Pinegrove on Audiotree Live

Pinegrove on Audiotree Live is the first live album by American rock band Pinegrove, released May 27, 2016 on Audiotree Music. The group, which formed in 2010, developed a following with their mix of Americana and emo. The performance was filmed and released through Audiotree, a Chicago, Illinois–based music company.

Pinegrove on Audiotree Live
Live album by
ReleasedMay 27, 2016
RecordedApril 30, 2016
StudioAudiotree (Chicago, Illinois)
Genre
Length27:45
LabelAudiotree Music
Pinegrove chronology
Cardinal
(2016)
Pinegrove on Audiotree Live
(2016)
Elsewhere
(2017)

Background

Audiotree, an American record label and music discovery platform, was founded in Chicago, Illinois in 2011. The company became known for its high-quality videos of live performances, mainly from independent musicians. Its associated YouTube channel became a popular destination for indie music fans in the 2010s. Forbes writer Melissa Daniels reports that, like all Audiotree performances, it was not further mixed in post-production; "what you hear is real," she wrote.[1]

Pinegrove on Audiotree Live was filmed and recorded at the company's Chicago studio space on April 30, 2016. The group were interviewed by a host, though these segments were omitted from the streaming release. At the time, the quintet were in the midst of a national tour supporting the emo act Into It. Over It..[2] Daniels noted the band were considered "breakout indie stars" at the time of their appearance.[1]

Reception

Sam Sodomsky of Pitchfork described it as "legendary," and "tailor-made for introducing new fans to the band."[3]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Evan Stephens Hall.

No.TitleLength
1."Need 2"3:09
2."Problems"1:24
3."Cadmium"3:55
4."Size of the Moon"4:12
5."Angelina"1:27
6."&"4:00
7."Recycling"4:29
8."Aphasia"5:09
Total length:27:45

Personnel

  • Evan Stephens Hall – vocals, guitar
  • Josh Marre – guitar, backing vocals
  • David Mitchell – bass
  • Zack Levine – drums, backing vocals
gollark: I dislike it.
gollark: In my case it's opcode, 2 4-bit registers, and a 16-bit constant.
gollark: If I wasn't currently writing test code by hand as hexadecimal strings, I might do what MIPS does and make opcodes 6 bits and register indices 5 bits.
gollark: Currently it just means "print all registers", but most information is there.
gollark: ```instructions (everything >8 bits is big endian):HALT - 00 - halt executionNOP - 01 - do nothingPEEK - 02 [register 1][register 2] [16-bit constant] - load value at (constant + ri2) in memory into ri1POKE - 03 [register 1][register 2] [16-bit constant] - ↑ but other way roundADD - 04 [register 1][register 2] [16-bit constant] - save (constant + ri2) to ri1JEQ - 05 [register 1][register 2] [16-bit constant] - set program counter to constant if ri1 = ri2JNE - 06 [register 1][register 2] [16-bit constant] - set program counter to constant if ri1 != ri2JLT - 07 [register 1][register 2] [16-bit constant] - set program counter to constant if ri1 < ri2TEST - FF - print debug information```

References

  1. Daniels, Melissa (April 6, 2017). "How Audiotree Is Reinventing Music Videos, One Live Performance At A Time". Forbes. Retrieved July 16, 2020.
  2. Olivier, Bobby (January 22, 2016). "Must-hear N.J.: How Faulkner and forest inspired agile indie-rockers Pinegrove". NJ.com. Retrieved July 16, 2020.
  3. Sodomsky, Sam (January 27, 2017). "Pinegrove: Elsewhere". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved July 16, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.