More than a band. More than a show. Step into the world of Steam Powered Giraffe.
Steam Powered Giraffe is a musical project from San Diego, California. It was formed in 2008 by twin siblings David Michael Bennett and Isabella “Bunny” Bennett. Together, along with a cast and crew filled with theatrical backgrounds, the group takes on the guise of singing antique automatons and the fictional robotics company that made them.
The quirky act combines comedic sketches, improvised android banter, and original music fused with multimedia visuals, billowing steam effects, and robot pantomime.
From their heartwarming nostalgic melodies to their funky cabaret rock, Steam Powered Giraffe’s songs are memorable, infectious, and as unique as the robots themselves.
More than just a band, Steam Powered Giraffe is an experience that must be seen and heard by the entire family.
The artists behind the robots started street busking as these quirky characters in January 2008 at Balboa Park, California, and instantly drew the attention of Southern California. Since then they’ve performed at such venues as The San Diego Fair, The San Diego Zoo, The Wild Animal Park, Legoland, Ontario Mills, and numerous Sci-Fi, Fantasy, and Steampunk Conventions.
For information on how to book Steam Powered Giraffe, please click here to go to our contact page.
Steam Powered Giraffe is proudly endorsed by Höfner.
The group uses a black Höfner H500/1-CT Contemporary Series Violin Bass Guitar with a custom painted red pickguard and knob plate. The bass guitar can be seen and heard being played by Hatchworth and The Spine during live stage shows.
Rabbit
Performed by Isabella “Bunny” Bennett
Built: 1896
Style: Steampunk
Instruments: Melodica, Accordion
Features: Victorian gear-driven motors, kinetic projectile chambers, antique particle accelerator lens device
Bio:
In 1896, Peter Alexander Walter built his first humanoid robot. Rabbit was made with a copper exterior, and ran off of a new form of energy: Blue Matter.
Rabbit wasn’t always a girl robot though. For the longest time the robot was just another one of the guys. An incomplete skeletal copper Victorian man. Or so everyone thought.
The name Rabbit comes when the bot was just a curious head on Walter’s table. Having just made the world’s first artificial intelligence, Peter Walter was excited to explore the robot’s abilities. He pointed to a lab animal in a cage, and said; “Rabbit.”
“Raa-bit,” the robot said.
Peter was so astonished and delighted when the robot repeated the word back to him, that he pointed at other things in the lab, wondering if he could teach it more words. But all the robot would say all night was Rabbit, and that’s how she got her name.
Rabbit went on to fight against Becile’s copper elephants in 1897, outfitted with a prototype blue matter laser lens array, a Gatling Gun attachment, and a collapsible buzz saw. Rabbit’s combat history also spans WWI, WWII, and the Vietnam war.
Many years later, at the start of the new year in 2014, Rabbit started going more haywire. Fearing a blue-matter leak, Peter Walter VI went to repair the mysterous inner workings by referencing a previously thought lost blueprint of Rabbit.
Much to the Walter’s surprise, Peter Walter the First always intended Rabbit to be a girl but never completed her due to the war that broke out between him and his rival inventor way back when.
Peter Walter VI fixed Rabbit best he could, finally finishing the job on the incomplete automaton girl.
As a musician, Rabbit plays the keytar and accordion.
Rabbit is a well-intentioned robot, but she is prone to the most malfunctions because of her archaic interiors. Unlike many of the other robot musicians, Rabbit still possesses many of her Victorian parts, which makes her quite clumsy. She is always making puns, and her favorite activity outside of entertaining is feeding the ducks at the Walter Cemetery.
Born: October 7, 1986, San Diego, California
Height: 6′ 1″
Eye Color: Hazel
Hair Color: Dirty Blonde
Bio:
Isabella “Bunny” Bennett is the transgender identical twin of David Bennett. She is a mime, actor, graphic designer, and illustrator.
Her interests include movies, monsters, dinosaurs, art, and theatrical makeup.
Her artistic inspirations include Dali, Burne Hogarth, and Leonardo DaVinci.
When Bunny was a child she would draw continuously, and wanted to be a cartoonist when she grew up.
Always highly imaginative along with her brother, she would come up with quirky stories and characters and express them through drawings and little comic books she would make.
In high school she joined the drama department after seeing her brother in a play, and graduated with honors.
From high school she attended the Art Institute of California, majoring in Game Art and Design, but as the first year curriculum went on, she dropped out, foreseeing a stale career of drawing muscular men and rendering football players. She wasn’t convinced it would be a job where her imagination could wander and freely thrive.
