Kingsbury

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Emeralds 00:00 Tools
Easy 00:00 Tools
All Gone 00:00 Tools
Alone Again 00:00 Tools
In My Brain 00:00 Tools
U Take It Back 00:00 Tools
Blurry Now 03:17 Tools
Back In the Orange Grove 05:17 Tools
The Great Compromise 02:58 Tools
Blood In The Kitchen 03:32 Tools
Corpse 03:16 Tools
Desert Inn 02:35 Tools
All This Dead Space 03:40 Tools
Lie to Me 04:21 Tools
This Time Of Night 04:44 Tools
Breaking Apart 04:44 Tools
Armada 03:00 Tools
Holy War 06:13 Tools
As I See It 03:06 Tools
Ocarina Mountiantop 03:13 Tools
Ceremony 04:49 Tools
Leave Me Be 03:37 Tools
This Place is Coming Down 02:33 Tools
Before Dry Eyes 06:03 Tools
Peninsula 03:05 Tools
Buried Beneath The Trees 04:10 Tools
The City And The Sea 09:14 Tools
In Her Grace 04:06 Tools
18 Months 05:25 Tools
Oh Captain, My Captain 04:17 Tools
The Open Sea 05:43 Tools
Been Around 03:38 Tools
Seeing the Path 03:17 Tools
Atlantic City (Bruce Springsteen cover) 03:17 Tools
Atlantic City 03:17 Tools
Ocarina Mountain 03:12 Tools
open sea 03:17 Tools
Track-05 03:12 Tools
Unrequited 05:10 Tools
Track-02 03:33 Tools
Track-03 02:35 Tools
Track-01 03:16 Tools
Getting To Me 03:16 Tools
Spooky Demon 03:10 Tools
Listen, Perform, and Show 03:14 Tools
00's, Post-Rock, Cover, Southern Accent (feat. Matt Butcher) 03:14 Tools
  • 24,646
    plays
  • 8,388
    listners
  • 24646
    top track count

There are 2 artists named Kingsbury: 1. In November, we released a new version of our website, www.kingsburymusic.net. On this new version, we have released our new EP "Lie To Me" for free. You will also be able to download everything we have ever recorded for free. We will have live recordings, random tracks that never got released, studio footage, all the album artwork, all the lyrics, and maybe even a few cover songs if we don't get sued for playing them. Kingsburymusic.net is going to be the portal to everything we do from here on. Every time we record a new song, we will post it. All the pictures we take, the videos we make, the ideas we have, everything will be on the site. And we will post it as quickly as we can make it. Think of it as an online music blog, but the only content will be content we create. The site is going to have a donations link, so that if you feel so inclined, you can help us with making our wonderful content. All of the donation money will be reinvested into our recording studio, gas for our van, and other infrastructure we may need to make more abundant and higher quality audio and video. All of our records and related merchandise will still be on sale for all of you on Post-Records.com. Hardcopy releases will still be released on Post-Records, and if we get enough money from donations, we are going to press vinyl copies of "Lie To Me" and "The Great Compromise". We strongly feel that the way people consume music and media is radically changing, and as technology changes, the relevance of the album will continue to come into question. Rather than try to fight a changing media climate, we would rather spend our time setting up a system that we can be as creative and constant as possible. We are going to change the way we do things as a band, because our culture and technology is changing. We are excited about the change, and we hope you are too. Lie To Me From May 2007 to July 2008, Kingsbury tried numerous different writing and recording strategies in their home studio, Sugarwood, in Winter Park, FL. The band (Mark Freeman, TJ Burke, Samantha Christine, and Bruce Reed) was still involved in promoting their critically acclaimed debut full-length "The Great Compromise" and touring across the country, but used what little time they had to write, record, and craft music in ways outside of what they were used to. The result is "Lie To Me", the follow-up EP to "The Great Compromise" and the first of a series of recordings released for free on the bands recently rebuilt website, kingsburymusic.net. "Lie To Me" exploits the more atmospheric elements of what Kingsbury does. With six songs, it still clocks in around thirty minutes. The songs share a strong emphasis on subtlety and dynamics, but remain incredibly gripping. The record is rich with layered compositions and Reed's voice sounds more comfortable than ever. Instrumental tracks like "Ocarina Mountaintop" and "Armada" were born out of sonic manipulations and stream of conscious recording, while songs like "Holy War" and the title track, "Lie To Me", were crafted in the studio completely live. As a whole, "Lie To Me" delivers on Kingsbury's strength; music that is uncomfortably gorgeous and beautifully unnerving. The EP will be released for free on the band's recently rebuilt website, kingsburymusic.net, this November and will have an official release early next year on Post-Records. 2. Pop duo Kingsbury washes away traditional expectations of Nashville’s country sound to showcase the progressive pop phenomenon emerging in Tennessee’s capital city. Caroline Kingsbury and Will Hess’ debut single “Easy” came to fruition while the two were on separate sides of the country. With Will in San Francisco and Caroline in Nashville, they combined dreamwave sensuality with indiepop and R&B sensibilities. It’s a sonic light submerged and emitting from the sea, a sound so detached from Music City’s roots that its ties to Nashville become surreal. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.