Below the Radio | |
Type: | mixtape |
Artist: | Grandaddy |
Cover: | Below the Radio - Grandaddy.jpg |
Released: | 2004 |
Genre: | Indie rock |
Label: | Ultra |
Prev Title: | Sumday |
Prev Year: | 2003 |
Next Title: | Excerpts from the Diary of Todd Zilla |
Next Year: | 2005 |
Below the Radio is a mixtape put together by Jason Lytle of American indie rock band Grandaddy, released in 2004 by record label Ultra. The album also included a new Grandaddy track, "Nature Anthem".
Ultra Records had approached Grandaddy frontman Jason Lytle via his management some time earlier with the idea for him to compile a mixtape, and he decided to include tracks that he considered "sleeper hits", identifying a common theme: "They all seem to have pretty conventional and familiar chord progressions. They all have vivid imagery for me with their words. There also seems to be a bit of sadness, but not necessarily despair."[1]
AllMusic's Matt Collar stated the album "plays like a K-Tel commercial for Gen X sad-sackism", calling it "pretty cool". Brian Howe of Pitchfork wrote "for the most part, the songs [Lytle] selected sound quite a bit like his own band. Lush yet sleek and slightly sterile is the dominant style of Below the Radio".
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