Frogtoon

Beat Scientific

29 top tracks

Biography

As you know, Daryl Palumbo has a large amount of side projects, one being “Beat Scientific“. This was a collaboration between Daryl Palumbo and Brian Lane (drummer of Brand New). It was Daryl Palumbo singing over hip hop beats created by Brian Lane and Daryl Palumbo Circa 2000-2001....Read more on Last.fm
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As you know, Daryl Palumbo has a large amount of side projects, one being “Beat Scientific“. This was a collaboration between Daryl Palumbo and Brian Lane (drummer of Brand New). It was Daryl Palumbo singing over hip hop beats created by Brian Lane and Daryl Palumbo Circa 2000-2001. The first track to appear from the side project was “Midwestern Stylings“. It was officially released via Fadeaway Records on their “The Best Comp in The World” compilation CD. The album credits labeled it was labeled as a Glassjaw remix, though it was really the spawn of Beat Scientific. An acoustic version also appeared on a sampler CD from Fadeaway Records; limited to 2000 copies. Glassjaw later recorded the song on a few demo sessions while working on Worship & Tribute. Unfortunately, it didn’t make the album. Beat Scientific’s debut album entitled “Students of the Drums” was set to be released in January of 2001 via Fadeaway Records, but the album never materialized or was finished for that matter. Out of a handful of tracks, only 3 were completed with lyrics, the rest were left as instrumentals. One of the tracks created from Beat Scientific was later recreated by Glassjaw entitled “The Number No Good Things Can Come Of” as a Worship & Tribute b-side. It was featured on Glassjaw's Cosmopiltan Bloodloss Uk Single, and the El Mark Digital EP which was released on iTunes last Fall (2005). Daryl has also called the track “St. Alex” in a live performance while performing acoustically with Beck (guitarist of Glassjaw). Why Beat Scientific was never continued or completed is not known. All info from: http://www.danceinmyblood.com/ <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Beat+Scientific">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.