Common Rotation

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Indie Rockin' 00:00 Tools
Don't Let's Start 00:00 Tools
Clear Channel 00:00 Tools
Everything Under the Sun 00:00 Tools
True Hollywood Romance 00:00 Tools
Post Modern 00:00 Tools
Oklahoma 00:00 Tools
Sit Down 00:00 Tools
Offstage Lines 00:00 Tools
Fortunate 00:00 Tools
Savior 00:00 Tools
Answering Machine 00:00 Tools
All My Time 00:00 Tools
With My Trumpet in My Hand 00:00 Tools
Prime Time 00:00 Tools
How to Lose 00:00 Tools
Party People 00:00 Tools
Heaven Help Me 00:00 Tools
It's Always More Than Once Before It Takes 00:00 Tools
Wasted Words 00:00 Tools
Gone Dyin' 00:00 Tools
Color Guard 00:00 Tools
Plan Ahead 00:00 Tools
We're Not Gonna Take It 00:00 Tools
The First Time 00:00 Tools
Union Dues 00:00 Tools
All Smiles 00:00 Tools
God Will 00:00 Tools
Smile and the Whole World Leaves With You 00:00 Tools
Auctioneer 00:00 Tools
What We Have Now 00:00 Tools
Payback 00:00 Tools
The Crowd and I 00:00 Tools
Normal Sea 00:00 Tools
Given Signs 00:00 Tools
Burgandy 00:00 Tools
Put My Little Shoes Away 00:00 Tools
RockStar 00:00 Tools
Chain of Command 00:00 Tools
Try Too Hard 00:00 Tools
Did a Verse End? 00:00 Tools
Karma Chameleon 00:00 Tools
Hidden Track 00:00 Tools
My Wedding Day, My Setting Sun 00:00 Tools
Paper Planes 00:00 Tools
A Reasonable Lie 00:00 Tools
It's a Wonderful Lie 00:00 Tools
Pawn 00:00 Tools
Carnivale 00:00 Tools
If Heaven Knows 00:00 Tools
Did Averse End? 00:00 Tools
Patients 00:00 Tools
Forget For a While 00:00 Tools
Dancer (live) 00:00 Tools
Hollywood 00:00 Tools
Pawns 00:00 Tools
In Loving (Instrumental) 00:00 Tools
Venice 00:00 Tools
The Other David Berman 00:00 Tools
Tired/Sad/Bed/Bad 00:00 Tools
Let It Go 00:00 Tools
In Mourning (Instrumental) 00:00 Tools
Princess of Venice 00:00 Tools
No Love at All 00:00 Tools
Help Save The Youth Of America 00:00 Tools
92 Mikes 00:00 Tools
Radio DJ 00:00 Tools
Old Shoes and Picture Postcards 00:00 Tools
Afterthought 00:00 Tools
My Kingdom 00:00 Tools
No One Like You 00:00 Tools
Indie Rockin 00:00 Tools
Paper Planes (M.I.A. Cover) 00:00 Tools
Dancer [Live] 00:00 Tools
My Funny Valentine 00:00 Tools
Cowboy Tune 00:00 Tools
Here to Stay 00:00 Tools
Bitter Honey 00:00 Tools
Crowd and I 00:00 Tools
Union Maid Fight Song 00:00 Tools
[Untitled Hidden Track] 00:00 Tools
Get on the Idol 00:00 Tools
Let's Go for a Drive 00:00 Tools
Moving Up Exercizes 00:00 Tools
Belfast 00:00 Tools
Rock Star 00:00 Tools
Rock Me Obama 00:00 Tools
Lena 00:00 Tools
One Step Up 00:00 Tools
It's Not My Birthday 00:00 Tools
Untitled 00:00 Tools
White House Blues 00:00 Tools
Travel Late 00:00 Tools
Easy Chair 00:00 Tools
More Complex than it Sounds 00:00 Tools
Last Christmas 00:00 Tools
Hey Mr DJ 00:00 Tools
Dont Let's Start 00:00 Tools
Did a Verse End 00:00 Tools
Day for A Day 00:00 Tools
Near Miss 00:00 Tools
Lesson Learned 00:00 Tools
Cowboy 00:00 Tools
Broken Arrow (There Was A Time) 00:00 Tools
Captain's Arrival 00:00 Tools
Moving Up Exercises 00:00 Tools
Surround Face 00:00 Tools
Borderline 00:00 Tools
Hollywood Romance 00:00 Tools
afterthoughts 00:00 Tools
Innocent When You Dream 00:00 Tools
DJ 00:00 Tools
Satan/Satan No 00:00 Tools
Let Me Die With My Trumpet In My Hand 00:00 Tools
Gone Dyin 00:00 Tools
Hey Mr. DJ 00:00 Tools
A Definitive Biography 00:00 Tools
Louisiana 00:00 Tools
Hey Lena 00:00 Tools
Need Not Know 00:00 Tools
Smile 00:00 Tools
You Ain't Goin' Nowhere 00:00 Tools
Waiting For the Great Leap Forward 00:00 Tools
Down in Front 00:00 Tools