She once again dabbled in acting, but this time at Grossmont Community College, where she took Jerry Hager’s mime class along with Jon Sprague and Erin Burke. She urged her brother to take it with her the following year, and having found enjoyment doing pantomime, the four of them took it a third year as well, spawning the Steam Powered Giraffe act.
Today, when not being a robot, Bunny illustrates in her free time and works on other creative endevors.
Examples of her art can be seen at the following link:
http://whitebunny.deviantart.com
The Spine
Performed by David Michael Bennett
Built: 1896
Style: Futurism
Instruments: Guitar, Bass, Keys, Mandolin
Features: Titanium alloy spinal column, blue matter ray projector arrays, tesla coil high voltage discharger
Bio:
The Spine, like his fellow Steam Powered Giraffe band members, was created in 1896 by an inventor named Peter A. Walter, to be featured at the Cavalcadium’s scientific convention.
The Spine was originally created with a spinal column made up of smokestacks similar to a locomotive, thus he was appropriately named The Spine. In 1955, the US government invested millions of dollars into upgrading The Spine. Therein he received a brand new titanium alloy spine, and a multitude of highly classified weapons.
Along with his weapon upgrade, The Spine received new adaptive programming. Instead of being an old fashioned automaton, The Spine was reprogrammed and redesigned to more closely represent a human. This way, he could serve Uncle Sam by performing special ops missions as their number one ‘guy’, without any human lives being put in danger.
The upgrades were a success technically speaking; however, they weren’t put to good use in Vietnam, where guerrilla warfare overpowered all of Walter’s robots- including The Spine.
Despite a history of war, The Spine does not like violence, even in the service of his country. He, along with the rest of the Walter automatons have downloaded a vow of peace since Vietnam, and will not use their weapons.
As a musician, The Spine plays the acoustic guitar, the bass, keys, and the mandolin.
The Spine is a stoic automaton, and often plays the straight man in the trio of robot musicians. The Spine tries the most to fit in and be human around organic company, but spends most of his time interfacing with the Walter’s in-house computer network via The Hall of Wires.
Born: October 7, 1986, San Diego, California
Height: 6′ 3″
Eye Color: Hazel
Hair Color: Black (Naturally Dirty Blonde)
Bio:
David Bennett was born the eldest brother to his identical twin, Isabella Bennett (AKA Rabbit). He is exactly one minute older than his sister and has no other siblings. David’s childhood gave him enough room to let his creative juices flow and develop. Drawing, plastic model building, computer programming, and taking technology apart and putting it back together again were all staples of his childhood.
In high school he worked towards his A+ Certification in computers and looked towards becoming an IT Technician. A divorce between his parents turned David’s life upside down during his Junior year, at which point he joined the drama department, started to learn how to play guitar, and made new friends.
David graduated high school with honors and some school plays under his belt. He immediately got a job working as a Data Entry personnel at his father’s work and started going to Grossmont College. David auditioned for productions at the college and began to take a multitude of general education classes and Theatre Arts classes. David’s job as a Data Entry personnel changed to that of an IT Technician, Graphic Designer, and Print Operator once his and his sister’s already developed art & technological skills became realized by the company.
David met his future mime instructor Jerry Hager for the first time when he took his Beginning Acting class in college. David knew of Jerry’s “miming” down at Seaport Village and even visited his professor a few times while he was performing. It wasn’t until his sister Isabella took Jerry’s mime class, and recommend that he take it with her again the following year, that David was introduced to the beauty of the art of mime and movement.
Steam Powered Giraffe started during his college years with his sister and some other friends who were interested at the time. He wanted to incorporate playing music into the robot act almost immediately in conceptual stages.
David is currently performing and working with Steam Powered Giraffe full-time.
He manages the band’s show contracts, store, and merchandise shipping with fellow band member Chelsea Penyak, and handles the accounting and finances as well.
He also provides his voice and instrumental abilities to the band’s albums and he serves as the band’s recording engineer, mixing all of the final mixes for their albums.
Zero
Performed by Bryan Barbarin
Built: 1896
Style: Swing
Instruments: Bass, Piano
Features: Projectile grappling spear and hook with retractable chain, prototype beam arrays, and advanced pneumatic hydraulic systems
Bio:
Beautiful were the systems Peter A. Walter I developed for robotic movement, and diabolical was the arsenal of devices he outfitted his mechano-men with. To fight in the great robot war of 1896, they all were equipped with a multitude of claws, chains, blades, heat rays, death rays, gatling guns, machine saws, cannons, and Tesla coil electrical dischargers.
