On TV.com: KIM KARDASHIAN is hot hot hot

Search:
Go!


The premier source for free music 111,052 FREE MP3s
FeaturedOther
advertisement
Click Here
Crossfade

For the latest songs, albums, videos, playlists, and artist news, bite into our music blog Crossfade.

advertisement
Click Here

The Explorers Club

The Explorers Club

  • Avg user rating: 4 stars Out of 40 votes
  • Your rating:  Write your review
  • Similar Artists: Beach Boys, The Turtles, Zombies

Playlist

Do You Love Me? (2:45) Date added: 02/26/08 | Total listens: 15,062
Last Kiss (2:33) Date added: 06/08/07 | Total listens: 11,536

User reviews for The Explorers Club

Average rating4 starsOut of 40 votes

Rock & Pop artists you may also like

The Grip Weeds

Avg user rating:
4 and one half Stars
Out of 9 votes

Dust Galaxy

Avg user rating:
3 Stars
Out of 7 votes

The Quarter After

Avg user rating:
4 Stars
Out of 8 votes

The Jessica Fletchers

Avg user rating:
4 and one half Stars
Out of 12 votes

Denise James

Avg user rating:
3 Stars
Out of 12 votes

Editor's review

This jangle-pop bunch follows the Beach Boys in sentiment and style, but it has new ends in mind. Put differently, the group wishes they all could be South Carolina girls. Musically, this means plenty of tambourines and twee harmonies, but with orchestration that's more psychedelic than sandy.

Biography

The Explorers Club's sunny psychedelic pop, replete with lush arrangements and cushy four-part harmonies, harkens back to a decade long ago, when kids turned on their FM radios to find the cool new thing. The band draws on the soul-satisfying vocal style made famous by the Beach Boys and the Association, and pairs it with arrangements patented by the likes of Phil Spector, the Left Banke and the Zombies. These 1960s pop reference points are undeniable, but this is not a band that sounds influenced by the Beach Boys records in their collection - the Explorers Club's pop songs sound as authentic as if they had actually just been unearthed for a new Nuggets collection or compiled for a deluxe Sundazed or Rev-Ola reissue. In other words, this bunch of early twenty-somethings channel a bygone era without sounding burdened by it. This type of pleasure-seeking pop sound historically hails from beachside towns, and the Explorer's Club is no exception; their home is not an iconic California surfing city but Charleston, South Carolina. Twenty-six-year-old Jason Brewer does the songwriting and arranging, while the complex vocal harmonies come courtesy of James Faust, Nathan Hussey, and David Ellis. Filling out the instrumental sound of the Explorers Club on organ and drums, respectively, are Stefan Rogenmoser and Neil Thomas. This six-man band has been charming new fans with epic live shows since July of 2005, and with a debut album on the horizon, the Explorers Club is primed to reintroduce some splendor into the pop music world.

Expand to read more Collapse

Where to buy

Record label store
advertisement


© 2008 CNET Networks, Inc., a CBS Company. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use