Letter A artists.
A
A Canorous Quintet
A Death For Every Sin
A Flock Of Seagulls
A Klana Indiana
A La Carte
A Moti Sol
A New Found Glory
A Perfect Circle
A Shrine
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For his part, Barber was a music junkie whose own journey began as an East Coast skater punk, discovering musical thrills in the form of CBGB's legendary hardcore matinee shows, via bands like Gorilla Biscuits. Signposts along his musical path — "I was always looking for something weird," he remembers — included Skinny Puppy, My Bloody Valentine, Slayer, the Smiths, Jefferson Airplane, Lee "Scratch" Perry, Lightning Bolt and the Fort Thunder noise scene, not to mention Beat Happening, the '80s indie-pop combo with a kid-like energy, to whom High Places have been compared. "I think it's always been more about energy to me than aggression," Barber said, "and in the early 2000s when I started getting into weirder music, the Brooklyn scene was more dark, noisy, male, smoky. It wasn't really me. I'm more outdoorsy. I was always more into more playful stuff, more hyper than aggressive."
A Canorous Quintet
A Death For Every Sin
A Flock Of Seagulls
A Klana Indiana
A La Carte
A Moti Sol
A New Found Glory
A Perfect Circle
A Shrine
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
Music News
The band recently finished up a three-week West Coast tour and will soon begin a trek along the East Coast in October. Adebimpe can also be seen in the upcoming Jonathan Demme-directed movie "Rachel Getting Married" (which inspired the song "Family Tree" from the new album). The film opens September 26.For his part, Barber was a music junkie whose own journey began as an East Coast skater punk, discovering musical thrills in the form of CBGB's legendary hardcore matinee shows, via bands like Gorilla Biscuits. Signposts along his musical path — "I was always looking for something weird," he remembers — included Skinny Puppy, My Bloody Valentine, Slayer, the Smiths, Jefferson Airplane, Lee "Scratch" Perry, Lightning Bolt and the Fort Thunder noise scene, not to mention Beat Happening, the '80s indie-pop combo with a kid-like energy, to whom High Places have been compared. "I think it's always been more about energy to me than aggression," Barber said, "and in the early 2000s when I started getting into weirder music, the Brooklyn scene was more dark, noisy, male, smoky. It wasn't really me. I'm more outdoorsy. I was always more into more playful stuff, more hyper than aggressive."