Spymob

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Half Steering 03:33 Tools
German Test Drive 04:19 Tools
Half-Steering... 03:33 Tools
It Gets Me Going 05:16 Tools
2040 04:29 Tools
Half-Steering 00:00 Tools
Walking Under Green Leaves 03:40 Tools
Sitting Around Keeping Score 03:24 Tools
Stand Up & Win 03:08 Tools
I Still Live At Home 04:39 Tools
National Holidays 04:19 Tools
Thinking Of Someone Else 03:34 Tools
On Pilot Mountain 03:00 Tools
Fly Fly Fishing Poles 03:42 Tools
Half Steering Half Eating Ice Cream 03:45 Tools
Joe Namath 03:56 Tools
John Madden 03:48 Tools
Napping Mid-Day 04:14 Tools
Heavy Load 03:49 Tools
Wake For The Night 03:13 Tools
Up For A Good Time 02:55 Tools
Keep Your Speed Up 03:40 Tools
Give Us A Chance To Call 03:41 Tools
The Things I Used To Know 03:59 Tools
Shine Like The Sun 04:01 Tools
Dream About Her 02:29 Tools
Townhouse Stereo 04:01 Tools
Kissing the Neighborhood Houses Goodbye 04:01 Tools
I Think I Can Live With You 03:15 Tools
Reno 02:29 Tools
Paul Harvey 02:02 Tools
Half The Time With You 03:03 Tools
Seventeen New Recipes 05:54 Tools
Bleachers 05:54 Tools
Uncontrollably 05:54 Tools
Capital Buildings 05:54 Tools
Half Steering... 05:54 Tools
Sometimes It Doesn't Feel Right 03:57 Tools
Sundays 00:30 Tools
I Feel Like I Let You Down 03:47 Tools
Sugar Free 03:26 Tools
Making a Killing 03:00 Tools
Minneapolis Office Of Tourism 03:47 Tools
Sweet Lovin' high 03:53 Tools
Call Me in the Middle of the Night 03:25 Tools
Almost 40 Years 02:16 Tools
Shoveling Snow 02:59 Tools
Plans for My Evening 03:36 Tools
Giving Us A Chance To Call 02:16 Tools
Half-Steering... (Spymob) 02:16 Tools
It Gets Me Going [radio] 02:16 Tools
Half-Steering Half-Eating Ice Cream 02:16 Tools
Sitting Around 02:16 Tools
Palo Alto to Grand Forks 02:16 Tools
Steering 02:16 Tools
Give Back Yourself 02:16 Tools
Exposed To Light 02:16 Tools
10. Half-Steering... 02:16 Tools
Holidays 02:16 Tools
Stand Up 02:16 Tools
Half-Steering… 02:16 Tools
Half Steering, Half Eating Ice Cream 02:16 Tools
National Holiday 02:16 Tools
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SPYMOB John Ostby, lead vocals, keyboards Eric Fawcett, drums, vocals Brent Paschke, guitar, vocals Christian Twigg, bass How do you describe a year in which your band toured the world, played on a gold-selling record, performed on "The Late Show with David Letterman," scored radio and MTV airplay, garnered critical acclaim, shared stages with everyone from David Bowie to Jay-Z and recorded its debut album? "I call that a really good year," says vocalist John Ostby, whose group Spymob hit it big in 2002 as the backing band for Neptunes side project N.E.R.D. For the average artist, such achievements usually mark the summation of an entire career -- if they're lucky. Spymob, however, is just getting started. Their eagerly awaited debut album Sitting Around Keeping Score glows with the absorbed influences of Todd Rundgren, Steely Dan, Jellyfish and Split Enz. It's also the first rock album released on Star Trak, the new Arista subsidiary founded by the Neptunes. About the Neptunes/N.E.R.D. collaboration, Ostby says, "It changed our world. One day we were playing hole-in-the-wall gigs in our hometown of Minneapolis and the next we're touring Europe and performing on BBC's 'Top of the Pops.' It's the kind of stuff you dream about from the day you learn to play, but not something you can plan." Pharrell Williams, however, had it all mapped out. The visionary Neptunes producer foresaw endless possibilities after hearing Spymob's much-buzzed-about demo. "They reminded me of the music I grew up with," he says. "Their songs sounded like Steely Dan crossed with the Meters and Prince and it just blew me away." Williams sang Spymob's praises to his attorney, who, unbeknownst to him, already represented the band. Meetings ensued, ideas were exchanged and excitement built as Williams told Spymob drummer Eric Fawcett, "I'm gonna blow Spymob up. Everyone is gonna know who you are." After asking Ostby to lend backing vocals to the Neptunes-produced Kelis track "Mr. UFO Man," talk of a more serious collaboration began. It all came together in June of 2001, when Williams and partner Chad Hugo decided to re-cut N.E.R.D.'s debut In Search Of... using live instrumentation. The two-man hit factory, whose multi-platinum producing credits include Nelly, Mary J. Blige, Kid Rock and dozens more, had their pick of star power and A-list session players. They chose Spymob. "Those guys were integral to the making of the album," says Williams. Rolling Stone agreed, praising In Search Of... by