Drexel

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
BCM 00:00 Tools
The Sky 00:00 Tools
Big Black 00:00 Tools
You Wanted It 00:00 Tools
Shoe 00:00 Tools
Lies 00:00 Tools
Nutshell 00:00 Tools
Promises 00:00 Tools
Honestly 00:00 Tools
Allright 00:00 Tools
Drexel 00:00 Tools
Monolithic Beast 00:00 Tools
Practicing Preachers 00:00 Tools
Praise on Them 00:00 Tools
Cynical Sadness 00:00 Tools
Tenacious D 00:00 Tools
Big John's House 00:00 Tools
Righteous Judgement 00:00 Tools
Newnew 00:00 Tools
Queen V 00:00 Tools
The Rainbow Connection 00:00 Tools
So Far Away 00:00 Tools
Only One 00:00 Tools
Allston Throne 00:00 Tools
Walden Pond 00:00 Tools
Since Yesterday 00:00 Tools
Underground 00:00 Tools
Christy 00:00 Tools
River of Jordan 00:00 Tools
Lazy 00:00 Tools
Timing 00:00 Tools
Steve 00:00 Tools
Wonderland 00:00 Tools
Waiting For A Train 00:00 Tools
Go 00:00 Tools
Victory 00:00 Tools
Costello's 00:00 Tools
Short One 00:00 Tools
Screaming At A Wall 00:00 Tools
The Decline Of Western Civ. II 00:00 Tools
B C M 00:00 Tools
Allrght 00:00 Tools
National League 00:00 Tools
Summer of Nothin' 00:00 Tools
(Unlisted) 00:00 Tools
National 00:00 Tools
17 League 00:00 Tools
17 00:00 Tools
Drexel: So Far Away 00:00 Tools
East Dayton Saturday Night 00:00 Tools
Unknown 00:00 Tools
The Summer of Nothin' 00:00 Tools
Alexandria 00:00 Tools
God Bless Your Mother 00:00 Tools
TheBloodyTransylvaniaStreetMachine 00:00 Tools
The Man Called Chowder 00:00 Tools
Track 01 00:00 Tools
Track 06 00:00 Tools
Track 11 00:00 Tools
Track 05 00:00 Tools
Track 02 00:00 Tools
Track 04 00:00 Tools
Black Roses 00:00 Tools
You Can See My Soul In Rock'n'Roll 00:00 Tools
10 00:00 Tools
Trick Knee 00:00 Tools
Standing In The Shadows Of The Dollar Tree Store 00:00 Tools
Track 03 00:00 Tools
Track 10 00:00 Tools
Blood On The Snow 00:00 Tools
Alright 00:00 Tools
Track 07 00:00 Tools
Death Acceptor 00:00 Tools
Do Not Mess With Oprah 00:00 Tools
Track 09 00:00 Tools
Joe 00:00 Tools
Sexual Pancakes 00:00 Tools
Giant Jesus Made Of Hummus 00:00 Tools
Urban Girl 00:00 Tools
Flagless Memorial Day 00:00 Tools
Track 08 00:00 Tools
Untitled 2 00:00 Tools
Track 3 00:00 Tools
Viva Estonia 00:00 Tools
Apples 00:00 Tools
New 00:00 Tools
Seventeen 00:00 Tools
Untitled 00:00 Tools
Daffodil 00:00 Tools
Bonus Track 00:00 Tools
Track 6 00:00 Tools
American Gold 00:00 Tools
Janglie 00:00 Tools
Untitled 1 00:00 Tools
Costellos 00:00 Tools
Third 00:00 Tools
Decline of Western Civilization 00:00 Tools
Rainbow Connection 00:00 Tools
?!?!?! 00:00 Tools
Nina Blackwood Fugate Humperdink In G-Minor 00:00 Tools
New New 00:00 Tools
Hits 00:00 Tools
Untitled 3 00:00 Tools
Missing You 00:00 Tools
Intro 00:00 Tools
Track 5 00:00 Tools
Track 7 00:00 Tools
Eunich From Munich 00:00 Tools
Cycle Back 00:00 Tools
Alliston Throne 00:00 Tools
Eating Movies 00:00 Tools
2 00:00 Tools
Untitled 4 00:00 Tools
Untitled 5 00:00 Tools
6 00:00 Tools
Second 00:00 Tools
What Went Wrong 00:00 Tools
Frostman 00:00 Tools
pony 00:00 Tools
Track 2 00:00 Tools
Right After The Show 00:00 Tools
Thing 00:00 Tools
Track 8 00:00 Tools
Burnout Down Memory Lane 00:00 Tools
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DREXEL does consist of members of other bands, however we cannot say which bands. DREXEL formed in the city of BOSTON. It was the winter of 1996. The four friends came together out of boredom: “It was more a joke or a reason to hangout, or rather, to just fuck about”. -Pearson Woodbury It was here that DREXEL wrote their first batch of ten songs. Most of these ten PUNK songs were recorded by their friend, Jon Lammi, in different studios all over BOSTON when he could find the time--usually around 4 or 5 in the morning. The others, however, were recorded by any other person that was bored on a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday… really, whatever night Lammi was busy. Later, the collection of songs were put out on a on a split full-length album called Shot By Lammi on FORK IN HAND records. At the end of he year, the four boys lived, wrote and recorded in a town just a spit outside of BOSTON called ALLSTON. The address of this shit-brown lean-to is 51 Gardner. Jeff Highway was jobless. He mostly spent his time on the porch of 51, drinking beer on his ‘Allston Throne’ (a dirty, bed bug-ridden recliner left there by previous tenants) writing songs for DREXEL’s next record, No On Told Me. CREEK