Statistics

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Hours Seemed Like Days 00:00 Tools
A Number, Not A Name 00:00 Tools
Final Broadcast 00:00 Tools
Sing A Song 00:00 Tools
Mr. Nathan 00:00 Tools
The Grass Is Always Greener 00:00 Tools
Say You Will 00:00 Tools
Nobody Knows Your Name 00:00 Tools
Reminisce 00:00 Tools
Leave Your Name 00:00 Tools
2 A.M. 00:00 Tools
No Promises 00:00 Tools
Accomplishment 00:00 Tools
Circular Memories 00:00 Tools
Another Day 00:00 Tools
Chairman of the Bored 00:00 Tools
10.22 00:00 Tools
By(e) Now 00:00 Tools
At the End 00:00 Tools
Begging to Be Heard 00:00 Tools
A Foreward 00:00 Tools
Nineteen Ninety Nine 00:00 Tools
Cure Me 00:00 Tools
(A Flashback) 00:00 Tools
(A Memory) 00:00 Tools
Take The Lead 00:00 Tools
Lock Me Down 00:00 Tools
StatisticsFaded 00:00 Tools
Menu Screen 00:00 Tools
Another Space Song 00:00 Tools
Fever Sleep 00:00 Tools
Pictures of Success 00:00 Tools
Waiting 00:00 Tools
Look Alive 00:00 Tools
Sendoff 00:00 Tools
- 00:00 Tools
Faded 00:00 Tools
Nineteen Ninety Nine (Remix) 00:00 Tools
Waiting (Remix) 00:00 Tools
Another Space Song (Unreleased) 00:00 Tools
By 00:00 Tools
Zam 00:00 Tools
03 Take The Lead 00:00 Tools
Do You Bleed Like I Do 00:00 Tools
Begging To Be Head 00:00 Tools
The Actress 00:00 Tools
Destroy 00:00 Tools
Kings And Sheep 00:00 Tools
In The Scene 00:00 Tools
Rewind 00:00 Tools
Find the z score 00:00 Tools
Beeps 00:00 Tools
Rewind Replay Repeat 00:00 Tools
Big Open Reverb 00:00 Tools
Elephant 00:00 Tools
Kaity 00:00 Tools
6 Leagues Beneath 00:00 Tools
Hours Seem Like Days 00:00 Tools
1022 00:00 Tools
No Control 00:00 Tools
statistics - final broadcast 00:00 Tools
Hours Seems Like Days 00:00 Tools
The average | Descriptive statistics | Probability and Statistics | Khan Academy 00:00 Tools
A Foward 00:00 Tools
05 Menu Screen 00:00 Tools
10\/22 00:00 Tools
Number Not a Name 00:00 Tools
10 - reminisce 00:00 Tools
04 - mr. nathan 00:00 Tools
Hous Felt Like Days 00:00 Tools
No More 00:00 Tools
Another Space Song [#] 00:00 Tools
10 22 00:00 Tools
2am 00:00 Tools
02 - leave your name 00:00 Tools
06 - Hours Seemed Like Days 00:00 Tools
Statistics Faded 00:00 Tools
Politics Are Dead 00:00 Tools
Dumb 00:00 Tools
Under The Gun 00:00 Tools
Choices 00:00 Tools
08 - 2 A.M. 00:00 Tools
Chairmen Of The Bored 00:00 Tools
11 - circular memories 00:00 Tools
07 - Chairman of the Bored 00:00 Tools
09 - A Number, Not a Name 00:00 Tools
04-Mr. Nathan 00:00 Tools
Hours Seemed Like Says 00:00 Tools
bye now 00:00 Tools
03 - the grass is always greener 00:00 Tools
Another Space Song (Previously Unreleased Version) 00:00 Tools
Home Movies 00:00 Tools
07-Chairman Of The Bored 00:00 Tools
04 - No Promises 00:00 Tools
11-Circular Memories 00:00 Tools
02-statistics-leave_your_name-ph 00:00 Tools
Statistics - No Promises 00:00 Tools
Statistics-Final_Broadcast 00:00 Tools
01-Sing A Song 00:00 Tools
03-The Grass Is Always Greener 00:00 Tools
10:22 00:00 Tools
03 - Say You Will 00:00 Tools
02-Leave Your Name 00:00 Tools
Take The Lead (feat. Har Mar Superstar) 00:00 Tools
10-Reminisce 00:00 Tools
02 - Nobody Knows Your Name 00:00 Tools
05-Accomplishment 00:00 Tools
08-2 A.M. 00:00 Tools
Kick your neighbor in the head/ David's easy 00:00 Tools
06-Hours Seemed Like Days 00:00 Tools
Calculating Variance 00:00 Tools
Sample vs. Population Mean 00:00 Tools
04-statistics-mr._nathan-ph 00:00 Tools
03-statistics-the_grass_is_always_greener-ph 00:00 Tools
10-statistics-reminisce-ph 00:00 Tools
11-statistics-circular_memories-ph 00:00 Tools
07 Chairman of the Bored 00:00 Tools
