…..news letter #731 – hiring…..

As you may or may not know, we are losing Nora soon, which means, 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!

…..pick of the week…..

revenantRyuichi Sakamoto & Alva Noto: The Revenant OST (Milan) LP
A film of this magnitude deserves a composer who understands creative artistry and unbridled passion. Japanese master and Oscar winner Ryuichi Sakamoto fits the bill perfectly. Along with fellow Yellow Magic Orchestra member and frequent collaborator Alva Noto, Sakamoto has created a gripping soundtrack that is sure to be a treat for the winter crowds. Bryce Dessner also supplies additional music.

File Under: Classical, OST
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…..new arrivals…..

ahc

African Head Charge: My life in a Hole in the Ground (On-U Sound) LP
After a resurgent 2015, On-U Sound will kick off the new year with vinyl re-presses of the first four African Head Charge albums. All have been re-cut at Dubplates & Mastering in Berlin for maximum bass pressure. They also include printed inners with sleeve notes by Steve Barker (On The Wire), and digital download cards for the full album. The groundbreaking debut album My Life In A Hole In The Ground from 1981 plays on both the title and concept of David Byrne and Brian Eno’s My Life in the Bush of Ghosts. Built upon sparse backing tracks constructed by Adrian Sherwood, the producer invited Bonjo Iyabinghi Noah (who had studied under Count Ossie in the rasta drumming camp at Wareika Hill in Jamaica) to lay down hand percussion patterns and breaks on top, augmented by stereo-strafed effects and the occasional burst of Sun Ra-style horns. The result is a unique mixture of traditional African rhythms, dub and free jazz. Features DJ favorite “Stebeni’s Theme” and “Far Away Chant,” used to famously gruesome effect by David Lynch in the film Wild At Heart.

File Under: Electronic, Reggae
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ayler

Albert Ayler: In Greenwich Village (Impulse) LP
“The first two Ayler interactions in this album, For Coltrane and Change Has Come, were recorded during a concert at the Village Theatre on New York’s Lower East Side on February 26, 1967…I can’t imagine ‘For Coltrane’ presenting any problems of comprehension for any listener. Ayler is a strong, intense melodist – an element in his work that usually is in clear evidence primarily at the beginning of an improvisation, before the deeply secure, affirming melody courses through Ayler’s own playing and that of Joel Friedman on cello. Adding dimensions of textures and emotions are the two bassists, with Alan Silva particularly brilliant in his explorations of the upper range of the instrument… “Change Has Come’ implies, says Ayler, that “in my mysic, I’m trying to look far ahead. Like Coltrane, I’m playing about the beauty that is to come after all the tensions and anxieties. This is about post-war cries; I mean the cries of love that are already in the young and that will emerge as people seeking freedom come to spiritual freedom.” “Truth Is Marching In and Our Prayer were recorded at the Village Vanguard on December 18, 1966, with John Coltrane in attendance…Echoes of New Orleans marching bands set the rejoicing mood at the start of Truth Is Marching In as Albert Ayler again demonstrates his penchant for boldly dramatic opening lines…Ayler explains that [Our Prayer] is, “a prayer to the Creator, a song about the spiritual principles of the universe.” “…I would only add that Albert Ayler’s music projects such overwhelming vitality – or spiritual energy, as he would all it – that it cannot help but triumph. It may not change all its listeners in the way Ayler intendes, but it will surely open up more and more people to new ways of listening and, therefore, to new ways of feeling.” – original liner notes, Nat Hentoff

File Under: Jazz
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cale2

John Cale: M:Fans (Domino) LP
M:FANS is a radical new reworking of one of John Cale’s most unique and lauded solo records, the 1982 masterpiece Music For A New Society. M:FANS explores the relationship between old and new, in terms of the sound and vision, and Cale’s memories of the experience, in terms of his life and the recording. Back and forth M:FANS goes, sampling the original, while creating brand new soundscapes, giving Cale the opportunity for closure on one of the most testing eras of his life, and a way to keep moving forward. “Making any form of art is always personal to my mind. During the making of M:FANS, I found myself loathing each and every character written about in those original recording sessions of Music For… ,” says Cale of the reworking. “Unearthing those tapes reopened those wounds. It was time to decimate the despair from 1981 and breathe new energy, re-write the story. Then, the unthinkable happened. What had informed so much over lost and twisted relationships in 1981 had now come full circle. Losing Lou [too painful to understand] forced me to upend the entire recording process and begin again…a different perspective – a new sense of urgency to tell a story from a completely opposite point of view – what was once sorrow, was now a form of rage. A fertile ground for exorcism of things gone wrong and the realization they are unchangeable. From sadness came the strength of fire!!!” In 1982, Music For A New Society sounded exactly like its title: something futuristic, a new kind of songwriting exercise. In 2015, M:FANS is exactly that too, full of electrical crackle and disturbed frequencies, a different kind of dystopian future awaits. John Cale forages on; it’s the only way he knows how.

