
Making Beds
In a perfect world, we’d be talking about Troubled Hubble’s 2005 album Making Beds in a Burning House with the same reverent tones that we do other indie classics of the era, from The Dismemberment Plan’s Emergency & I to Built to Spill’s Keep it Like a Secret. It’s a smart, fun, skitterish delight that was bolstered by the fact that these four young men played every show like it was both their first and last. They put all of that manic energy into Making Beds, meticulously recording and producing it with Jason Caddell of the Dismemberment Plan, and finding a home for it at the legendary pop-punk label Lookout! Records. Troubled Hubble would be one of the last bands signed to Lookout, though, and not long after Making Beds hit shelves, the label and the band were done.
Making Beds
In a perfect world, we’d be talking about Troubled Hubble’s 2005 album Making Beds in a Burning House with the same reverent tones that we do other indie classics of the era, from The Dismemberment Plan’s Emergency & I to Built to Spill’s Keep it Like a Secret. It’s a smart, fun, skitterish delight that was bolstered by the fact that these four young men played every show like it was both their first and last. They put all of that manic energy into Making Beds, meticulously recording and producing it with Jason Caddell of the Dismemberment Plan, and finding a home for it at the legendary pop-punk label Lookout! Records. Troubled Hubble would be one of the last bands signed to Lookout, though, and not long after Making Beds hit shelves, the label and the band were done.
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In a perfect world, we’d be talking about Troubled Hubble’s 2005 album Making Beds in a Burning House with the same reverent tones that we do other indie classics of the era, from The Dismemberment Plan’s Emergency & I to Built to Spill’s Keep it Like a Secret. It’s a smart, fun, skitterish delight that was bolstered by the fact that these four young men played every show like it was both their first and last. They put all of that manic energy into Making Beds, meticulously recording and producing it with Jason Caddell of the Dismemberment Plan, and finding a home for it at the legendary pop-punk label Lookout! Records. Troubled Hubble would be one of the last bands signed to Lookout, though, and not long after Making Beds hit shelves, the label and the band were done.











