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The Pulsars

The Pulsars
Origin Chicago, Illinois
Genres New wave, indie rock
Years active 1994–2000, 2009
Labels Almo Sounds
Website www.thepulsars.com
Members Dave Trumfio & Harry Trumfio

The Pulsars was a new wave/indie rock band from Chicago, Illinois led by Dave Trumfio and his brother, Harry Trumfio. They signed to Herb Alpert and Jerry Moss's Almo Sounds label and recorded two albums in the mid-1990s, one of which was released and another that has yet to be released.

The band comprised the brothers Dave and Harry Trumfio, with Harry on drums and Dave producing, singing and playing all of the other instruments. The brothers had played together in bands since they were at school, and recorded at home. Trumfio named his synthesizers and electronic gear 'Theodore 9000', which he described as "the third member of our band", and the brothers considered 'T9000' as the name of the band before deciding on The Pulsars. Dave Trumfio had previously played in Ashtray Boy and The Mekons.

The Pulsars' first release was the Teenage Nights EP, on the Sweet Pea label in 1995. They were then signed to Almo Sounds in a US$2.5 million, three-album deal, their first release for the label the five-track Submission to the Master e.p., on which label-boss Alpert contributed trumpet.

The band's self-titled debut album was released on Almo Sounds in 1997, and was described as "an album that's in the moment, behind the times, and looking to the future", with influences from the early 1980s, although writer Ritchie Unterberger viewed the band's sound as "considerably more enjoyable and warm" than their 1970s and 1980s influences, describing the album as "pleasant, catchy retro-new wave".SPIN's Eric Weisbard described the album's songs as "amazingly confident, catchy anthems". In the view of Trouser Press writer Ira Robbins:

"The album is one of the singular musical accomplishments of the '90s — with its combination of indelible melodies and seemingly pre-mature bedroom vulnerability and obsessions, it's a science fair version of Pet Sounds for the computer age."


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Wikipedia

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