File Under: Rock
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cale1

John Cale: Music For A New Society (Domino) LP
33 years since its original arrival, 2016 will see the release of the remastered version of one of John Cale’s most unique and lauded solo records, Music For A New Society. In 1982, Music For A New Society sounded exactly like its title: something futuristic, a new kind of songwriting exercise. Overseen by Cale himself, the long out of print Music For A New Society has been completely re-mastered from the original files, while its download card includes three exclusive tracks: two outtakes from the original sessions, and one previously unheard gem – “Library of Force.”

File Under: Rock
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CINDY-LEE

Cindy Lee: Act of Tenderness (CCQSK) LP
Cindy Lee is the experimental no wave / blues / trans-pop project from former Women (and more recently, Androgynous Mind) guitarist/singer Patrick Flegel. “Power and Possession” is taken from the group’s intensely dark and cathartic new album Act of Tenderness, an eerie fever dream of fleeting, utterly heartbreaking classic girl-group melodies, sometimes obscured by abrasive noise and buried under a heavy layer of murk, casting a palpable, unshakeable gloom over the whole thing. One of the most haunting and frankly depressing things we’ve heard all year, and also one of the best.

File Under: LoFi, Women
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alice

Alice Coltrane: World Galaxy (Impulse) LP
Born Alice McLeod into a musical Detroit family, Alice Coltrane began playing piano at age seven and later studied with Bud Powell in Paris. Upon returning to the States, she joined vibraphonist Terry Gibbs’ group and eventually shared a bill with the John Coltrane Quartet. Alice and John wed in Juárez, Mexico in 1965 and played alongside one another until his last performance in May 1967. After John’s death, Alice became a band leader in her own right, fusing spiritual free jazz and new age with classical, Eastern, post-bop and gospel. Her meditative 1971 album World Galaxy served as her sixth solo effort overall and stands as one of the finest sets of her career. Coltrane plays piano, harp, and organ here and is accompanied by Reggie Workman (bass), Ben Riley (drums), Leroy Jenkins (violin), Frank Lowe (saxophone), and Elayne Jones (timpani) plus a 16 person strong string orchestra. Anchored by daring reworkings of her late husband’s signature cuts “My Favorite Things” and “A Love Supreme,” Alice fully embrace’s John’s inspiration on her work yet still manages to elevate the proceedings with her own idiosyncrasies.

 File Under: Jazz, Spiritual Jazz
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lovesupreme

John Coltrane: A Love Supreme: The Complete Masters (Verve) 3LP
On December 9th, 1964, John Coltrane and his classic quartet (Elvin Jones, Jimmy Garrison and McCoy Tyner) went into the legendary Van Gelder Studio in New Jersey and recorded A Love Supreme – the four-part suite that has influenced musicians and reached generations of fans far beyond the jazz world. Far less known is the fact that Coltrane, his classic quartet and two additional musicians – the legendary saxophonist Archie Shepp and second bassist, Dr. Art Davis – returned to the studio the next day to cut the opening part of the suite again. Until now, the complete picture of what happened on those two days, including all takes, overdubs, and even studio chatter, has been unavailable. That will change when Verve Music Group proudly releases A Love Supreme: The Complete Masters, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the release of this seminal recording. It will include this alternate version, taken from reels from the personal collection of John Coltrane and originally recorded in incredible sonic detail by Rudy Van Gelder, along with revised notes and detailed information on these amazing lost sessions. With the availability of long-lost session reels, A Love Supreme: The Complete Masters brings together all existing recordings and written outlines for the first time to paint the most comprehensive and accurate picture of the A Love Supreme story. It reveals how Coltrane’s masterpiece came together, from its initial conception as a nine-piece performance – it turns out the original plan was for a nine-piece band, including three Latin percussionists – to how it changed and developed in the studio. While the 2002 edition of A Love Supreme did include some of the music recorded at the second session, The Complete Masters is the first to feature all six takes of “Acknowledgement,” the opening section of the suite, in their entirety, providing a deeper understanding and appreciation of how Coltrane would allow music to mature in the studio. A Love Supreme was Coltrane’s most pre-conceived, meticulously planned musical recording: “This is the first time I have everything ready,” he famously told his wife Alice after composing the suite in their Long Island home. It was also his most successful, a high-water mark in Coltrane’s career and popularity in 1965-generating two Grammy Award-nominations, and earning him top position in various polls that year. That A Love Supreme remains a permanent fixture in lists of Greatest and Most Important musical recordings of the modern era – Rolling Stone magazine places it at No. 47 in its “500 Greatest Albums Of All Time” – speaks to the enduring significance of Coltrane’s music and his message of spirituality. As Kahn writes in the essay to A Love Supreme: The Complete Masters: “Fifty years after its release, voices that speak of divine light and supreme love have trouble being heard. Lines that divide people run deep. At odds with itself, the world lacks the spirit to ascend and is needful once again of a spiritual recharger like A Love Supreme. The sound and message of John Coltrane remain more relevant than ever.”

