…..news letter #674 – california screamin’…..

I’m back! And what a mess I’ve made already. Between all the new records and used records pouring in here we might need to take over the neighbours! Anyway, loads of killer stuff in and lots to do so I’ll leave you to it….

…..pick of the week…..

holy mountain

Alejandro Jodorowsky: The Holy Mountain (Real Gone) LP
“One of the ironies of the career of Chilean-born filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky is that while he is best known as a visual stylist, his most avid and loyal champions have often been musicians. When Jodorowsky arrived in New York from Mexico City in 1970 carrying a copy of the then-unreleased El Topo, it was the jazz producer Alan Douglas who bought the distribution rights to the film. When Jodorowsky and Douglas were looking for a venue in which to screen El Topo, it was John Lennon and Yoko Ono who asked for it to run at midnight following their short-film festival at New York’s Elgin Cinema. After six months of sold-out midnight screenings at the Elgin, it was Lennon’s manager, Allen Klein (ABKCO’s founder), who bought the rights to El Topo and agreed to produce its follow-up, The Holy Mountain. And when Jodorowsky wanted, in his words, ‘another kind of music — something that wasn’t entertainment, something that wasn’t a show, something that went to the soul, something profound,’ for the soundtrack to The Holy Mountain, forward came jazz legend Don Cherry and crack studio musician (and one-time Archie) Ron Frangipane to share composing and (along with Jodorowsky) conducting duties. And, boy, did they deliver — the score to The Holy Mountain is every bit as hallucinatory as the fantastic visual imagery in the film itself. The deep, primordial chants that begin the movie, ‘Trance Mutation,’ give way to an almost jaunty percussion-and-plucked-strings melody, ‘Pissed and Passed Out.’ On the next track, ‘Violence of the Lambs,’ a single flute is slowly joined by a set of mournful strings while, onscreen, Gestapo-like soldiers in gas masks parade with bloody lamb carcasses on sticks. ‘Drink It,’ an upbeat sitar folk melody, follows, briefly accompanying the main protagonist The Thief’s ill-considered decision to guzzle tequila (or sleeping potion). Then there is ‘Christs 4 Sale,’ a blaring orchestral riff that sounds like it was ripped from a 1950’s swords-and-sandals epic. The next track, ‘Cast Out and Pissed,’ begins with a beelike buzz, then is overwhelmed by a cacophony of drums, horns, and, finally, screaming. ‘Eye of the Beholder’ which follows, changes moods entirely once again — a string section swells with overwrought romanticism. (Onscreen, a group of young prostitutes prays in a church. One of them later walks arm and arm with a chimpanzee.) And then there is ‘Communion,’ a brooding, trumpet-led number that would be at home on the noir-steeped Chinatown soundtrack. (As ‘Communion’ plays, the Thief is not driving through Los Angeles at night but eating the face off a statue of Christ.) This veritable cornucopia of musical styles would be more than enough to fill an entire movie. It would be more than enough to fill three movies. But in fact, the eight musical compositions described above play entirely in The Holy Mountain’s first 24 minutes. Still ahead lie the hard rock of ‘Psychedelic Weapons,’ the pomp and circumstance of the waltz ‘Miniature Plastic Bomb Shop,’ the gospel-inflected sax of ‘Isla (The Sapphic Sleep),’ and so on. Every one of the 24 tracks on the film’s soundtrack presents another vertiginous twist in the philosophical and spiritual journey that is The Holy Mountain. Now, Real Gone Music, in association with ABKCO Music & Records, Inc., presents, for the first time ever on vinyl, the original soundtrack to Alejandro Jodorowsky’s 1973 masterpiece The Holy Mountain. The double-LP edition features liner notes by New York Times contributor Eric Benson that include exclusive quotes from Jodorowsky himself, festooned with copious production stills. Produced for release by Grammy-winning producer Teri Landi and Mick Gochanour, and mastered from the original tapes by Joe Yannece (with lacquer cutting on the LP by Carl Rowatti at Trutone Mastering), this long-awaited release of Alejandro Jodorowsky’s The Holy Mountain: Original Soundtrack offers a major addition to the soundtrack canon and a completely unique listening experience.”

File Under: OST, Cult Films, Psych, Folk, Rock
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…..new arrivals…..

ba

Black Angels/Sonic Jesus: Fuzz Club (Black Angels Inc.) 10″
The Fuzz Club SPLIT SINGLE SERIES. 2 very long tracks. Fuzz Club Records are thrilled to announce the next issue of the ‘Split Single Series’, a regular release of 10″ vinyl limited editions. Formed in 2004, The Black Angels have already gained the cult status. Their critically acclaimed fourth LP, ‘Indigo Meadow’, was another big statement from the champions of Psych Nouveau. In a way they represent a solid bridge between the ‘Brian Jonestown Massacre’ and the international Psych scene of today, and they keep spreading that joyful psych-infection that has been taking over the globe in the last few years. Sonic Jesus are a young band from Doganella Di Ninfa, Italy. They took part in the Reverb Conspiracy (curated by Fuzz Club and Austin Psych Fest) twice. Their sound is a colourful blend of Sixties, Folk, Krautrock and Shoegaze, made up of drones and layers of sound combined with poetic lyrics. This single is a preview of their debut LP, which will be released next year.