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Statistics is the solo project of singer-songwriter, Denver Dalley. His latest release, Peninsula, is reminiscent of the electronic infused rock-n-roll that defined his decade-old debut. But Statistics has matured into something vast, detailed, and deliberate, drawing inspiration from all corners of Dalley’s nomadic musical career. Dalley grew up in Omaha, Nebraska. He began making music in junior high, playing punk-rock loudly in garages with friends. After a series of moves (to Nashville, then to New York), Dalley found himself back in Nebraska to attend college at Creighton University. There, he was reunited with childhood friends, Ian McElroy and Matt Baum, aspiring musicians themselves, and the three soon began plotting their rock band future. Joined by Dalley’s other childhood friend, Conor Oberst, the group called themselves Desaparecidos. Their first and only album, Read Music/Speak Spanish, was released on Saddle Creek Records in 2002 and was praised for its emotional energy and raw production. With Dalley as principal songwriter, the Desaparecidos sound (at the time noted for its contrast to Oberst’s work with Bright Eyes) drew from Dalley’s love for the experimental spasms of the Pixies’ and the immediacy of Weezer’s Pinkerton, all while honoring the band’s roots in the Midwestern punk scene. Bright Eyes’ increasing fame slowed Desaparecidos’ momentum, and the friends took time to focus on other projects. Dalley began experimenting with new sounds and instrumentation, especially electronic elements, eventually compiling his ideas into a solo project, dubbed Statistics. Dalley’s musical tinkering defined his self-titled EP, released in 2003. Two more albums followed, 2004’s Leave Your Name and 2005’s Often Lie, but by his third release, Dalley found himself burnt out, uninspired, and tired of a solo career. Refocusing his energies, Dalley began licensing his music, and eventually composed scores for ads and feature length films. He also began touring with several national acts as part of their backing bands, reveling in the chance to lend creative support without having to call the shots. Dalley’s time as a “hired gun,” playing guitar for poppy Sean Na Na, taking up bass to play with funky Har Mar Superstar and the folky Watson Twins, proved incredibly fruitful, as it forced him to act as a sonic chameleon, adapting to different styles, and learning along the way. It’s been 8 years since the last Statistics album. Peninsula has been in the works for the past 5. But it doesn’t sound labored or meticulous. The album is instead made up of songs that have stood the test of time, that are at once nostalgic and cutting edge. The experimentalism that made that first EP so exciting is back, now grounded in Dalley’s eclectic experience and a fresh coat of pop polish. The grooving “Take the Lead,” featuring Har Mar Superstar, could easily have been a single off of Justin Timberlake’s Justified, while the smooth and slightly eerie instrumentation of “Nineteen-Ninety-Nine” perfectly encapsulates Y2K paranoia. A mellow cover of Rilo Kiley’s “Picture of Success” rounds out the record, its sparse arrangement showcasing Dalley’s subtle vocal power. Peninsula feels like a new beginning, but it is in fact the completed whole of a career composed of many movements (both literal and figurative). It will be available for free download from Afternoon Records. It’s something to sample and something to share. Hello, good to see you, we’d like to re-introduce you to your old friend, Statistics. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.