Nathan Leigh [dot] Net

composer, sound designer, producer, singer-songwriter

The Tremendous Seasons

The Tremendous Seasons

Every December for the past few years, Mike Delatizky, Sol Israel and I gather to record a whole bunch of irreverent, poorly produced, poorly recorded, and offensive as hell Christmas themed covers of garage rock songs. Because we're Jews and have nothing better to do around then.

Recorded over 5 days at Sol's in December 2009. After pretty much killing ourselves on "Manger Is My Middle Name" last year we decided we'd rather just make a really fun record. So we only did pretty much one run through of each song before we laid down the track and just let whatever happened happen. The result is a very silly monstrosity. Enjoy the latest from America's favorite all Jewish novelty Christmas garage rock band.

Recorded over two weeks at Sol's in December 2008. Released the weekend before Christmas (as always). The CD Release show for this one was the first time we'd ever played live as The Tremendous Seasons. We played a basement show at our friend Lexie's. In full Santa suits. In a blizzard.
This was recorded at my old apartment in Allston in about 8 hours in December 2007. Sol was in Israel at the time, so he literally phoned his parts in. Mike and I tracked all the instruments. We had to go acoustic because we couldn't be as loud as we could at Sol's.
Recorded over 2 days at Sol's place in December 2006. There was lots of beer involved. This was the first Tremendous Seasons record that I sang lead on. This was also the first project that I used the recording set up I used for Tell Me Something Honey and A Thousand Ships.
Recorded in December 2005 at Sol's place. This was the first Tremendous Seasons record I was involved with. Sol and Mike recorded the first one the previous year with one microphone in the middle of the room. They asked me to come in and produce this one. I did marginally better. Over the course of the day I went from producer to guitarist and even lent some backing vocals to the disc.