Sanatçının Albümleri
When The World Sings
2000 · albüm
The Beautiful
1996 · single
Trees at Night
2022 · single
Trees at Night
2020 · single
Every Nerve Alert
2019 · single
Not Thrilled
2018 · albüm
You Are Not the Future
2018 · single
No One Knows
2014 · single
Rialto Bridge
2014 · single
The Jaws Of Life
2005 · albüm
You Make Me Hate Music
2002 · albüm
Benzer Sanatçılar
Squad Five-O
Sanatçı
Brothers Martin
Sanatçı
Stavesacre
Sanatçı
Joy Electric
Sanatçı
Plankeye
Sanatçı
Michael Knott
Sanatçı
Fold Zandura
Sanatçı
Bon Voyage
Sanatçı
Havalina Rail Co.
Sanatçı
Starflyer 59
Sanatçı
Aaron Sprinkle
Sanatçı
Denison Marrs
Sanatçı
Poor Old Lu
Sanatçı
Discover America
Sanatçı
Roadside Monument
Sanatçı
The Prayer Chain
Sanatçı
Joe Christmas
Sanatçı
Velour 100
Sanatçı
Luxury
Sanatçı
Biyografi
If there were ever an aural argument for noise-canceling headphones, it might be “Trees at Night,” the new single from Phoenix, Arizona’s Fine China. “I grew up listening to oddball New Age records that my parents were into, things like Mannheim Steamroller’s ‘Fresh Aire,’ Andreas Vollenweider, and the Windham Hill samplers,” Fine China founder and frontman Rob Withem said. “I always liked the ones with the sounds of nature blended in. Those tracks made me feel like I was someplace else. I had always wanted to find a way to integrate the weird ambiance that these types of artists achieved with the pure pop music that I make.” The single opens by fading into those “sounds of nature” accompanied by a synth harp before it gives way to an ‘80s-esque drumbeat and bassline. It’s New Age meets New Wave. The single was originally released digitally in March 2020 to coincide with a tour opening for The Ocean Blue. But while the pandemic scuttled that run, “Trees at Night” found new life thanks to a remix by Bob Hoag (The Ataris) and will be released on July 8 as a 12”-vinyl single from Velvet Blue Music. Two instrumental pieces join the title track, “Eyes at Night” and the three-movement “Eyes at Dawn.” “I was always drawn to the songs with nature sounds, songs that had a setting in which they existed,” Withem said. “With ‘Trees at Night,’ I wanted to combine that approach with pure pop music, so that the song not only is a song, but it lives in a place.”