The Living Blue

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Tell me leza 03:20 Tools
Murderous youth 03:47 Tools
State of affairs 04:11 Tools
Serrated friend 04:16 Tools
She bleeds pink 04:33 Tools
One beat 02:38 Tools
Greenthumb 03:49 Tools
Wishlist 03:33 Tools
Secrets 02:57 Tools
Conquistador 06:05 Tools
Numb 02:41 Tools
Without You 03:42 Tools
Wishelist 02:56 Tools
Nightwind 02:56 Tools
Venus Fly Trap 05:07 Tools
Refugee 02:59 Tools
Something You Do 04:48 Tools
Leaf In The Breeze 03:28 Tools
Depth Charge 03:42 Tools
Roll the Breakers 03:21 Tools
The Beat Of Her Drums (Bonus Track) 02:29 Tools
Forest Fire 02:29 Tools
WOXY.com Lounge Act 04/18/06 02:29 Tools
No Tomorrow 04:23 Tools
Jungle Fever 04:23 Tools
Jungle Fever (Bonus Track) 04:23 Tools
Walk, Talk, Rhythm, Roam 04:23 Tools
Startune 04:23 Tools
Wang Dang Doodle 04:23 Tools
WOXY.com Lounge Act - The Living Blue 04:23 Tools
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Champaign, IL, indie rock outfit the Living Blue was formed in 1997 by three natives of tiny Odell, IL — singer/guitarist Steve Ucherek, guitarist Joe Prokop, and drummer Mark Schroder — who first met while in high school. Originally dubbed the Blackouts, they burned through a series of bassists (among them Ucherek's brother, Ben) while building a fan following on the Champaign bar circuit. After installing bassist Pat Olsen in 2001, the group cut a self-released five-song EP that caught the attention of the Chicago indie Lucid, which the following year issued their debut LP, the garage rock homage Everyday Is a Sunday Evening. Power pop cult hero Adam Schmitt produced the Blackouts' 2004 follow-up, Living in Blue. After sharing top honors in a nationwide talent contest sponsored by Little Steven's Underground Garage, the syndicated radio show hosted by E Street Band guitarist/actor Steven Van Zandt, the group further increased its visibility when several of its songs were prominently featured on the WB Network teen drama One Tree Hill. To avoid confusion with other similarly named acts, the Blackouts then rechristened themselves the Living Blue, swapping Olsen for bassist Andrew Davidson and signing to Minty Fresh to begin work on their next LP. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.