File Under: Psych, Fuzz
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mamiffer

Circle & Mamiffer: Enharmonic Intervals (Sige) LP
Forget what you know about the Seattle-area sound-art project Mamiffer and the Finnish hypno-rock institution Circle. Enharmonic Intervals (for Paschen Organ), the first in a proposed series of joint efforts involving these parties, contains few of the musical hallmarks you might associate with either performer. The comforts of austere piano sketches and solemn nocturnes are largely absent; the wallop of repetitive rhythms and metallic kitsch is nowhere to be found. It’s as if an unseen hand has erased the auditory signatures of each group and left behind only impressions, embers, filaments, and shadows. As with Mamiffer’s recent collaboration with Locrian, the work is anything but a predictable merger of two bands’ established visions. Recorded over a single day at Keski-Porin Kirkko, the nineteenth-century stone church in the heart of Circle’s hometown, the basic tracks for Enharmonic Intervals exude divine inspiration. Caressed by Faith Coloccia, Aaron Turner, Jussi Lehtisalo, and Mika Rättö, the house of worship’s immense Paschen organ sets a liturgical, contemplative mood, which persists unabated through a cycle of improvisations and short compositions. The album opens and closes with slowly building sinfoniettas of sustained drone and flatlining feedback that shine heavenly light onto the wan, academic corpse of avant-garde minimalism. In the middle, all sorts of hell breaks loose: Coloccia chants wordless omens on a distant shore, Turner shouts his lungs out, Lehtisalo speaks in tongues from atop synthesized snowbanks, Rättö gargles operatic gibberish, hummingbird guitars flutter past, and delicate chords glisten like dewdrops on Arctic lichen. Much of this earthly ruckus stems from additional sessions spent brainstorming, fine-tuning, cooking, and stoking the sauna at the Lehtisalo family cottage, deep in rural Finland. (A couple of months later via the miracle of technology, Eyvind Kang tacked on a spot of viola while visiting Turner and Coloccia at their Washington state abode.) Instead of engaging in some lazy superstar jam, Mamiffer and Circle have gone above and beyond to create a site-specific triumph that bridges the gap between serene, holy bliss and the warm, messy sprawl of humanity. Amen to that, brothers and sisters.

File Under: Drone, Ambient, Metal
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calder

Alex Calder: Strange Dreams (Captured Tracks) LP
Alex Calder’s sophomore release with Captured Tracks is as familiar as it is foreign – brining together both infectious melodies and texture to create tidy, acid-induced pop sequences. Strange Dreams takes a confident step forward from Calder’s previous release and brings the focus and ambition of Alex’s songwriting to all aspects of his music. This record delivers, while still maintaining the youthful humour that has become his trademark.

File Under: Indie Rock, Pop, CanCon
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gbv

Guided By Voices: Bee Thousand (Scat) LP
Little introduction should be required here. Let it suffice to say that Bee Thousand is arguably the best, or at least among the top Guided By Voices albums in a copious discography. Accordingly, the album has stacked up accolades over the years, including being voted #1 on Amazon.com s  100 Greatest Indie Rock Albums of All Time.  It s a staple of such lists, and has also placed highly on those curated by Spin, Pitchfork, Mojo and Rolling Stone.This new LP pressing, the first since the late  90s, honors the album s 20th anniversary. It features new (and definitely improved) mastering from John Golden, a substantial gatefold jacket with a previously unpublished Robert Pollard collage, and high-quality virgin vinyl from RTI.

File Under: Indie Rock, Classics
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oceanic

Isis: Oceanic (Robotic Empire) LP
The defining Isis album, now that it’s all said and done, Oceanic finally returns to vinyl after being out of print for years. Showcasing a band at the height of a monumental transition, Oceanic is hailed by fans as the band’s landmark album and has earned widespread critical acclaim (even being dubbed “seminal” by Drowned in Sound). Raising the massive bridge between crushing metal and atmospheric post-rock, Isis truly came into their own on their brilliant sophomore album. This stunning double-LP comes housed in a heavyweight tip-on gatefold jacket and has been carefully re-mastered and re-cut for optimal sound quality.  “Isis is one of the few heavy metal bands recording without regard for convention, and […] few have succeeded in such breathtaking fashion.” —Chris Ott, Pitchfork (9.1 rating)

File Under: Doom, Metal
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panopticon

