Category Archives: Weekly News Letters

…..news letter #735 – drones…..

Oh man! Another bonkers week for crazy reissues! Three more absolutely essential reissues from the 70’s underground. Insane!!!!!

Also, Nora asked me to pass this little note along, “A big warm thanks for spending time with me at Listen. From the new customers to the regulars, you have made my 3 years at Listen very special. I will miss all of you.”

We are sad to see her leave not just the shop, but Edmonton. We wish her all the best back home…

…..picks of the week…..

young

La Monte Young & Mariah Zazeela: Dream House 78’17” (Les Series Shandar) LP
Originally released by the French label Shandar and never re-released on LP, Dream House 78′ 17″ is one of the very few recordings ever made by minimalist composer La Monte Young, in this case together with his long-time companion Marian Zazeela and his group the Theatre of Eternal Music c.1974. Now available for the first time proper on vinyl, this is a right-on opportunity to get down into this incredible work of drifting sublime minimalism, transcendent drones and narcotic, sine-wave ambient energy. This is the art of ‘continuous’ music as explored by Young and his collective of Dream House musicians including a young Jon Hassell on Voice, and Garrett List on Trombone. You certainly get your money’s worth here; clocking in at an epically, beautiful 78’ minutes and 71 seconds… as the title suggests. This is worth every minute/penny. Highest Recommendation!

File Under: Drone, Avant-Garde, Minimalism, Essential Grooves
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conrad

Tony Conrad with Faust: Outside the Dream Syndicate (Superior Viaduct) LP
In tomorrow… Violinist, composer and filmmaker Tony Conrad started his career in New York in the early 1960s. As a member of the Theater of Eternal Music (a.k.a. the Dream Syndicate) alongside John Cale, La Monte Young, Marian Zazeela and Angus MacLise, he participated in now-legendary and often legendarily loud drone performances with many pieces having no beginning and no end. During a fateful trip to Germany in 1972, Conrad met with avant-rock visionaries Faust and made the very first record to bear his name. Outside The Dream Syndicate, originally released in Europe only in 1973, is a stunning debut. Two side-long tracks—“The Side Of Man And Womankind” and “The Side Of The Machine”—show just how far Conrad had moved beyond his minimalist peers. Werner Diermaier’s repetitive drum beat and Jean-Hervé Peron’s stripped-down bassline conjure a tense, ascetic groove, while Conrad’s seamless violin, initially so controlled, reveals a surprising adaptability. The music shifts almost on a subliminal level, pushing and pulling to the drone’s internal pulse. It is hard to imagine Conrad’s trajectory from downtown Manhattan to a farmhouse in the German countryside that ultimately resulted in Outside The Dream Syndicate, yet no other record captures—so completely and instantly—the intersection of avant-garde and rock forms. Outside The Dream Syndicate remains ahead of and bracingly outside of its time. This first-time vinyl reissue and long out-of-print CD release have been carefully been carefully mastered from the original master tapes and include liner notes by musician Jim O’Rourke and author Branden W. Joseph. Highest Recommendation!

File Under: Minimalism, Drone, Avant-Garde, Essential Grooves
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trad

Träd, Gräs och Stenar: s/t (Anthology Recordings) 6LP
In tomorrow… The essential live recordings of Träd, Gräs och Stenar, Sweden’s greatest underground music export, are collected across 6 LPs. Includes Djungelns Lag and Mors Mors, plus Kom Tillsammans, an exclusive 2xLP with entirely unreleased live material from 1972. All albums are in deluxe gatefold jackets with printed inner sleeves containing liner notes by the band, and scores of images published here for the first time. Includes risograph reproductions of two rare original TGS flyers, and download code with extra unreleased material. Limited to 1,000 numbered deluxe silkscreened box sets. Kom Tillsammans features completely unheard recordings culled from original member archives, while unseen photos and extensive liner notes by the band complete this definitive Träd, Gräs och Stenar experience. Essential, unheralded psychedelic rock in the raw. And… all this material has been remastered from the original master tapes.

File Under: Psych, Sweden
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…..new arrivals…..

edip

Edip Akbayram & Dostlar: Nice Yillara Gulum (Pharaway) LP
The third album by Turkish psychedelic singer Edip Akbayram, originally released in 1982, really ramps up the silly synthesizers. Hear whooshy ’80s Rolands, vocals run through a harmonizer, and tons of totally tubular bass popping — it’s easy to hear the boundaries of the western intros and breaks. Ever wish Knight Rider’s KITT could drive to İstanbul? Take a ride on cheesy synthesizers with Edip at the wheel! Remastered sound. Includes insert.

File Under: Turkey, Psych
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akita

Masami Akita & Eiko Ishibashi: Kouen Kyoudai (Editions Mego) LP
Prolific Japanese artist Masami Akita aka Merzbow teams up with session musician, producer, and singer-songwriter Eiko Ishibashi for a work that showcases yet another side to Akita’s monumental catalog. Kouen Kyoudai consists of two side-long tracks that could be read as a contemporary take on the traditional avant-garde. With its skittering electronics, percussion, piano, doom, and noise, Kouen Kyoudai seamlessly incorporates many strands of experimental thought and practice. The tension that arises from the human use of the tool is made explicit as these works unfold in a storm of ecstatic human/instrument/machine interaction. Drums hammer alongside an ecstatic drone. Notes on a piano jostle with a storm of splintered electronics. Kouen Kyoudai highlights the pull between beauty and chaos; structure and the abyss — leaving behind a thrilling display of the interplay between the human and the technological while opening up new paths for both musicians involved. Masami Akita: noise electronics, computer, drums. Eiko Ishibashi: piano, drums, synth. Recorded at Gok Sound and SuperDeluxe, Tokyo. Recorded and mixed by Jim O’Rourke. Cut at Dubplates & Mastering, Berlin 2015. Photography by Shunichiro Okada. Design by Jacob Cates.

File Under: Japan, Avant-Garde, Merzbow
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moroccoPaul Bowles: Music of Morocco (Dust-to-Digital) 4CD
Silkscreened cigar box with foil stamping details throughout, 120-page leatherette book, and four CDs containing 4 hours and 30 minutes of audio. Includes introduction by Lee Ranaldo, field notes by Paul Bowles, and annotations by Philip Schuyler. From July to December 1959, Paul Bowles crisscrossed Morocco making recordings of traditional music under the auspices of the Library of Congress. Although the trip occupied less than six months in a long and busy career, it was the culmination of Bowles’s longstanding interest in North African music. The resulting collection remained a musical touchstone for the rest of his life and an important part of his mythology. Paul Bowles (1910-1999) was an American expatriate composer and author. He became associated with Tangier, Morocco, where he settled in 1947 and lived for 52 years to the end of his life. While living in Morocco, Bowles became a magnet for those envisioning the artist’s life away from the mainstream. He was idolized by writers of the Beat Generation, many of whom (William Burroughs, Gregory Corso, Allen Ginsberg, and Jack Kerouac) visited Bowles and his wife Jane in Tangier — a city Burroughs would later reimagine as the “Interzone” in his 1959 novel Naked Lunch. Over four months in 1959, Bowles traveled an estimated 25,000 miles around Morocco, capturing vocal and instrumental (including dance) music of various tribes and other indigenous populations at 23 locations throughout the country. In 1972, the Library of Congress issued a double LP titled Music of Morocco, containing selections from the collection. This four-CD set contains the recordings included on that double LP in addition to a wealth of never-before-heard music from this rich collection. Includes performances by Maallem Ahmed, Rais Ahmed ben Bakrim, Moqaddem Mohammed ben Salem, Chikh Ayyad ou Haddou, Rais Mahamad ben Mohammed, Chikh Hamed bel Hadj Hamadi ben Allal, Maallem Ahmed Gacha, Chikha Fatoma bent Kaddour, Cheikha Haddouj bent Fatma Rohou, Mohammed bel Hassan El Ferqa dial Guedra (Bechara), Maalem Abdeslam Sarsi el Mahet, Sadiq ben Mohammed Laghzaoui Morsan Embarek ben Mohammed, Maalem Mohammed Rhiata, Si Mohammed Bel Hassan Soudani, Maallem Taieb ben Mbarek, Hazan Isaac Ouanounou, members of the Hevrat Gezekel, Hazan Semtob Knafo, Amram Castiel, Hevrat David Hamelekh, Maalem el Hocein, Abdelkrim Rais, and members of the Family of the Chorfa of Ouezzane, as well as recordings of unknown performers.

File Under: Morocco, Field Recordings, Archival
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bradley

Charles Bradley: Changes (Daptone) LP/2LP
We are now an AUTHORIZED DAPTONE, so in addition to the regular version of the new Charles Bradley we have the limited exclusive 2LP version which includes the instrumental versions of the album. Soul singer Charles Bradley’s star has been on the rise since the release of his widely praised 2011 debut album No Time For Dreaming, and his ascent has continued long after the release of his triumphant second album, 2013’s Victim of Love. Dubbed “The Screaming Eagle of Soul,” the singer is proud to present his highly anticipated third album Changes, on Daptone imprint Dunham Records. The album is named for his popular, “smoldering” (SPIN) cover of the Black Sabbath track. “I think about the lyrics very closely when I sing ‘Changes’ and get emotional,” notes Bradley. “It makes me think of my mother and the changes in my life since she passed away.” By now, Bradley’s remarkable, against-all-odds rise has been well documented: how he transcended a bleak life on the streets and struggled through a series of ill-fitting jobs before finally being discovered by Daptone’s Gabriel Roth. The documentary Charles Bradley: Soul of America, directed by Poull Brien, follows Bradley’s extraordinary journey during the electrifying and transformative months leading up to the release of debut album No Time for Dreaming. The year following the release of No Time For Dreaming was one triumph after another and Victim of Love saw Bradley emerging from his past heartaches stronger and more confident, overflowing with love to share. Victim of Love went on to receive overwhelming praise and was included on numerous “Best of 2013” lists while the album’s title track was also named one of Rolling Stone’s “Best Songs of 2013.” Produced by Thomas Brenneck and backed by Menahan Street Band, with Changes, the powerhouse performer brings music fans of all ages another unforgettable set of songs and will continue to bring his live shows to stages around the world.

