Jessamine

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Secret 00:00 Tools
Another Fictionalized History 00:00 Tools
Ordinary Sleep 00:00 Tools
Royal Jelly Eye Cream 00:00 Tools
...Or What You Mean 00:00 Tools
Cellophane 00:00 Tools
You Have Ugly Talents, Martha 00:00 Tools
Inevitably 00:00 Tools
One Trick Pony 00:00 Tools
Say What You Can 00:00 Tools
Lisboa 00:00 Tools
Don't You Know That Yet? 00:00 Tools
Periwinkle 05:27 Tools
Elsewards 00:00 Tools
Step Down 00:00 Tools
It Was Already Thursday 00:00 Tools
You May Have Forgotten 00:00 Tools
Schisandra 00:00 Tools
Corrupted Endeavor 00:00 Tools
Polish Countryside 00:00 Tools
Continuous 00:00 Tools
All the Same 00:00 Tools
It's Cold in Space 00:00 Tools
Burgundy 00:00 Tools
The Long Arm of Coincidence Makes My Radio Connections 00:00 Tools
Hand Held 00:00 Tools
Pilot-Free Ignition 00:00 Tools
Pilot Free-Ignition 00:00 Tools
Your Head Is So Small It's Like a Little Light 00:00 Tools
(I'm Not Afraid of) Electricity 00:00 Tools
22:30 00:00 Tools
Reflections 00:00 Tools
Cheree 00:00 Tools
Oscillations 00:00 Tools
The Moon Is Made of Cheese 00:00 Tools
It Shouldn't Take So Long for a Man to Drown 00:00 Tools
From Hereto and Now Otherwise 00:00 Tools
Air From Another World 00:00 Tools
Soon the World of Fashion Will Take and Interest in These Proceedings 00:00 Tools
Live at Off the Record 00:00 Tools
... or what you mean 00:00 Tools
From Here to and Now Otherwise 00:00 Tools
soon the world of fashion will 00:00 Tools
[Untitled Track] 08.43 00:00 Tools
The Long Arm of Coincidence 00:00 Tools
...Or What You Mea 00:00 Tools
…Or What You Mean 00:00 Tools
[Untitled Track] 04.37 00:00 Tools
[Untitled Track] 07.52 00:00 Tools
I'm Not Afraid Of Electricity 00:00 Tools
[Untitled Track] 02.07 00:00 Tools
[Untitled Track] 00:00 Tools
More love later 00:00 Tools
[Untitled Track] 07.47 00:00 Tools
Imaginary Friend 00:00 Tools
[Untitled Track] 07.48 00:00 Tools
[Untitled Track] 09.21 00:00 Tools
Untitled 00:00 Tools
Cheree (Suicide Cover) 00:00 Tools
untitled 1 00:00 Tools
Living Sound (Part 1) 00:00 Tools
untitled 3 00:00 Tools
…Or What You Mean 00:00 Tools
untitled 2 00:00 Tools
untitled 4 00:00 Tools
I Don't Look Good on Paper 00:00 Tools
untitled 6 00:00 Tools
untitled 5 00:00 Tools
Living Sound (Part 6) 00:00 Tools
Living Sound (Part 4) 00:00 Tools
Living Sound (Part 5) 00:00 Tools
Jessamine 00:00 Tools
untitled 7 00:00 Tools
Living Sound (Part 2) 00:00 Tools
Living Sound (Part 7) 00:00 Tools
living sound (part 3) 00:00 Tools
It`s Cold In Space 00:00 Tools
Petals or Razors 00:00 Tools
Pilot Free Ignition 00:00 Tools
See-Saw 00:00 Tools
Soon The World Of Fashion Will Take An Interest In These Precedings 00:00 Tools
[untitled] 00:00 Tools
a pox on you 00:00 Tools
02 - living sound (part 2) 00:00 Tools
Oscillations (Silver Apples cover) 00:00 Tools
Burgandy 00:00 Tools
Seagreen 00:00 Tools
Continious 00:00 Tools
Don't You Know That Yet_ 00:00 Tools
03 - living sound (part 3) 00:00 Tools
Your Head Is So Small It's Like a Tiny Little Light 00:00 Tools
A12 Elsewards 00:00 Tools
Say What You Can... 00:00 Tools
It Was Alredy Thrusday 00:00 Tools
your head is so small...light 00:00 Tools
Soon The World Of Fashion Will Take An Interest In These Procedings 00:00 Tools
01 - another fictionalized history 00:00 Tools
(I'm Not Afraid of Electricity) 00:00 Tools
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Jessamine was a four-piece psychedelic rock and drone rock band from Galion, Ohio, United States formed in 1992. Like a few people, Kranky first became aware of Jessamine in 1994 when we got a hold of their debut, self-released seven inch single. Wrapped in silver paper and bearing the logo of the Silver Apple label, and an Alan Vega cover, the band was sending out signals to those willing to receive them. A second single followed and Kranky was able to sign the Seattle-based quartet. To play wavering, keyboard heavy music in mid-90s Seattle was no small feat, Jessamine were swimming against a flannel tide. Guitarist Rex Ritter moved to the Pacific Northwest from Ohio (where he played in a band with his brother who contributed drums to some of the early Jessamine recordings) and met up with keyboardist Andy Brown and bassist/singer Dawn Smithson. After signing on the dotted line and getting some recording equipment, the band recorded over the course of three months with the band rehearsing, taping and playing live shows to hammer down the material before finishing basic tracks in two days. The self-titled Jessamine debut album came wrapped in translucent paper and received accolades in the press. And as Dave Segal recognized "even though they peddle massive doses of distortion and flirt with chaos, these libertines of the effects box can also craft songs full of memorable hooks and melodies." Sub Pop asked Jessamine to record a single for their label, Drunken Fish asked them to contribute to the Harmony of the Spheres compilation alongside Flying Saucer Attack, Bardo Pond, Charalambides, and others. With the drum position secured by Michael Faeth, the band began touring the United States. Jessamine recorded their second album, Long Arm of Coincidence in their home studio. Touring had made the band airtight, honing their melodic material as it fed their musical ambition. Kranky released the double LP/CD in 1996. Jessamine began a nationwide tour with Bardo Pond, then pulled up stakes and moved from Seattle to Portland in late 1996. With more room for home recording equipment. A sixteen track recording set up came together. A number of singles came out (later collected on the band's own Histrionic label as the CD Another Fictionalized History) and the group collaborated with Sonic Boom's Spectrum band for a cover of the Silver Apples' A Pox on You. A massive live collaboration between Jessamine and Experimental Audio Research would later be released on Histrionic as well. Then, in 1998, came the third album, Don't Stay Too Long. The band had tightened up on the extended interplay of previous recordings, concentrating on song structures. At the point when so many musicians supposedly advancing the sound form were content to lean on the effects peddles, noodle away or dabble with breakbeats, Jessamine had crafted their best album, demonstrating how instrumental aptitude and sonic experimentation could be focused into songs. For better or for worse, the band quit in 1999 while they were on top. Dawn Smithson returned to college in Seattle and Michael Faeth moved to Davis, California while Rex Ritter and Andy Brown completed their new studio Magnetic Park and began putting together Fontanelle. http://www.kranky.net/artists/jessamine.html Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.