Isis: Panopticon (Robotic Empire) LP
Finally repressed after years of unavailability and highly sought-after. On ISIS’ third-full-length album, Panopticon, the unblinking eye of counterinsurgency is exposed with mesmerizing stereophonic clarity. The perpetual collapse and crush of ultra-dynamic sound-design takes on the heightened dimensions of institutionally-induced anxiety, and the carefully constructed artifice of an omniscient predatory apparatus becomes the paradigm of surveillance culture. Meanwhile, panoptic cognizance, while ostensibly the utmost of all Orwellian implications, portends to far more insidious applications: Just as hidden crosshairs hold sway over every prison yard, to see everything is to know all. Features a guest bass appearances from Justin Chancellor of Tool and production by Matt Bayles (Mastodon, Botch, Pearl Jam, etc.). Deluxe double-LP features a stunning gatefold jacket with different artwork than the CD version on Ipecac. Finally re-pressed after years of unavailability. Highly sought-after.* ISIS has grown considerably over the years and now has a highly devoted following as a result.* Recent tours include sharing the stage with Tool, Jesu, Torche, Boris, These Arms Are Snakes and an overall great variety of bands.* Double LP packaged in a deluxe gatefold jacket with exclusive artwork designed by Aaron Turner.

File Under: Metal, Doom
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lazerwulfLazer/Wulf: The Beast of Left & Right (Retro Futurist) LP
Lazer/Wulf is an instrumental metal trio, which sometimes includes vocals. No, let’s start over. It’s a funk group with thrash roots. Or a jazz trio with sludge issues. Whatever it is, it’s not the easiest thing to describe, which makes it that much easier to love. Just ask the band’s rabidly devoted following. To put it another way; imagine a giant trampoline rigged to explode. It’s fun for everybody, but likely to kill you at any moment. Circumstantially, it’s heavy as hell, and tends to unify audiences with how simply fun it all is, even as it toes the line between “challenging listen” and “utter alienation.” The Beast of Left and Right was written to be a palindrome, here is an explanation from the band: “As far as the symmetricality, we wrote the album to be a palindrome—that is, it’s the same backwards and forwards. The album is in two distinct halves, Left and Right, and we wrote them to be the “opposite” of each other. On the full 9-track version that’s on CD, track 1 uses the exact same chords, riffs and drum tracks as track 9 but one is major and the other is minor; track 2 lyrically opposes track 8 (and both are re-recordings from our EP); track 3 uses the rhythm of track 7 backwards (we even recorded the guitars for track 3 backwards and reversed them to the version that’s on the album); track 4 uses all the same drum parts and melodies as track 6 but the song structure is backwards, and 5 is the center track—no song opposes it, but it incorporates parts of the songs on either side of it. The idea is that either way you choose, Left or Right, the paths are the same.” Released on Carl McGinley of Kylesa’s Retro Futurist label.

File Under: Metal, Instrumental
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melvins_eggnogliceall_mid_main

Melvins: Eggnog/Lice All (Boner) LP
This double-LP package combines two of the earliest releases from the often imitated but never duplicated Melvins. Formed in the early-’80s in the scenic wonderland known as Aberdeen, WA, the band took inspiration from Black Flag, Black Sabbath, Venom, Flipper, Stooges and other floggers of high-energy, low-velocity plod. Today, more than 30 years later, they might be more popular than ever. Slow and steady wins the race. Disc one is Eggnog, from 1991. Originally released as a 10-inch, Eggnog is a wild ride into the outer limits of Melvins-dom. The first side cuts loose with three quick blasts. “Wispy” has the Lorax (Lori Temple Black) on bass and Dale Crover on drums, pounding one note in unison while Buzz Osborne bellows and whispers and turns his guitar on and off. “Antitoxidote” is a rabid horse galloping off into the desert, with yet more stops and starts and feedback detonations. “Hog Leg” sounds like a syphillitic Jimmy Swaggert trying to mimic Dio while being backed by a drunken ZZ Top cover band. Side Two features the side-long epic “Charmicarmicat,” with seasick waves of guitar and slow-motion madness bringing communicable disease and poisonous jellyfish ashore, stinging and infecting the unsuspecting sunbathers before gently washing out to sea again. Disc two is Lice-All, from 1992, previously known as self-titled, and also previously known as something else we’re all not gonna talk about, thank you very much. This was their last release before signing their Atlantic deal, and features the introduction of new bass player Joe Preston (previously of Earth, currently of Thrones). It’s one long, slow, loud blob of drones, moans and fuzztones. The opening endless power chord shimmer influenced Sleep, Sunn O))), and countless other sludge metal drone freaks for years to come. The LPs have been remastered and are back in print on vinyl for the first time in 15 years. The new gatefold packaging includes never-before-seen vintage photos, as well as the original artwork and insert, all tidied up and ready to meet Mom and Dad. Free download is included.

