Nickelback. . . . Kelly Clarkson. . . . Green Day. . . . Weezer. . . . Coldplay. . . . Gwen Stefani. . . . Lifehouse. . . . Sheryl Crow and more. . . These are the artists you'll hear on Mix103fm.

Home
Features
Community

Music News

Concerts/Events

Personalities

Photo Album

Back Talk

To Win
Advertise

EEO/Jobs

 

 





 

 

 

Click here for The Net Music Countdown NewsStream | eTracks | Artists | Podcast | Fantasy Music League

Death Cab For Cutie
Death Cab For CutieFormed in the tiny college town of Bellingham, WA, Death Cab for Cutie started out as a solo project from engineering student and committed indie rocker Ben Gibbard. Having turned a freshly broken heart into nine songs he wasn't embarrassed to share with someone else, he recruited fledgling four-track producer (and fellow Teenage Fanclub fan) Chris Walla and bassist Nick Harmer, the most amiable (and comic-book obsessed) musician on campus. The result was the 1997 cassette, You Can Play These Songs With Chords (finally released on CD in '02, expanded to include various DCFC rarities).

To set the record straight, the band's name comes from a song performed by British jazz/rock/comedy combo the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band in the Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour film.

Generating a Seattle-area buzz, Death Cab for Cutie quickly became a proper band, releasing their official debut album - Something About Airplanes - in 1998 on the burgeoning area indie Barsuk. Then came touring. And new drummers. And more touring. And more albums - including 2000's We Have the Facts And We're Voting Yes and 2001's The Photo Album - each more successful, in content and sales, than the last.

Having created a substantial body of work as a band, Ben, Chris & Nick looked around and realized this wasn't a college extracurricular anymore, this was a life. So they did what all sensible people do: they took a break. Chris returned to his first love, producing, working on widely hailed releases by The Decemberists, The Thermals, Nada Surf, and Travis Morrison. Ben spent some time in the L.A. neighborhood of Silverlake recording electropop songs with his friend, producer Jimmy Tamborello. This little side project, called The Postal Service, yielded an album, Give Up, that has, to date, sold over 600,000 copies.

In 2003, refreshed and renewed by their time apart - and inspired by the recruitment of ace drummer Jason McGerr - Death Cab recorded and released the rave-spawning Transatlanticism. Milestones began to fall like dominos: sales that doubled those of any previous release, successful tours of Japan and Australia, magazine features, TV appearances (including a memorable spring '05 performance on The OC), and a personal invitation to join Pearl Jam on the Vote for Change tour.

Death Cab's 2004 Transatlanticism tour is documented on the just-released DVD, Drive Well, Sleep Carefully, directed by noted filmmaker Justin Mitchell.

In the fall of 2004, Death Cab for Cutie inked a worldwide deal with Atlantic Records. The band's label debut, Plans, will be released in August 30 2005

--- from the official Death Cab For Cutie website

Copyright ©2007 Net Music Countdown®. All Rights Reserved.



 

An Employee Owned Eagle Radio Station
2300 Hall Street, P. O. Box 6, Hays, Kansas 67601
Phone (785) 625-2578, Fax (785) 625-3632