File Under: Soul
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brian jonestown

Brian Jonestown Massacre: Smoking Acid (A) LP
180-gram single LP version, on green vinyl, of The Brian Jonestown Massacre’s Smoking Acid EP, originally released as a double 12″ in 2009. Following the band’s extensive tour of Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and a few select dates in New York (including at ATP supporting My Bloody Valentine et al.) in 2008, Anton Newcombe went to Berlin to focus on his next album. Four weeks before hitting the US tour in April 2009, Newcombe was bursting with ideas and went to Iceland where this five-track EP was recorded. Originally, Newcombe was heavily influenced by The Rolling Stones’ psychedelic phase, but his work in the 2000s has expanded into aesthetic dimensions approximating the UK shoegaze genre of the 1990s and incorporating influences from world music, especially Middle Eastern and Brazilian music. This work mixes the traditional Brian Jonestown Massacre sound with Eastern influences and brings it up to date with the benefit of all the additional weirdness that’s been discovered in the past 40 years.

File Under: Space Rock, Psych
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cfm

CFM: Still Life of Citrus And Slime (In The Red) LP
In tomorrow…. CFM is Charles Francis Moothart. He has been making records for the past decade, playing various instruments in various bands—bass in The Epsilons, drums in The Moonhearts, and guitar in The Ty Segall Band and, most recently, Fuzz. Still Life of Citrus and Slime is Moothart’s first solo effort and it’s a great one. Moothart says, “Still Life of Citrus and Slime—the idea of creating something outside of the comfort zone. Blending basic elements of necessity, release and escape. An attempt to fuse reality with the elusions of the possible. The music represents an elevation beyond the barriers of linear motion and self-doubt. It is similar to looking in a mirror and realizing that time trails itself constantly by just a millisecond. You cannot kill time, and you cannot exist on both sides of the reflex. Yet, to bridge the gap is to eliminate instinct and output in their purest forms. “This record is a portrait of a person navigating the mechanics of two distinct machines. The first—the brain. The second—the Tascam 388. Eight tracks and a quarter-inch path to maneuver to the summation. The songs simmer from rare to well done. No matter the cut, the meat is fresh and still vibrating with life. “Fast, slow, wonky and straight. There are moments of everything in these grooves. At times it feels like it could come apart at the seams, but it doesn’t. It grabs the thread, bites the end, pulls it tight and continues the experiment. It’s rock ’n’ roll, and that’s all. The greener grass is browning on the other side. The drought is here to stay. The only way out of this mess is to put your head down and do the right thing. Keep moving, keep trying, keep creating, and project any positivity possible. Of course it is much easier to succumb to the wolf. Just forget about it, and pretend it is out of your control. Thankfully the wolf let down his guard. Having found refuge in a blanket of heartache and a bottle of wine, he took a cat nap in a manger of confusion.”

 File Under: Garage, Psych
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circles

Circles: s/t (Mental Experience) LP
In the late 1970s and ’80s there was a lot happening in the German post-krautrock underground that few people knew about — lots of independent artists doing their own thing, either via small labels or no labels at all. Circles was one of these bands. Based in the suburbs of Frankfurt, they consisted of Dierk Leitert (synthesizer, sequencer, drums, bass, guitar, voice, saxophone, flute) and Mike Bohrmann (guitars, bass, synthesizer), plus a few collaborators. Carrying the torch of ’70s bands like Cluster, Harmonia, or Liliental into the ’80s, Circles were also contemporaries of groups like Throbbing Gristle, Ilitch, and Nurse with Wound, so one can also expect some similarities to those artists. Circles is their first album, originally privately released in 1983 on the duo’s tiny Einhorn label and housed in a mysterious cover. This little-known but excellent kraut/psych/experimental album is highly recommended for anyone into Harmonia, Cluster, Fripp & Eno, Heldon, Conrad Schnitzler, NEU!, Throbbing Gristle, Ilitch, Irmin Schmidt, Amon Düül II. . . . First-ever reissue, including detailed liner notes by Alan Freeman (The Crack in the Cosmic Egg, Ultima Thule) telling the band’s story for the first time.

File Under: Krautrock, Experimental
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circles2

Circles: More Circles (Mental Experience) LP
In the late 1970s and ’80s there was a lot happening in the German post-krautrock underground that few people knew about — lots of independent artists doing their own thing, either via small labels or no labels at all. Circles was one of these bands. Based in the suburbs of Frankfurt, they consisted of Dierk Leitert (synthesizer, sequencer, drums, bass, guitar, voice, saxophone, flute) and Mike Bohrmann (guitars, bass, synthesizer), plus a few collaborators. Carrying the torch of ’70s bands like Cluster, Harmonia, or Liliental into the ’80s, Circles were also contemporaries of groups like Throbbing Gristle, Ilitch, and Nurse with Wound, so one can also expect some similarities to those artists. More Circles is their second album, originally privately released in 1984 on the duo’s tiny Einhorn label. It’s a work of experimental krautrock with lots of psychedelic guitar, keyboards, motorik drums, drones, proto-ambient sounds, and avant-garde/Dadaist touches. RIYL: Harmonia, Cluster, Fripp & Eno, Nurse with Wound, Throbbing Gristle, Chrome, Heldon, Conrad Schnitzler, NEU!, Eroc. . . . First-ever reissue, including detailed liner notes by Alan Freeman (The Crack in the Cosmic Egg, Ultima Thule) telling the band’s story for the first time.

File Under: Krautrock, Experimental
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diminishedDiminished Men: Vision in Crime (Abduction) LP
Distorted through a shattered lens, Diminished Men refocus hard-boiled cinema and classic instrumental music into something entirely unique. Vision in Crime, their third LP on Sun City Girls’ Abduction label, unfolds like a paranormal detective story full of delinquent exotica, deranged noir, hyperventilating surf, and shortwave radio nightmares. Opening number “Chamber,” an apparition of a forensics crime scene investigation, sets the tone but quickly spirals into the cobra-twilight guitar work of Steve Schmitt on the Aegean Sea-inspired espionage-surf track “Oistros Dolorous.” From here the band’s mutant lounge carnage weaves through sinister cityscapes and plazas, kudzu-infested forests on the avant-spy jazz of “Kudzu Mine,” lost island noir, hallucinatory gamelan rock, and phantom radio dispatches. By the time that mickey sets in, the title-track, a hauntingly gorgeous ballad, closes out the album. Diminished Men possess dangerous musical minds pulsing with nervous electricity, shattering Fender reverb, explodo-free jazz, and gorgeous, sometimes romantic melancholy. Featuring Steve Schmitt on guitars, drummer Dave Abramson (Master Musicians of Bukkake), and Simon Henneman on Bass VI. Vision in Crime includes special guest recording appearances by saxophonists Skerik (Critters Buggin, Garage a Trois, Wayne Horvitz) and Neil Welch (Bad Luck, King Tears Bat Trip). Limited edition of 500.

File Under: Rock, Surf, Sun City Girls
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explosions

Explosions in the Sky: The Wilderness (Temporary Residence) LP
Explosions In The Sky return with their sixth album and first non-soundtrack release since 2011’s Take Care, Take Care, Take Care. True to its title, The Wilderness explores the infinite unknown, utilizing several of the band’s own definitions of “space” (outer space, mental space, physical geography of space) as compositional tools. It is an album where shoegaze, electronic experimentation, punk damaged dub, noise, and ambient folk somehow coexist without a hint of contrivance – and cohere into some of the most memorable and listenable moments of the band’s expansive body of work – ‘proper’ studio albums and major motion picture soundtracks alike. If The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place was the defining album of Explosions In The Sky’s career, The Wilderness is the band’s (re)defining album.

File Under: Post Rock
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fieldThe Field: The Follower (Kompakt) LP
Celebrated Kompakt staple The Field returns to the spotlight with The Follower, his fifth full-length offering following From Here We Go Sublime, Yesterday and Today, Looping State of Mind, and Cupid’s Head. Swedish soundsmith Axel Willner is well known for his mastery when it comes to the allusive layering of loops, but it was with his 2013 album Cupid’s Head that a newly found, somewhat pressing snappishness started to replace the soft-hued sonics of his ambient-infused techno, imbued with a darker mood and stronger footing than before. A carefully gauged balance of stoic motorik and gloomy drones was key here — just as it is for The Follower, which goes even further in blurring the lines between concrete experimentation, body music, and precisely laid-out arrangement, leading to one of the most rhythmically and texturally engaging listening experiences in Willner’s catalog. Title-track “The Follower” opening on a surprisingly muscular groove and setting the tone for what could be considered The Field’s most floor-attuned work yet; a raw bounce dripping with foggy acid and marching percussion catches long-time fans off-guard while providing a perfect entry point for curious newcomers. Follow-up cut “Pink Sun” quickly finds its pace with one of these perpetually rotating hooks for which Willner is known, while “Monte Verità” specializes in tunefully glitched vocal samples with accompanying bass workout. This powerful, propelling album build-up finds its first moment of introspection with the mountainous “Soft Streams,” an exciting synth journey that emits both ethereal and kinetic propensities. “Raise the Dead” presents The Field’s focused sonic storytelling at its minimalist best, gyrating around a basic motive for a while before joining an earthy beat and opening up the sunshine roof. It’s a winding, hypnotic track that also works particularly well as transition to the album’s remarkable closing chapter; the slow-paced “Reflecting Lights” shows Willner at his most refined, evoking his often-quoted appreciation of Wolfgang Voigt’s ambient project Gas as well as an obvious fondness for kraut synthesists and their trance-inducing exploits. The Follower shows a consistent evolution in The Field’s trademark style of creation, but may very well be considered one of his most vibrant and visceral outings yet.