File Under: Metal, Doom, Sludge
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melvins_ozmabullhead_mid_mainMelvins: Ozma/Bullhead (Boner) LP
This double-LP package combines two of the earliest releases from the often imitated but never duplicated Melvins. Formed in the early-’80s in the scenic wonderland known as Aberdeen, WA, the band took inspiration from Black Flag, Black Sabbath, Venom, Flipper, Stooges and other floggers of high-energy, low-velocity plod. Today, more than 30 years later, they might be more popular than ever. Slow and steady wins the race. Disc one is Ozma, from 1989, which was recorded soon after their move from Washington to San Francisco, and was their first release to include the diminutive yet mighty Lorax (Lori Temple Black) on bass. In fact, the first sound one hears at the album’s opening is Lori standing on her tiptoes to switch on her amp, thereby warning the listener of the onslaught to come. Distorted, down-tuned doom riffs start, stop, lurch sideways with no warning, and seem to end before they start. Buzz Osborne adds extraneous guitar static and vocal squeals. Drummer Dale Crover plays as if he’s inside a barrel going over Niagara Falls; the long, slow fall allows the space between beats to grow and grow until he crashes into the water with the vessel blasting apart in an explosion of drum rolls. The classic Melvins heavy grind is set up and broken up by assorted odd sidetracks: “Revulsion / We Reach” flows forward slower and slower until it eventually melts into a gooey feedback drone. “Raise a Paw” is a superball paddled against one’s head by a grinning village idiot. “Love Thing” enlists in the Kiss Army before getting dishonorably discharged.  Disc two is Bullhead, from 1991. The songs are longer, the mood is calmer, yet more menacing. “Boris” (which gave the Japanese group their name) is a long, slow, low death march of addiction and self-abuse. “Zodiac” is a frantic punk rock machine gun blasting away at Buzz’s demons (both inner and outer). “Cow” is a happy baboon bashing away at the best drum solo of his life. “It’s Shoved” is a groovy beat for the cast of Shindig to bop along to, until their carefree performances of The Pony, The Mashed Potato, and The Watusi are horribly interrupted by the soundstage tilting up and sliding them all into a mangled heap of screaming dancers, broken cameras and flaming electronic equipment at the bottom. The LPs have been remastered and are back in print on vinyl for the first time in 15 years. The new gatefold packaging includes never-before-seen vintage photos, as well as the original artwork and insert, all tidied up and ready to meet Mom and Dad. Free download (with one extra track) is included.

File Under: Metal, Doom, Sludge
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jackname

Jack Name: Weird Moons (Castle Face) LP
Jack Name’s genius is the listener can never anticipate his next direction. A change of trajectory is as likely a return to the beginning as it is a sharp upwards spike that pulls one deeper into one’s seat and threatens unconsciousness. Nothing here is concrete or predictable. Songs float, attract, repel, and rebound off each other like pitch black matter. A wonderful followup to 2014’s masterpiece Light Show (God?), Weird Moons was recorded in a room with mirrored walls, moth-eaten shades pulled low to block the sun’s brutal radiation and the howls of the urchins 60 stories below. Less a sequel to the tales spun in the first, and more a rocket that has jettisoned its initial thruster to be driven further away from this mortal orb and deeper into this sticky story. Reminiscent of late-era Can, Bruce Haack, Hans Edler, Solid Space, Dario Argento and VHS tapes, it’s fucking great. Listen to this album in an egg-shaped speaker chair, if possible.

File Under: Rock, Glam, White Fence
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hannibal

OST: Hannibal Season 2 Parts 1 & 2 (Invada) LP
Invada Records are proud to announce the vinyl release of two volumes music from hit NBC television series Hannibal by Brian Reitzell. Spread across two double gatefold LPs, each volume available as 140gm and coloured variants. Accompanying the release, director David Slade has provided rare photos from his personal collection for the artwork. Each LP comes with a download card. The music has been sequenced in the chronological order it appears on the show itself, allowing for an essential listening experience as dictated by the music’s creator. Over the last decade and a half, multi-instrumentalist, composer and producer Reitzell has created his own unique method of scoring films, drawing equally from his experience as a recording and touring musi-cian with bands such as Redd Kross and Air, and his massive knowledge of recorded music. Brian’s past films include The Virgin Suicides, Lost In Translation (for which he received a BAFTA award nomination), CQ, Friday Night Lights, Stranger Than Fiction, Thumbsucker, Marie Antoinette, The Brothers Bloom, 30 Days Of Night, Beginners, and Red Riding Hood. His video game credits include his critically acclaimed score for THQ’s Red Faction: Armageddon and the upcoming Watch Dogs for Ubisoft.

File Under: OST
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refn

OST: My Life Directed By Nicolas Winding Refn (Milan) LP
My Life Directed By Nicolas Winding Refn is a fascinating, behind the- scenes documentary directed by Liv Corfixen, the wife of Nicolas Winding Refn (Drive, Bronson). It is a heartfelt and authentic portrait of the acclaimed and controversial director during the filming and release of Only God Forgives. This one hour-long film takes the audience on-set with the director in the streets of Bangkok and offers a unique perspective on the filmmaker’s family life.

