New Science Projects

New Science Projects
Origin Denton, Texas, United States
Genres Blues punk
Anti-folk
Folk Punk
Labels Gutterth Records
Website http://nspnsp.com/
Members Dale Jones
Donovan Ford
Scarlett Wright
Miles DeBruin

New Science Projects is a blues punk band from Denton, Texas. They play a grungy, lo-fi styled punk rock, and are known for their wildly eclectic, often bizarre make-up and on-stage mannerisms. They have been described as an "anti-house-disco-hipster band,"[1] by the Dallas Observer in an interview after the band's release of Poison Culture; however, Jones refutes this, claiming he doesn't "want to position [himself] to run for political office at this time."[2] The band is significant member of both the local Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex music scene as well as the local punk scene. New Science Projects has toured throughout North Texas, including Mount Righteous, Innards, and The Two Knights; they frequently play at 1919 Hemphill in Fort Worth, Texas, where they are also set to release their album Bikini Salute in January,[3] which has been cited as "...A wild ride... like a Bob Dylan nightmare."[4] They were nominated for Best Blues Act in the Dallas Observer's 2010 award series.[5]

New Science Projects is known for their bizarre make-up, which depicts all of the band members as severely injured and bleeding. The reasoning behind this has never been answered with clarity. Dale Jones speaks on behalf of the rest of the band, and is notorious for his on-stage persona, including his thick, ambiguous, Eastern European accent, though Jones states that his stage persona is no specific character with any particular origin.[6] Jones' mannerisms seem distant and apart from the present; while he is very charismatic, much of his banter is juxtaposed, with multiple conflicting topics being spoken about at any given time, while other speeches very frequently trail off before their conclusion. When asked about his persona, Jones merely replied, "I feel like it is me. So I don't know how I'd be anything else... Unless I was pretending. Which is not a bad idea."[7]

Members

Discography

Albums

References

  1. DC9 in SPACE: New Science Projects, DC9 at Night, June 10, 2009
  2. DC9 in SPACE: New Science Projects, DC9 at Night, June 10, 2009
  3. Calendar, 1919 Hemphill, January 23, 2011
  4. Hogan, Josh (January 24, 2011), Album review: Bikini Salute by New Science Projects, Pegasus News
  5. McAnelly, Travis (November 11, 2010), Meet the New Science Projects, My Denton Music
  6. Sullivan, Dick (July 21, 2010), Why Dallas Needs New Science Projects, The Mad Man Troubadour, Front Row: D Magazine
  7. DC9 in SPACE: New Science Projects, DC9 at Night, June 10, 2009
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