Miles underneath his manor in San Diego, California, Peter had developed and tested these dangerous weapons, and when work was nearly complete on fashioning his robot army, he did not leave any of his resources untapped.
Prototype-0 was the hastily fused together remains of all the prototype systems Peter had developed. From three incomplete robots Peter forged the mighty automaton of immense strength and resilience. “Zero,” as he became known, was even able to fell one of Becile’s mechanical elephants all by himself using his grappling hook chain mechanism.
Zero was an indisputable asset in battle, but when Peter’s creations were refashioned for their original purpose of entertainment after the war, he was abandoned in the facility of his inception far beneath Walter Manor.
For nearly a hundred years the automaton’s core powered the very sub-levels of the Walter family’s workshop, and he was all but forgotten down in the depths until Beebop noticed the robot’s existence in 1992 while searching the archives in maintenance. He happily powered Zero on and the two of them became good friends, enjoying old records and films that had been stashed in the abandoned facility.
Over the years Zero became infatuated with the various Motown records stored down with him, and he absorbed the material with much gusto.
In 2008, while testing out his new rocket elevator, Peter Walter V was enchanted by a gorgeous voice emanating from one of the lowest decks of the Walter workshops. When he stumbled upon Zero, he knew he had to reconstruct the robot for entertainment, and thus the musical legacy of Zero’s career was born.
It wasn’t long after joining the band that Zero became “the face” of Steam Powered Giraffe. He skyrocketed into popularity until in 2012, he left the band for a solo career under a competing label. The Walter family lost the rights to Zero’s likeness and voice and he had to be edited out of all previous material.
Zero’s fame and wealth soared as a solo musician. He even had his own reality TV show, “Zero’s House” and a sugary breakfast cereal, “Zer-e-Os.” But his success was short lived when a bad investment left the robot millionaire penniless. Zero wanted to invest his earnings into love, but was unaware that love only existed as a feeling and was not something that you could buy stock in.
In 2015, Zero released his biography, “How I Lost All My Money By Investing in an Abstract Concept.” It only sold one copy.
Bankrupt and broken, Zero returned home to Walter Manor with the only possession left in his name: A yacht named “Floaty Time.” After repaving the roads and driveway Zero tore up while dragging a boat through the streets, Peter Walter VI was approached by Hatchworth, who saw this as the perfect opportunity to go and pursue his main passion of ‘gold-fishing.’
While unsure what that even was, Peter and the robots waved goodbye to Hatchworth and welcomed Zero back into the act for the year 2017.
Zero’s popularity may soon be on the rise, as over two people liked his photo already on Facebook. Today the washed up super-star enjoys hanging with his favorite disembodied robot head Beebop and watching soft serve ice cream melt on a hot day.
Born: June 15, 1987, San Diego, California
Height: 5′ 10″?
Eye Color: Brown
Hair Color: Black
Bio:
Bryan Barbarin is the youngest and loudest of 5 siblings. At a young age he found his heart on the stage, (Don’t worry the heart was fine once he brushed it off) and since then he has dedicated his life to the performing arts…kind of.
After solidifying his love for the theatre in high school, Bryan moved on to Grossmont College where he met the Bennetts. Not only did they perform in several shows together, as well as start their own improv group together, they also all took mime from the famous Jerry Hager. After watching the Bennetts brilliantly display their abilities in class Bryan decided that maybe he should go another route. He started working professionally for many of the theaters around San Diego including; Lamb’s Players Theatre, Cygnet, San Diego Rep, National Comedy Theatre, SDMT, and New Village Arts.
After achieving moderate success and creating many lifelong friend/family in the SD theatre Community, Bryan moved on to play with The Routine. The Routine is a brotherhood of musicians formed from the ashes to radiate a fire of funk and soul that will spread love across this earth. This sparked up his love for performing music so when he got an opportunity to reunite with Bennetts in that capacity, he couldn’t turn it down. He couldn’t be happier to be part of the SPG family!
You can check out Bryan with The Routine here:
http://www.theroutineband.com/#theroutine
Walter Worker Chelsea
Performed by Chelsea Penyak
Bio:
At Walter Robotics we take every precaution with our highly incomprehensible technology. We send a minimum of two Walter Blue Matter Engineer to every show that our robots perform at!
Introducing, the Walter Workers!