File Under: Techno, Electronic
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fluxion

Fluxion: Bipolar Defect (Subwax BCN) LP
Widely considered one of the landmark releases of dub-infused electronic music, as well as an endless resource of inspiration and awe for generations of electronic music artists and enthusiasts, Bipolar Defect by Fluxion was originally released on Mark Ernestus and Moritz von Oswald’s revered Chain Reaction label in 2000; this cavernous masterpiece now receives its long-awaited first-ever reissue from Barcelona imprint Subwax Bcn. Bipolar Defect successfully managed to broaden the space and the environment of Fluxion’s compositions, and developed further his technique of textural sonic blend. “Fluxion’s fourth and most otherworldly Chain Reaction EP, Bipolar Effect. . . . remains his most stunning listen, as the producer continually crafts hallucinogenic aural experiences with an unbelievably minimal palette.” –AllMusic

File Under: Electronic, Dub
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gnod

Gnod: Mirror (Rocket) LP
Just as dramatically as their restless disposition morphed their sound to a binary-driven direction for their last work, now Gnod strip their electronic setup to a vicious, viscous attack, as redolent of the primal punishment of early Swans as the angularity of prime Public Image Ltd, yet shot through with a mercurial power and fiery intensity that could come from no-one else. Reflecting and refracting the uncertainty of a darkening era, ‘Mirror’ is a work of bold reinvention and raw renewal, sculpting chaos and discord into a formidable statement of intent. Only one thing is certain – wherever Gnod choose to go next, their ire and inspiration blaze as brightly as ever.

File Under: Rock, Experimental
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hayden

Hayden: Everything I Long For (Hardwood) LP
In tomorrow… hopefully! Twenty years on from the release of Hayden’s gruff-voiced full-length debut, Everything I Long For, the album remains an iconic time capsule for mid-’90s Canadian indie rock. To celebrate, the beloved singer-songwriter is giving the record a brand new vinyl pressing and taking the songs on tour. A press release explains that Hayden Desser’s own Hardwood Recordings will issue the repress on April 1. The double-LP set presents the U.S. running order of the LP, which arrived in 1996 and was two songs shorter than the original 1995 Canadian edition. That said, the D side to the new vinyl release includes the Canuck edition’s “I Almost Cried,” as well as demos and outtakes and Hayden’s recipe for Kraft Dinner. Sadly, if you’re a completist, the repress still omits “Bunkbed.” The sessions were remastered by Joao Carvalho, with the vinyl arriving in a hand-numbered run of 1,000 copies on white vinyl. The limited release also comes with a download card, a handwritten lyric sheet and a collage of era-appropriate memorabilia. Pre-orders are up for grabs over here. Everything I Long For kickstarted Hayden’s career, with opening single “Bad As They Seem” introducing listeners to a much growlier Hayden than we’d hear in the years to come. The single was a MuchMusic staple in the mid-’90s. “I’ve always had a bit of a complex relationship with this record,” Desser said in a statement, “but with all of the personal baggage it comes with, I can’t deny the impact it has had on my life and the meaning it had to a certain group of people in the mid 1990s. For that, I’ve made the decision to briefly go back in time and celebrate the first songs I ever wrote.”

File Under: Folk, CanCon
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impact

Impact All-Stars: Java Java Java Java (Get On Down) LP
“‘Dub as we know it begins here. Prior to 1973, there existed in Jamaica instrumental takes of songs — B-sides that were labeled ‘versions’ — and vocal-less acetates produced as one-offs for sound systems to give their mic men something to toast over. But there was nothing that fit the radical mixing board athleticism and psychedelic soundscapes that are the trademarks of dub music. By the end of that year, however, the story had radically changed. Lee Perry’s Rhythm Shower and Upsetters 14 Dub, aka Blackboard Jungle, Herman Chin-Loy’s Aquarius Dub and Prince Buster’s The Message Dubwise had all appeared on the scene, each to varying degrees exemplifying dub’s radical take-off on the instrumental concept. However, it may have been Java Java Java Java, that broke the first ground. ‘To my knowledge,’ producer Clive Chin confirms, ‘and I’m telling this from a true fact, at the time it came out there was no other album like it.’ Although the debate will probably continue for as long as scholars of Jamaican music exist, there is no doubt that Java Java Java Java is one of the foundations of dub music.’ –Andrew Mason from the extensive liner notes. Java Java Java Java features key members of the Randy’s house band aka The Impact All-Stars. Featured here are Earl ‘Chinna’ Smith, Fully Fullwood, Augustus Pablo, Winston Wright, Tommy McCook, and more with the production helmed by Clive Chin with Errol Thompson behind the board.”

File Under: Reggae
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low jack

Low Jack: Lighthouse Stories (Modern Love) LP
Modern Love very rarely reaches out to artists outside of its immediate surroundings; it’s happened just a couple of times since the label’s inception in 2002. But there’s something about Philippe Hallais that compelled the label to ask him if he wanted to do something together. Hallais has released music on a bunch of cool labels (L.I.E.S., The Trilogy Tapes, Delsin, In Paradisum), but upon hearing the first tracks recorded for Lighthouse Stories, it was obvious that he was hitting on something new — a kinda weird slow/fast dance music that sounded like a footwork variant sewn up with an exotic production style impossible to pin down. These tracks eventually splintered off into different directions, held together by a strong sense of narrative and motion harking back to a teenage obsession with turntablism, Detroit electro, and ghetto house, and eventually juke and grime. Although Hallais had previously been focusing on more industrial dancefloor variants, for Lighthouse Stories he turned to these foundational influences, as well as his love of mixtapes and sound collages full of unfinished ideas, skits, and experiments — all things that inform the flow of this album. Lighthouse Stories captures a sense of nostalgia well, but is also a futuristic vision full of that exploratory, vibrant spirit that’s so hard to find in electronic music these days. Frames of reference are hard, but in places it reminds one of the dusted swagger of Anthony Shake Shakir, the aquatic Drexciyan movements of Ultradyne, a loose-limbed take on shangaan, and Actress at his most submerged. But ultimately, it’s an album made by a producer looking to his personal history while breaking new ground, pushing ahead with little regard to convention and ultimately ending up with something completely unique: a kind of intimate journal rendered in bright colors and odd shapes. Mastered and cut by Matt Colton. Pressed at Pallas. Cover artwork and insert designed by Will Bankhead.

File Under: Electronic, Techno
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manco

Baris Manco & Kurtalan Ekspres: Sozum Meclisten Disari  (Pharaway) LP
Originally released in 1981, this is another killer album by the Turkish legend, recorded with the same line-up as 1979’s Yeni Bir Gün album. Psych/funk/progressive sounds full of heavy drums and basslines, Moog/analog keyboards, and psychedelic guitar. Featuring the killer duet with Deniz Tüney (“Alla Beni Pulla Beni”), the superb boogie-funk-styled “Adem Oğlu Kızgın Fırın Havva Kızı Mercimek,” the cosmic prog sounds of “2025 (Üçüncü Ve Son Yolculuk),” and more. Remastered sound. Original artwork.

File Under: Turkey, Psych
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buddhists

Muslimgauze: Buddhist on Fire (Vinyl on Demand) LP
Standalone edition of Vinyl-on-Demand’s expanded reissue of Buddhist on Fire by Muslimgauze, included in its 2014 Chasing the Shadow of Bryn Jones 1983-1988 box set and originally released on Recloose Organisation in 1984. The set focuses on the early output of the Manchester, England-based Bryn Jones, who produced nearly 200 albums between 1982 and 1998, before he passed away in 1999 at age 37. An anti-colonialist at heart, Jones dedicated most of his music to Muslim-world struggles during his lifetime, such as Soviet-occupied Afghanistan, the Iran/Iraq war, and the Lebanon civil war, to name a few, with an emphasis on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Jones was pro-Palestine, often evidenced on album and track titles as well as dedications. Muslimgauze music can be considered a sonic treatise on Muslim-world conflicts in the form of exotic soundscape narratives, driving musical protest and rhythmic assertion. As a side-effect of being prolific, Jones worked in a variety of styles and successfully melded traditional ethnic music of places he championed with Western urban stylings such as techno, breakbeat, and dub. Some credit him as being the “Godfather of Dubstep.” Perhaps Jones’s musical brilliance shone brightest as an audio editor who deftly juxtaposed unlikely sounds in ways that now cannot be envisioned otherwise. In 1992 Jones wrote a manifesto about his music and influence; decades later, his vision is more relevant than ever. “The Principle Influence behind Muslimgauze is the political facts of the middle-east, though support of the PLO is the main Backbone. There are no musical influences, only political facts and figureheads e.g. Arafat, Gaddafi, Bhutto, Khaled etc. Such things are the starting point from which Muslimgauze music is taken. We have just (Gulf War) had a small skirmish in the middle-east, this area of the world is the most important quiet soon. Every countries going to have to choose which side it is on, to help free the people of Palestine. . . . There is a lot more to Muslimgauze than just a few pieces of music on a record or CD. There are no Bands around who I go out of my way to hear/see, the main-music I listen to is authentic and unable to be pigeonholed, people seem to buy what there told to, also they hear what other people have decided is good. Go Out and Discover.” –Bryn Jones, February 29, 1992, Manchester

File Under: Experimental, Electronic, Tribal
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opaques

Muslimgauze: Opaques (Vinyl on Demand) LP
Standalone edition of Vinyl-on-Demand’s expanded reissue of Opaques by Muslimgauze, included in its 2014 Chasing the Shadow of Bryn Jones 1983-1988 box set and originally released as a cassette on Product Kinematograph in 1983. The set focuses on the early output of the Manchester, England-based Bryn Jones, who produced nearly 200 albums between 1982 and 1998, before he passed away in 1999 at age 37. An anti-colonialist at heart, Jones dedicated most of his music to Muslim-world struggles during his lifetime, such as Soviet-occupied Afghanistan, the Iran/Iraq war, and the Lebanon civil war, to name a few, with an emphasis on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Jones was pro-Palestine, often evidenced on album and track titles as well as dedications. Muslimgauze music can be considered a sonic treatise on Muslim-world conflicts in the form of exotic soundscape narratives, driving musical protest and rhythmic assertion. As a side-effect of being prolific, Jones worked in a variety of styles and successfully melded traditional ethnic music of places he championed with Western urban stylings such as techno, breakbeat, and dub. Some credit him as being the “Godfather of Dubstep.” Perhaps Jones’s musical brilliance shone brightest as an audio editor who deftly juxtaposed unlikely sounds in ways that now cannot be envisioned otherwise. In 1992 Jones wrote a manifesto about his music and influence; decades later, his vision is more relevant than ever. “The Principle Influence behind Muslimgauze is the political facts of the middle-east, though support of the PLO is the main Backbone. There are no musical influences, only political facts and figureheads e.g. Arafat, Gaddafi, Bhutto, Khaled etc. Such things are the starting point from which Muslimgauze music is taken. We have just (Gulf War) had a small skirmish in the middle-east, this area of the world is the most important quiet soon. Every countries going to have to choose which side it is on, to help free the people of Palestine. . . . There is a lot more to Muslimgauze than just a few pieces of music on a record or CD. There are no Bands around who I go out of my way to hear/see, the main-music I listen to is authentic and unable to be pigeonholed, people seem to buy what there told to, also they hear what other people have decided is good. Go Out and Discover.” –Bryn Jones, February 29, 1992, Manchester

