Great Northern

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Home 00:00 Tools
Houses 00:00 Tools
Low Is a Height 00:00 Tools
Our Bleeding Hearts 00:00 Tools
Driveway 00:00 Tools
Telling Lies 00:00 Tools
This Is a Problem 00:00 Tools
Just a Dream 00:00 Tools
Story 00:00 Tools
The Middle 00:00 Tools
Numbers 00:00 Tools
Into The Sun 00:00 Tools
City of Sleep 00:00 Tools
Fingers 00:00 Tools
A Sun a Sound 00:00 Tools
Snakes 00:00 Tools
New Tricks 00:00 Tools
Warning 00:00 Tools
Stop 00:00 Tools
Mountain 00:00 Tools
Babies 00:00 Tools
33 00:00 Tools
Summertime 00:00 Tools
Holes 00:00 Tools
Loose Ends 00:00 Tools
Winter 00:00 Tools
Shakey 00:00 Tools
Radio 00:00 Tools
Into The Flood 00:00 Tools
SKIN OF OUR TEETH 00:00 Tools
Bonnie & Clyde 00:00 Tools
Seasons 00:00 Tools
Ripple 00:00 Tools
Bonnie and Clyde 00:00 Tools
Great Northern - Warning 00:00 Tools
SHOTS 00:00 Tools
Human 00:00 Tools
LIKE STRANGERS 00:00 Tools
X 00:00 Tools
Fever 00:00 Tools
BULLETS 00:00 Tools
This Is a Problem (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
Great Northern - Story 00:00 Tools
Summertime (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
Loose Ends (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
Shakey (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
Radio (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
Winter (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
Baby 00:00 Tools
Great Northern - Low is a Height 00:00 Tools
Great Northern - This Is A Problem 00:00 Tools
Bonnie And Clyde (OST Gossip Girl) 00:00 Tools
For Weeks 00:00 Tools
home new 00:00 Tools
Houses (Radio Edit) 00:00 Tools
Great Northern - Houses 00:00 Tools
Houses (lyrcis) 00:00 Tools
334 Home 00:00 Tools
Waxing / Waning 00:00 Tools
Houses (The Rhombus Remix) 00:00 Tools
Houses - The Rhombus Remix 00:00 Tools
Great Northern - Home 00:00 Tools
Houses (ost Соседка по комнате 2011) 00:00 Tools
Houses (2009) 00:00 Tools
Houses (Ruben Anderson Remix) 00:00 Tools
Middle 00:00 Tools
Rock On 00:00 Tools
Sun a Sound 00:00 Tools
Even The Sunbeams 00:00 Tools
Houses - Ruben Anderson Remix 00:00 Tools
Orl 00:00 Tools
Bonnie And Clyd 00:00 Tools
Houses (Alexei & Carlos Kinn Remix) 00:00 Tools
Bonnie and Clyde lyrics 00:00 Tools
Love Is a Height 00:00 Tools
01 Our Bleeding Hearts 00:00 Tools
10 Babies 00:00 Tools
HOLES ref.02 edit 00:00 Tools
This King 00:00 Tools
03 Home 00:00 Tools
Low is a Height video 00:00 Tools
Blalock's Indie/Rock Playlist: May (2009) - 51 - Houses 00:00 Tools
Great Northern - Snakes 00:00 Tools
Houses (OST The Roommate) 00:00 Tools
Bonnie& Clyde 00:00 Tools
11 Winter 00:00 Tools
Intro 00:00 Tools
Great Northern, 'Houses' 00:00 Tools
Bonnie And Clyde (zaycev.net) 00:00 Tools
06 City of Sleep 00:00 Tools
Middle, The 00:00 Tools
05 Low Is a Height 00:00 Tools
Houses (ost Соседка по комнате) 00:00 Tools
Houses - Alexei & Carlos Kinn Remix 00:00 Tools
Babies (Alternate Version) 00:00 Tools
Bonny and Clyde 00:00 Tools
Skin Of Our Teeth (OST Shameless 5-1) 00:00 Tools
Great Northern - Fingers 00:00 Tools
Houses [The Vampire Diaries 1.09] 00:00 Tools
Great Northern-Driveway 00:00 Tools
08 Into the Sun 00:00 Tools
A Story 00:00 Tools
Great Northern - Driveway 00:00 Tools
07 A Sun a Sound 00:00 Tools
Bonnie & Clyde (Gainsbourg and Brigitte Bardot cover) 00:00 Tools
low is height 00:00 Tools
Houses (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Great Northern - Mountain 00:00 Tools
Low Is A Height [HQ] (Trading Twilight For Daylight) 00:00 Tools
Houses (Episode 9) 00:00 Tools
"Home" Eenie Meenie Records 00:00 Tools
Great Northern - New Tricks 00:00 Tools
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Great Northern is an indie rock group from Los Angeles comprising vocalist/guitarist Solon Bixler (formerly of 30 Seconds to Mars), vocalist/keyboardist Rachel Stolte, bassist Michael Regilio, keyboardist Marissa Micik and drummer Dusty Rocherolle. As of 2007, they are signed with the independent label Eenie Meenie Records, where they have released their debut album, Trading Twilight For Daylight (2007), and their sophomore album, Remind Me Where the Light Is (2009). "It's like being intimate with total strangers." That is how Rachel Stolte of Great Northern describes the feeling of performing live and creating a connection with her audience. The sentiment could be duly applied to the band's latest release, Remind Me Where the Light Is, on which Stolte and co-writer Solon Bixler pour so much of themselves into their highly personal lyrics and wistful melodies. On their sophomore album, Bixler and Stolte are not afraid to delve into darkness. Taking that risk helped them find beauty in sadness, the uplifting elements in the devastating. "We took a lot more risks by entering uncomfortable territory