The way you make me feel 00:00 Tools
Instrumental 00:00 Tools
Everything Under The Sun (Live) 00:00 Tools
Playground 00:00 Tools
I'm So Bored With The USA 00:00 Tools
Punchline Delivery 00:00 Tools
Time Of Your Life 00:00 Tools
Don't Lets Start 00:00 Tools
Pretty Lights 00:00 Tools
Boy in the Bubble 00:00 Tools
Master of My Domain 00:00 Tools
You Ain't Going Nowhere 00:00 Tools
Before it Takes 00:00 Tools
Don't Let's Start (Live) 00:00 Tools
Broken Arrow 00:00 Tools
Satan No 00:00 Tools
Drop Old Diamond 00:00 Tools
Love And Mercy 00:00 Tools
Dancer 00:00 Tools
Godwill 00:00 Tools
Savior1_12_02 00:00 Tools
Waiting Right Here 00:00 Tools
Union Maid 00:00 Tools
Another Day Older 00:00 Tools
afternoons and coffeespoons 00:00 Tools
Off To The Races 00:00 Tools
One I Left Behind 00:00 Tools
More Than Once 00:00 Tools
Trouble 00:00 Tools
[untitled] 00:00 Tools
I'll Be Home For Christmas 00:00 Tools
The Christmas Song 00:00 Tools
Indie Rockin' (live) 00:00 Tools
Savior (live) 00:00 Tools
God Will (live) 00:00 Tools
Songs For An Empty House 00:00 Tools
So Nice To Be Here 00:00 Tools
Little Boxes 00:00 Tools
Live In Five 00:00 Tools
Means of Survival 00:00 Tools
Postmodern 00:00 Tools
Carnival Song 00:00 Tools
What I See 00:00 Tools
More Than Once Before it Takes 00:00 Tools
My Kingdom - Live 00:00 Tools
Adeline 00:00 Tools
Definitive Biography 00:00 Tools
Common Rotation 00:00 Tools
Ice Cream 00:00 Tools
Oklahoma (live) 00:00 Tools
Fortunate (live) 00:00 Tools
Might Never Know 00:00 Tools
Gone Dyin' (Live) 00:00 Tools
[Untitled Track] 00:00 Tools
The First Time (Live) 00:00 Tools
Don't Want To Die Alone 00:00 Tools
dont lets start 00:00 Tools
Question And Answer 00:00 Tools
All Night Rave 00:00 Tools
Clear Channel (Live) 00:00 Tools
Little Shoes 00:00 Tools
No Easy Way Out 00:00 Tools
Sweetheart 00:00 Tools
Strange 00:00 Tools
The Way We Move 00:00 Tools
Saturday Night 00:00 Tools
Way Too Much 00:00 Tools
Fatal Flaw 00:00 Tools
Lay You Down 00:00 Tools
White City 00:00 Tools
Homeward Bound 00:00 Tools
Gone Dying 00:00 Tools
One Checks Out 00:00 Tools
Price To Pay 00:00 Tools
roundend 00:00 Tools
unionmaid 00:00 Tools
3-6-03.True.Hollywood.Romance 00:00 Tools
  • 126,455
    plays
  • 3,900
    listners
  • 126455
    top track count

Common Rotation Adam Busch – vocals Eric Kufs – vocals, guitar Jordan Katz - vocals, trumpet, banjo “The atmosphere at our concerts," says Common Rotation vocalist Adam Busch, “is one of an intelligent and ironic frat house celebration of the morbid view of mortality.” Life is short but this won’t dissuade us from its pleasures. It’s at once kinda dorky (like folk music) but also profoundly sage, the only religion worth a subscription. It’s the axis of Common Rotation’s existence, and the thesis of their new album, The Big Fear. “Our shows are a party every time, intentionally and incidentally, conjured by the mix of a teen boredom, alcohol, a visually dramatic performance of catchy upbeat folk tunes with very cynical messages.” Busch and his good friend Eric Kufs formed the morbid party called Common Rotation in their high school days. Busch had experienced a musical awakening at hearing Elvis Costello; thinking he was the only one (as Costello fans seem to do), Busch was surprised to hear Kufs was also a fan. That and a shared love of folk music forged a bond between the two and a relentlessly prolific collaboration that continues to this day. Their tunes were funny and sad in equal doses—consummately existential, smart but not pretentiously literate. They began