File Under: Electronic, Experimental, Tribal
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nmh

Neutral Milk Hotel: s/t (Neutral Milk Hotel) 2LP+2×10″+2×7″+7″Picture Disk
In tomorrow…. A self-released vinyl only box set including fifteen previously unreleased tracks. Includes two gatefold 12” records (In the Aeroplane Over the Sea and On Avery Island), two 10” records (Everything Is EP with bonus tracks and Ferris Wheel on Fire EP featuring eight previously unreleased acoustic recordings), two 7” records (Little Birds and You’ve Passed/Where You’ll Find Me Now), one 7” picture disc with fold-out poster (Holland 1945/Engine), and two 24“x24” posters.

File Under: Indie Rock
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pablo

Augustus Pablo: This is Augustus Pablo (Get On Down) LP
“Augustus Pablo (given name Horace Swaby) was born just outside of Kingston. ‘I am a Kingstonian,’ he told the NME in 1986, ‘but my heart is for the hills.’ This mystical connection to ‘the hills’ is at the heart of Pablo’s unique and immediately identifiable sound. By the late ’60s, Swaby and his brother Dougie had founded a small sound system they called Rockers. The brothers spent a lot of time in record shops, including Aquarius, where owner Herman Chin-Loy heard Swaby experimenting on his melodica and was struck by the inspiration to record. The resulting tune was credited to Augustus Pablo, a name that Chin-Loy invented, as the story goes, to give an air of mystery to the release. Pablo recorded two more singles soon after with ‘Java’ becoming a major hit and being voted Instrumental Song Of The Year by Jamaica’s Swing Magazine. This success led to the Randy’s label moving to create a full-length album from Pablo. Recording in the Randy’s studio upstairs from the record shop ‘we weren’t watching the clock…we had the studio,’ Clive Chin recalled. The band included a cast of the greatest reggae musicians of all time: future Wailer Tyrone Downie on keyboards, Aston ‘Family Man’ Barrett, ‘Fully’ Fullwood and Lloyd Parks on the bass, Carlton Barrett, ‘Santa’ Davis and Lloyd ‘Tin Leg’ Adams were on drums and Earl ‘Chinna’ Smith played guitar. In addition to these future Hall of Famers, the mixing board was helmed by Errol Thompson. Thompson and Chin would together pioneer a tough, new reggae sound that, Chin referred to as ‘Rockers’ after the Swaby brothers’ Rockers Hi-Fi sound system. For this issue three songs contemporary to the first release of This Is… have been added: the original single version of Pablo’s hit, ‘Java,’ and two cuts issued as B-sides to successful Clive Chin-produced records. ‘Guiding Red’ and ‘Marabi.’ Augustus Pablo sadly passed away in 1999. ‘He was 46,’ his obituary stated, ‘and lived in the hills outside Kingston,’ where his heart belonged. His music has endured and continues to inspire. This Is Augustus Pablo is considered among the greatest collections of Jamaican instrumental music and is an essential part of reggae history.”

File Under: Reggae
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simularkrum

Simulakrum Lab: s/t (Rustblade) LP
“Simulakrum Lab is an electronic music project created by Paolo Prevosto, composer and sound designer, in collaboration with Eugene, voice and sound engineering. The concept deals with advanced research technology matters, by means of 70s sound paradigms, inspired by electronic music pioneers such as Kraftwerk, Goblin, Moroder and Roroyksopp. What makes this project outstanding is the realization of tracks based almost exclusively on original analog synthesizers from the 70s, Moog, Korg and Doepfer, avoiding as much as possible the use of emulated computer synthesizers. The core of Simulakrum Lab is the balance between old school electronic music and groundbreaking future sound engineering. Here some renowned guests who collaborated to the project: Claudio Simonetti (famous author, together with Goblin, of many of Dario Argento’s movies soundtracks) keyboard player in track ‘Aggregat 4.’ Fabio Pignatelli (legendary bass player, former Goblin member, renown for Profondo Rosso and Suspiria soundtracks) bass guitar player in track ‘Backlit.’ Kenneth Johnson (maker, producer and director of many famous tv series, among which Visitors, Bionic Woman, The Incredible Hulk and Alien Nation) voice in track ‘The Day The Vocoder Stood Still’ Liz Enthusiam (singer for the U.S.A. synth-pop band Freezepop) vocals in ‘Quiet Girl’ and ‘Far Worlds’.”

File Under: Electronic, Synth Pop
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souleyman

Omar Souleyman: Heli Yuweli (Trilogy Tapes) 12″
“Souleyman’s vocals are strong and assured on the title track, supported by traditional dabke instruments like the mijwiz, oud and tablas. As with most of Souleyman’s music, the song is celebratory and undeniably danceable. Anonymous duo Rezzett, a Trilogy Tapes staple, lure ‘Heli Yuweli’ into their hazy techno lair. Their remix filters and distorts the original vocals, adding a blown-out bassline, a bouncing synth melody and flanging claps. And all the while Rezzett retain dabke’s core elements. The aptly named ‘Rerezz’ version of ‘Heli Yuweli’ is a standout — more suited to a spliff session than a wedding reception. The original is made to sound as if it’s playing in a nearby room, reduced to near-static noise, with a gauzy melody disrupted by rhythmic cymbals. Considering the dark, melancholic Legowelt remix on his last LP, Souleyman could do with more bizarre remixes of his original songs. Rezzett is known for their own thumping, distorted techno productions, but their work on this B-side makes it seem like the pair could remix just about anything.” –Resident Advisor

File Under: Syrian, Dabke, Electronic
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stevensSufjan Stevens: Illinoise (Asthmatic Kitty) LP
Sufjan Stevens Illinoise (Special 10th Anniversary Blue Marvel Edition) on Limited Edition Colored 2LP! In 2005 Sufjan Stevens released Illinoise, his fourth album and the second in his 50-state project. Sufjan fans with long memories might recall a minor hiccup in Asthmatic Kitty’s release of Illinoise as it related to the inclusion of a certain Metropolis-born man of steel. While the label does love balloons, they’ve always missed the imminent presence Big Blue brought to the album’s cover art, short-lived though it was. But things are very different in 2016 than they were in 2005, and different times call for different heroes. So exactly ten years after Asthmatic released the double LP of Illinoise, they’re proud to announce a special 10th anniversary edition of the LP that includes Chicago-born Blue Marvel on the cover. The double LP will include an “Antimatter Blue” and “Cape White” vinyl colors. The audio for the special edition comes from a 2014 remastered version of Illinoise. The label has also commissioned children’s book artist and the original Illinoise cover artist Divya Srinivasan to portray Blue Marvel in the style of the original art. Pressing is limited to 10,000 worldwide.

File Under: Indie Rock
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stoned

Stoned Jesus: Stormy Monday (Heavy Psych Sounds) LP
Reissue of Ukrainian band Stoned Jesus’s classic Stormy Monday EP, first released on CD in 2011. Stoner rock and traditional doom metal in the vein of early Black Sabbath, later Electric Wizard, and classic Sleep. Fuzzy, Sabbathian epics filled with catchy riffs, Hendrix-like guitar solos, and masterful vocals. For fans of: Black Sabbath, Colour Haze, Sleep, Electric Wizard.

File Under: Stoner, Psych, Metal
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traditional foolsTraditional Fools: Fools Gold (In the Red) LP
In tomorrow… The Traditional Fools were David Fox, Andrew Luttrell and Ty Segall. They splashed onto the underground music scene around 2006 with a no-frills, lo-fi, fun, sloppy brand of budget garage-surf-punk sadly absent from music at the time. The trio released one cassette, one full-length album, a single and then knocked it on the head. They occasionally still get together for the odd “reunion” show (they never technically broke up) but will only play suitable venues like Permanent Records in Eagle Rock or Don the Beachcomber in Huntington Beach.Fools Gold collects the tracks from their 7-inch single along with thirteen previously unreleased recordings that have been languishing in their garage for years. Taken together, this is a barn-burner for those who can appreciate trash rock at its finest—soaked in reverb, feedback and cheap beer. Cover versions of The Damned, Love, Redd Kross, The Mummies and Gary Glitter stand shoulder to shoulder with the band’s original jams.The Traditional Fools were a party band and this album is a rock ’n’ roll party! “With speed, volume, great riffs, and a sloppy delivery, they breathe punk rock life into surf.” —Pitchfork “Like Link Wray and Dick Dale on steroids, effortlessly marrying sun-soaked surf rock with the dirtier sounds of bands like the Dead Boys.” —Consequence of Sound

File Under: Garage, Punk

woodsWoods: City Sun Eater in the River (Woodsist) LP
In tomorrow… “Woods have always been experts at distilling life epiphanies into compact chunks of psychedelic folk that exists just outside of any sort of tangible time or place. Maybe those epiphanies were buried under cassette manipulation or drum-and-drone freakouts, or maybe they were cloaked in Jeremy Earl’s lilting falsetto, but over the course of an impressive eight albums, Woods refined and drilled down their sound into City Sun Eater in the River of Light, their ninth LP and second recorded in a proper studio. It’s a dense record of rippling guitar, lush horns, and seductive, bustling anxiety about the state of the world. It’s still the Woods you recognize, only now they’re dabbling in zonked out Ethiopian jazz, pulling influence from the low key simmer of Brown Rice, and tapping into the weird dichotomy of making a home in a claustrophobic city that feels full of possibility even as it closes in on you. City Sun Eater in the River of Light is concise, powerful, anxious—barreling headlong into an uncertain, constantly shifting new world.” -Sam Hockley-Smith