Being a Walter Worker takes months and months of extensive training to hone a specialized affinity towards blue matter itself. Even though malfunctions are (mostly) non-existent with the performances, the Walter Workers are always on the job to make sure the robots’ machinery is working in top order.
What’s with the blue hair and pale skin? Well, we don’t know. But we’re sure it has nothing to do with working extensively with blue matter cores. Honest!
So don’t worry! You’re in good hands folks! And most of our Walter Blue Matter Engineers do have hands!
Born: May 27, 1989, San Diego, California
Height: 5′ 5″
Eye Color: Blue/Gray
Hair Color: Dark blonde
Bio:
Chelsea Penyak, a San Diego native, made her first stage appearance as a student of City Ballet of San Diego at the age of 7. She continued her training with City Ballet of San Diego under the direction of Steven and Elizabeth Wistrich (formerly of the Stuttgart Ballet). She trained and performed in ballet for 13 years, appearing in professional productions including Don Quixote, The Nutcracker , and George Balanchine’s Stars and Stripes.
Walter Worker Camille
Performed by Camille Penyak
Bio:
At Walter Robotics we take every precaution with our highly incomprehensible technology. We send a minimum of two Walter Blue Matter Engineer to every show that our robots perform at!
Introducing, the Walter Workers!
Being a Walter Worker takes months and months of extensive training to hone a specialized affinity towards blue matter itself. Even though malfunctions are (mostly) non-existent with the performances, the Walter Workers are always on the job to make sure the robots’ machinery is working in top order.
What’s with the blue hair and pale skin? Well, we don’t know. But we’re sure it has nothing to do with working extensively with blue matter cores. Honest!
So don’t worry! You’re in good hands folks! And most of our Walter Blue Matter Engineers do have hands!
Born: March 5, 1652, Somewhere, Someplace
Height: 5′ 5″
Eye Color: Eye ball white
Hair Color: Hair colored
Bio:
Camille Penyak, born and raised in San Diego California, gained a love of the performing arts at the age of 5. Inspired by her big sister Chelsea, she tried on a pair of ballet shoes and never looked back. At City Ballet of San Diego, under the direction of Steven and Elizabeth Wistrich (formerly of the Stuttgart Ballet), she trained for almost 14 years. Along with her resident instructors, Camille also had the opportunity to train with star guest artists such as Gelsey Kirkland, David Howard, Fernando Bujones, Alonzo King, and Susan Jaffe. During her time as a student, she went on to join the professional company as a trainee (2007-2010) and an apprentice (2010-2011). With extensive stage experience from a very young age, Camille never felt more at home than when she was performing for an audience or just rehearsing in a studio. During her time in the professional company she appeared in productions such as Swan Lake, Giselle, Don Quixote, The Nutcracker, and Peter Pan. She also worked with Sandra Jennings of the Balanchine Trust in preparation for demi-soloist and corps roles in the production of George Balanchine’s Walpurgisnacht Ballet, a highlight of her performing career.
While slowly easing out of performing professionally, Camille remained at City Ballet of San Diego working as an administrative assistant and the company’s social media manager for two years. Camille joined Steam Powered Giraffe as a Walter Worker in September 2014, getting the opportunity to perform onstage with her sister for the first time in many years. Along with her duties as a merchandise associate and stage performer, she has also collaborated with Chelsea to choreograph ballet pieces to live performances of Turn Back the Clock in 2015 and Hold Me in 2016. In her time away from the band, she works in another scene she enjoys: a local independent bookstore. Still with Steam Powered Giraffe today, she feels lucky enough to continue to do what she loves and work in such a creative environment with very talented artists!
GG The Giraffe
Performed by Isabella “Bunny” Bennett
Built: ?
Style: Industrial
Instruments: Piano
Features: Cute
Bio:
Not much is known about this plucky baby giraffe robot other than she was locked in a crate for many years.
Upon being released, The Walters discovered she had a very advanced learning module installed in her brain that lets her digest information at an alarming rate.
(Seriously, she once read all the Twilight books in five minutes. Naturally she promptly burned them when finished).
Her curious robot brain can seemingly interface with almost any electronic device she wishes, though most of her time is spent inside Walter Manor trying to catch up on every television show and movie known to man. She also is an internet-aholic and frequents her Tumblr, which is mostly filled with kitten gifs.
Beebop
Built: 2003
Style: Digital
Instruments: Synth
Features: Able to interface with any of the Walter Robotics machinery.
