The "This Song Is About Being Special" EP
1. Hey Russ, Why You Singin' 'Bout All Those Animals?
2. Ghosts Never Die And Neither Will You!
3. Two Little Revolutionaries With Big Hearts
4. Voice Like A Mountain
5. Louisiana Brother
6. Bryce Isbell Knows How To Shake Shake Shake
Track Details:
1. Vocals, Baritone Ukulele, Banjo, Keyboard, Garageband Samples
a demonstration album vol. green
17 songs about being shy. especially the instrumental ones.
"Sweet & Sour, on the other hand, was conceived months and months before recording even began, and was really a try at mixing the sweetness of indie-pop with my incessant desire to be a pretentious prick and release a double album."-Isaac during an interview at Electric Tomatoes
http://electrictomatoes.blogspot.com/2006/08/blanketarms-is-going-on-hia...
Co-released by Playground's Greatest Records and Pop Monster Records, a crew of us put this comp together in 2006. A lot of the people participating didn't/don't even like the misfits, so that made this all the more fun. I'd never heard "angelfuck" until after I recorded the Tinyfolk version. Super Famicom's is not to be missed.
Dear Robert Hanoy is a scratchy, expansive masterpiece, 14 sung songs of outsider ragtime, rambling European café waltz, and charismatic lyrical chemistry. Influenced equally by Cocorosie, Celine Dion, and Chamillionaire (circa “Ridin’ Dirty”), BB weave piano, accordion, and dueling voices into a freaky, frayed woolen mitten of strange emotions. Put it on, feel weird, throw a snowball.
Come on. Everyone knows about this. Here's a review:
"With a smile that stretched across his entire face, the Cheshire Cat exclaimed, “You can’t help that. We are all mad here.” And with tinyfolk’s release of Thirty-Six Cat Songs, everyone gets their own seat at the Mad Hatter’s tea party.
Moving back and forth, hence remaining. Looking back for comfort and forth for a sense of belonging, this is where we land. A set of songs to bide our time meanwhile.
We all decided to do this split while sitting in a cafe waiting for a show to start in Neenah, Wisconsin this past summer. We love eachother's songs.
The second in a 3 part series of jam sessions with myself in a tiny rectangle study room at UCSB. It was recorded back in February of 2007. My only instruments here were my acoustic guitar plus cigarette amp and the piano in the room. It was just a chance to mess around and have fun and experiment. This second go around featured some actual songwriting during the session.
Two souless scoundrels in lisergic mood looking inwardly while searching out for god-knows-what over a period of three months of frenzy.
...Rats to Survive reminds me of another band with a rodent namesake, Modest Mouse. The comparison is obvious. Rob's vocals ride the off-kilter, warbling lines of Isaac Brock, rambling between weird and inspired. So although the similarities are unavoidable, Rats to Survive brings enough originality and quality to their album to allow them to emerge from the shadows of the Mouse. - punkbands.com
Silly Rob Childish 's eleventh album project, MILK!, contains a lo-fi blend of acoustic and electronic noises layered under his ever out-of-tune poetic rants, grunts, shouts, oooh's and aah's. It was recorded using a variety of acoustic and electric guitars, keyboards and random percussive instruments in the living room of the ARTSHOLE with a little help from his friends.