Glasvegas ''hallucinated due to lack of sleep''
30/10/2008
Emerging Scottish rock band Glasvegas have admitted that a lack of sleep had given them hallucinations while recording the end of their album.
In a piece for Bang Media International, the forthcoming release - called A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like A Kiss) caused the band to struggle, forcing them to spend 29 straight hours recording it.
Lead singer James Allan said that the production of the album was so "intense" that in their "mad rush" to finish the record, the band ignored their bodies'' desires to go to bed and kept on going throughout the night in their Transylvanian recording studio in Brasov.
He continued: "One of the guys working on the record was that tired he started hallucinating. He saw somebody in a checked shirt waving at him in the studio."
Glasvegas won the Philip Hall Radar Award from NME this year for being the most promising band after releasing two singles, Daddy''s Gone and Geraldine.
