Internet Forever
Internet Forever have always been a strange and wonderful band.
They started as a duo: a talented, super-niche solo artist and scene-star with pop aspirations called Laura Wolf, and Heartbeeps, aka Craig Nunn, a lo-fi musician and photographer with a knack for eye-catching imagery and ear-catching songs. Their first demo of “Break Bones” illustrated both a striking capacity for pop songwriting, and a sensibility that redefined the lower limits of lo-fi. It swept the blogsphere like wildfire, right up the the heady heights of Pitchfork. “That version of Break Bones was all we could manage with our mad skills at the time,” says Craig. “It’s not like we were intentionally part of a lo-fi scene. I think we were always destined to make a straight-up pop record.”
Snipe Highlights
Some popular articles from past years
- The five best places in London to have an epiphany
- Punk brewery just as sexist and homophobic as the industry they rail against
- Silencing the Brick Lane curry touts could be fatal for the city's self-esteem
- The best church names in London, and where they come from
- 9 poems about London: one for each of your moods
- London has chosen its mayor, but why can’t it choose its own media?
- The five spookiest abandoned London hospitals
- Margaret Thatcher statue rejected by public
- Nice Interactive timeline lets you follow Londoners' historic fight against racism
- Hope and despair in Woolwich town centre
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