Guitar player B-unit will always remain one of UO’s most pondered about mysteries. This record is gross in all the right ways, and loud and unorganized to perfection.
Archives: Releases
UOPJ-27
They played the last show the Dungeon in Oshawa ever had with KTO to 5 people. Jess Bauming took photos that we never saw that I hope exist somewhere safely to this day. This record and this band meant a lot to people all over. Some members are still doing wonderful things to this day.
UOPJ-26
When we landed on her myspace page which had a picture of a little pink triceratops as her dp, it was clear as day. She and this record will forever live in our hearts.
1st Pressing:
Translucent Pink Vinyl* – /250
Translucent Green Vinyl* – /250
Pink Vinyl – /500
* – Wrong track list printed on labels. Never sold online or to retail. Mostly used to create clocks, jewelery and possibly a few slipped into the hands of a few lucky fans via the merch table.
UOPJ-24
Jesse Colburn, Chad, and Scotty lived in a bedroom studio for six months creating this emotional atom bomb. It is to this day a wonderful masterpiece, and worth putting headphones on somewhere with little distraction to lose yourself for a while.
UOPJ-54321
The summer of 2008 was a wild, weird, and strange time for us all.
UOPJ-23
It was honestly incredible to see kids who were 16 write songs like these. But like all things that rise too quickly, this band quickly defunct once others started to tell them how special they actually were. Thanks for the invite to the reunion boys. 😉
UOPJ-22
This record went so over schedule the last portion was completed by Luke Hoskin, Juice Butty, and Mark Spicoluk while the rest of the band was on the road. There was a member of Strung Out filling in for Luke as he was banned from the states for six months for a drug mix up at US customs.
1st Pressing:
Purple Vinyl – /250
Green Vinyl – /250
UOPJ-21
Mark Mcadam made the art for this one… the original art is believed to still be hanging in the bathroom of the bovine sex club … GFK is a staple to early 2000’s political punk rock, and I Hate Sally, well they were just a staple. It was really cool to put out a split record like this, even though in the end it probably only sold 40 copies.
UOPJ-20
In their brief existence THSD caused us a lot of emotional heartache… but in the end, this record made it almost worth it. We signed them after we saw them at the bovine sex club play for basically us and the bar tenders… and a year later they sold almost 1000 tickets less than a city block away. Nobody writes a hardcore hook like these guys.
1st Pressing:
White Vinyl – /500
UOPJ-666
There is a lot of fog around the memories of the summer of 2007.