Estradasphere
| Estradasphere | |
|---|---|
![]() Estradasphere performing in 2007.  | |
| Background information | |
| Origin | 
Santa Cruz, California, USA Seattle, Washington, USA (now)  | 
| Genres | 
Experimental music Experimental rock Various others  | 
| Years active | 1998–2008 | 
| Labels | 
The End Mimicry  | 
| Associated acts | 
Secret Chiefs 3 God of Shamisen Fishtank Ensemble ThanatoSchizO Orange Tulip Conspiracy Atomic Ape  | 
| Website | Official website | 
| Past members | Band members | 
Estradasphere was an experimental band that originated in Santa Cruz, California during the late 1990s. The band, which in its last incarnation was based in Seattle, consisted of 6 multi-instrumentalists from a variety of musical backgrounds trained in disciplines ranging from classical music and jazz to heavy metal.[1]
In November 2007, members of Estradasphere started touring with Amanda Palmer of The Dresden Dolls,[2] as well as helping to produce her debut solo album Who Killed Amanda Palmer.[3]
The band is on a "permanent hiatus"[4] since 2010.
Estradasphere were influenced by many different artists from many different subgenres, such as jazz, funk, techno, classical music, pop, heavy metal, New Age, Latin, Balkan, Greek and gypsy.[5] They were influenced by artists such as The Beach Boys and Secret Chiefs 3, and have been compared to Mr. Bungle,[6] Frank Zappa and John Zorn.[7] Similarly to Mr. Bungle and Secret Chiefs 3, the band mixes several genres in its songs.[8] The band was a self-proclaimed inventor of bizarre genres such as "Bulgarian Surf", "Romanian Gypsy-Metal", and "Spaghetti Eastern"[5] and sounded like "Psychedelic-Sci-fi", "Gypsy-Metal-Jazz" and "Epic-Cinema-Thon", according to its MySpace.[9]
Band members
Members
According to www.estradasphere.com:
- Tim Smolens - standup bass, electric bass, vocals, audio production/engineering
 - Timb Harris - violin, trumpet, mandolin, guitar, vocals
 - Jason Schimmel - guitar, keyboards, banjo, vocals
 - Lee Smith - drums
 - Kevin Kmetz - tsugaru shamisen, guitar, keyboards
 - Adam Stacey - accordion, keyboards, vocals
 
Former members
Discography
| Title | Release Date | Label | 
|---|---|---|
| It's Understood (LP) | June 26, 2000 | Mimicry | 
| These are the Days (VHS) | 2000 | |
| The Silent Elk of Yesterday (EP) | September 18, 2001 | Mimicry | 
| Buck Fever (LP) | 2001 | Mimicry | 
| Quadropus (LP) | October 28, 2003 | Mimicry | 
| Passion for Life (LP/DVD) | March 9, 2004 | Mimicry | 
| These are the Days (DVD Reissue) | October 3, 2005 | |
| Palace of Mirrors (LP) | September 19, 2006 | The End | 
| Palace of Mirrors - Live (DVD) | 2007 | The End | 
| The Pegasus Vault EP (EP) | February, 2008 | Lobefood | 
Notes
- ↑  "Estradasphere's website". Retrieved 2007-07-21. 
Estradasphere is a band of multi-instrumentalists from an unlikely variety of musical backgrounds. Timb Harris (violin/trumpet), Jason Schimmel (guitar/banjo/keyboards/vocals), Tim Smolens (upright and electric bass/vocals), Kevin Kmetz (Tsugaru Shamisen/guitar/keyboards), Adam Stacey (accordion/keyboards/clavinet), and Lee Smith (drums/percussion) were trained in disciplines ranging from classical and jazz to metal. This diverse instrumental and stylistic palette enables them to execute a vast array of orchestrations and even forge entirely new genres such as "Bulgarian Surf," "Romanian Gypsy-Metal," and "Spaghetti Eastern."
 - ↑ Live show review of Amanda Palmer with Estradasphere @ 608 Club in Ballard by Three Imaginary Girls
 - ↑ Estradasphere touring with Amanda Palmer
 - ↑ "Estradasphere's Facebook". Retrieved 2011-08-03.
 - 1 2  "Estradasphere's MySpace". Retrieved 2007-07-21. 
Estradasphere is a band trained in disciplines ranging from classical and jazz to metal.
 - ↑  "Biography @ Allmusic". Retrieved 2007-07-21. 
Unmistakably derived from the genre-bending loins of experimental rockers Mr. Bungle and Secret Chiefs 3, Estradasphere respectfully lives up to the ambitious musical aims of their wildly talented mentors.
 - ↑  "SSMT Reviews". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-07-21. 
Estradasphere returns with another collection of Zappa-esquely varied songs spanning almost every musical genre invented since early Homo sapiens individuals first blew into hollow branches recreationally.
 - ↑  "Biography @ Allmusic". Retrieved 2007-07-21. 
Their hectic mix of jazz, metal, video game themes, and bluegrass was eaten up by hardcore Mr. Bungle fans, but went largely unnoticed elsewhere.
 - ↑  "Estradasphere's MySpace". Retrieved 2007-07-21. 
Sounds like a Psychedelic-Sci-fi... Gypsy-Metal-Jazz... Epic-Cinema-Thon.
 
External links
- Estradasphere's official website
 - Estradasphere MySpace
 - The End Records - website of Estradasphere's current record label.
 - Web of Mimicry - website for Estradasphere's former record label.
 - Obnoxious Listeners: Estradasphere
 
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