the EP titled Birth of a Lover later that year and instantly garnered a slew of favorable reviews, as well as a publishing deal with Pure Tone Music. In 2005 they began writing songs for their first full length release eventually titled Let The Nightlife Down. Steve Champine was added on keyboards and recording with began at Studio 12ax7 in Hamtramck and in Ann Arbor. Yet another lineup change, Matt Hatch left and was replaced by Jeff Alber on bass in June 2005. The video for "Innocent" was shot by Lucky Airlines in early 2006 and by May the record was released and a US/CA tour followed. In January 2007, Steve Champine was replaced on keyboards with Thomas Smak until June 2008 at which time they became a four-piece again. In the summer of 2007 Alicia and Matt began rehearsing with Sire Records artists The Von Bondies for the upcoming release of a new EP titled "We are Kamikazes" and subsequent tours to follow. They took a several month hiatus from The Nice Device to rehearse and tour in The Von Bondies throughout the US, CA, UK, Europe and Scandinavia - eventually leaving the band in April 2008. In the fall of 2008, The Nice Device regrouped and released their second EP titled Sorry We Killed You. It was recorded and produced at The Loft in Saline, MI by Tim Patalan, former member of another Sire Records artist . While finishing a planned final album, the band unofficially disbanded in the fall of 2009.
Members
Alicia Gbur - vocals, guitar
Matthew Lannoo - guitar, vocals
Nick Gerhardt - drums
Jeff Alber - bass, vocals
Past:
Rich Griffith - bass
Zach Shipps - bass
Matt Hatch - bass
Steve Champine - keyboards/synth
Thomas Smak - keyboards/synth
Work
Discography
"Gotta Get It" single on 7" vinyl b/w "My Little Birdie" and "Bittersweet"
"Innocent" featured on the Maybelline NY/Jane Magazine - Pure Talent Reader CD No. 5
"Under Control" featured on the MC2 - Best ofMotor City Music Conference
"My Little Birdie" featured on the Pure Tone Music Publishing Compilation Volume 1
"Under Control" featured on the Detroit Breakdown - The Rocked Out Motor City Music Sampler
Videography
shot by 3alarm Carnival at the historic Michigan Theater in downtown Detroit.
shot by , directed by Nick Hill, edited by Sarah Fisher.
Miscellaneous
Five songs from their album Let The Nightlife Down are featured in a documentary called Racer Girls filmed in London, U.K. - airing in 80 countries.
A 45 minute live performance and interviews were filmed at The Magic Stick in Detroit - January 2007 for CanYouHearMeTV.com's Episode 6.
The song "My Little Birdie" is used in the film Bachelor Party Vegas and the TV shows Life with Derek, and Radio Free Roscoe airing on The N television network for teens.