Following their 1995 debut, Memphis garage punk band Oblivians released two more albums in quick succession and then practically disappeared for the next twelve years. But they didn't quite slip into, well, oblivion. Band members Greg Oblivian, Jack Oblivian and Eric Oblivian -- a.k.a. Greg Cartwright, Jack Yarber, and Eric Friedl -- each carried on with other projects, plus in Greg's case, a record store, and in Eric's, indie label Goner Records. Thankfully, Oblivians weren't destined to be just one of the many mayfly punk acts, now dead and buried, of these gentlemen's careers. In 2009, the trio reunited for a handful of shows and supported their friends The Gories on tour. They decided to stick together and "keep their amateur status" by writing new material because, as Eric says, "messing up new songs is a whole new way to go". Now, with an fiery new LP on In The Red Records, Oblivians stop by the KEXP studio to keep it short, fast and loud as they play three new songs and one old one from 1996's Popular Favorites:
Full Performance:
Fearlessly dabbling in the gaudy with their electro pop sound, Future Bible Heroes began as a project of The Magnetic Fields' Stephin Merritt and DJ Christopher Ewen, but gradually evolved into a substantial group of talented musicians. Eleven years after the release of their sophomore album, Etern…
Recently, Seattle songwriter Shelby Earl, fresh off releasing her new album, Swift Arrows, stopped by KEXP for a live in-studio to play four new tracks off the record. Produced by Seattle folk hero Damien Jurado, Swift Arrows is a mix of piano ballads and guitar rock in the lineage of Seattle songw…