Bio:
Currently Beebop resides at Walter Manor, the home of the Walter family and their robots. Because of his digital nature he is able to accompany the robots at their live concerts anywhere in the world.
During shows, he interfaces between the band’s sound engineer and the three main Steam Powered Giraffe robots on stage so that the shows go smoothly and everything runs systematically.
Beebop has a very dry sense of humor, owing to the fact that his personality is more “robotic” than the other robots.
Qwerty
Built: 1983
Style: 8-bit
Instruments: Synth
Features: Able to interface with any of the Walter Robotics machinery
Bio:
QWERTY, was a state-of-the-art operating system designed to assist the Walters in interfacing with the Steam Powered Giraffe robots in the 1980s. Like Beebop, he is digital and currently helps with behind-the-scenes technical mumbo-jumbo during live concerts.
While his 8-bit graphics and high-pitched monotonous voice might not be “hip”, “cool” , and “sleek” today, he is still reliable and dependable, which is why he is still made use of to this day.
Qwerty tends to poke fun at things a lot, including his fellow robots, which they just love…
Previous Members
Hatchworth
Performed by Sam Luke (Previous Member)
The Jon
Performed by Jonathan Sprague (Previous Member)
Upgrade
Performed by Erin Burke (Previous Member)
Steve Negrete
Live Show Sound Technician (Previous Member)
Michael Philip Reed
Live Show Backing Musician (Previous Member)
Matthew Smith
Live Show Drummer (Previous Member)
New albums make their way to streaming services and our “Patreon-like” Engineer-eteer site within one year after their initial release. The band is a very small company and self publishes all of it’s albums. As such we rely on the support of our fans directly and do not go through a record producer or label of any kind. When we release a new album we put it up for sale on our website in CD form and digitally wherever we can except for streaming services or services that require albums-for-sale on their platform to be available on their streaming mediums as well. This is due to the fact that the band makes close to nothing off of streaming services like Spotify. While these services are convenient and fan favorites, the profits generated by them are fractions of fractions of a cent and these percentages are based off of the total number of track listens by users overall within Shopify’s entire vast music library and the total amount of monthly subscription income a site like Spotify makes. Small independant artists like ourselves don’t stand a chance to rake in a decent percentage with our small but dedicated fanbase (in comparison to mainstream artists) and are unfortunately given “very little of the Spotify pie”. “Income is still income” one might say, and that is true and obviously we’re grateful for any support a fan can give us, even if it’s through a streaming service, but for us even hundreds of thousands of track streams a day only equals a very small amount of income, and we certainly do not have those kind of listening numbers. The fact is, if we released our new albums on streaming services when they initially release, a large number of folks would choose to listen to the album on Spotify and the like instead of purchasing a CD or digital copy directly from us. We are a company and like all companies we have expenses and are trying to stay afloat while creating new albums. This is just our way, once again, of encouraging fans to support us by buying new albums from us, and it has nothing to do with us being greedy greedy mean people. With that said, we understand that Spotify and services like it (Apple Music, Amazon, Google Play) are all here to stay. If you don’t want to purchase an album from us, you can simply wait until it’s been out for awhile and then listen to it at a later date when we push it to streaming services. We apologize that you will have to wait to hear a new album if you don’t want to purchase the album, but we do release music videos throughout the year after an album is released, we share select songs with Engineer-eteers, and there are 60 second previews available on iTunes. Lots of options to tide you over we think. 🙂 Streaming services are a good way for new fans to discover the band for sure, and they are convenient, but we are trying to balance that with encouraging our fans to support us when we release a new album. So hopefully you can understand why we delay new releases to streaming sites. Steam Powered Giraffe encourages fan-made videos on YouTube that feature our songs. The only stipulation we have is that you do not upload any videos on your account that include our songs from the list below. -1896 Acoustic Version Tracks. You may upload videos with songs from any album other than those listed above. When the above are released on streaming services, you may then upload videos with these songs when this list is updated to reflect that. If you happen to upload a song from this list, YouTube’s automated content ID system will automatically remove it. When you upload a video to YouTube that has one of our songs in it from an album not in the list above, YouTube will automatically tag it and monetize the video for Steam Powered Giraffe. We feel this is a fair trade and a good way to help support the band, while still being able to upload your creations with our songs in them. The band gets a small bit of revenue from the ads YouTube may place on your video, and you do not have to do anything further. Please note that due to YouTube’s automated system and the large volume of email inquiries we receive, we cannot offer individual licensing of our songs for YouTube videos with our songs