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Goddamn Electric Bill : Topics For Gossip
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A propulsive blend of ambient electronic and post-rock music. For fans of: Sigur Ros, Boards of Canada, The Album Leaf, Explosions in the Sky, Air, Lemon Jelly, and Pinback.
Genre: Electronic: Folktronic
Release Date: 2008
Topics For Gossip Record Label: 99X/10
  • Buy CD - $9.99
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
The Morning Commute 3:48 Album Only
Our History, Part 2 4:03 Album Only
Wake Me Up 4:06 Album Only
The Shallows 4:39 Album Only
Clouds and a Bee 2:12 Album Only
Hermit 3:26 Album Only
Crossfire 3:14 Album Only
Ten Thousand Years 5:50 Album Only
Pink Ribbon 3:01 Album Only
In Memory 5:50 Album Only
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Album Notes

THE NEW CD!! Released October 1st, 2008

The sounds of Goddamn Electric Bill were never meant to leave Jason Torbert’s bedroom. But the one-man band, a propulsive blend of ambient electronic, folktronica and post-rock music, made its way out to the world anyway.

Since 2004, Goddamn Electric Bill has been nominated for several San Diego Music Awards, licensed music for television and film, released two full-length albums on 99X/10 Records (run by former The Cure keysman Roger O’Donnell), including the new 2008 release “Topics For Gossip,” and been featured in San Diego CityBEAT and Music Matters Magazine. But Torbert isn’t new to the musical arena.

Torbert’s suburban childhood was spent playing trombone in high school and college Jazz Ensembles. It was at University of Oregon that Torbert began his seven-year stint as the bassist for a popular punk outfit called Cigar. The band eventually signed to a label run by Pennywise guitarist Fletcher Dragge and toured internationally before calling it quits. He tried his luck at a few other projects, including one band that signed to At The Drive-In/Sparta front man Jim Ward’s label, Restart Records, but Torbert figured out that the band life wasn’t for him.

It was the sounds Torbert made on his own – from bass, guitar, rhodes, sitar, mbira, minimal vocals, percussion and synthesizers - that turned into Goddamn Electric Bill. And it is those sounds that continue to cause a stir.

"An electronic album with soul"
Delusions of Adequacy

"Some of the best electronic songs I've heard since the likes of Boards of Canada"
Music Emissions

"Jaw dropping cinematic tracks"
Slug Magazine

"Hypnotic tracks that swallow you up"
ReGen magazine

"Uplifting in both mood and subtlety"
Rip It Up Magazine

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