File Under: Indie Rock
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stockhausenZeitkratzer + Keiji Haino: Stockhausen Aus Den Sieben Tagen (Karlrecords) LP
The third collaboration between Keiji Haino, one of the most prolific artists of the Japanese experimental/noise scene, and the critically acclaimed zeitkratzer ensemble, comprising stunning interpretations of Stockhausen compositions. When Keiji Haino heard zeitkratzer rehearsing for their Stockhausen performance at the Ruhrtriennale festival, he spontaneously decided to join the group for that part of the program, in addition to the collaborative performance that was released in 2014 as zeitkratzer + Keiji Haino and Live at Jahrhunderthalle Bochum. In the Stockhausen performance, Haino focuses on his voice while zeitkratzer creates the instrumental environment, applying their amplified extended techniques and unique skills as musicians. The ensemble proves its outstanding quality once again, having already earned its reputation with recordings of works by Throbbing Gristle, John Cage, Alvin Lucier, and Lou Reed (Metal Machine Music) and collaborations with Carsten Nicolai aka Alva Noto, Terre Thaemlitz, and others. Aus den sieben Tagen features five pieces from Stockhausen’s collection of 15 text compositions, composed in May 1968 in reaction to a personal crisis. Stockhausen characterized the pieces as “intuitive music” — music primarily played by intuition rather than by the intellect of the performer(s), without a single defined note. zeitkratzer and Keiji Haino demonstrate beyond any doubt that they know how to use this free interpretive space. zeitkratzer, directed by Reinhold Friedl: Frank Gratkowski, clarinet; Hild Sofie Tafjord, French horn; Hilary Jeffery, trombone; Reinhold Friedl, piano; Maurice de Martin, drums and percussion; Marc Weiser, acoustic noise; Burkhard Schlothauer, violin; Anton Lukoszevieze, violoncello; Ulrich Phillipp, double bass. Keiji Haino, voice.

File Under: Experimental, Avant-Garde
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…..restocks…..

A Tribe Called Quest: Midnight Mauraders (Jive) LP
Arcade Fire: Neon Bible (Merge) LP
Baroness: Purple (Abraxan Hymns) LP
Boards of Canada: Music has the Right to Children (Warp) LP
David Bowie: Ziggy Stardust (RCA) LP
David Bowie: Hunky Dory (RCA) LP
David Bowie: Aladdin Sane (RCA) LP
Glenn Branca: The Ascension (Superior Viaduct) LP
Broadcast: Tender Buttons (Warp) LP
Miles Davis: Kind of Blue (Legacy) LP
Dreamtime: s/t (Catchpa) LP
Dreamtime: Sun (Catchpa) LP
John Fahey: Great San Bernardino (4 Men With Beards) LP
Gorillaz: s/t (Parlophone) LP
Grouper: Dragging A Dead Deer Up A Hill (Kranky) LP
Haunted: s/t (Hungry For Vinyl) LP
Kerridge: Fatal Light (DNSKER) LP
Last Exit: Iron Path (ESP) LP
Love: Forever Changes (Rhino) LP
Not Waving: Voices (Not Waving) LP
Jim O’Rourke: Eureka (Drag City) LP
Jim O’Rourke: Insignificance (Drag City) LP
Jim O’Rourke: Simple Songs (Drag City) LP
Om: Advaitic Songs (Drag City) LP
Primal Sceam: Screamadelia (Plain) LP
Rolling Stones: Their Satanic Majesties Request (Abkco) LP
Ty Segall: Ty Rex (Goner) LP
Ty Segall: Melted (Goner) LP
Six Organs of Admittance: Dark Noontide (Holy Mountain) LP
Six Organs of Admittance: Dust & Chimes (Holy Mountain) LP
Smog: Knock Knock (Drag City) LP
Sonic Youth: Daydream Nation (Goofin) LP
Sonic Youth: Sister (Goofin) LP
Spacin’: Total Freedom (Richie) LP
Stereolab: Cobra & Phases Group (1972) LP
Stereolab: Dots & Loops (1972) LP
Stereolab: Emperor Tomato Ketchup (1972) LP
Stereolab: Mars Audiac Quintet (1972) LP
Stereolab: Sound-dust (1972) LP
Tapes: Selected Works (Ecstatic) LP
Weakerthans: Reconstruction Site (Anti) LP
Weakerthans: Reunion Tour (Anti) LP

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…..news letter #734 – eggs…..

Alrighty, Easter is upon us again, one of the few times we actually shut down for a day. Our hours this weekend are…..

Friday March 25 – 12 – 5
Saturday March 26 – 11 – 6
Sunday March 27 – CLOSED
Monday March 28 – 11 – 6

Also, this is Nora’s last couple of shifts so stop on in and say ‘See ya!’

And as I mentioned last week, WE ARE HIRING! This doesn’t happen very often so if you’v ever wanted to work here, this is your best chance! Please drop off a resume in person and include your top 10 albums of 2015 as well as of all time. Good luck!

…..picks of the week…..

lifetonesLifetones: For A Reason (Light in the Attic) LP
Political post-punk trio This Heat dissolved at a turbulent time in the UK. Margaret “The Iron Lady” Thatcher was in power, and her budget-cutting, ultra-conservative influence was felt strongly in–among many other places–the cultural melting pot of Brixton, South London, where This Heat had their origins. Dusting himself off after the collapse of the band in 1982, guitarist/vocalist Charles Bullen united with Julius Samuel to form Lifetones and embraced the sounds of the local West Indian community to fuse reggae flavor to the kind of propulsive, rhythmic, and experimental music made by This Heat. Deceit, This Heat’s 1981 album, had seen them work with David Cunningham, who had already helped mesh dub reggae with new wave pop on The Flying Lizards’ 1979 single, “Money (That’s What I Want Want).” Even so, For A Reason was a great leap, one that created a strange, unsettling mood as Bullen’s multi-tracked, chant-like vocals met dub beats and Krautrock-informed repetition. Where Deceit dealt with the nuclear threat, For A Reason was less reactionary, even quoting Bob Marley in its lyrics: “you love the life you live, you live the life you love.” Containing 6 songs in total, the album was recorded at Cold Storage studio and released on Bullen’s own Tone Of Life Records. It has become a sought-after collector’s item that changes hands for hundreds of dollars a time. As a solo artist, Bullen was not prolific–it was 15 years until, in 1998, he released Internal Clock under the name Circadian Rhythms–but like the rest of his band, he has enjoyed a long, enriching career in unending pursuit of new sounds. Even though This Heat had no commercial success to follow up on, For A Reason was an album created with no intention of hitting the charts. Reissued on Light In The Attic, Lifetones’ single album retains a timeless quality and perhaps–on tracks such as “Good Side”–a futuristic sound that nobody else ever caught up to.

File Under: Dub, Experimental, This Heat
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cometaVarious: Rare Music from the Cometa Library Vaults (Pheon) LP
As most library music geeks know, some of the finest, oddest and most sought-after library music comes from Italy. But collecting it is an expensive business, and one full of risks – many library LPs are one trackers but will still set you back hundreds. The second Pheon Records LP release is a trip through the Cometa library music vaults. To buy the originals featured here would cost you thousands of pounds today. How mental is that! So, here we present a twelve tracker – twelve killer cues of library gold; jazz, abstracted oddness, killer percussion, amazing ideas, beautiful sound – and all for a bargain price. These cues were all recorded in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and all come from possibly the most desirable library label of all, “SR”, a company originally set up by The Sermi Film Co. The original recordings are now mostly owned by Cometa, hence our album title. The composers are masters of the genre, the musicians faultless. It’s a superb comp, very limited, with no chance of a repress.

File Under: Library, Italian
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…..new arrivals…..

blackcrowes

Black Crowes: Amorica (American) LP
Released on Rick Rubin’s American Recordings in 1994, Amorica is the Black Crowes’ third full-length and follow-up to the band’s two breakout albums Shake Your Money Maker (1990) and The Southern Harmony and Musical Companion (1992). Produced by Jack Joseph Puig, the 11-song set may not have the runaway hits of its predecessors, but it stands as one of the band’s best overall collections. The group’s jammy blues-rock sound, anchored by throwback frontman Chris Robinson and the killer guitar riffs from his brother Rich and Marc Ford, is as fully realized as ever, an ideal modern mix of their heart on sleeve ’70s influences.

File Under: Rock
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case

Neko Case: The Tigers Have Spoken (Anti) LP
November 2015 marks the, limited edition vinyl re-issues of three Neko Case records that have been long out of print. Each title has been remastered from the original analog tapes and comes complete with a full album download card. Furnace Room Lullaby (2000), Blacklisted (2002), and The Tigers Have Spoken (2004) are highly sought after fan favorites that have been missing on wax for over 6 years. These stand-alone offerings come on the heels of her stunning vinyl box set, Truckdriver, Gladiator, Mule and are available just in time for the holidays. Recorded live over seven nights and at three different venues in Chicago and Toronto in 2004, The Tigers Have Spoken finds Neko in incredible voice backed by a full band featuring The Sadies and steel guitar wizard Jon Rauhouse along with special guests Kelly Hogan, Carolyn Mark, Jim & Jennie and the Pinetops, Paul Morstad, and Brian Connelly. While The Tigers Have Spoken is a live album, it’s not your typical career retrospective – only two of the eleven songs are from Neko’s back catalog. In addition to two new original compositions, the songstress wraps her powerful pipes around a surprising collection of covers written by artists like Buffy Saint Marie, Loretta Lynn, the Shangri-La’s and Freakwater’s Catherine Irwin. The set closes with impassioned versions of the standards, “Wayfaring Stranger” and “This Little Light,” which Neko forever makes her own.