File Under:
Jazz, Classics
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coltrane

John Coltrane: Ascension (Impusle) LP
Trane is joined by Pharoah Sanders, Freddie Hubbard and four additional horn players for an explosion of fiery solos and free improvisation on this famous 1965 session. Recorded with three tenors (Coltrane, Sanders, Archie Shepp), two altos (Marion Brown, John Tchicai), two trumpet players (Freddie Hubbard, Dewey Johnson), two bassists (Art Davis, Jimmy Garrison), the lone McCoy Tyner on piano, and Elvin Jones on the drums, this large group is both relentless and soulful simultaneously.

File Under: Jazz
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harmonia

Harmonia: Musik von Harmonia (Gronland) LP
Few bands match the pastoral beauty and majesty of Harmonia, the short-lived German band that existed from 1973 to 1976. The krautrock supergroup, brought together Dieter Moebius and Hans-Joachim Roedelius of Cluster, and Michael Rother of NEU!, who were later joined by Brian Eno. Although Harmonia produced only two studio albums – 1974’s Musik von Harmonia and 1975’s Deluxe – they were very influential and perfectly embodied the krautrock ideal. While leaning slightly towards Cluster’s ambient sound, they were also entirely their own entity – a jet engine running clean and precise but also spouting asphyxiating aural exhaust.

File Under: Krautrock, Kosmische
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rangda

Rangda: The Heretic’s Bargain (Drag City) LP
The Heretic’s Bargain takes territories that Rangda explored on their first two albums – the abraded fury and free forms off False Flag and the serpentine Rang-dang-doodle songatechture from Formerly Extinct – and evolves them further into a grand unified I-know-I-don’t-know-what-it-is- (but-I-like-it) development in music. The Heretic’s Bargain is the sound of Rangda – and, without getting all rock-opera on you (but a little AOR, to be sure), The Heretic’s Bargain is best taken as a whole. Lots of ground is covered, but it’s all part of the same earth. Until you fall off the edge in the end.

File Under: Rock, Sun City Girls, 6OOA
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sanders

Pharoah Sanders: Karma (Impusle) LP
Pharoah Sanders possesses one of the most distinctive tenor saxophone sounds in jazz. Harmonically rich and heavy with overtones, Sanders’ sound can be as raw and abrasive as it is possible for a saxophonist to produce. Yet, Sanders is highly regarded to the point of reverence by a great many jazz fans. Although he made his name with expressionistic, nearly anarchic free jazz in John Coltrane’s late ensembles of the mid-’60s, Sanders’ later music is guided by more graceful concerns. The hallmarks of Sanders’ playing at that time were naked aggression and unrestrained passion. In the years after Coltrane’s death, however, Sanders explored other, somewhat gentler and perhaps more cerebral avenues – without, it should be added, sacrificing any of the intensity that defined his work as an apprentice to Coltrane. Sanders made his first record as a leader in 1964. After Coltrane’s death in 1967, Sanders worked briefly with his widow, Alice Coltrane. From the late ’60s, he worked primarily as a leader of his own ensembles. In the decades after his first recordings with Coltrane, Sanders developed into a more well-rounded artist, capable of playing convincingly in a variety of contexts, from free to mainstream. 1969’s spiritually-themed Karma served as his third album as a leader and finds the tenor saxophonist leading a top flight group comprised of Leon Thomas (vocals), Lonnie Liston Smith (piano), Reggie Workman (bass), Billy Hart (drums) and Julius Watkins (French horn). The two accessible free-jazz tracks – 32-minute “The Creator Has A Master Plan” and 5-minute “Colors” – are diverse and dynamic excursions which leave the listener wanting more.

File Under: Jazz
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diamond

Sonic Youth: Diamond Sea (Geffen) 12″
The first single from Sonic Youth’s intrepid 1995 album Washing Machine featured the radio edit of the band’s sprawling epic “The Diamond Sea,” the previously unreleased outtake “My Arena” and the alternate ending version of “The Diamond Sea” which clocks in at over 25 mind bending minutes.

File Under: Indie Rock
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dirty

Sonic Youth: Dirty (Geffen) LP
Sonic Youth’s second major-label album, produced and mixed by Butch Vig and Andy Wallace (a team that had helped turn Nirvana’s Nevermind multi-platinum) was not the barefaced bid for mainstream acceptance that surly underground souls grumbled about in the pages of fanzines. While Vig and Wallace give guitarists Thurston Moore and Lee Ranaldo, bassist Kim Gordon, and phenomenal drummer Steve Shelley a wide-screen panorama for their bizarrely-tuned assaults, 1992’s Dirty is probably Sonic Youth’s most uncompromising album since 1985’s Bad Moon Rising-particularly in the lyrical department. Dropping the deliberate obscurantism, Philip K. Dick references, and smart-alecky snottiness, Sonic Youth brackets a slew of pointed political attacks (“Youth Against Fascism,” “Swimsuit Issue,” and the Jesse Helms-bashing “Chapel Hill”) with two passionate tributes to the band members’ murdered friend, Joe Cole (“100%” and “JC”). That Dirty is Sonic Youth’s most commercial-sounding album makes it that much more subversive.

