No one saw it coming. Ten years ago Hublot Big Bang replica uk, when an unheard of group called Postal Service put out a debut, the small label that issued it, Sub Pop, expected sales to measure in the tens of thousands tops. "Even that was ambitious," says Tony Kiewel http://www.nalumar.com/hublot-big-bang-replica-uk.html, the label's A director. "That was what our best selling bands sold." In fact, the Postal Service disc, titled "Give Up," went on to move 1.1 million copies, producing what has become a classic single ("Such Great Heights"), while marking a key moment in the development of indie rock. To celebrate the album's decade anniversary Breitling Bentley replica uk, Sub Pop reissued it last month in a special double CD package http://www.nalumar.com/breitling-bentley-replica-uk.html, inspiring a tour. is playing venues up to 20 times the size of those they graced in 2003. The duo's first New York gig was at the 800 capacity Bowery Ballroom. This weekend they'll headline Barclays Center, capacity 18,000. "Even we asked ourselves, 'Are they crazy?' " Kiewel says of the Barclays booking. All this attention has shocked and amused the group, which consists of Ben Gibbard, better known as the singer for Death Cab for Cutie, and Jimmy Tamborello Breitling Replica Watches UK Unbelievably Cost-effective, of lesser known acts like Dntel and Figurine. Back in 2001, a mutual friend got them to collaborate on a track on a Dntel album. It went so well, the two began sending music to each other by mail (hence the name of the group). In their spare time off their usual projects, Tamborello sent synth tracks to Gibbard, who would fill them out with guitars and vocals. In less than a year they had enough music for a CD. The sound on it stood out in the indie rock world of the time by relying on electronics. "If people saw a rock band with a synthesizer back then, they would be bummed," Kiewel says. "Now it's super commonplace." To ease rock fans into it, the guys came up with the idea to have well known rock bands do acoustic covers of the single "Such Great Heights," including the Shins and Iron and Wine. "We called them pre mixes, as opposed to remixes," Kiewel says. "We thought it would be funny." But fans took it seriously. The Iron and Wine version was featured on the "Garden State" soundtrack, which sold 1.4 million copies, spiking sales of Postal Service's already bubbling under status. The I take also turned up in an M ad. The 10th anniversary edition of "Give Up" includes all the cover versions of Postal Service's songs, plus two numbers they wrote in 2006. Still, Kiewel warns fans not to expect a follow up CD. Key to the joy of this tour, he says, is the guys' lack of careerist ambition. "There's nothing to it other than the will to have fun and to hang out with people they like," he says. "It's pure."
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