File Under: Alt-Country
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case1

Neko Case: Furnace Room Lullaby (Anti) LP
The limited edition, vinyl re-issue of three Neko Case records that have been long out of print. Each title has been remastered from their original analog tapes and come complete with full album download cards. Furnace Room Lullaby, Blacklisted, and The Tigers Have Spoken are sought after fan favorites that have been missing on wax for over 6 years. These stand-alone offerings come on the heels of her stunning vinyl box set, Truckdriver, Gladiator, Mule, and are available on black and colored vinyl.

File Under: Alt Country
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causa sui

Causa Sui: Return to the Sky (El Paraiso) LP
Successor to 2013’s Euporie Tide, which consolidated the band as a crucial force in the European psych scene. Return To Sky is a condensed piece of acutely experimental, yet immensely engag-ing, instrumental rock. Each of the album’s five epics unfolds as a microcosm of the band’s genre-transcending psychedelia at large, yet adds something different to the whole. Heavy, detuned riffs are transformed into wide, pastoral soundscapes, and fluid minimalism warped into swirling cre-scendos and back again.

File Under: Psych
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cloudland

Cloudland Canyon: An Arabesque (Medical) LP
Cloudland Canyon’s third LP, An Arabesque, was spearheaded by founding member Kip Uhlhorn but fleshed out with contributions from Memphis rock royalty such as Ross Johnson (Panther Burns, Alex Chilton), Lesa Alridge (Big Star) and Jody Stephens (Big Star), alongside collaborative accents by Ezra Buchla, M. Geddes Gengras, Kliph Scurlock (ex-Flaming Lips), David Scott Stone (ex-LCD Soundsystem), and Pete Kember aka Sonic Boom (Spacemen 3, Spectrum), who also co-produced the album. While past recordings on Holy Mountain and Kranky flirted with drone and krautrock modes, An Arabesque skews in a more rhythmic direction, with shades of naive disco and new age.

File Under: Electronic, Space Rock
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dillinger

Dillinger Escape Plan: Option Paralysis (Season of Mist) LP
At first glance, Option Paralysis (2010) seems like a highly inappropriate title to describe the constantly evolving output of The Dillinger Escape Plan. But once you’re faced with the cumulative power and vision of guitarist Ben Weinman, vocalist Greg Puciato, bassist Liam Wilson, guitarist Jeff Tuttle and drummer Billy Rymer, you’ll wonder-right after you pick yourself up off the floor – why more bands don’t achieve similar force-of-nature status. “The title Option Paralysis represents being in a situation where you have so many choices you can’t decide, and end up being frozen,” says founding member Weinman about the mindset permeating the band’s fourth full-length album. “Back in the early days when I started to discover music, go to shows and find out about new bands, there were ‘filters’ from various circumstances – geography, economic status, etc – which deeply affected how a band sounded and what they stood for.” He adds, “Now, everyone is going through the same filter-namely computers and the internet-and everyone has the same circumstances: Everybody’s seeing the same thing for the first time at the very same time, simultaneously all over the world. That very system is negatively affecting art and has created a situation where everything is influencing itself and art is not based on struggle, personal scarcity or unique and personal inspiration. This cultural revolutions is a big part of what determines our mission. We’re not listening to any of the bands around us for some kind of input as to what we should sound like. At this point, we’re using our own accomplishments as a measurement of what we need to do next.” Produced by Steve Evetts, Dillinger’s music is positively abundant with possibilities. New drummer Billy Rymer began to occupy the engine room that powers the band here. Frontman, Puciato has always had a knack with a bellow that could make reciting a grocery list seem like an exhortation to open the mouth of Hell. But feeling some of the lyrics on Option Paralysis, you can’t positively determine if the singer is handing down indictments (“Farewell, Mona Lisa”) or feeling emotionally wounded. “This record is concept driven but there is still a very emotional and personal aspect to his lyrics,” explains Weinman. “He’s going through transitional stages in his life right now.” Nothing so eloquently supports that statement than the six and-a-half-minute “Widower,” where the band are joined by veteran David Bowie keyboardist Mike Garson for an aural excursion that incorporates piano-trio jazz, tender balladry and anthemic power. While there’s no shortage of DEP plasma-balls on Option Paralysis (“Room Full Of Eyes,” “Good Neighbor”), the band keep things fresh with the math-rock/free-jazz convergence of “I Wouldn’t If You Didn’t,” the electro-tweaked “Chinese Whispers” and the closing “Parasitic Twins.” The latter track sports lead vocals courtesy of guitarist Tuttle, as well as Beach Boys-styled harmonies and a major-key Weinman solo that’s more Clapton (ca. Derek And The Dominos) than calculus crush. Clearly, this is not your older brother’s Dillinger Escape Plan.

 File Under: Metal
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ellis

Noel Ellis: s/t (Light in the Attic) LP
Noel Ellis features six dub-loved, heavy yet ethereal tracks, with contributions from OG reggae maestros Jackie Mittoo, Willi Williams, and Johnny Osbourne. The eponymous classic lost full-length includes the hugely influential “Rocking Universally”, whose rhythmic influence was Willi Williams’ “Armagideon Time” (covered by The Clash). The poignantly autobiographical “Memories” (about Noel’s upbringing in Jamaica) is a highpoint as well. “Stop Your Fighting” was a universal anti-materialism/war plea that we should still heed today, while “Marcus Garvey” was delivered in Noel’s playful style, despite a solemn rallying cry of “Africa it must be free…” Noel Ellis evoked a transcendent majesty, and the album’s economical performances were a blessing compared to certain overproduced recordings of the era. Tasteful keys, varied percussion, essential echo, conquering dub changeovers, and Noel’s impeccable mic control gave an otherworldly twist to Summer’s remarkable drum and bass sound. It was an end-to-end burner for midnight tokers and cool rulers alike.

File Under:
Reggae
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grycan

Julien Grycan: Post Atom (Strawberry Rain) LP
French acid folk with stoned vocals, Julien Grycan’s privately released album was made for a French car lot as a way to attract customers. Never distributed, this  reverb laden, emotion filled album was originally limited to 200 copies, but many were disposed making it a rare artifact.  Influenced by the likes of Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, and the psychedelic years of Herve Cristiani whom Julien befriended.  Having been a cartoonist at the time, the artwork was originally done by Julien himself, however due to financial constraints he wasn’t able to print in color.  This release offers the artwork in full color for the first time, as was originally intended. For fans of Beautiful Losers, the 1st Manset, Denis, Celebration (Old Green Village) etc..

File Under: Acid Folk
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justu

Domingo Justus: Juju Music In Niegria (Asherah) LP
The music of Domingo Justus is some of the earliest known recorded in the African folk tradition. Quite interestingly, however, the music was recorded in the city of London, and Justus himself was not believed to be a resident of the African continent at the time. Such transplant culture was a significant component of the immigrant experience, particularly during the United Kingdom’s colonial era. In his time, specifically circa 1925-1927, Justus recorded several original and traditional songs inspired by his experiences as part of the African Diaspora, mixing his Lagosian and Yoruba folk song roots within the context of his day-to-day existence in his adopted home.

File Under: Nigeria, Highlife
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narin

Khun Narin Electric Phin Band: II (Innovative Leisure) LP
It all started a couple years ago with the caption “MINDBLOWING PSYCHEDELIA FROM THAILAND” – the Youtube video that accompanied this headline on the Dangerous Minds Blog was exactly that. Here was a group of Thai musicians being filmed parading through a remote village hundreds of miles away from Bangkok playing some of the heaviest Psych known to mankind out of a crazy homemade soundsystem. Who were these men and how on earth was this not some unearthed archived footage from the ’60s or ’70s?! The Youtube clip quickly made its rounds amongst music enthusiasts leaving many in the Western hemisphere to question who this group of contemporary Thai villagers (loosely named Khun Narin’s Electric Phin Band) was. Six months after that first encounter with Khun Narin’s Electric Phin Band, a Los Angeles music producer named Josh Marcy used Facebook and some unlikely interpreters at his local Thai restaurant to get in contact with the group’s leader and namesake Khun Narin (also known simply as “Rin”). Rin eventually warmed to the idea of having Marcy come visit and record the group in their small village outside the city of Lom Sak, in the valley of mountains that form a rough border between Thailand’s North and Northeast. The result of that initial encounter was 2014’s eponymous LP, 40 minutes of hypnotizing psychedelia filled with heavy drum breaks that sounds like something RZA would sample for a Quentin Tarantino film.  The music they play is called phin prayuk. The first word refers to the lead instrument, a 3-stringed lute known as the phin. The phin player, uses a string of Boss effects pedals, including a phaser, distortion and digital delay to get his sound. He also builds his own instruments, installing Fender pickups into hand-carved hardwood bodies, with elaborate mythical serpents adorning the headstock. The band takes pride in their custom PA system, as well as an imposing tower of 8 loudspeaker horns atop a huge bass cabinet. Khun Narin’s Electric Phin Band’s membership is always in rotation and spans several generations, from high school kids to men well into their 60s. A standard engagement has the band setting up at the hosting household during the morning rituals, playing several low-key sets from the comfort of plastic lawn chairs occasionally working in a cover version of a foreign classic (The Cranberries ‘Zombie’ is a favorite) while the beer and whiskey flow freely. After a mid-day banquet, they start up the generator and lead a parade through the community to the local temple, picking up more and more partiers along the way. While the music was the first thing that engaged Marcy, this casual yet participatory playing environment connected him further with the band – so much so that he decided to travel back to Lom Sak in early 2015 to record more. As the band members rotate, the follow up to 2014’s LP (simply titled II) introduces some new players including new phin players Aob and Bas, while retaining some members of the old guard. The thing that remains consistent with Khun Narin’s Electric Phin Band is the authenticity of sound, which Marcy was able to capture again in LP2.