File Under: Indie Rock
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szabo

Gabor Szabo: Sorcerer (Impulse) LP
The Sorcerer is an excellent live album by iconoclastic Hungarian jazz guitarist Gábor Szabó recorded at Boston’s Jazz Workshop on April 14-15, 1967. Produced by Bob Thiele, the release finds Szabo showcasing his distinct self-taught sound and leading an innovative quintet rounded out by Jimmy Stewart (guitar), Louis Kabok (bass), Marty Morrell (drums) and Hal Gordon (percussion). The group displays their proclivity for fusing jazz with rock throughout no better than on standouts like “The Beat Goes On,” “Little Boat” “Space,” and “Mizrab.”

File Under: Jazz, Guitar
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wardWard: More Rain  (Merge) LP
Ward has released a string of acclaimed solo albums over the past several years, along with five LPs with Zooey Deschanel as She & Him and a 2009 collaborative album with My Morning Jacket’s Jim James and Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst and Mike Mogis under the moniker Monsters of Folk. In addition to his celebrated work as a musician, Ward is an accomplished producer, handling those duties for such luminaries as Mavis Staples, Jenny Lewis, and Carlos Forster as well as his own musical projects. More Rain, Ward’s eighth solo affair, finds the artist picking up the tempo and volume a bit from his previous release, 2012’s A Wasteland Companion. Where that record introspectively looked in from the outside, More Rain finds Ward on the inside, gazing out. Begun four years ago and imagined initially as a DIY doo-wop album that would feature Ward experimenting with layering his own voice, it soon branched out in different directions, a move that he credits largely to his collaborators here who include R.E.M.’s Peter Buck, Neko Case, k.d. lang, The Secret Sisters, and Joey Spampinato of NRBQ. The result is a collection of upbeat, sonically ambitious yet canonically familiar songs that both propel Ward’s reach and satisfy longtime fans. “I think one of the biggest mysteries of America right now is this: How are we able to process unending bad news on Page One and then go about our lives the way the style section portrays us?” says Ward. “There must be a place in our brains that allows us to take a bird’s-eye view of humanity, and I think music is good at helping people – myself included – go to that place.”

File Under: Indie Rock, Folk
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yousayparty

You Say Party: s/t (Paper Bag) LP
In 2004, You Say Party played their first punk show in a church basement outside Vancouver, BC. Four years later, they were touring China and Japan on the strength of two acclaimed albums, 2005’s Hit the Floor! and 2007’s Lose All Time. They shifted from new wave-punk into indie pop rock and were poised for breakout, mainstream success with 2009’s award-winning XXXX when tragedy struck. Drummer Devon Clifford collapsed on stage and died suddenly. You Say Party (Becky Ninkovic, Stephen O’Shea, Krista Loewen, and Derek Adam) reunited in 2012 and have spent the last four years slow dancing towards this moment: their first full-length release in six years. The record is, appropriately enough, self-titled – a reaffirmation of their willful determination and identity after devastating lows. It’s a space-like record that swallows the listener inside eight shimmering constellations about friendship, loss, reconciliation and uncertainty. You Say Party’s new sound is more expansive and experimental, and while it offers a nod to their past, their legion of fans, and their journey to this moment, it’s also a map pointing the way forward. You Say Party is the band’s most contemplative, experimental and wildly ambitious offering to date.

File Under: Indie Rock
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…..Restocks…..

