Windsor for the Derby 来自美国佛罗里达州的坦帕,乐队由吉他手Dan Matz和Jason McNeeley,鼓手Greg Anderson组成,随后乐队来到德州发展,并签约当地的Trance Syndicate厂牌。
by Jason Ankeny
Hailing from Tampa, Florida, the founding members of the atmospheric post-rock group Windsor for the Derby — guitarists Dan Matz and Jason McNeeley, along with drummer Greg Anderson — soon migrated to Austin, Texas, where they were signed to the local Trance Syndicate label. Their debut LP, 1996s Calm Hades Float, was produced and engineered by Adam Witzie, who agreed to become a full-time Windsor for the Derby member shortly after the projects completion. After issuing the EP Metropolitan Then Poland in early 1997, the group closed out the year with the release of the full-length Minnie Greunzfeldt. In 1999, they returned with Difference and Repetition. Three years later they appeared with a B-sides collection, Earnest Powers, on Emperor Jones. The band also scaled down in this time period, leaving only Matz and McNeeley from the original lineup. Spacey folk texture crept into the 2002 Aesthetic release Emotional Rescue, 2004s We Fight Til Death featured halting vocals and a greater instrumental palette to work from. After the album both McNeeley and Matz ended up living in Philadelphia, (previously theyd converged somewhere once or twice a year to work on material), and putting down roots let them experiment more in a home studio, as well as play frequent live shows. They also added to the lineup drummer Charlie Hall and keyboardist and bassist Ann Neighbor. Giving Up the Ghost reflected these changes when it appeared from Secretly Canadian in August 2005. Though Neighbor was credited alongside Matz and McNeely, Gianmarco Cilli (National Eye) handled drums on the album.