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Dredg (stylized as dredg) is an American rock band formed in 1993 in Los Gatos, California. The band's lineup consists of vocalist Gavin Hayes, guitarist Mark Engles, bassist Drew Roulette and drummer and pianist Dino Campanella.
The Pariah, the Parrot, the Delusion is the fourth studio album by American alternative rock band Dredg, released on June 9, 2009, on Ohlone Recordings.Bassist Drew Roulette describes the album as "a rock and roll record, filled with experimental journeys and eccentric jousts," [1] and states that the album is inspired by a Salman Rushdie essay, entitled Imagine There Is No Heaven: A Letter to ...
The album was released with a booklet containing art created by Dredg bassist, Drew Roulette and lead singer, Gavin Hayes. Initially there was an original painting created for each song and two others, a total of 14 paintings, in the Catch Without Arms Collection.
Chuckles and Mr. Squeezy [6] is the fifth studio album by American rock band Dredg, released on Superball Music. It was released on April 25, 2011 in the United Kingdom and most of Europe, and on May 3, 2011 for the United States.
Leitmotif is the debut studio album by American rock band Dredg.The album was originally self-released on May 30, 1999, [4] [5] through the band's own label, Woven Recordings, before being nationally re-released in the United States by Interscope Records, with different artwork, on September 11, 2001.
One of dredg's main influences on the album, El Cielo, was a painting by Salvador Dalí entitled Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee Around a Pomegranate a Second Before Awakening, which is also what the acronym in the title "Brushstroke: dcbtfoabaaposba", stands for ("one" second instead of "a" second). The painting clearly influences many of ...
dredg, Leitmotif: After the last track of the album, "Movement V: 90 Hour Sleep" (2:23), a 7-minute gap separates the song from an 11-minute hidden track ...
Drummer Dino Campanella says, "Our first two recordings were written to be rhythmically aggressive. We did the third one, Orph, because we wanted to grow up the right way, from our roots with harmony and melody."