AC/DC: Powerage (Epic) LP
Arca: Mutant (Mute) LP
Bent Wind: Sussex (Ugly Pop) LP
Boards of Canada: Music Has The Right To Children (Warp) LP
Broadcast: Haha Sound (Warp) LP
Broadcast: Tender Buttons (Warp) LP
Built to Spill: There’s Nothing Wrong With Love (Up) LP
Butthole Surfers: Electric Larryland (Plain) LP
Circle: Miljard (Hydra Head) LP
Cure: Disintegration (Elektra) LP
Daft Punk: Random Access Memories (Columbia) LP
Dinosaur Jr: You’re Living All Over Me (Jagjaguwar) LP
Danger Doom: Mouse & The Mask (Lex) LP
Funkadelic: Free Your Mind… (4 Men With Beards) LP
Tim Hecker: Harmony in Ultraviolet (Kranky) LP
Tim Hecker: An Imaginary Country (Kranky) LP
Kraftwerk: Radio Activity (EMI) LP
Kraftwerk: Trans Europa Express (EMI) LP
Kendrick Lamar: To Pimp A Butterfly (Aftermath) LP
Mayhem: Deathcrush (Back on Black) LP
Nap Eyes: Though Rock Fish Scale (You’ve Changed) LP
Neu!: 75 (Gronland) LP
Joanna Newsom: Have One On Me (Drag City) LP
Night Beats: Who Sold My Generation (Heavenly) LP
Jessica Pratt: On your Own Love Again (Drag City) LP
Radiohead: King of Limbs (TBD) LP
Radiohead: Hail to the Thief (Capitol) LP
Rage Against the Machine: s/t (Epic) LP
Sex Pistols: Never Mind the Bollocks (Rhino) LP
Nina Simone: Pastel Blues (Music on Vinyl) LP
Sleater Kinney: All Hands on the Bad One (Sub Pop) LP
Sleater Kinney: Call the Doctor (Sub Pop) LP
Sleater Kinney: Dig Me Out (Sub Pop) LP
Sleater Kinney: One Beat (Sub Pop) LP
Sleater Kinney: s/t (Sub Pop) LP
Sleater Kinney: The Hot Rocks (Sub Pop) LP
Sleater Kinney: The Woods (Sub Pop) LP
Slow Season: s/t (Riding Easy) LP
Smiths: Meat is Murder (Rhino) LP
Smiths: Queen is Dead (Rhino) LP
Smiths: Strangeways… (Rhino) LP
Tortoise: TNT (Thrill Jockey) LP
War on Drugs: Lost in the Dream (Secretly Canadian) LP
Wild Nothing: Life of Pause (Captured Tracks) LP
John Zorn: Naked City (Nonesuch) LP
Various: Warfaring Strangers: Darkscorch Canticals (Numero) LP

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…..news letter #730 – alarm o’clock…..

A pretty light week here this week, but the powers that be have finally reissued the first few Bowie records. If you weren’t in yet this week, I put a fresh crate of used Jazz out, so come on down for a dig.

…..pick of the week…..

vsnares

Venetian Snares: Traditional Synthesizer Music (Planet Mu) LP
Traditional Synthesizer Music is a collection of songs created and performed live exclusively on the modular synthesizer by Aaron Funk. Each sound contained within was created purely with the modular synthesizer. No overdubbing or editing techniques were utilized in the recordings on Traditional Synthesizer Music. Each song was approached from the ground up and dismantled upon the completion of it’s recording. The goal was to develop songs with interchangeable structures and sub structures, yet musically pleasing motifs. Many techniques were incorporated to “humanize” or vary the rhythmic results within these sub structures. An exercise in constructing surprises, patches interrupting each other to create unforeseen progressions. Multiple takes were recorded for each song resulting in vastly different versions of each piece.

File Under: Electronic, Synth, CanCon
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…..new arrivals…..

spaceoddity

David Bowie: David Bowie AKA Space Oddity (RCA) LP
Originally titled David Bowie, then subsequently Man of Words, Man of Music, the album that became widely known as Space Oddity was reissued under that name again in 1972, peaking at #16 on Billboard’s Albums chart and #5 in the UK. Produced by Tony Visconti (except for the title track, produced by Gus Dudgeon), the album represents a giant leap forward in Bowie’s songwriting and is the first truly essential Bowie album. Equally notable for its collaborators, including session players Herbie Flowers, Tim Renwick, Terry Cox, and Rick Wakeman, Space Oddity pays homage to the influences of the then-burgeoning London artistic scene and delves into psychedelic folk-rock, and prog. Its genre-defying template created a blueprint of the musician who would become, over the next decade, one of the world’s most innovative and inimitable artists. “As was the case with Miles Davis in jazz, Bowie has come not just to represent his innovations but to symbolize modern rock as an idiom in which literacy, art, fashion, style, sexual exploration and social commentary can be rolled into one.” – Rolling Stone

File Under: Rock, Classics
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man

David Bowie: The Man Who Sold The World (RCA) LP
David Bowie’s first album of the 1970s, the Tony Visconti-produced The Man Who Sold the World represents the beginning of the landmark artist’s classic period. Mick Ronson’s guitars occupy hard-rock and psychedelic domains, and Bowie pursues a sound that’s simultaneously bizarre, fuzzed-out, and alien. Made more famous by Nirvana’s cover of the title track on MTV Unplugged in New York, The Man Who Sold the World goes much deeper than one song. The record points in the unpredictable, innovative directions Bowie would travel throughout the 1970s. In addition, the album’s cover, on which Bowie wears a dress, remains a landmark image and indicative of his bold refusal of hard-and-fast sexual identities. Bowie said of Nirvana’s cover: “I was simply blown away when I found that Kurt Cobain liked my work, and have always wanted to talk to him about his reasons for covering ‘The Man Who Sold the World’ and that it was a good straight forward rendition and sounded somehow very honest.”

