Showing 1 - 25 of 233
Artist: Devics
Dustin O'Halloran (guitar/keyboards), Sara Lov (vocals), Ed Maxwell (bass), and Evan Schnabel (drums) comprise the dark, lush sounds of The Devics. Hailing from Los Angeles, The Devics arrived on the rock scene in the early 1990s with their own label, Splinter Records. In 1996, the band self-released their debut album, Buxom; two years later, If... [+] Read More
Artist: Device
The trio Device was formed around the skills of musician/songwriter Holly Knight. Although not a household name, Knight had become one of the most ubiquitous presences in music during the mid-'80s. Having appeared on three albums with the band Spider during the earlier portion of the decade (1980's Spider, 1981's Between the Lines, and 1984's... [+] Read More
Artist: Device
Artist: Device
Artist: The Nice Device
Detroit popsters the Nice Device formed in early 2001 to bridge the exploding garage rock revival scene and the underrated Detroit power pop scene with a polished, yet slightly trashy sound filled with hooks akin to the Runaways and the Breeders. Centered around vocalist, guitarist, and songwriter Alicia Gbur, the quartet quickly built a name... [+] Read More
Artist: Ritual Device
Ritual Device imported the Chicago sound of Big Black, the Effigies, and the Jesus Lizard inspired punk to their hometown of Omaha, NE. With their own ire of complex guitars and screamy vocals, Man's Ruin Records debuted the quartet's hallmark noise on a 1994 split 10" with Killdozer. Continuing with the -ismist Records 7" of Rabe, the lineup of... [+] Read More
Artist: The Ribbon Device
The Ribbon Device started early 2004, as the brainchild of Mat Creedon (vox & guitar) and his trusty companion Mimmo Panunzio (bass). Along the way they have enlisted an ever changing line up of musicians including Bar McKinnon (keys & woodwinds) of Mr Bungle and Secret Chiefs 3, Pat Moore (drums), Mat Baulch (guitar/Sax), Ben Street... [+] Read More
Artist: Null Device
Artist: Arcane Device
Calling himself Arcane Device after his recorded experiments became popular enough to warrant a name, David Myers' exploration into manipulated feedback resulted in several album and cassette-only releases beginning in 1987 and ending in 1994, when he felt the experiment had run its course.
Myers came of age during the era of the Beatles and... [+] Read More