Word: bandã
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...that each song will have a sound and feel slightly different from the one before it. “When you try to categorize [our music], it doesn’t really work,” said Repete. He attributed that eclectic, hard-to-pin-down sound to the band??s varying musical tastes. Dispatch acknowledge everyone from Peter Gabriel and Cat Stevens to Stevie Wonder and Al Green when talking about their personal tastes; other influences and favorite bands include Radiohead, Rage Against the Machine, Pink Floyd, The Red Hot Chili Peppers and Dire Straits. Slightly older...
...fact, the band??s success on Napster was cited as a major component to their being able to play FleetBoston this summer. Melis Sancaktar ’03, who has been listening to Dispatch for a little over a year, first learned about the band when she saw them in concert. “After that I was a Dispatch fan and started downloading all the mp3s I could find and eventually just bought all of their albums which now have a regular spot in my CD player,” she said...
...larger band, Dispatch have created what they like to call their “D-Team.” ‘Reps’ across the country can log onto the Dispatch website and report on anything from ticket sales to album sales and the growth of the band??s local following. Chetro admits that the administration needed to maintain the D-Team on the band??s side of things have, at times, fallen by the wayside, which if nothing else is a testament to the loyalty of fans who have been following Dispatch since...
...band, but venues much like the one at Sanders Theater only ensure that other lesser known tracks and albums will become relatively more mainstream. As the crowd poured out of the theater, many of them stopped off to purchase CDs, t-shirts and posters, a testament to the band??s Monday night success...
...Androgyny,” the first single from Garbage’s Beautiful Garbage, proves an appropriate sampling of the band??s new album: While the track opens with the start-and-stop synthesizer pop of a TRL favorite, it quickly unveils the crunching guitars and harmonies Garbage fans have come to expect. In Beautiful Garbage, the electro-pop rockers offer a satisfying follow-up to 1998’s Version 2.0, once again harkening back to their trademark blend of guitars, electronic-influenced beats and lead singer Shirley Manson’s cynical musings. Led by Manson?...