File Under: OST, Drive
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warning

OST: Warning Sign (Invada) LP
Invada Records proudly presents the release of a Synth-Heavy Score from one of the Industry’s most creative composers; Craig Safan’s music to the 1985 20th Century Fox sci-fi thriller Warning Sign. Famous for his score to the timeless classic The Last Star Fighter, as well as A Nightmare on Elm Street, Part IV and (amazingly) the hit series Cheers! Safan’s film music is notable for its clever use of electronics, and Warning Sign is no different. Recorded using a Synclavier Synthesizer – an expensive piece of kit at the time – the score is fully electronic but no less effective than his orchestral work, and provides an entertaining and futuristic soundscape for the story of a man-made virus that is accidentally released into its laboratory, turning its work-ers into zombies. The Synclavier creates an appropriate atmosphere, which Sa-fan layers with different effects, from an electric piano that illus-trates a desolate location in the film’s early stages to the use of metallic effects as percussion for the chemically-affected staff. Safan weaves dissonant sounds to suggest chaos and para-noia, and innovatively synthesises human voices to convey a sense of tortured souls to those infected. An intense score where the foreboding turns to reality with an eerie and uncomfortable texture, broken only by a beautiful and warm melody for the resolution and end credits, where all is well. This special edition that features an expanded version of the original 1985 LP program, along with 15 unreleased cues presented as bonus tracks. The release features new art-work by Marc Bessant, liner notes by Safan himself plus George Ginn presenting a comprehensive package befitting one of the scores that was an important part of 80s electronic film music.

File Under: OST
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parquet

Parquet Courts: Content Nausea  (What’s Your Rupture) LP
Content Nausea, Parkay Courts’ second release of 2014, is the inevitable repercussion to Sunbathing Animal’s pure emotion. With one member completing a degree in mathematics, and another starting a family, Content Nausea features mostly the work of Andrew Savage and Austin Brown, with the help of a few friends (Jackie-O Motherfucker’s Jef Brown on saxophone and Eaters’ Bob Jones on fiddle). This likely explains the homophonic name shift from Parquet Courts to Parkay Courts, which was previously used on last years’ Tally All the Things That You Broke EP. Featuring some of the band’s most accessible and dissonant recordings, Content Nausea was recorded, mixed and mastered in two weeks on a 4-track tape machine. The band wanted something that listeners could “live with over the winter.” At 35 minutes, the record lies somewhere between an EP and an LP, but who’s counting? On Content Nausea, we find the band confidently exploring sounds that were previously only hinted at; Townes Van Zandt and Dylan are evident points of departure on “Uncast Shadow of a Southern Myth,” a lonesome tale about “two men tragically colliding in the deep south,” explains Savage. The 13th Floor Elevators get a hat tip via NYC reinterpretation of “Slide Machine,” and there’s even an unexpected, gender-bending cover of Nancy Sinatra’s “These Boots Are Made for Walking.” “A personal karaoke standard,” explains Savage. Mostly, Content Nausea reflects the rapid change in the band’s hometown of New York City, while at the same time emphasizing the changes in the band itself. The record’s sleeve is a bleak vision of Freedom-Tower-era NYC flooded by (what else?) content. A city that is becoming increasingly unrecognizable to its romantic history. Not unlike Parkay Quarts.

File Under: Rock, Punk
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iggy pop

Iggy Pop: American Caesar (Plain) LP
American Caesar was originally released in 1993, a couple of years after Iggy Pop’s all star “comeback” album Brick By Brick. Returning to the studio with his muscular, tight touring band, Iggy and Co. made what is arguably his best solo effort since New Values in the 1970s, a dark, loud and subtly atmospheric double album recorded in New Orleans with producer Malcolm Burn. Iggy explores the dark heart of America in songs that range from all out hard rock such as “Wild America” and “Sickness” to calmer numbers like “Jealousy” and “Mixin’ The Colors.” Iggy also puts his stamp on the rock classic “Louie Louie” and makes it his own via some updated lyrics. The provocateur ends the record with the funny and brutal spoken word piece “Caesar” in which he plays a U.S. version of the ancient leaders of the Roman Empire. This is most definitely an Iggy Pop record and a hidden gem in his catalog at that. Includes a previously unavailable insert with an image of Iggy on one side and the lyrics on the other. 180 gram vinyl pressing from Plain Recordings.

File Under: Rock, Stooges
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red aunts

Red Aunts: Come Up For A Closer Look (In the Red) LP
The Red Aunts were an all-female punk band that formed in 1991 in Long Beach, California, when Terri Wahl (guitar / vocals) recruited friends Kerry Davis (guitar / vocals), Debi Martini (bass / vocals), and Lesley Ishino (drums). Their brand of unfiltered music is toxic, taking a sharp claw to every riot grrrl cliché it can shred.  After five albums, several years of touring and a huge fanbase, they called it quits in 1998. The ladies recently decided it was time to wake people up and save the music with their unique form of rock. Come Up for a Closer Look is their “Greatest Hits” compilation, a gatefold-sleeve double-album complete with killer art and photos, plus liner notes by Red Aunts fan Sasha Frere-Jones.  “The Red Aunts are nothing to mess with … wonderfully reckless rock.” —L.A. Times

File Under: Punk
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sleater kinney

