Sunday (1994)
Written and recorded out of their one-bedroom apartment, writers and band members Paige Turner and Lee Newell enter the outside world like two characters walking onto the screen, their premiere awarded a standing ovation.
Along with their enigmatic, anonymous drummer, ‘X’, the sound of Sunday (1994) is cinematic in the truest sense.
Their songs are for bedroom floor tears or the first time two hands touch, and their first body of work captures a love story, and every love story that has ever and will ever happen, in all of its sweet day-dreaming and dramatic beauty.
Sunday (1994) are the result of hundrum Slough (Newell) meeting the sleepy suburbs of California (Turner), the pair haven fallen into each other’s arms 10 years ago, both with very different upbringings yet identical perspectives on the “charade that is modern life”. “I had stumbled around aimlessly for many years, but I wasn’t born until we’d met,” declares Newell. Never knowing when they are being serious or not. Self-confessed cinephiles, their band name ‘Sunday (1994)’ is stylized to resemble a film title – “our biopic would be Dumb and Dumber directed by Federico Fellini.” The name is also a nod to Turner’s Italian heritage with cherished family gatherings on Sunday evenings, where the food was plentiful and the music very loud.
Sunday (1994) continue to see growing support from fans and critics alike, having received love from the likes of The Sunday Times – as their Breaking Act, DORK, The Line of Best Fit, DIY Mag, NOTION, Under The Radar, Wonderland Magazine, Far Out Magazine, 1883 Mag and more. With radio support across BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 6Music, Travis Mills’ Apple Music Show and NME Radio.