The Playing Favorites

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Indigenous 00:00 Tools
Leavingtown 00:00 Tools
Good Years 00:00 Tools
This is the Last Train 00:00 Tools
Waiting 00:00 Tools
Spill My GUts 00:00 Tools
Futuring 00:00 Tools
Drug Hugger 00:00 Tools
Stay 00:00 Tools
Wasteland 00:00 Tools
Citizen's Band 00:00 Tools
Whole Lotta Nothin 00:00 Tools
The Problems Last 00:00 Tools
Everyone Else 00:00 Tools
Everyone Else In The World 00:00 Tools
This Is The Last Train (acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Drug Hugger (acoustic) 00:00 Tools
The Ramones are dead (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Same old me (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Whole Lotta Nothin' (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Citizen's Band (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
The Ramones Are Dead 00:00 Tools
Same Old Me 00:00 Tools
Whole Lotta Nothin’ (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Citizens Band (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Whole Lotta Nothin’ 00:00 Tools
The Ramones are dead* (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Same old me* (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Drug Hugge 00:00 Tools
the starting line 00:00 Tools
Drug Hugger (Acoustic Version) 00:00 Tools
Starting Line 00:00 Tools
Whole Lotta Nothin‚ 00:00 Tools
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There's an ongoing joke: When musicians get too wasted they start side projects. These grandiose schemes usually fizzle as attention spans are rerouted to deal with hangovers and coming back down to reality. Occasionally there are exceptions to this rule... Enter The Playing Favorites, a band born out of an idea conceived on a drunken night in Japan when old pals Joey Cape and Luke Tierney were on tour together in their respective bands (Me First & the Gimme Gimmes and The Penfifteen Club). Caffeine and/or alcohol-assisted brainstorms ensued with more good friends; Tim Cullen (a solo artist and former singer/guitarist of Summercamp); Marko DeSantis (guitarist of Sugarcult and bassist of another Cape band, Bad Astronaut); and Mick Flowers (who had played in Tim and Marko's early 90's band Popsicko, and bands such as The Rentals, and The Lapdancers). The five of them originate from Santa Barbara, CA but have all carved out new lives in different cities. They have such an intertwining history of musical relationships that a family tree would look more like a family forest. Soon after, the concept of making a record together grew into a plan. Everyone synchronized their calendars and found a week of time to meet at The Sandbox Studio in Los Angeles. With Rick Parker (Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, The Shore) behind the glass they rolled up their sleeves and got right to work. Time and money were of the essence the so process was as follows: set up the gear, throw up some microphones, learn a song, record it, pass the mic to the next guy that had a song, and do it again. 3 songs a day were recorded over a period of 5 days (the final 2 days were used for a few basic changes), resulting in 14 inspired-by-the-moment songs; diverse in style, but united by mutual respect. The raw tracks were then fermented for about a year; the elapsed time providing a fresh perspective on the songs. Final touches were made and the record was finished. There's a refreshing honesty and authenticity to The Playing Favorites that can't be fabricated. Their debut album "I Remember When I Was Pretty" plays like a tribute to a collective and possibly checkered past of a circle of friends. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.