Sleater Kinney: No Cities to Love (Sub Pop) LP/DLX LP
“We sound possessed on these songs,” says guitarist/vocalist Carrie Brownstein about Sleater-Kinney’s eighth studio album, No Cities to Love. “Willing it all – the entire weight of the band and what it means to us – back into existence.” The new record is the first in 10 years from the acclaimed trio – Brownstein, vocalist/guitarist Corin Tucker, and drummer Janet Weiss – who came crashing out of the ’90s Pacific Northwest riot grrrl scene, setting a new bar for punk’s political insight and emotional impact. Formed in Olympia, WA in 1994, Sleater-Kinney were hailed as “America’s best rock band” by Greil Marcus in Time Magazine, and put out seven searing albums in 10 years before going on indefinite hiatus in 2006. But the new album isn’t about reminiscing, it’s about reinvention, the ignition of an unparalleled chemistry to create new sounds and tell new stories. “I always considered Corin and Carrie to be musical soulmates,” says Weiss, whose drums fuel the fire of Tucker and Brownstein’s vocal and guitar interplay. “Something about taking a break brought them closer, desperate to reach together again for their true expression.” The result is a record that grapples with love, power and redemption without restraint. Produced by longtime Sleater-Kinney collaborator John Goodmanson, who helmed many of the band’s earlier albums including 1997 breakout set Dig Me Out, No Cities to Love is indeed formidable from the first beat. Sleater-Kinney’s decade apart made room for family and other fruitful collaborations, as well as an understanding of what the band’s singular chemistry demands. “Sleater-Kinney isn’t something you can do half-assed or half-heartedly,” says Brownstein. “This band requires a certain desperation, a direness. We have to be willing to push because the entity that is this band will push right back.” “The core of this record is our relationship to each other, to the music, and how all of us still felt strongly enough to about those to sweat it out in the basement and to try and reinvent our band,” adds Tucker. With No Cities to Love, “we went for the jugular.” The deluxe version of No Cities to Love comes pressed on colored 180-gram vinyl complete with a bonus colored 180g 12” featuring two exclusive tracks on one side and an etching on the other. All of which is housed in a very cool slipcase with its own exclusive cover art and a 2-sided poster. The album is also available as standard vinyl edition pressed on black vinyl.

File Under: Indie Rock
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viet cong

Viet Cong: s/t (Flemish Eye) LP
It takes less than sixty seconds of album opener “Newspaper Spoons” for you to realize that Viet Cong is a winter record. The album has barely begun, and the guitar doesn’t snarl until the end of that opening minute, but it still presents a palpable iciness in just a few short moments. It’s bitter. It stings. But once you’re in it, and you’re bracing yourself and charging ahead, “Newspaper Spoons” moves from a punishing, almost militarized drumbeat to a melody that’s still menacing but also delicate, almost celestial. That instinct for humanizing a stone-cold song is Viet Cong’s greatest gift and sharpest weapon. It’s harsh, but exhilarating. Themes of deconstruction and disintegration, of hardening and crumbling seem to come from every direction. But time and again, they are rescued by something – a little bit of humor, a cathartic moment, even a basic human goof. In fact, as the members of Viet Cong worked through the songs that make up this record, they erred on the side of keeping those moments that save it from being overly mechanized. “There have to be strange little goofups and stuff that’s sometimes intentional, sometimes not,” bassist and lead singer Matt Flegel explains. “I have a bleak sense of humor, too, so some lyrics might seem funny to me even though anyone else might think they’re desperately hopeless.” Recorded in a barn-turned-studio in rural Ontario, the seven songs that make up Viet Cong were born largely on the road, when Flegel and bandmates Mike Wallace, Scott Munro and Daniel Christiansen embarked on a 50-date tour that stretched virtually every limit imaginable. Close quarters hastened their exhaustion but also honed them as a group. With all four members traveling in one car, the mood conflated with the soundtrack, the soundtrack with the cities around them, and so forth. There was repetition, but it was all different. This combined with the grey, chilly emptiness of Calgary rendered a record with a viscerally rugged vibe, one that Flegel even describes as “shit earth.” As Viet Cong pushes forward, the six-minute “March of Progress” is when it begins to really take flight. A lengthy, almost industrial march chugs along for a full three minutes before the floor gives out underneath it and gives way to a spare little riff and the album’s first real melody. “That’s the one where I thought ‘that’s what I want us to be doing. Finally,'” explains Flegel. “That was the sound that I had heard in my mind before we even got started.” Later still, that negative space gives way to a richer melody, and it’s here that Flegel sings “we build the buildings and they’re built to break,” a declaration that is in many ways this album’s thesis. The repetition throughout Viet Cong hypnotizes but it also softens, leaving a space that is deceptively personal. “Continental Shelf” orbits a thousand-watt hook with a thick crackle and a battering-ram drum line. It’s so arresting that you barely notice it doesn’t have a chorus, and then in comes a line like “if we’re lucky we’ll get old and die” and you can’t believe Leonard Cohen (or Trent Reznor, or Nick Cave, or Sinatra) didn’t get to it first. “Silhouettes” is a tripwire of a song, opening with an almost Joy Division-esque exposition and moving at breakneck speed – frantic and pitch-black at a thousand miles an hour – until before you know it they are howling. Actually howling, and maybe you are too. You can designate records as seasonal, and you can feel Viet Cong’s bleakness and declare it wintry. But the only way you get a frost is when there’s something warmer to freeze up. So yes, Viet Cong is a winter album, but only until it is a spring record, then a summer scorcher, then an autumn burner, then it ices over again. They build these buildings, and they’re built to break.

