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<title>Music Videos by Dishwalla on Rhapsody Online</title><link>http://www.rhapsody.com/goto?rcid=art.3973&amp;rws=%2Fdishwalla%2Fmusic-videos.rss</link><description>Dishwalla came from the coastside college town of Santa Barbara, Calif. just a couple hour's drive from Los Angeles. The band made a name for themselves playing their noisy Post-Grunge in venues between the two cities, and eventually got noticed by A&amp;M records. Things were looking good for Dishwalla when their eponymous debut was released in 1995, but it came and went without incident. It would take "Counting Blue Cars" from their follow-up album to hit, thanks in part to radio's positive reaction to the single, which, according to &lt;I&gt;Billboard&lt;/I&gt; magazine, was Modern Rock radio's most played song in 1996. The band's fuzzy, bottom-heavy Grunge Pop has the guitar crunch and pop hooks that has become a staple of the format. 1998's &lt;/&gt;And You Think You Know What Life's About&lt;/I&gt; saw the band stretch their legs a bit, and try new ideas. The album failed to light any fires. Time will tell if Dishwalla will go down in history as yet another one-hit-wonder. But certainly, for a time in the mid 1990's, they were in their zenith.
- Linda Ryan</description><category>Grunge-Pop</category><language>en</language><ttl>720</ttl><pubDate>Wed, 25 Nov 2009 10:33:09 -0800</pubDate><image>
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<description>Dishwalla came from the coastside college town of Santa Barbara, Calif. just a couple hour's drive from Los Angeles. The band made a name for themselves playing their noisy Post-Grunge in venues between the two cities, and eventually got noticed by A&amp;M records. Things were looking good for Dishwalla when their eponymous debut was released in 1995, but it came and went without incident. It would take "Counting Blue Cars" from their follow-up album to hit, thanks in part to radio's positive reaction to the single, which, according to &lt;I&gt;Billboard&lt;/I&gt; magazine, was Modern Rock radio's most played song in 1996. The band's fuzzy, bottom-heavy Grunge Pop has the guitar crunch and pop hooks that has become a staple of the format. 1998's &lt;/&gt;And You Think You Know What Life's About&lt;/I&gt; saw the band stretch their legs a bit, and try new ideas. The album failed to light any fires. Time will tell if Dishwalla will go down in history as yet another one-hit-wonder. But certainly, for a time in the mid 1990's, they were in their zenith.
- Linda Ryan</description>
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