in them. Also of note, the band cannot sanction the upload of any videos with our songs in them unless they are only going up on YouTube, since YouTube is the only place where we have the option to allow these videos and monetization on our end. David and Bunny Bennett came up with the name before they even had their robot group or knew the name would be used for it. The name “Steam Powered Giraffe” was just a silly name for a few recordings that the Bennett siblings did. Bunny was partial to steampunk, and David sort of liked giraffes. After taking a mime class at Grossmont Community College with Jerry Hager, they met other performers who shared their passion for acting and proceeded to dabble in robot pantomime busking on the streets of Balboa Park. What started as a street act soon turned to the stage. The result is what you see today! The Spine and Rabbit were the Bennett siblings’ online aliases for many years, while the name Hatchworth was constructed more recently to tie in with the character’s supposed chest-door and old-timey appearance. Both Isabella Bennett and her character Rabbit are transgender. Our show is extremely family friendly. We’re often told both kids, teenagers, parents, and grandparents find our show cool! Each robot performer actually does their own makeup! We use a combination of Mehron metallic powder and an alcohol based mixing solution, Snazaroo’s various water based makeups, liquid eyeliner, and Ben Nye creams. Makeup application time varies between artists. Typically the makeup takes about an hour and a half to two hours each. Most of the Steam Powered Giraffe costumes are custom made by our costume designer Esther Skandunas. Bunny Bennett does the majority of the art you see on the website, including the graphical elements, the comic, and many of the illustrations. Samuel Luke has contributed his own artwork to posters, various illustrations, and the lyric booklets that come with our albums! Gabi Gonzalez has also contributed to album art, the SPG comic and other miscellaneous. Collectively, the members of Steam Powered Giraffe enjoy a wide variety of music. Here are just a few names that we have been influenced by: The Band, ELO, The Beatles, Queen, David Bowie, Michael Jackson, The Mills Brothers, The Bee Gees, Amanda Palmer, Danny Elfman, Frank Sinatra, Radiohead, Muse… And the list goes on! The robots live in San Diego, California and perform all over America (and sometimes in other countries)! Typically you can find us on the west coast entertaining at various conventions and events, but as our group expands- we may be in your area soon! We’re making it our goal to travel planet Earth as much as possible in our career. For the latest shows, you can consult our calendar here. Typically we only post upcoming events for the next couple of months, but if you don’t see your location- know that we’d be more than happy to make it out there with enough interest and a booking from your local venue! Our Contact page has all the information that you can pass on to anyone interested in hiring us for a show in your area. While we had our start busking in the park as street entertainers, we no longer do park performances. Due to the unique nature of our act, we have had a few robot performers come and go over the years, in addition to a few backing musicians. The band had a 10 Year Anniversary show in 2018 which had all past and present members invited back on stage together though. The show was video archived and can be purchased on the band’s store by clicking here. Typically the main writer of a song sings the melody, but sometimes that’s not always the case or we have multiple people singing parts of the melody. A good way to learn the robot voices and their names is to listen to the music and consult the lyrical information on our website or the lyric booklets that come with our albums.
This encourages fans to support the band directly by buying our newly released albums and songs at full price, rather than listening through streaming services.
Our albums are available initially upon release through our official online store as CDs and digital MP3s, as well as digitally through Bandcamp and iTunes.
And hey! It feels good to support small businesses! Your CD and/or digital purchase from us (or iTunes) pays the people who work for Steam Powered Giraffe, whether that’s maintaining our online presence on the social streams, packing and shipping said CDs to you, or contributing art to one of our many projects! Either way, your album purchases help someone in the band or working for the band make a living, and we think that’s pretty swell and hope you agree!
While they do hurt artists like ourselves in their own way, we do eventually put all of our newly released albums up on these streaming services, usually within one year after an album’s initial release. We feel this is a good trade-off for those of you who do not wish to purchase an album in CD form or digitally and only want to stream music over the internet. We get it, times are hard, some people don’t have money or just don’t ever want to spend money on entertainment.
Here is a list of the current albums you may not upload songs from:
You can upload any other songs from our 1896 album, but not the acoustic tracks.
These tracks are not currently on streaming services and are exclusive to the purchased versions of the album.
They will be released on streaming services by the end of 2021, at which point we will allow these tracks to be used in videos on YouTube.
Thank you for understanding!
You can see Bunny’s artwork by visiting her gallery here.
You can see Sam’s artwork by visiting his gallery here.
You can checkout Gabi’s Instagram here.