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Results tagged “earlimart”
An Interview with Admiral Radley, Tonight's Croc Headliner

An Interview with Admiral Radley, Tonight's Croc Headliner

When Grandaddy reached the end of the road in 2006 after 14 years as a band, we were admittedly a bit distraught. Without frontman Jason Lytle’s brilliantly-crafted pop that explored the anxieties around modern life and lost connections, we traveled down many musical paths in an attempt to fill the void. Fast forward to the present and we’re delighted to recommend a trip to the Croc tonight to check out Admiral Radley, the new side-project between Lytle and Aaron Burtch of Grandaddy along with Ariana Murray and Aaron Espinoza of Earlimart. As you might guess, the result is a sonic pop oddity filled with beautiful “mopey” numbers rounded out by upbeat, and uncompromisingly poppy tunes like the less-than-sincere “I Heart California.” If you're anything like us, you'll greatly enjoy the evening of Lytle and his old friends warding off proclaimed modern day anxieties with brilliant pop music, complete with a toy-piano or two for good measure. more ›

Can't Miss It: Wednesday

Can't Miss It: Wednesday

ALL INCLUSIVE: Knowledge is power. Bone up on making your website design more accessible to every PC, Mac, and Blackberry by taking this course, sponsored by Refresh Seattle. Consultant Wendy Chisholm will speak and everyone will head over to the Red Door for snacks afterward. more ›

Earlimart Thanks You for Listening

Earlimart Thanks You for Listening

It's a relaxing evening at Chop Suey, Earlimart has draped Christmas lights on their gear, and we sip our gin and tonic as midnight approaches. Aaron Espinoza thanks the crowd at Chop Suey several times, though "crowd" may be stretching it--as usual at an Earlimart show in Seattle, a ragtag band of resistance fighters has showed. They sway in semi-darkness, drowning in a rumbling drone, to gently sung, lush pop that promises "it's a deathtrap, it's a bloodbath" and "it's gonna get worse before it gets better." This is an appropriate sentiment, if you live somewhere between Fresno and Bakersfield. The new album, Hymn and Her, sounds like a sequel to Mentor Tormentor, with two songs sung by Ariana Murray in the mix. If there's nothing as soaring and blue-angelic as "Answers and Questions" (YouTube) or as bouncily alienated as "Happy Alone," there's the needling assurance "God Loves You the Best," and empty reassurance of "Face Down in the Right Town," complete with defeated trumpet. We've been catching up on the new Battlestar Galactica, and it occurs to us that this is the perfect soundtrack to that scene where Apollo is drifting in space in an ejection seat, his ship destroyed, watching the fireworks of an exploding baseship with the last of his oxygen hissing from his suit. more ›

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