File Under: Rock, Classics
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hunky

David Bowie: Hunky Dory (RCA) LP
David Bowie’s Hunky Dory still sounds as invigorating, fresh, and kaleidoscopic in scope as it did upon original release more than four decades ago. Built from a six-song demo he had used to entice RCA to sign him and featuring the timeless songs “Changes” and “Life on Mars,” Bowie’s first album recorded with producer Ken Scott finds the musical chameleon back in the role of singer/songwriter. He pays tribute to his influences with the postmodern pop songs “Andy Warhol,” “Song for Bob Dylan,” and the Velvet Underground inspired “Queen Bitch.” Almost immediately, Bowie followed the record up with the instant classic The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. “Hunky Dory gave me a fabulous groundswell,” Bowie told Uncut in 1999. “I guess it provided me, for the first time in my life, with an actual audience – I mean, people actually coming up to me and saying, ‘Good album, good songs.’ That hadn’t happened to me before. It was like, ‘Ah, I’m getting it, I’m finding my feet. I’m starting to communicate what I want to do.”

File Under: Rock, Classics
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ziggy

David Bowie: Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust (RCA) LP
“Wham Bam Thank You Ma’m!” David Bowie’s The Rise and Fall Of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars erased borders, eliminated stereotypes, broke open cultural possibilities, and spawned a legacy like no other. More than four decades after its release, the record remains one of the most electrifying and brilliant works ever released. Again available on 180g vinyl LP, it is here presented in freshly remastered sound that does justice to Bowie, Mick Ronson, and company’s creative genius. Ziggy Stardust is an album written by an aspirant rock star in the guise of a hugely successful one. This nifty deceit has led to it being dubbed the first post-modern pop record. Its songs obtusely referenced aspects of rock history, whilst at the same time tell a story of a future world of extraterrestrial intervention and space-age androgyny. Ziggy Stardust works so well because it’s a concept album with the ‘concept’ taken out. “We certainly didn’t go into it thinking that the entire album would be a concept album,” says producer Ken Scott. “It was a bunch of songs that worked together. Now yes, there is a story for a few of the tracks that hook them together, but, that’s it, a few of the tracks.” “I think the best thing I did was to leave him so open-ended,” Bowie rightly pointed out. “It wasn’t a specific story. There were specific incidences within the story, but it wasn’t as roundly written as a usual narrative is. The only trouble about copying someone who is really well known is that you know all the facts about them, so you can’t actually be that person. But, because Ziggy was kind of an empty vessel, you could put a lot of yourself into being your own version of him.” “Moonage Daydream” is simply stunning, the end-of-song solo by Mick Ronson, which dissolves into spacey, phased high strings, makes it, even more so than “Space Oddity,” the definitive space-rock Bowie anthem. “Star,” and, most importantly, “Hang On to Yourself” were precursors of punk rock. “Starman” is such a crafty steal from “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” that it was bound to be huge. The title track’s closing salvo, ‘Ziggy played guitar’ is so famous now that its three words could be Bowie’s tombstone epitaph.  “Suffragette City” became a Bowie classic: its powerhouse of a riff, booming ARP synthesizer, and “Wham Bam Thank You Ma’m!” are still ludicrously thrilling. “Soul Love” and “Lady Stardust” are beautiful little songs and surely two of Bowie’s most underrated. But it’s the astonishing opener and the killer of a closing number that take you into Bowie’s parallel universe. The scene of anarchy on the streets melded with a simple love story that is “Five Years” is surely one of Bowie’s greatest moments. Everything from the heartbeat drum figure which opens the song to the hysteria of the ending works perfectly. And “Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide” is as impassioned a performance as any on the record. So much of pop music would have been unthinkable, unimaginable, without this record. In pop, you’re always best remembered for your initial breakthrough. Bowie’s career trajectory through soul, electronica and avant-garde pop is perhaps, in part, an attempt to free himself from this stereotyping circa 1972.

File Under: Rock, Classics
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matmos