JOHNSON worked at the local package store, loading kegs of beer and dinging up the store’s VAN 3 delivery truck. PEARSON WOODBURY was taking summer classes and painting the house he grew up in for his father. MICHAEL NILE shipped packages of a non-alcoholic nature at a retail store and often visited CREEK at work after his own shift. It was in the roach-infested basement on Gardner Street that DREXEL wrote No One Told Me. This was also released on FORK IN HAND records. The band toured and toured, yet had to come home, get jobs and start the new record, Whatever Whenever. At this point CREEK and MICHAEL had moved into a new place in the Back Bay, JEFF lived in a basement apartment around the corner, and PEARSON about a ten minute walk away. Because the boys were such close friends, the distance between their apartments was filled with rumor and hearsay. One night after a show at The Linwood and a day before tour, PEARSON decided to end the bad energy in the band by throwing fists at CREEK and JEFF. The immature message was made and then left to be handled by the other members. Luckily for him the boys gave him a get-out-of-jail free card. With life demanding more and more hours of work to make more money to survive the increasing price of living, AND with the introductions of different girlfriends, DREXEL began to have their troubles. The problem with the four boys had always been their closeness. Being the best of best friends, it would always hurt when the boys were not able to hangout together on a regular basis, like they had in the past. There was “weird air” between them that would often make for an argument. However, with CREEK’s slow Texas demeanor, he would often calm the fight down, reminding everyone they were all still ‘buddies’. Unfortunately, it could not help MICHAEL. After one show’s argument of CREEK being a “dick”, MICHAEL was through. Was it because the two had gotten so close from living together for so many years, that the “bad air” had been harder for the two of them to swallow? More so than for JEFF and PEARSON? …I think so. New houses, new friends, new record. It was at this time when DREXEL found its sound--loosely named PANIC ROCK--that The Inevitable Is Available was being crafted. Even though the days of hanging out together as brothers were few and far between, the three members of DREXEL managed to stay close. It was the music. The band was all on the “same page”. Each member was proud of and challenged by the new sounds being presented at each rehearsal. It was around this time CREEK and PEARSON’s famous love-hate relationship began, and the band only saw each other at rehearsal or at shows. It was not because of any ill feelings, it was, according to longtime friend and confidant MURPH, “Their friends didn’t hangout with his friends, and his friends didn’t drink where his friends did.” The Inevitable Is Available was recorded and received with a lot of critical acclaim. CREEK, JEFF, PEARSON and a PHANTOM BUDDY on bass produced this new approach to their music. The band played on and continued crafting they’re new PANIC ROCK style. The other bands CREEK and PEARSON were in began to tour more and more. Did CREEK foresee the end of DREXEL? Maybe, but for whatever reason he nonetheless named the new and last DREXEL record, What Went Wrong. The band was at its most distant as friends, but the respect and love of the band’s music was at its highest. SANCHEZ, PEARSON’s roommate and close, close buddy, replaced MICHAEL on bass and brought the band back together again--close friends, once more. Everything was as it had been: DREXEL was four friends making music they loved. Rehearsal would always have a 30 pack ready, and afterwards the boys would go out and talk about the night’s progress on What Went Wrong. The record was finished and properly recorded--for the first time. It was DREXEL’s best. What Went Wrong was well-received. Things were good. BUT, because of the time CREEK and PEARSON’s other bands were demanding, CREEK felt it was time to end the much-maligned DREXEL. SANCHEZ was more then bummed, JEFF dealt, and PEARSON tried to change CREEK’s mind. But CREEK felt DREXEL should bow out nobly, rather than fizzle away. So, DREXEL had they’re last show at T.T. And The Bears - Sept. 25th . www.myspace.com/drexel Read more on Last.fm. 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