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Artist
Even for hardcore aficionados of '90s maritime indie-rock, Interstellar, Interstellar by Moncton, New Brunswick's Orange Glass just may have slipped off your radar. If this trio seems to be seeped in the same distorto-laden, lo-fi sensibilities of say, Eric's Trip, it probably won't surprise you to learn that frontman Ron Bates was also a member of the post Eric's Trip project, Elevator to Hell. Possessing a keener pop awareness than Elevator, Orange Glass were more in league with The Hardship Post, and for that matter early Sloan. Though they recorded primarily from 1994-96, O/G were relatively prolific, pumping out three singles, three CDs and a couple of tapes. On Interstellar, they were paired down to a duo with Chris Flanagan manning the percussion, and Bates handling all else. "Knock Wood" finds Bates proudly peeling off Mascis-y squalls of unruly feedback, but it's where the hooks meet the fuzz on "Wait a Day," "Saturn and the Moon," and "Em Pulse," that will have you scrambling for the repeat button. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

Interstellar Interstellar

Band Recordings 1995-1996
More Of Our Stupid Noise

Underwater Underground

More Of Our Stupid Noise '98
Protography

Prism b/w Starving for Days

1995-2001

Mix-Tape (1994-1996)
CBC Radio 3: New Music Canada Vol 01
Concrete
All Their Broken Hearts - A Paper Heart tribute to Julie Doiron