Matmos: Ultimate Care II (Thrill Jockey) LP
Ultimate Care II is the new album from renowned conceptual electronics duo Matmos (Drew Daniel and M.C. Schmidt). Recorded in the basement studio of their home in Baltimore, MD the album is constructed entirely out of the sounds generated by a Whirlpool Ultimate Care II model washing machine. Like its namesake, the album runs across its variations as a single, continuous thirty eight minute experience that starts with the grinding turn of the wash size selection wheel, and ends with the alert noise that signals that the wash is done. Between these audio-verité book-ends, we experience an exploded view of the machine, hearing it in normal operation, but also as an object being rubbed and stroked and drummed upon and prodded and sampled and sequenced and processed by the duo, with some occasional extra help from an ultra-local crew of guest stars (some of whom regularly do laundry chez Matmos). Dan Deacon, Max Eilbacher (Horse Lords), Sam Haberman (Horse Lords), Jason Willett (Half Japanese), and Duncan Moore (Needle Gun) all took part, either playing the machine like a drum, processing its audio, or sending MIDI data to the duo’s samplers. The vocabulary of the Ultimate Care II, its rhythmic chugs, spin cycle drones, rinse cycle splashes, metallic clanks and electronic beeps are parsed into an eclectic syntax of diverse musical genres. The result is a suite of rhythmic, melodic and drone-based compositions that morph dramatically, but remain fanatically centered upon their single, original sound source. Like their promiscuous DJ sets, the palette of genres in play reveals Matmos’ hybrid musical DNA: Industrial music, vogue beats, gabber, Miami bass, free jazz, house, krautrock, drone, musique-concrete, and new age music all churn up to the surface and are sucked back into the depths. In this moiré pattern of textures, the listener encounters elements that sound like horns, kick drums, xylophones or sine waves, but in fact each component is meticulously crafted out of a manipulated sample of the machine. In other hands, such relentless conceptual tightness would court claustrophobia. Happily, Matmos’ willingness to transform audio and engage pop structure bypasses arid, arty thought exercises and produces instead their signature effect: abject and unusual noises yielding weirdly listenable music. The duo know how to rein back the processing too. In its starkest passage, we hear the rinse cycle of the machine run uninterruptedly for four minutes as a slow filter sweep combs across the oceanic frequency range. The result is a kind of “Environments” LP that never was: the Psychologically Ultimate Washing Machine. It’s a gesture that’s likely to infuriate some people and tantalize others. Is this the conceptualist emperor’s new clothes, a wistful domestic reverie, a parody of recent moves in “object oriented” philosophy, a feminist point about alienated domestic labor, an elegy to a discontinued model that stands in for unsustainable and water-wasteful technologies generally, or simply an immersion in the beauty of the noises of everyday life? Sucker-punching ambient pastoral, the album ends with a techno-industrial-booty bass workout that recapitulates motifs from across the entire composition before grinding to a halt, its task completed. Funny and sad, bouncy and creepy, liquid and mechanical, Ultimate Care II swirls with perverse paradox, but the agitation at its core offers vital evidence of Matmos’ abiding faith in the musical potential of sound.

File Under: Electronic
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thunderbitch

Thunderbitch: s/t (ATO) LP
Finally more copies, in tomorrow…. “I’m a wild child!” Brittany Howard shouts on the eponymous debut album by Thunderbitch, and she leaves no doubt about it. Thunderbitch is where Ms. Howard, who leads Alabama Shakes, gets to blow off steam playing rock ‘n’ roll, whooping and hollering with no pressure to innovate or make big statements. It has self-explanatory song titles like “I Just Wanna Rock n Roll,” “Leather Jacket” and “Eastside Party,” and the music reaches back to Chuck Berry and the Rolling Stones, charged with late-1960s adrenaline.

 File Under: Rock, Alabama Shakes
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tortoise

Tortoise: TNT (Thrill Jockey) LP
Tortoise’s third full-length release, TNT, was written and recorded during a 10-month interval in 1997 and originally issued in 1998. This longer-than-usual writing/production schedule was purposefully undertaken by the group in the hopes of crafting an expansive, diverse, yet thematically coherent offering. Clocking in at 65 minutes, it is certainly one of the most substantial Tortoise offerings to date. TNT builds upon the spare, instrumental framework of the group’s debut self-titled album, and the extended edits, melodic adventures, and klangfarben of the subsequent full-length release, Millions Now Living Will Never Die. Further to this, Tortoise’s interest in the possibilities offered by the remixing of tracks was realized within the actual production of TNT; individual elements, sections, or sometimes whole compositions mutate within the album’s shifting framework. These techniques were suitably realized thanks in part to the use of non-linear digital recording and editing methods, the first example of such work for the group. In addition, many of the arrangements push the group’s standard instrumentation into new territories with the inclusion of strings, woodwinds, and brass. The permanent addition of guitarist Jeff Parker (New Horizons ensemble, Chicago Underground Orchestra, Isotope 217) to the group’s lineup should be noted; his unique contributions can be felt throughout the album. Tortoise’s long-standing interest in electronic and computer music is revealed during the unbroken suite of tracks beginning with “In Sarah, Mencken, Christ, and Beethoven There Were Women And Men,” and ending with “Jetty.” Yet TNT remains very much a record produced by a group of musicians who enjoy presenting their material in a live context. To this end, the axis of drums-basses-guitars-keyboards-mallets-percussion continues to provide both the backdrop and the inspiration for points of departure in style and sound.

