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Incomplete Neighbor, "And Then There Were 3"

The new five-song EP from Incomplete Neighbor, Flowers and Dinosaurs, dropped March 15, featuring their current lineup as a trio. Currently based in Chula Vista and University Heights and about to go on a northwest tour, they decided to release the EP online as a free download at http://www.incompleteneighbor.com , also available with optional donation.

"It's self-released," says frontman Tyson Zamora, "and we believe it's just the beginning of our future sound as a psyche trio. We included a bunch of scribbles I made in my notebook and some pics that have been taken throughout the year."

As for the EP title, "Flowers and Dinosaurs does have a little story. I used to have these apocalyptic conversations over the phone about reptilian politics and Earth-changes with a close friend back when I first moved out here. We would always end the conversation laughing as we reminded each other to think about 'purple dinosaurs and flowers.' Just a line that I kept writing down in my poetry after that. I kinda forgot it had something to do with Barney."

They're currently shooting a video for the EP's opening cut, "Compromise."

Incomplete Neighbor’s debut album Suspended Electric Coma hit the streets May 9, 2009, featuring ten original pieces of art on the cover and inside the CD sleeve. Each band member painted several canvases which were compiled together “to make something that we felt was original,” says Tyson Zamora, “and express how we felt about the album in general.” The artwork is also featured on T-shirts and bumper stickers.

In late 2009, the band went into the studio to record during some personally turbulent times. After quitting his fast food day job, Brandon Dow ended up living in the studio for around three months. By the time recording was done, he had decided to move to Oregon with his family, a decision the band says they fully supported.

(courtesy SD:DialedIn)

The group has carried on as a trio, starting with a west coast tour alongside the Napoleon Complex. In 2010, with the band based in Chula Vista and El Cajon, they recorded Where the Penguins Live. “I quit my fast-food day-job and moved into Brandon’s studio while we recorded our second album," says guitarist Tyson Zamora. “It was surreal to be homeless, sleeping on the studio couch.”

Zamora says he’s turning depression into art. “Kurt Cobain’s suicide inspired me to pick up the guitar for myself,” he notes. “You could ridicule the album as being a bit morose and introverted at times. I can’t really defend myself, except to say that music has always been a process of personal transformation — I can confront holographic demons and turn pain into bright, shiny butterfly sensations.”

Bassist-keyboardist George Thornton says, “Where the Penguins Live is a loose reference to the ‘laughing place,’ from Disney’s Song of the South, a place you want to be, but it also has its dark side, in that life will always get in the way. The album ended up mirroring our personal lives through that whole time period for us...it was a cleansing process. We went in with dreams of the other side, got lost in the process, and discovered that where the penguins live is not like we pictured it, but we still want to go there."

“We tried to mimic the vinyl-listening experience, so there are two sides to the album. You know when side A is through; your ear’s palate is cleansed by the scratching silence. Then, side B finishes the point off with a new perspective.”

 Zamora says the new three-piece Neighbors have already racked up one of the best gigs he can recall the band ever playing. "There was a Tin Can Alehouse show that had me teary-eyed. Besides the people and energy just flowing great, I remember it was the first time I noticed that many people singing along to the songs. And, most importantly, screaming animal noises during our song 'Hall of Mirrors.'"

"Seeing that many people let down their cool to hoot, screech, and chirp like birds is the reason I play music, for sure."

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The new five-song EP from Incomplete Neighbor, Flowers and Dinosaurs, dropped March 15, featuring their current lineup as a trio. Currently based in Chula Vista and University Heights and about to go on a northwest tour, they decided to release the EP online as a free download at http://www.incompleteneighbor.com , also available with optional donation.

"It's self-released," says frontman Tyson Zamora, "and we believe it's just the beginning of our future sound as a psyche trio. We included a bunch of scribbles I made in my notebook and some pics that have been taken throughout the year."

As for the EP title, "Flowers and Dinosaurs does have a little story. I used to have these apocalyptic conversations over the phone about reptilian politics and Earth-changes with a close friend back when I first moved out here. We would always end the conversation laughing as we reminded each other to think about 'purple dinosaurs and flowers.' Just a line that I kept writing down in my poetry after that. I kinda forgot it had something to do with Barney."

They're currently shooting a video for the EP's opening cut, "Compromise."

Incomplete Neighbor’s debut album Suspended Electric Coma hit the streets May 9, 2009, featuring ten original pieces of art on the cover and inside the CD sleeve. Each band member painted several canvases which were compiled together “to make something that we felt was original,” says Tyson Zamora, “and express how we felt about the album in general.” The artwork is also featured on T-shirts and bumper stickers.

In late 2009, the band went into the studio to record during some personally turbulent times. After quitting his fast food day job, Brandon Dow ended up living in the studio for around three months. By the time recording was done, he had decided to move to Oregon with his family, a decision the band says they fully supported.

(courtesy SD:DialedIn)

The group has carried on as a trio, starting with a west coast tour alongside the Napoleon Complex. In 2010, with the band based in Chula Vista and El Cajon, they recorded Where the Penguins Live. “I quit my fast-food day-job and moved into Brandon’s studio while we recorded our second album," says guitarist Tyson Zamora. “It was surreal to be homeless, sleeping on the studio couch.”

Zamora says he’s turning depression into art. “Kurt Cobain’s suicide inspired me to pick up the guitar for myself,” he notes. “You could ridicule the album as being a bit morose and introverted at times. I can’t really defend myself, except to say that music has always been a process of personal transformation — I can confront holographic demons and turn pain into bright, shiny butterfly sensations.”

Bassist-keyboardist George Thornton says, “Where the Penguins Live is a loose reference to the ‘laughing place,’ from Disney’s Song of the South, a place you want to be, but it also has its dark side, in that life will always get in the way. The album ended up mirroring our personal lives through that whole time period for us...it was a cleansing process. We went in with dreams of the other side, got lost in the process, and discovered that where the penguins live is not like we pictured it, but we still want to go there."

“We tried to mimic the vinyl-listening experience, so there are two sides to the album. You know when side A is through; your ear’s palate is cleansed by the scratching silence. Then, side B finishes the point off with a new perspective.”

 Zamora says the new three-piece Neighbors have already racked up one of the best gigs he can recall the band ever playing. "There was a Tin Can Alehouse show that had me teary-eyed. Besides the people and energy just flowing great, I remember it was the first time I noticed that many people singing along to the songs. And, most importantly, screaming animal noises during our song 'Hall of Mirrors.'"

"Seeing that many people let down their cool to hoot, screech, and chirp like birds is the reason I play music, for sure."

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