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Flowchart was an American band from Philadelphia. The group originally consisted of Sean O'Neal, Craig Bottel and Brodie Budd in 1994. Their first album ''Multi-Personality Tabletop Vacation'' was released in 1995 on Carrot Top Records, garnering negative reviews from critics who found their music to be too similar to the group Stereolab. The group followed the album with several EPs that moved away from the Stereolab styled sound. In 1997, O'Neil met Erin Anderson at a DJ gig. This meeting led to the duo collaborating on music and eventually having Anderson join Flowchart while Bottel and Budd left the group. Their second album ''Cumulus Mood Twang'' received positive reviews from Allmusic, Pitchfork Media and ''CMJ'' as well as having the group placed on URB's "The "Next 100" list. The following releases from Flowchart included ''Commercial'' in 1999 and ''Broken and Blue'' in 2003 where the group began to have more of an experimental techno and house music sound. They later released their third album ''Wishworm Tracks''.〔 Both O'Neil and Anderson began recording their own music in the 2000s, with O'Neil recording under the name "Someone Else" and Anderson releasing albums as "Fidget" as well as working at a hair salon that doubled as an art gallery. ==History== Flowchart earliest release was on Sean O'Neal's label Fuzzybox Records, where the group released their first 7-inch titled "Our Little Audio 7-Inch" in 1994.〔(【引用サイトリンク】work=Fuzzybox Records )〕 Flowchart released an EP in 1995 titled ''Hallow Sky'' on Burnt Hair Records. Flowchart first studio album ''Multi-Personality Tabletop Vacation'' was also released in 1995 on Carrot Top Records.〔 The album was criticized for being to similar to the group Stereolab by online music database Allmusic and the ''Philadelphia City Paper''〔〔 Allmusic's review stated that "some of the songs on ''Multi-Personality Tabletop Vacation'' seem liks perfect replicas of ''Space Age Bachelor Pad'' or ''Mars Audiac Quintet''-era Lab. And don't think it's accidental; one of the songs on the album is actually called "New Radiolab Rip-Off." The group's found the comparison odd, stating that they had not heard a lot of Stereolab music at that point.〔 In 1996, the group released the ''Evergreen Noise Is Flexible'' EP through Carrot Top on August 6 and ''Tenjira'' on November 12. ''Tenjira'' marked a turning point for the group's style as a review from Allmusic described it as "Flowchart managed to leave behind their Stereolab fixation and move on to simply sounding Japanese." In January 1997, Sean O'Neal met Erin Anderson at a DJing gig where the two discussed music.〔 O'Neal recalled meeting Anderon stating that "Basically, we were fascinated with each other because we were both overwhelmed to meet someone who had exactly the same taste in music"〔 A few weeks after meeting O'Neal and Anderson began working on music together and a few months later began dating.〔 Brodie Budd and Craig Bottel left the group while O'Neal became a member.〔〔 released the album ''Cumulus Mood Twang'' on October 20, 1997. The album received positive reviews from Allmusic, Pitchfork Media, and ''CMJ'' magazine.〔 After a tour of Europe, the group began working on their next album.〔 In 1998, Flowchart were listed on ''URBs next 100, a list of promising up and coming musicians.〔〔(【引用サイトリンク】work=Foundsound Records )〕 The group's next album titled ''Commercial'' was a collaboration with Trevor Kampmann under the alias of hollAnd. The album was released on January 13, 1999. The sound of the album was described as containing "drum'n'bass moves, C-86 pop references, and even a few orchestrated 60s-pop touches"〔 Flowchart sound continued to change as they released their ''Gee Bee'' EP in 2000 which was more experimental techno sounding. Their next release titled ''Broken and Blue'' in 2003, contained a more house music oriented sound.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Flowchart (band)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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