File Under: Psych
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kumasiKumasi Trio: Fanti Guitar In West Africa 1928 (Asherah) LP
These rare recordings are some of the first ever featuring traditional African music played on western instruments. This cultural exchange led to completely new genres in music, most importantly, Highlife. Kumasi is a Gold Coast city in Ghana, West Africa, that, at the time, did not feature much more than an open air market and one of the first British department stores in the continent. The Trio is made up of H.E. Biney on guitar, Kwah Kanta on percussion, and Jacob Sam on guitar, with all three contributing on vocals. The trio was brought to London to record these tracks in the Summer of 1928.

File Under: Africa, Highlife
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liima

Liima: II (4AD) LP
Liima is Tatu Rönkkö, Mads Brauer, Casper Clausen and Rasmus Stolberg. Translated from Finnish as ‘glue’, Liima is an autonomous unit where boundaries are blurred and roles are fluid. Their debut release ii, will be released on 4AD in March 2016. The idea for Liima began in July 2014 when Brauer, Clausen and Stolberg (founding members of Danish act Efterklang) were invited to be artists-in-resident at Our Festival, Finland. Joined by Finnish native Rönkkö, the group were tasked with creating new material to be performed at the end of a 10-day residency. Naturally drawn to the possibilities an informal electronic live set-up could deliver, the four found the spontaneity of songwriting and performing in a limited time frame hugely liberating. With hours of music created and performed live, the band returned to Berlin to record 10 songs over four days at Voxton studio with producer Jonas Verwijnen.

File Under: Indie Rock, Efterklang
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gimmer

Gimmer Nicholson: Christopher Idyllis (Light in the Attic) LP
Upon first glance, one could be forgiven for wondering which is the artist and which is the title of this album. Memphis’ Larry “Gimmer” Nicholson still remains a great unknown today, despite his having orbited the periphery of the city’s music scene since the early ‘60s, playing with artists ranging from Furry Lewis to William Eggleston and influencing a young Chris Bell (Big Star). Fusing classical and folk music, the sound Gimmer created for Christopher Idylls was evocative and unusual, its chiming guitars recalling the music of centuries past while also–when recorded in 1968–being quite desperately ahead of its time. The album was recorded with Terry Manning (Big Star, Led Zeppelin), who describes its creator as “one of the world’s most enigmatic people. I don’t know how many people really knew him because he was such a private person, a ‘full of love’ person, who had a dark side as well.” The six compositions that comprise Christopher Idylls were composed out west, Manning believes, while overlooking the Pacific Ocean. They were laid down in 1968 in four weeks of intimate sessions at Ardent Studios that saw Gimmer experiment by feeding acoustic guitars through delay pedals, layering and layering the sound live–one of the first examples of electronic repeat being used as part of the music. The album was supposed to be the first full-length LP release on Ardent Records, but there were understandable concerns about the size of audience that might be waiting for a curious instrumental album such as this. Meanwhile, Gimmer put blocks in the road himself: he didn’t like the original mixes or the sleeve and eventually decided he didn’t want the album released at all. He got his way but, Manning argues, the influence of those chiming guitars can be heard in the sounds floating out of Memphis in the decades that followed–especially in Big Star. Having personally played it to luminaries including Jimmy Page, Manning was frustrated he couldn’t get the album to a wider audience. “It was one of the best things I’ve been associated with–and it still is,” he says. It was Manning who finally convinced Nicholson to release the album on CD in 1994 and who was talking about recording more with him when Gimmer passed away at just 54 years old in 2000. Now available on vinyl, it’s Gimmer’s time to chime–and shine–again.

File Under: Folk
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novak

Novak: Dumb Records (Orion Read) LP
The Bay Area punk scene really started to energize in early ’77, when bands like Crime, the Nuns, the Mutants, and the Avengers started drawing rabid fans to legendary venue Mabuhay Gardens. Novak was a Mills College grad student with a background in avant­ garde composition—he’d worked with Robert Moog and John Cage as an undergrad—and access to a 12 ­track recording studio. He started making his own version of garage ­inspired punk rock. By the end of ’77, he’d formed a band, played Mabuhay Gardens five times, started his own label—Dumb Records, and released his first 7”, “RU21.” He did all the engineering and production himself, glued the 500 covers by hand, and went around on foot to San Francisco record stores trying to get people to listen. Novak met the Nuns’ Alejandro Escovedo at Mabuhay when the Nuns opened up for the Ramones, and ended up recording a three song demo for the band. Shortly after, Novak produced Crime’s second single, “Frustration”/”Murder by Guitar.” Gathering momentum, Novak put out a second 7”, “Oh Farrah!,” later that year. He went on to put out two more Novak singles, and also—returning to his avant­ garde roots—a more experimental project called the Survivors, two savage drone tracks that incorporate eerie vocal samples of cult leader Jim Jones. Into the early ’80s Novak broadened the Dumb Records catalog, issuing releases by local bands BOB and Ixna. One part glam, one part dumb is smart, one part riff rock ’n’ roll, Novak’s music is raw, arty punk rock. The fourteen tracks on this LP preserve the legacy of the Novak project by collecting the four Novak 45s and the Survivors 45.

File Under: Punk
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ojays

The O’Jays: Back Stabbers (Real Gone) LP
Deemed by many to be the pinnacle of the Philly Sound as perfected by legendary producers Kenneth Gamble and Leon Huff, 1972’s Back Stabbers scored no less than two Top Five Pop and three Top Five R&B smashes with the songs “Love Train,” “Time to Get Down,” and the title track. Honed by a decade of woodshedding, the vocal arrangements are simply sublime, and when married to Gamble & Huff’s polished backing tracks, they create an album that is a masterpiece through and through – one that brought both the O’Jays and Gamble and Huff to national attention, but it’s never been reissued on vinyl in the “modern” era.

File Under: Soul, R&B
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homealone

OST: Home Alone (Mondo) LP
Mondo is proud to present the 25th anniversary release of the soundtrack to Home Alone. Featuring original music by John Williams, and including such classic Christmas songs such as “White Christmas,” “I’ll be Home For Christmas,” and “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas.”

File Under: OST

bloodstained

OST: The Bloodstained Shadow (Death Waltz) LP
Death Waltz Recording Company is proud to release into the wild another classic giallo score, this time a momentous collaboration between two giants of the film scoring world with a soundtrack to Antonio Bido’s Solemente Nero aka The Bloodstained Shadow aka Only Darkness. Composed by Stelvio Cipriani and performed by Goblin, it’s an unsettling mix of eerie melodies with electronic effects that is guaranteed to keep out even the most boastful hardcore fan.

File Under: OST, Goblin
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replacements

Replacements: The Sire Years (Rhino) 4LP
Along with Prince and Hüsker Dü, The Replacements put Minneapolis on the rock map in the 1980s. Among America’s greatest alternative acts of the last two decades, the ‘Mats rose from chaotic noise-makers to polished craftsmen, leaving at least three unqualified masterpieces in their wake. In a perfect world, Let It Be, Tim, and Pleased To Meet Me would have all gone platinum – but then again, endearing imperfection was always a hallmark of this band’s music. The Replacements formed in the wake of the punk explosion of the late-70s. Their anarchic stage shows had earned them considerable notoriety in local clubs. Indie label Twin/Tone took note and signed the quartet for their first four releases, Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash (1981), Stink EP (1982), Hootenanny (1983) and Let It Be (1984) which earned The Replacements a place on the roster at Sire Records. It was there that the ‘Mats released their final four albums – Tim (1985), Pleased to Meet Me (1987), Don’t Tell A Soul (1989) and All Shook Down (1990) – collected here in the new limited edition 4LP box set The Sire Years. Tim was the last album to feature the band’s legendary original lineup. A departure from the raw, punk-rock aesthetic that dominated their Twin/Tone releases, Tim showcases Westerberg’s gift for songcraft with the uptempo rock anthems “Bastards Of Young” and “Left Of The Dial,” the poignant ballad “Here Comes A Regular,” and the clever lyricism of “Little Mascara.” Follow-up Pleased To Meet Me was recorded in Memphis, TN with producer Jim Dickinson whose association with Big Star attracted the band. Memorable tracks include “Alex Chilton,” “The Ledge,” “I Don’t Know,” “Red Red Wine” and “Can’t Hardly Wait.” For Don’t Tell A Soul, the screaming, yelling and falling to pieces drunken brothers added sleepy melancholy, violins, and waves of layered guitar, something that sounded like a “real” recording and a bit if not a lot of personal vulnerability to the mix. Songs like “Achin’ to Be,” the haunted “Rock ‘n’ Roll Ghost,” the sweetly self-mythologizing “Talent Show,” and “I’ll Be You,” are among the best of their era. Produced with Scott Litt, All Shook Down started out as a Westerberg solo album, but was eventually released as the Replacements seventh and final album. That also explains the album’s many guest artists which include John Cale, Benmont Tench, Terry Reid and Johnette Napolitano.

File Under: Punk, Rock
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Tariverdiev

Tariverdiev: Film Music (Earth) 3LP
In 2011, Stephen Coates of the band The Real Tuesday Weld found himself sheltering from the cold in a cafe in Moscow with a friend. Fascinated by the music that was playing, he asked the waitress and was told ‘it was something from the old times’. It turned out to be the soundtrack for the Sixties cult Soviet film ‘Goodbye Boys’ composed by Mikael Tariverdiev. Compiled by his wife Vera Tariverdieva together with Stephen (in association with his publishing company Antique Beat), ‘Film Music’ includes a selection of the composer’s greatest tracks, including many previously unreleased versions. All were made with new transfers from original tapes and his own reel-to-reel machine. They are thematically programmed around Vera’s intimate knowledge of her husband’s music. It is with her blessing and dedication to see his legacy live on that we are able to bring his music to new audiences. ‘Film Music’ unveils the extraordinary life of an unusual composer who was acutely aware of the political environment although it was not central to his work. The 3LP boxset is beautifully packaged within hard outer slipcase and comes with a 24 page booklet bursting with unseen documents and materials from the Tariverdiev home. The rare photographs come from Mikael’s personal collection including stills from the film sets he was working on, his and Vera’s apartment and images of his studio images.

