Killjoy Confetti
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Killjoy Confetti

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This band has not uploaded any videos
This band has not uploaded any videos

Music

The best kept secret in music

Press


"Review of "Into the Light""

"Honestly, the music of this band is interesting to me regardless of the label you slap on them because it is outside the mainstream of anything happening right now! Meter changes, dynamic changes, and a general disregard for song formulas produce a coleection of songs that gets better every time you listen."

- Mark Lush
MidwestBands.com
July 31, 2003 - MidwestBands.com


"Review of "Into the Light""

"An all female band that isn't punk rock is still something of a rarity; whether they deserve it or not, their sex would show them up in a sea of skinny T-shirted indie rock boys. Good thing they deserve it."

- www.splendidzine.com
Sarah Zachrich
August 27, 2003 - splendidzine.com


"Review of "Into the Light""

" Arcade (now known as Killjoy Confetti) rocks their first album, 'Into the Light'. The vocals leap from girlie harmonies to deadpan straight talk to raging onslaught, while sweet melodies jam with jagged rhythms."

- Mojie Crigler
Womanrock.com
October 2003 - Womanrock.com


Discography

"Into the Light" - Full length cd released by Wooden Man Records in 2002

"Workman's Comp III" - includes one track from "Into the Light", released by Wooden Man Records in 2003

"Workman's Comp IV" - includes one track from "Into the Light", released by Wooden Man Records in 2004

MP3's are available through http://www.killjoyconfetti.com

Numerous songs from "Into the Light" have received radio airplay throughout the US, as well as other countries

A second album, to be recorded by Shellac's Bob Weston, will be released in the Spring of 2005

Photos

Feeling a bit camera shy

Bio

Although the girls have varying musical influences, ranging from punk to classical...and everything in between, their combined sound is accurately described by Mike Breen from Cincinnati's "City Beat" magazine. He writes, "If you took the idiosyncrasies of Throwing Muses and infused them with post-punked, angled rhythms, a captivatingly textured guitar patch-work and a melange of evocative melodies and harmony quirks, your Frankenstein's monster would sound something like four piece Arcade (now known as Killjoy Confetti) from Muncie, Indiana." - Mike Breen