playing coffeehouses, “hitting every open mic night in the Tri-State area” originally, cultivating a following among the venues’ folk-friendly denizens. These morphed into regular gigs at the same places, weekends at larger clubs in New York City, and eventual opening dates with friends and benefactors They Might Be Giants. During that time, they released a quickie album (titled Common Rotation, but credited to “28 Orange Street”). It did well for them, but Busch says it was when he and Kufs moved to California—and donned the Common Rotation as a moniker (partly due to their revolving-door rhythm section) that they began work on the album they’d both envisioned: The Big Fear. They rented a big house and set about writing and recording three albums’ worth of material, from which ten tracks were chosen (Note: the rest weren’t to languish; the band has a full-disclosure policy, making new rehearsals, demos and live takes available on CommonRotation.com every two days and sprinkling them throughout their constantly changing set list). The environment, Busch says, was especially conducive to creativity, and resulted in the album they’ve both envisioned since their salad days, a marriage of pop sensibilities and the communal, inclusive aura of folk. “There is a major difference in the maturity of the production,” says Busch. “The first album was recorded in one ten-hour day. The songs on The Big Fear are much more polished in the band’s performance of them and were closely examined in terms of their arrangements.” “Indie Rockin’,” an unrighteous raspberry at elitist hipsters, commences the record thusly, melding an infectious chorus to a troubadour-ish admonition to not take oneself so serious—music is supposed to be fun—and protest (the hipster protagonist admits his “indie rockin’” ethos is a “feeling that I stole”). Henceforth, Common Rotation (Kufs and Busch are joined by drummer Prof. Ken Beck and bassist Mike Uhler, two of several musicians that comprise Common Rotation’s sundry live incarnations) have fun throughout an album that ponders weighty questions and situations (the airy, jazzy “Savior,” acoustic pop gems “Post Modern,” “All My Time”) and inhales life (the jubilant “Sit Down,” a quirk-lite interpretation of They Might Be Giants’ “Don’t Let’s Start,” the summer vibe-y “Prime Time”). The effect is such that one is at once liberated and somewhat blissfully burdened with new questions. Kufs: “The point of writing songs, for us, has always been to release feelings we have at different moments in our lives so we can understand them better. Whether the subject of a song is a relationship with another person or a relationship with society, human nature, a God, etcetera, we feel the need to express our feelings about it without preaching to a listener.” At the same time, Common Rotation seeks to exist, if only in brief bursts, on the same plane as the listener. Their name intimates as much; we’re all on the same planet, spinning on the same axis. Everybody, everywhere is trying to get through the same crappy day en route to the inevitable dirtnap denouement; we don’t have to dance to the same song, but sometimes doing exactly that is enough to get you through the day. “We don't know any more than our audience does,” Busch says, “and if we can give them something catchy to sing along with that doesn't invoke any thought by any means other than sincerity, then we have succeeded.” Taken from www.commonrotation.com Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.