File Under: Indie Rock, Post Punk
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…..Restocks…..

Aphex Twin: Selected Ambient Works II (1972) LP
Black Keys: Thickfreakness (Fat Possum) LP
Glenn Branca: Lesson No.1 (Superior Viaduct) LP
Caribou: Our Love (Merge) LP
Cramps: A Date With Elvis (Vengence) LP
Cramps: Big Beat From Badsville (Vengence) LP
Cramps: Fiends of Dope Island (Vengence) LP
Cramps: Look Mom No Hands (Vengence) LP
Cramps: Rockinnreelininauckland… (Vengence) LP
Cramps: Smell of Female (Vengence) LP
Cramps: Stay Sick (Vengence) LP
Crime: Murder By Guitar (Superior Viaduct) LP
Death in June: Nada Plus! (Pylon) LP
Decemberists: Tain/5 Songs (Jealous Butcher) LP
Tashi Dorji: s/t (Hermit Hut) LP
Kyle Bobby Dunn: And The Infinite Sadness (Students of Decay) 3LP
Alain Goraguer: La Planete Sauvage OST (Superior Viaduct) LP
Hawkwind: Doremi Fasol Latido (Rock Classics) LP
Lee Hazlewood: Love & Other Crimes (1972) LP
The Heads: Everybody Knows We Got Nowhere (Rooster) 5LP Box
Mark Hollis: s/t (Ba Da Bing) LP
Hot Snakes: Automatic Midnight (Swami) LP
Hot Snakes: Suicide Invoice (Swami) LP
Isis: In The Absence of Truth (Robotic Empire) LP
King Khan & BBQ Show: Invisible Girl (In The Red) LP
Natural Snow Buildings: Night Coercion… (Ba Da Bing) 4LP
Life Without Buildings: Any Other City (What’s Your Rupture) LP
Night Flights: Vol 1 (Agitation) LP
Oh Sees: Carrion Crawler (In The Red) LP
Oh Sees: Castlemania (In The Red) LP
Oh Sees: Drop (In The Red) LP
Oh Sees: Putrifiers (In The Red) LP
Oh Sees: Singles Collection 1 & 2 (Castle Face) LP
Oneohtrix Point Never: Betrayed In The Octogon (Software) LP
Oneohtrix Point Never: Zones Without People (Software) LP
Oneohtrix Point Never: Russian Mind (Software) LP
Oneohtrix Point Never: Drawn And Quartered (Software) LP
Oneohtrix Point Never: The Fall Into Time (Software) LP
Pip Proud: A Bird In The Engine (Superior Viaduct) LP
Pip Proud: Adreneline & Richard (Superior Viaduct) LP
Ty Segall: Lemons (Goner) LP
Ty Segall: Manipulator (Drag City) LP
Ty Segall: Melted (Goner) LP
Ty Segall & White Fence: Hair (Drag City) LP
Silkworm: Libertine (Comedy Minus One) LP
Sleep: Volume One (Tupelo) LP
Sonic Youth: A Thousand Leaves (Goofin) LP
Sonic Youth: Anagrama (Goofin) LP
Sonic Youth: Destroyed Room (Goofin) LP
Sonic Youth: Goodbye 20th Century (Goofin) LP
Sonic Youth: Smart Bar Chicago 1985 (Goofin) LP
Dusty Springfield: Dusty In Memphis (4 Men With Beards) LP
Stereolab: Mars Audiac Quintet (1972) LP
Swans: The Seer (Young God) LP
T Rex: Slider (Fat Possum) LP
Total Control: Henge Beat (Iron Lung) LP
Total Control: Typical System (Iron Lung) LP
Tom Waits: Frank’s Wild Years (Music On Vinyl) LP

Tagged , , , , , ,

…..news letter #673 – mouseman…..

The new releases are finally starting to roll in and there’s some big ones coming out next week, but don’t let those distract you from the killer stuff in this week. I’m sending this out a couple days early as I will be away from the shop, but Nora and James will be around so stop in, say hi and grab some wax!

…..pick of the week…..

Red Noise: Sarcelles-Locheres (Souffle Continu) LP
Souffle Continu Records presents the first official vinyl reissue of Sarcelles-Lochères by Red Noise, originally released in 1970. This LP inaugurates Souffle Continu’s series of ten reissues from the catalog of the cult French label Futura Records, fully licensed by Futura founder Gérard Terronè. Red Noise were founded in May of 1968 by Patrick Vian (son of Boris Vian), who would go on to release Bruits et Temps Analogues (STAUB 126CD) in 1976. Red Noise developed their own unique blend of free jazz and rock with highly political and satirical lyrics. The highlight of their sole full-length release is the 18-minute closer, “Sarcelles c’Est l’Avenir,” which charts an epic journey into proto-noise territories that prefigure the sonic experimentation of the decades to come. Presented in a gatefold sleeve with obi strip and matte finish. Limited to 1000 copies: 700 on black vinyl.