File Under: Post Rock
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williams

Saul Williams: MartyrLoserKing (Fader) LP
MartyrLoserKing has just tagged his screen name onto the White House lawn via remote drone. He’s working from a remote e-waste camp in Burundi, Central Africa, neighboring the more well-known Rwanda, with equipment scrapped together from our old Dell PC towers and Sidekick IIs. Homeland Security, the NSA, and the CIA are tracing his signal back to a place that isn’t on the map or on the grid, and the alert level rises when he hacks NASA just to show he can do it. At least, that’s what Saul Williams will tell you when you ask about his upcoming album and the story it’s inspired. Written and recorded between Senegal, Reunion Island, Paris, Haiti, and New Orleans and New York, MartyrLoserKing is a multimedia project that engages the digital dialogue between the 1st and 3rd Worlds, and the global street sounds that yoke the two. “In Senegal, I was buying iPhones for $20, Beats for $10, because they get all the influx from China, with no regulation,” Williams explains. “So everyone’s online. Everyone’s high tech.” He sights Beyoncé, Fredo Santana, and Haitian field recordings as musical inspirations for his self-produced sixth album, straining trap hi-hats and mbira strokes together for a nuanced, entirely original sound. “I’m just letting you know what I’m reading and seeing while I’m writing. When I’m writing, the music leads.” “My goal with MartyrLoserKing was to skim global issues, throw them into my drum machine and see what polyrhythms formed,” he adds. “Never did I imagine that the release of ‘Burundi,’ the first song recorded for the album, would coincide with democratic unrest in Burundi as their president attempts to re-write their constitution to run for a 3rd term. My hope is that this song & songs like it give the protesters the fuel they need to overcome over-militarized police & power hungry politicians. I want the politicians, police, and all who stand in the face of democracy with over-zealous self-interest to know that their candle is burning at both ends and that the collective WE will never be silenced and the more they try the more our voices will be heard. The technology of awareness is solar powered and cannot be turned off.” Williams has been breaking ground since his debut album, Amethyst Rock Star, which was released in 2001 and executive produced by Rick Rubin. After gaining global fame for his poetry and writings at the turn of the century, Williams has performed in over 30 countries and read in over 300 universities, with invitations that have spanned from the White House, the Sydney Opera House, Lincoln Center, The Louvre, The Getty Center, Queen Elizabeth Hall, to countless villages, townships, community centers, and prisons across the world. The Newburgh, New York native gained a BA from Morehouse and an MFA from Tisch, and has gone on to record with Nine Inch Nails and Allen Ginsburg and has performed in numerous film and television roles.

File Under: Hip Hop
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…..restocks…..

Alice in Chains: Dirt (Music on Vinyl) LP
Beach House: Depression Cherry (Sub Pop) LP
Black Sabbath: s/t (Rhino) LP
Black Sabbath: Paranoid (Rhino) LP
David Bowie: Reality (Columbia) LP
Broadcast & The Focus Group: Investigate Witch Cults (Warp) LP
James Brown: Night Train (Not Now) LP
James Brown: Papa’s Got A Brand New Bag (Polydor) LP
James Brown: Super Bad (Polydor) LP
Neko Case: Blacklisted (Anti) LP
Neko Case: The Worse Things Get… (Anti) LP
Chrvches: Bones of What You Believe (Glass Note) LP
City & Color: Little hell (Dine Alone) LP
Coil: Queens of the Circulating Library (Eskaton) LP
Cold War Kids: Robbers & Cowards (Downtown) LP
Daft Punk: 1997 Alive: Live (Warner) LP
Daft Punk: Discovery (Warner) LP
Daft Punk: Human After All (Warner) LP
Daft Punk: Random Access Memories (Sony) LP
Miles Davis: Pangaea (4 Men With Beards) LP
Miles Davis: Dark Magus (4 Men With Beards) LP
Diiv: Is The Is Are (Captured Tracks) LP
Earth: 2 (Sub Pop) LP
Earth: Pentastar In The Style of Demons (Sub Pop) LP
Earth: Phase 3 (Sub Pop) LP
Father John Misty: Fear Fun (Sub Pop) LP
Grimes: Geidi Primes (Arbutus) LP
Hawkwind: In Search of Space (Rock Classics) LP
Hills: Frid (Rocket) LP
Fela Kute: Live with Ginger Baker (Knitting Factory) LP
Love: Forever Changes (Rhino) LP
MF Doom: Operation Doomsday (Metal Face) LP
Mogwai: Rock Action (Rock Action) LP
Pere Ubu: Dub Housing (Fire) LP
Purity Ring: Another Eternity (Last Gang) LP
Terry Riley: In C (Columbia) LP
Rolling Stones: Exile on Main Street (Polydor) LP
Chris Stapleton: Traveller (Universal) LP
Strokes: Is This It (RCA) LP
Strokes: Room on Fire (RCA) LP
Talk Talk: Laughing Stock (Universal) LP
This Heat: Deceit (Modern Classics) LP
War on Drugs: Lost in the Dream (Secretly Canadian) LP
White Zombie: La Sexorcisto (Music on Vinyl) LP
Steven Wilson: Hand.Cannot.Erase. (Snapper) LP
Various: Haiti Direct (Strut) LP

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