Young Indie pop quartet Alt-J take Britain’s Mercury Prize, beating out more established acts

LONDON – Indie pop quartet Alt-J has won Britain’s prestigious Mercury Prize, beating more established acts to the 20,000 pound (roughly $32,000) prize at the Roundhouse in north London.

Formed of four Leeds University students who met in 2007, the band’s sharp but spare vocals, genre-bending sound and occasionally bizarre, nasal lyrics propelled them onto the charts well before its members found fame.

Critical reception to their debut album, “An Awesome Wave,” was extremely favourable and the band was heavily tipped to beat artists including rapper Plan B and singer-songwriter Richard Hawley, who were also among the prize’s 12 finalists.

Music journalists have praised the group’s idiosyncratic song-building skills (and few failed to dwell on their bizarre name — it’s the command needed to get a triangle shape on a Mac).

Jenny Stevens of NME praised their “bookish sensibility and penchant for a sexual metaphor,” while the Guardian’s Paul Lester said their music was “rich and quirky enough to match the imagistic literacy of the lyrics.”

The Mercury Prize was established in 1992 to honour the best album of the year by a British or Irish band and often favours the eclectic and obscure over better-known acts.

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