Lytle, Jason / Dept. Of Disappearance
Album: | Dept. Of Disappearance | Collection: | General | |
Artist: | Lytle, Jason | Added: | Oct 2012 | |
Label: | Anti- / Epitaph |
A-File Activity
Add Date: | 2013-01-19 | Pull Date: | 2013-03-24 |
---|
Week Ending: | Mar 17 | Mar 10 | Mar 3 | Feb 24 | Feb 10 | Feb 3 | Jan 27 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Airplays: | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 5 |
Recent Airplay
1. | Dec 22, 2023: | KZSU Time Traveler
Matterhorn |
4. | Oct 12, 2018: | KZSU Time Traveler
Matterhorn |
|
2. | Dec 23, 2022: | KZSU Time Traveler
Matterhorn |
5. | Nov 24, 2017: | KZSU Time Traveler
Matterhorn |
|
3. | Mar 04, 2022: | KZSU Time Traveler
Matterhorn |
6. | Sep 29, 2017: | KZSU Time Traveler
Matterhorn |
Album Review
Caleb Rau
Reviewed 2013-01-11
Reviewed 2013-01-11
Artist: Jason Lytle
Album: Dept. Of Disappearance
Label: Anti/Epitaph
The soundtrack to a farmer’s encounter with alien life. On his fourth solo album Grandaddy frontman Jason Lytle uses circling synthesizers to give his folk-rock extraterrestrial vibes. A soothing and adventurous album. Like Eels minus the insanity.
Highlights: 1, 3, 7, 10!
1.(4:32): Industrial drums open into an upbeat folksy jam with an electro-rock interlude.
2.(5:15): Tension-building strings surround this triumphantly sad homage to a mountain.
3.(4:08): Distorted guitar in fits and starts. Swooping vocals and strings with a deep bass.
4.(3:52): Dreamy vocals accompanied by gentle piano and guitar. A cradle-rocking lullaby.
5.(2:16): Easy guitar and drums with occasional funky bass and analog synths. Tight intro and outro.
6.(5:44): Electronic strings and a post-rock instrumental interlude make this one lighter-worthy ballad.
7.(3:48): A supernintendo intro leads into guitar plucking and a beautiful marimba melody.
8.(6:15): Sad and slow track for the hopeless romantic, optimistic strings and swirling synth accompaniment.
9.(0:34): Classical piano melody with distant garage drums. Like walking past music practice rooms.
10.(5:10): Badass Daft Punk synths overtop a grooving bass make this one dark jam.
11.(8:14): Electro-drums and droning synth background with a rockin’ 70s guitar solo.
Album: Dept. Of Disappearance
Label: Anti/Epitaph
The soundtrack to a farmer’s encounter with alien life. On his fourth solo album Grandaddy frontman Jason Lytle uses circling synthesizers to give his folk-rock extraterrestrial vibes. A soothing and adventurous album. Like Eels minus the insanity.
Highlights: 1, 3, 7, 10!
1.(4:32): Industrial drums open into an upbeat folksy jam with an electro-rock interlude.
2.(5:15): Tension-building strings surround this triumphantly sad homage to a mountain.
3.(4:08): Distorted guitar in fits and starts. Swooping vocals and strings with a deep bass.
4.(3:52): Dreamy vocals accompanied by gentle piano and guitar. A cradle-rocking lullaby.
5.(2:16): Easy guitar and drums with occasional funky bass and analog synths. Tight intro and outro.
6.(5:44): Electronic strings and a post-rock instrumental interlude make this one lighter-worthy ballad.
7.(3:48): A supernintendo intro leads into guitar plucking and a beautiful marimba melody.
8.(6:15): Sad and slow track for the hopeless romantic, optimistic strings and swirling synth accompaniment.
9.(0:34): Classical piano melody with distant garage drums. Like walking past music practice rooms.
10.(5:10): Badass Daft Punk synths overtop a grooving bass make this one dark jam.
11.(8:14): Electro-drums and droning synth background with a rockin’ 70s guitar solo.
Track Listing