We are currently migrating our data. We expect the process to take 24 to 48 hours before everything is back to normal.

Last updated: 8 hours ago

Following the 2010 breakup of ecstatic New Zealand-via-Portland art punks <a href="spotify:artist:5ZBHHLHlb8otaBAjLF98hl">the Mint Chicks</a>, former lead singer <a href="spotify:artist:2OOOSMQcWqKu4RpV9rckuQ">Kody Nielson</a> launched Opossom as a vehicle for his solo compositions. While still playing drums in his brother (and also former <a href="spotify:artist:5ZBHHLHlb8otaBAjLF98hl">Mint Chicks</a> member) Ruban Nielson's band <a href="spotify:artist:1LeVJ5GPeYDOVUjxx1y7Rp">Unknown Mortal Orchestra</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:2OOOSMQcWqKu4RpV9rckuQ">Kody</a> set about writing, producing, performing, and recording an album's worth of new material more darkly moody and lounge-leaning than his former work. During the formation of his new solo endeavor, <a href="spotify:artist:2OOOSMQcWqKu4RpV9rckuQ">Nielson</a> was also working as a collaborator and backup musician for onetime major-label pop star <a href="spotify:artist:3R8AurcQVHkialifehVKXV">Bic Runga</a>, and when the time came for Opossom to transition from bedroom project to live band, he enlisted <a href="spotify:artist:3R8AurcQVHkialifehVKXV">Runga</a> as vocalist and multi-instrumentalist and rounded out the live band with former <a href="spotify:artist:5ZBHHLHlb8otaBAjLF98hl">Mint Chicks</a> member Michael Logie on bass. The group's debut LP, Electric Hawaii, saw release first on Dark Summer Records/CRS Records in April of 2012, but soon saw re-release on Fire Records in August of the same year. ~ Fred Thomas, Rovi

Monthly Listeners

1,667

Followers

4,781

Top Cities

64 listeners
35 listeners
34 listeners
33 listeners
31 listeners