Possum Dixon

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Watch The Girl Destroy Me 00:00 Tools
Nerves 00:00 Tools
Emergency's About To End 00:00 Tools
In Buildings 00:00 Tools
Only In The Summertime 00:00 Tools
She Drives 00:00 Tools
Crashing Your Planet 00:00 Tools
We're All Happy 00:00 Tools
Invisible 00:00 Tools
Executive Slacks 00:00 Tools
Pharmaceutical Itch 00:00 Tools
Regina 00:00 Tools
Elevators 00:00 Tools
John Struck Lucy 00:00 Tools
Holding (Lenny's Song) 00:00 Tools
Go West 00:00 Tools
Firecracker 00:00 Tools
General Electric 00:00 Tools
In Her Disco 00:00 Tools
Radio Comets 00:00 Tools
What You Mean 00:00 Tools
Skid Marks 00:00 Tools
New Sheets 00:00 Tools
Stop Breaking Me 00:00 Tools
Party Tonight 00:00 Tools
Song From A Box 00:00 Tools
Reds 00:00 Tools
Artificial Sunlight 00:00 Tools
Personals 00:00 Tools
Always Engines 00:00 Tools
Heavenly 00:00 Tools
Plan B 00:00 Tools
Apartment Song 00:00 Tools
Now What? 00:00 Tools
Faultlines 00:00 Tools
End's Beginning 00:00 Tools
El Mongoloido 00:00 Tools
Holding 00:00 Tools
for your love 00:00 Tools
Bathroom 00:00 Tools
Emergency's About End 00:00 Tools
Overdriving 00:00 Tools
Farewell My Lovely 00:00 Tools
Now What 00:00 Tools
Artificial Sunlight (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Emergency's About To End (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Nameless 00:00 Tools
Here She Comes 00:00 Tools
In Buildings (Live) 00:00 Tools
The Days of Wine and Roses 00:00 Tools
Damn The Rainbow 00:00 Tools
Fault Lines 00:00 Tools
11 Elevators 00:00 Tools
10 John Struck Lucy 00:00 Tools
Nerves (Demo) 00:00 Tools
Emergencys About To End 00:00 Tools
Emergency's About To End (Possum Dixon) 00:00 Tools
Damn the Rainbow (Demo) 00:00 Tools
Emergency's About To End (From CD 'Star Map') 00:00 Tools
09 watch the girl destroy me 00:00 Tools
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Possum Dixon (1989-1999) was an American alternative rock band. For the better part of their 10 year existence, the Los Angeles based quartet etched and sustained an imprint on the 1990s alternative rock and roll scene. Fronted by singer/songwriter/bassist Rob Zabrecky, literate songs about love lost and slacker life in Los Angeles and a penchant for unpredictable performances set them apart from the herd of other rock and roll hopefuls. Formed in 1989 by college friends Zabrecky and Celso Chavez (guitar), the pair took their name from a suspected murderer mentioned on television show America's Most Wanted. Initially performing as a duo, they mixed haphazard punk-folk compositions with store-front theatre to some measurable success, primarily performing at LA art/coffeehouses (Be Bop Records, Jabberjaw, Pik-Me-Up). The following year, longtime friends and former schoolmates Robert O’Sullivan (guitar/organ/keyboards) and Rich Truel (drums) were enlisted and together a fuller musical range was explored. Chronicling their hometown's east side slacker life with a pop-rock sensibility, the band smartly incorporated influences from the Talking Heads, Human Hands, Wall of Voodoo, Dream Syndicate and Camper Van Beethoven. By 1992 Possum Dixon had logged a number of mini-tours and produced a number self-released 45" singles and cassettes which included "Music for a One Bedroom Apartment", "Nerves", "Watch the Girl Destroy Me", and a three single box-set released by Pronto Records. Along the way a strong following was built and eventually the band found themselves part of a flowering LA art and coffeehouse scene. Secretly rehearsing by night in a warehouse (where Zabrecky worked as a mailroom clerk by day), hiding their equipment with boxes when they finished, the band diligently polished club-tested material and assembled what would become their first full length major label debut. They eventually found internal harmony without consciously trying. Chavez's disjointed guitar playing wasn't for lack of trying; O'Sullivan's piano crashes weren't for lack of talent. Truel's drumming and Zabrecky's spy-infused bass riffs were all part of a bigger picture about a band who found their own voice from the close confines of practice and proximity to each other in their daily lives. The band also wasn't without lending a helping hand. Beck, a young anti-folk singer with nothing to his name but a beat-up guitar, would frequently get up on stage before the band played to test his latest material. Zabrecky later recorded a bass track on his first Geffen release, Mellow Gold. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.