writing, "Credit has got to go to (Spymob bassist) Christian Twigg and Eric Fawcett for supplying Search with dexterous, downright joyful bass and drums." Entertainment Weekly applauded the Neptunes' decision as well, writing, "...the gamble paid off. In Search Of... has a crackling vigor missing from the first stab, and its melange of genres makes for music unlike anything else around." Anything up until now, that is. Spymob raises the ante with Sitting Around Keeping Score, a boundary-busting album that swings and sways with seductive flair. Nine of Sitting Around Keeping Score's 12 cuts were produced by Stephen Lironi (Black Grape, Hanson), while Minneapolis-based Alex Oana produced the title track and "Walking Under Green Leaves." Appropriately, the band produced and recorded the spare and compelling "I Still Live at Home" at their home studio. When someone suggested that the Neptunes re-mix one of the album's tracks, Williams laughed. "Chad and I are usually brought in to fix all kinds of things on records," he said. "We didn't want to touch this one at all." Adds Hugo, "Pharrell and I were inspired to form the Neptunes because of our love for old soul, jazz and rock records. I get that same feeling of excitement and energy when I listen to Spymob." "Their attitude toward music is refreshing," says Ostby. "There are plenty of producers out there who just want to put their stamp on records, but Pharrell and Chad are mature enough to know that if it ain't broke, don't fix it." Though Spymob's sound evokes classic rock and soul-music icons, they keep their grooves current by incorporating loops and samples into songs built on vintage instruments. Says Fawcett, "John has an old Rhodes piano, our guitarist Brent uses a vintage Fender Strat, our bassist Twigg plays a Fender Precision Bass and I play old Ludwig drums. Those vintage instruments have a warm sound, which makes the songs sound really rich." At the heart of the band's sound is Ostby, whose supple voice, unique phrasings and reflective meditations lend depth and color. In his lyrics, he reveals a singular perspective full of irony, optimism and reverie. In "It Gets Me Going," Ostby turns the seemingly mundane life of a family dog into a deliciously ironic tale set to a rollicking pop song colored by buoyant piano lines, bold Hammond riffs, soulful guitar fills and subtle electronic nuances. The perked-up "Thinking of Someone Else" begins with a broken toe before its protagonist wanders into a dreamy remembrance of childhood and his mother's nurturing. In "2040," Ostby imagines domesticity in a not-so-surreal future. Belying its effervescence, "National Holidays" is a poignant and heartbreaking look at a divorced couple's custody of their only daughter. The sleek "German Test Drive" transports listeners from their late-model Corollas and Civics to the cockpit of a sports car on the Autobahn. He also imagines the life of a NFL legend in the final track, "Joe Namath." "Our job is to take John's quirky witticisms and observations about the world and wrap them in music you can move your ass to," says Fawcett. Spymob's story begins nine months after Fawcett and Ostby's graduation from Minnesota's St. Olaf College, where the two roomed and played in a band together. Ostby was contemplating a career in film scoring in Los Angeles, while Fawcett had been accepted into a PhD program in the history of science at the University of Wisconsin. "I didn't think I was going to form another band," Ostby says. "But that's where my heart was." He called Fawcett, played him some recently written songs, and the two agreed to return to Minneapolis and form a new band. "We were on a Blues Brothers mission from God," laughs Fawcett. Once home, they met up with Brent Paschke, the guitarist who would help bring their developing sound to fruition. Ostby says, "I was coming from a background of pop music centered on the piano-stuff like the Beatles and Burt Bacharach, and also soul stuff like Stevie Wonder, Gamble and Huff and the Philly sound. Brent came in with a rock and funk feel, sort of like (Red Hot Chili Peppers axeman) John Frusciante. I think the fusion of piano-pop with the more aggressive, unorthodox guitar was key to forming our sound." A longtime friend and former classmate of Paschke's, bassist Christian Twigg, cements the group's lineup with his driving bottom-end groove. What's the secret to the band's across-the-board appeal? Says Fawcett, "We're willing to go to weird places musically to find inspiration, that's who we are. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.