Spiders Eat Babies

Spiders Eat Babies

Genres: Retard Electro-Grind

About Spiders Eat Babies

There will always be musical fads and trends which will run rampant through the modern rock music scene. At the same time, there will always be artists to fight against the normality and create something different. Enter Spiders Eat Babies, a two piece "Retard Electro-Grind" unit from Kent, Washington. "Spiders Eat Babies was created one day when I felt the need to change music forever," says founder Scott Byrnes about his musical masterpiece, "I think that our music really helps some people connect to their inner self..you know? To make them a better person" "When I first heard the music Scott was creating, I wasn't sure what to think of it, but I knew one thing... I had to be a part of it," tells Brent Nelson, the second member of Spiders Eat Babies Spiders Eat Babies goes beyond the traditional instruments a 'band' might use, for whatever music that band plays. Saxophones and trumpets are common in Jazz bands, while practically every rock band sports guitars, drums, and bass. But Spiders Eat Babies combines every instrument they have access to and then some. Keyboards, bass, and percussion form solid ground in Spiders Eat Babies to give way to more musical chaos with additions of harsh screamed vocals, fly swatters, distortions, trumpets, and an assortment of other unconstitutional noise devices.. Spiders Eat Babies does not play live for several reasons, "I don't find it neccessary for us to play live. Our music isn't something you'd share with a large group of people... it's more personal." says Byrnes, "The music is always improving," explains Byrnes. "There's so many things you can do with music, I think we're really just trying to do as much of it as we can." Certainly there are no restrictions on this fresh new breath of exciting new musical experience. Spiders Eat Babies have only just begun their impact on the minds of their listeners and those who have not yet experienced what it destined to change music forever.

Taken from Last.fm

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