File Under: OST, Russia
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thesda

Thesda: Spaced Out (Left Ear) LP
Thesda – Spaced Out was originally pressed in 1979 in a run of just 100 LPs. The original LPs were only distributed among friends and family and as a result they are extremely sort after. Spaced Out is a cosmic journey blending jazz funk soul and disco is a into one of the most unique private press releases of its time. This killer jazz funk album is fully licenced and reissued for the very first time by Left Ear Records.

File Under: Jazz, Funk
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alohaVarious: Aloha Got Soul (Strut) LP
New on Strut for February 2016, Aloha Got Soul encompasses a vibrant era of contemporary music made in Hawaii during the 1970s to the mid-1980s as jazz, rock, funk, disco and R&B co-existed alongside Hawaiian folk music. Hawaii’s identity had undergone huge change: statehood into America in ‘59 and the Vietnam War were the backdrop as Hawaii’s youth found inspiration in a new wave of international music led initially by The Beatles and Stones and, later, by US R&B bands like Earth Wind & Fire and Tower Of Power. Garage bands flourished during the ‘60s and, by the ‘70s, live music was at its peak. Waikīkī was filled with clubs: The Point After, Infinity’s, Hawaiian Hut, Spats and more. For the ‘70s generation of artists, some came through the talent contest ‘Home Grown’ and its accompanying compilation LP. Singer Nohelani Cypriano won it with her instant radio hit, “Lihue.” Other winning songs, like Marvin Franklin’s soul surfer jam “Kona Winds,” burned more slowly but have endured with DJs today. Many records also packed a powerful message. In 1978, Hawaiian was made the official state language and a huge movement arose to revive hula and traditional music. Steve & Teresa’s “Kaho’olawe Song” longs for an island long gone: the US military had used Kaho’olawe as a bombing range since Pearl Harbor. Nohelani Cypriano sang about the once sleepy town of Kailua, now a popular tourist destination: “Kailua needs no high-rise with her blue skies, not for our eyes. Can you realize?” Leading Hawaiian artists like Aura, Mike Lundy and keyboardist Kirk Thompson’s Lemuria took time in high quality facilities like Broad Recording Studio to make albums. Others grabbed studio time when they could: Tender Leaf’s Murray Compoc worked for the city bus by day and recorded an album during night sessions. Other albums were spontaneous. In 1983, Steve Maii & Teresa Bright recorded an acoustic set in just 3 hours after being invited to a studio following a gig. For the artists of the ‘70s, the climate for music changed rapidly during the mid- ‘80s as DJ culture grew and live venues shut down. Hawaii’s R&B era shone brightly and relatively briefly but, despite brilliant musicians, regular gigs and LP releases, most of the music barely made it to the mainland. Thanks largely to Aloha Got Soul’s Roger Bong, a new interest in this fertile era of Hawaiian music has grown, culminating in this new compilation of overlooked gems. Aloha Got Soul is compiled and annotated by Bong and features rare photos and original artwork.

File Under: Soul, Disco
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hawaii

Various: Hawai’i Authentic (Asherah) LP
Hawai’ian music is oft relegated to the confinements of Exotica, Easy Listening, or background “vacation music”. In reality, the archipelago’s recorded legacy is as rich, dense and emotionally complex as any other nation with developed musical sensibility. The Hawai’ian approach to the guitar and the advent of the ukulele not only changed the music on the islands, but swept across the Americas. This collection attempts to document this music in it’s original form, before it was co-opted for more urbane Continental tastes.

File Under: Exotica, Guitar
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punk45

Various: Punk 45 – Chaos in the City of Angels & Devils (Soul Jazz) LP
‘Chaos in the City of Angels and Devils’ is the new instalment of Soul Jazz Records’ Punk 45 series featuring an array of first generation Los Angeles punk bands including X, The Germs, The Zeros, The Urinals, The Weirdos through to second generation hardcore groups like The Circle Jerks, Adolescents and T.S.O.L. Unlike the other major cities of New York and London, Punk in Los Angeles was pretty much ignored by the major record industry. As bands sprang up, Los Angeles punk gave rise to a wide range of its own DIY independent records with labels like Dangerhouse, Bomp!, What? And Upsetter documenting the nascent emerging scene. Original Los Angeles punk came in two distinct phases. The first punk groups (c.77-79) all centred around The Masque club in Hollywood, and the birth of the first ever hardcore groups who emerged in the surrounding Los Angeles suburb and beach areas (c.1979-81), mixing punk, skate and surfer ideologies. This album includes music from both periods. ‘Chaos in the City of Angels and Devils’ documents this in detail. The 64-page outsize CD booklet features extensive notes, exclusive photography from celebrated original photographers Jenny Lens, Melanie Nissen (Slash magazine) and Edward Colver, original cover art as well as interviews and features on bands and labels (including The Urinals, Flesh Eaters, Dangerhouse, Posh Boy, Frontier, Upsetter and more!). The deluxe double vinyl comes in gatefold sleeve, inner sleeves, insert + free download (+ full sleevenotes and photography). This is the sixth Punk 45 release on Soul Jazz Records and follows on from the earlier releases covering punk from Cleveland, Akron, UK, USA and proto-punk, as well as the book Punk 45 – Cover Art of Punk written in collaboration with Jon Savage.

File Under: Punk
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cosmicVarious: Wayfaring Strangers: Cosmic American Music (Numero) LP
As progenitor and contemptuous poster boy for the music that came to be Cosmic American, Gram Parsons found himself mired in a recording career spent mostly in scouting the perimeters of chart success. “He hated country-rock,” Parsons collaborator Emmylou Harris would later reflect. “He thought that bands like the Eagles were pretty much missing the point.” Parsons had been orbiting the idea of Cosmic American Music for some time. In ‘68, he’d parted ways with the Byrds and was looking to take air with a new project. “It’s basically a Southern soul group playing country and gospel-oriented music with a steel guitar” he told Melody Maker, on the subject of The Flying Burrito Brothers. So it was that when A&M’s Burrito Brothers debut The Gilded Palace of Sin made it to shelves in February of 1969, early adherents to the Cosmic American gospel were already echoing its message from areas flanking Gram Parsons’ Southern California hills and canyons. There was F.J. McMahon in coastal Santa Barbara, Mistress Mary further inland in Hacienda Heights, and Plain Jane of Albuquerque, New Mexico, each responding by committing their own private readings to tape before for day one of the 1970s. Parsons himself might’ve disdained them, had he even been aware of such minor ripples, shimmering at the edges of his desert oasis. But these were true believers all the same, given over fully to his roots music concept, each filling vinyl grooves with non-rock instrumentation like fiddle, banjo, and pedal steel guitar, the last undoubtedly Cosmic American Music’s most distinguishing stringed signifier. Only too predictably, big labels did the grunt work of confining and defining the movement, as ABC, United Artists, RCA, and more played catch-up with Asylum’s raptor rock juggernaut, via backwoods crossover also-rans with names like Gladstone, American Flyer, and Silverado. Twang reigned, the shitkickers kicked shit, and the vaguely western-sounding guitar records piled up. Country-rock became “the dominant American rock style of the 1970s,” as Peter Doggett’s comprehensive Are You Ready for the Country put it much later. Wayfaring Strangers: Cosmic American Music picks up and dusts off golden ingots from the dollar-bin detritus of that domination, to reconstruct events as seen from the genre’s real Wild West – America’s one-off private press label substructure.

File Under: Cosmic American, Country
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…..Restocks…..

A Tribe Called Quest: Low End Theory (Jive) LP
Arcade Fire: Funeral (Merge) LP
Arcade Fire: The Suburbs (Merge) LP
Ariel Pink: Pom Pom (4AD) LP
Beach Boys: Pet Sounds (Capitol) LP
Blur: Parklife (Parlophone) LP
John Cale: Fear (Music on Vinyl) LP
Karen Dalton: In My Own Time (Light in the Attic) LP
Betty Davis: s/t (Light in the Attic) LP
Digable Planets: Blowout Comb (Modern Classics) LP
Roky Erickson: The Evil One (Light in the Attic) LP
Scott Fagan: South Atlantic Blues (Saint Ceila Knows) LP
Funkadelic: s/t (4 Men With Beards) LP
Funkadelic: Maggot Brain (4 Men With Beards) LP
Marvin Gaye: Let’s Get It On (Tamla) LP
Marvin Gaye: What’s Going On (Tamla) LP
Harmonia: Musick von Harmonia (Gronland) LP
Harmonia: Deluxe (Gronland) LP
Lee Hazlewood: LHI Years (Light in the Attic) LP
Lee Hazlewood: Trouble is a Lonesome Town (Light in the Attic) LP
Heron Oblivion: s/t (Sub Pop) LP
Shin Joong Hyun: Beautiful Rivers & Mountains (Light in the Attic) LP
Jesus & Mary Chain: Darklands (Demon) LP
Joy Division: Closer (Rhino) LP
Joy Division: Substance (Rhino) LP
Joy Division: Unknown Pleasures (Rhino) LP
David Kauffman & Eric Caboor: Songs from the Suicide Bridge (Modern Classics) LP
Knife: Silent Shout (Mute) LP
Lewis: L’Amour (Light in the Attic) LP
Medusa: First Step Beyond (Numero) LP
Ennio Morricone: Questa Specie D’amour (AMS) LP
OST: Black Swan (Mondo) LP
OST: Hannibal (Mondo) LP
Iggy Pop: Raw Power (Elektra) LP
Replacements: Let It Be (Rhino) LP
Rolling Stones: Exile On Main Street (Universal) LP
Sonics: Fifty (Etiquette) 3LP
Stooges: Funhouse (Elektra) LP
Stooges: s/t (Elektra) LP
Swans: To Be Kind (Young God) LP
Piero Umiliani: La Morte Bussa Due Volte (AMS) LP
Vega, Chilton & Vaughn: Cubist Blues (Light in the Attic) LP
Kamasi Washington: The Epic (Brainfeeder) 3LP
White Stripes: Elephant (Third Man) LP
Various: I Am The Center (Light in the Attic) 3LP
Various: New York Noise (Soul Jazz) LP
Various: This Record Belongs To… (Light in the Attic) LP

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