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Tuesday, February 5, 2013

JOLLY debut "Dust Nation Bleak" (video)


Check out the new video from JOLLY:



Filmed in the ruins of JOLLY's studio and birthplace post Hurricane Sandy.
"When God gives you lemons, make a music video. JOLLY loves you."

Dust Nation Bleak from the album "The Audio Guide to Happiness Part 2"
Copyright 2013 from InsideOut Music.
The story of JOLLY starts with four guys growing up in New York City. They attended public school, shared an affinity for 90s rock, and were all big fans of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.

On an average temperature day in November 2006, all four guys separately decided to start looking to form their ideal band. One Craigslist reply, one high school reunion, and one awkward conversation later, JOLLY’s current lineup, Anadale, Joe Reilly, Anthony Rondinone, and Louis Abramson, was established. They began writing and recording songs, and posting their material on Myspace. A label owner in Switzerland heardJOLLY  and offered them a record deal, and suddenly the band’s plans to record an EP transformed into recording a full-length album.
Fast forward and in March 2011, JOLLY released The Audio Guide To Happiness (Part 1), the first of a two-part series that is scientifically designed to bring a listener to a state of true happiness. The band collaborated with a professor and a few grad students at a nearby university, who conducted studies on over 5,000 subjects to perfect the usage of binaural tones to optimize the JOLLY listening experience. It was the peak of the band’s pretentiousness, but also a very rewarding undertaking.
After releasing part one of The Audio Guide, which received critical acclaim and was deemed by many one of the top albums of the year, JOLLY toured the US and Europe. Again, the airplane food was salty and the flight was long, but the band watched reruns of Friends to pass the time. Shortly after returning from tour, Mike Portnoy asked JOLLY to open for his band Flying Colors at Best Buy Theater in Times Square. He even said: “I am a big fan of the last two JOLLY albums and handpicked them to open the Flying Colors show in NYC.”

In October 2012, Hurricane Sandy struck
JOLLY hard, destroying Louis’ home, which also functioned as the band’s practice space and recording studio. All of Louis’ possessions and a lot of the band’s equipment were ruined. Needless to say, the members ofJOLLY  were devastated, but they tried to remain positive. The timing couldn't have been worse; the band was in the midst of finalizing The Audio Guide To Happiness (Part 2), but had to break away from the album to throw out Louis’ belongings and completely gut his home. In need of new equipment, JOLLY started a fundraising campaign, and their incredible fans came through in a big way to help the band rebuild after this major disaster.

The Audio Guide To Happiness (Part 2) is now here, and is a standing symbol of
JOLLY’s recovery from the storm. Plus, all of the people left hanging from Audio Guide 1 can finally complete their journey towards happiness. Don’t be surprised if crime rates plunge in 2013.
  
Band Interests
Eric Stoltz, eating specialty pizzas, making birdhouses out of popsicle sticks, painting birdhouses that were made out of popsicle sticks red, arguing over "The Fountain" and "No Country For Old Men," arguing about whether it's better to have no eyes or no jaw, holding stuffed animals, holding stuffed animals hostage

for more:





source: JOLLY





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