Old Traditions, New Standards

Old Traditions, New Standards is the debut album from the Washington-based indiepop band Tullycraft. In 2022, Old Traditions, New Standards was included on Pitchfork's list of The 25 Best Indie Pop Albums of the '90s.

The album was produced by Pat Maley. Tracks were recorded at Avast Studios in Seattle and mixed at Yoyo Studios in Olympia. The album was originally released on Harriet Records out of Cambridge, Massachusetts. Robynn Iwata from the band cub provided guest vocals on the song "Josie," and Chris Munford from the band Incredible Force of Junior provided guest vocals on the song "Mental Obsession."

The album reached #22 on the CMJ Top 200 chart. The song "Pop Songs Your New Boyfriend's Too Stupid to Know About" was listed as essential listening in Pitchfork Media's 2005 article on Twee Pop entitled "Twee as Fuck."

Track listing

 * 1) "Willie Goes to the Seashore"
 * 2) "Josie"
 * 3) "Mental Obsession"
 * 4) "Wish I'd Kept a Scrapbook"
 * 5) "Superboy & Supergirl"
 * 6) "Sweet"
 * 7) "Dollywood"
 * 8) "Pop Songs Your New Boyfriend's Too Stupid to Know About"
 * 9) "Then Again, Maybe I Don't"
 * 10) "Meet Me in Las Vegas"
 * 11) "Cammy & The Count"
 * 12) "Miracles Are Hard to Find"

Television

 * In 2018 the song "Superboy & Supergirl" was featured in the first episode of the Netflix series The End of the F***ing World, based on the graphic novel The End of the Fucking World by Charles S. Forsman.

Personnel

 * Sean Tollefson – vocals, bass
 * Jeff Fell – drums
 * Gary Miklusek – guitar, backing vocals
 * Pat Maley – production, audio engineering
 * Aaron Gorseth – production assistance
 * Robynn Iwata – vocals on "Josie"
 * Chris Munford – vocals on "Mental Obsession"
 * Susan Robb – vocals on "Then Again, Maybe I Don't"

Controversy
In 2007 the song "Sweet" was used in a television commercial for the hot-dog chain Wienerschnitzel. The song was licensed without the band's knowledge or permission. The licensing was handled by Darla, the California-based record label that had reissued the album Old Traditions, New Standards. Needless to say, the band was upset when they learned of the commercial, and a dispute between Tullycraft and Darla ensued.