that wasn't touched on the last record," Bixler says. "We dug deeper into the unpleasant, which helped us to find the beauty." Experiencing the negative to find the positive is something Bixler and Stolte are familiar with. "Both of us had been heading in unfulfilling directions creatively," Bixler says of their situations prior to coming together. “When we started Great Northern, we finally felt like we were starting something that truly expressed what was in our hearts and minds." Their first release, Trading Twilight for Daylight (2007), embodied surprisingly catchy hooks, lush keys and breathy vocals. The album made multiple Top 10 lists in magazines (Filter, Under the Radar) and on radio (Nic Harcourt, KCRW in LA; Aaron Axelson of Live 105 in San Francisco). The praise didn’t stop there as NME gave it a “Must Download Now” rating and iTunes dubbed the band “the next big thing.” FM Radio giants like KROQ and cutting edge stations like and Indie 103 added the band to their regular playlists. Extensive touring behind the album led Great Northern to share the stage with acts like Spoon, Cold War Kids, Silversun Pickups, Fiery Furnaces, Ladytron, The Gutter Twins, and Soulsavers. Their sophomore release, Remind Me Where the Light Is is the work of a more seasoned group, one that has been on the road for months, missed home, seen the world, and returned not entirely prepared to sit still. "When we started writing songs for [this album]," Stolte says, "we had just come off a year and a half of touring and didn't really know what was next. So we bought some recording equipment, set up a studio in our house [in LA], and just started writing. Almost immediately it was like the emotional flood gates opened. We would listen to stuff and be like 'Wow! So that's how we've been feeling about that. "It became very clear to both of us that we were going to do things a little differently this time, and in many ways we were outgrowing something. An old part of ourselves had died." That passing is shown literally (the use of piano is drastically reduced on Remind Me Where the Light Is) as well as lyrically and melodically, where melancholy becomes determination, and atmospherics are replaced with driving rhythms. "Story," for example, which started as a much slower piano demo, became a guitar-driven up-tempo rock song with no piano, thanks to the advice of production team Michael Patterson (Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Beck, P-Diddy, Ladytron) and Nic Jodoin. The song opens with a lively, driving beat, and Rachel's simultaneously unapologetic and forceful vocals slinging near-vicious lines such as "Tell me your secrets / tell me your story / how 'bout one you can't hide behind." Bixler joins for call-and-response with his hushed vocals pleading "what do you want? What do you see?," and Stolte responding "I should have left it all alone." On "Houses," the aggressive, thrashing drumbeat gives the melody a visceral quality; the darker side of things is something Stolte says is symbolic to the story of the record. "It's a song about walking through life and choosing to see the truth no matter how painful," Stolte says, "rather than staying in the same place or hiding from it." With over fuzzed and speeding electric guitar, Rachel takes the lead with her warm and commanding vocals, slinging captivating lyrics like "up ahead I see it / I can't find it but I feel alive" and "All this time when I talk it's not real." "With our music, we try to paint pictures to go along with the words that tell the story," Bixler says, and "Driveway" exemplifies that desire, as the lyrics create a vivid image of one desperate to be the object of another’s affection. It's a more melancholy offering, with muted, poignant keys and Bixler's pleading vocals. "Remember when you wake up / don't forget to turn out the light / 'cause I'm looking out my window for you every night," he sings as a lone piano builds to a fuller mournful melody with nostalgic, almost theatrical strings. "We are content to be learning as we go," Bixler says, "trying to overcome the fear of changing ourselves, constantly redefining ourselves as artists, and never creating the same thing twice. We hope the people who hear our music will relate to this next chapter or our lives." Given the ease with which Bixler and Stolte foster an immediate intimacy with their audience, listeners new and old are certain to not only relate but to join in on the journey from the darkness, back to the light. Solon Bixler – vocals/guitar Rachel Stolte – vocals/keyboard Releases: -Remind Me Where The Light Is is now on iTunes! see it here! -Gooseberries Book out now! media links: Myspace Purevolume Virb Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.