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== Discography == | == Discography == | ||
Small scale releases on Utility Records include a joint-effort EP with HomeGrown named '''Connection''' and an LP '''This Chapter is Called Titles'''. | |||
Higher distrituion releases with ] (which totes a small roster also containing ]) includes the albums: | Higher distrituion releases with ] (which totes a small roster also containing ]) includes the albums: |
Revision as of 09:25, 24 September 2005
Limbeck is an indie rock band hailing from Orange County, California.
Instrumentation
The band is a four piece group, which also features many other musicians on its records. The main members are:
Robb MacLean - Vocals, Guitars, Sexaphone, Wind Chimes and Percussion.
Patrick Carrie - Background Vocals, Guitars, Harmonica, Electric Sitar, Glockenspiel, Gong, and Percussion.
Jon Phillip - Drums, and Percussion.
Justin Entsminger - Electric Bass Guitar.
Long-time drummer Matt Stephens left the band in September of 2005, and was replaced by Jon Phillip, formerly the drummer for the Obsoletes and the Benjamins.
Genre & Style
While classified as indie rock due to the their relatively small niche in Southern California, the band's musical style is most often described as "Alternative Country Music".
Many fans, record stores and online music services vary in their classification of the band's particular genre, however, partially because the lyrical content of the band's songs, more closely resemble 21st Century Emo rock than country.
Geography appears to play a primary role in the band's recordings, both in musical arrangment (the band ackowledges influence from such local musicans ranging from Neil Young to Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers) as well as in lyrical content.
Many songs actually name Interstate Highways which are known primarily to Orange County and San Diego County residents, such as the 8, 22, and 15. Musical intellectuals argue that this could both hinder a band's marketability to other regions of the United States for obvious reasons, but others point to the international success of media powerhouses such as The O.C. and punk rockers Something Corporate, which capitalize on the current American fascination with the Orange County lifestyle.
The band's complete contrast to the Punk Rock style which most of the music scene has come to associate with the region makes the group a diamond in the rough.
Discography
Higher distrituion releases with Doghouse Records (which totes a small roster also containing The All-American Rejects) includes the albums:
Hi, Everything's Great (2003) and Let Me Come Home (2005)
The band has recieved local radio play as well as exposure on XM Satellite Radio's channel 43.