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Tripecac - College Collage

Tripecac - College Collage

Musician: Tripecac
Album title: College Collage
Style: Experimental, Pop Rock, Field Recording
Released: 2011
Size MP3 version: 1567 mb
Size APE version: 1388 mb
Size WMA version: 1770 mb
Rating ✫: 4.2
Votes: 683
Format: TTA FLAC MP2 VOX AC3 ADX APE
Genre: Electronic / Rock / Non Music

Tripecac - College Collage


Tracklist Hide Credits

1 Painted Friend 4:42
2 Numb (Live) 4:52
3 Funny Head 3:34
4 The Flop 4:45
5 Ipecac Is Dead
Shaker – Travis Emmitt
1:44
6 I Don't Wanna
Percussion – Travis Emmitt
2:08
7 Buzz Of Nothing 3:42
8 Filler 3:06
9 The Raft 3:33
10 In Voice Only 2:45
11 Eaten By Mimi 5:07
12 The LoveFish
Noises [Background] – Beth Ogura, Travis Emmitt
4:29
13 Narration
Speech [Talking] – Travis Emmitt
0:35
14 Anand's Journey 5:30
15 Allen And Luke 4:52
16 Travis And Jon 2:11
17 Testing The Cup 2:44
18 Almost There 3:03
19 The Battle 1:41
20 Gonna Die Today 1:46
21 Going Home 4:25
22 Die Today Reprise 0:08
23 End Chatter 1993
Speech [Talking] – Travis Emmitt
2:23
24 Anand's Journey (Original) 5:43

Companies, etc.

  • Copyright (c) – Travis Emmitt

Credits

  • Music By, Lyrics By – Travis Emmitt
  • Synthesizer [Yamaha SY55], Drum Machine [Roland TR-505], Vocals – Travis Emmitt

Notes

From album page:

'I recorded these songs in the first part of 1993, when I was at college.

"Eaten by Mimi" through "Die Today Reprise" are based on a play I wrote in 1990 called "The Band in the Land of the Anchovies". It was a silly fantasy story involving the members of the Master Anchovies (Allen, Anand, Jon, Luke, and me). By 1993, it looked unlikely that we'd ever actually perform or film the play, so I decided to "perform" it myself, musically. These songs are the result.

My main instrument was a Yamaha SY55 keyboard workstation. I also added a Roland TR-505 drum machine on many of the songs.

I'm pretty sure I was recording with a four-track by this point (instead of a mixer and tape deck). I'd record the SY55 and drum machine together first (onto separate mono tracks), and then add vocals and sound effects to the remaining two tracks.'

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