File Under: Jazz Rock, Free Jazz, Experimental, Futura
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…..new arrivals…..
afrikan

Afrikan Sciences: Circuitous (PAN) LP
At the nexus of Afrofuturism, science fiction, transcendental free jazz, and future hip hop, this new work from Eric Douglas Porter casts itself and its creator in a liminal zone most recognizably charted by astral traveller Sun Ra. Circuitous follows nearly a decade of releases for Deepblak — the Oakland-rooted imprint of frequent collaborator Aybee — and shares common blood with both the elevated consciousness of late ’80s club culture and contemporary west coast beat scene. Built around Porter’s signature polyrhythms and complex melodies, the album’s 14 tracks demonstrate an unorthodox agility honed over a long history of live improvised sets combining multiple turntables, upright bass, and a command center of digital tablets and controllers. Each track maps the artist’s own movements, tracing paths of flight, highway trajectories through tunnels and over bridges, and rides through rough and gated neighborhoods. If familiar on the surface, deeper or repeated listenings to Circuitous reveal the dynamic multiplicity within. Circuitous is a free and unbound body of work — one that defies easy classification yet translates fluidly across multiple environments — presented on double LP in order to fully realize the scope of Afrikan Sciences’ sonic palette. The album was mastered and cut by Rashad Becker at Dubplates & Mastering and features artwork by Louis Reith and Bill Kouligas.
File Under: Electronic, Future Hip Hop, Free Jazz
arthurArthur: Dreams & Images (Light in the Attic) LP/CD
The pantheon of performers known by but one name is full of superstars. Arthur–the nom de plume of singer-songwriter Arthur Lee Harper–is not one of them, but this gentle singer-songwriter and his wan, string-drenched, loved-up, psych-folk was probably never likely to be suitable for mass consumption. Released on Lee Hazlewood’s LHI label, the haunting Dreams And Images is the first of two albums from the Melbourne, Florida-born singer-songwriter. LHI was a broad church, taking in everything from soul to country, and Arthur found a home, a producer, and a champion in Hazlewood, who described him as “A man who will someday be a child again… A reason to cry and be unafraid… A bird with eighth-notes for wings.” Though his lonely, intimate music, shy demeanor, and stutter might not have suggested a man of great ambition, Arthur moved to Hollywood chasing the music industry dream. He suffered hardships to do so, living hand-to-mouth in a YMCA hostel with two like-minded individuals: Mark Lindsey Buckingham and Stephen John Kalinich, whose A World Of Peace Must Come has been reissued by Light In The Attic. “Arthur was a peace person. He was all about peace, love, and harmony,” remembers Kalinich in the brand new, extensive liner notes for Dreams And Images. “He was a person that believed you could change the world. We thought we would be some of the ones to usher in peace.” While Kalinich and Buckingham were signed by the Beach Boys’ Brother Records, Arthur allied with Hazlewood, having knocked on the door of the label’s Sunset Boulevard HQ and auditioned on the spot. Entering the studio with Hazlewood, Donnie Owens, Tom Thacker, and arranger Don Randi, who brought baroque pop grandeur to the songs, Arthur let his music do the talking. “He stuttered and had a hard time getting his ideas out, so he would sing me the parts he had in mind,” remembers Randi. A mixture of things conspired to make sure few people heard Arthur, including a packed release schedule at LHI, followed by the withdrawal of their major label funding and a lack of foundation on which to market the album. After the 1970 follow-up album, Love Is The Revolution, Arthur bowed out of the business, immersing himself in Christianity, family, and a career working first as a rocket engineer and, latterly, a teacher. “I never stopped writing or recording,” he later said. “I recorded in studios, friends’ houses, and live. I just recorded music with my friends or by myself when I felt inspired. For me, singing and songwriting is like breathing; I just do it.” On January 10th, 2002, Arthur’s wife Lora died in a car crash. He tragically passed away of a heart attack the same night. Now, with this reissue of his great, lost album, Arthur’s fragile heart can finally be enjoyed by all.

File Under: Psych-folk, LHI, Lee Hazlewood
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bishopSir Richard Bishop/Bill Orcutt: Road Stories (Kali) (Unrock) LP
The first installment in Unrock’s new string wringer Saraswati Series presents two of today’s most extraordinary guitar maniacs captured on location. While Bill Orcutt, “Re-inventor of the Blues,” falls from abstraction into acoustic hardcore serenade on his wooden 4-string guitar, the Kali-inspired Sir Richard Bishop improvises elegantly and calmly through a feverish 17-minute variation of “Zurvan.” Limited edition of 700 numbered copies. 180 gram vinyl, ncludes a solid cardboard info sheet.

File Under: Guitar Soli, Sun City Girls
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bloomKath Bloom: Pass Through Here (Chapter Music) LP
Pass Through Here is the first album from Connecticut folk icon Kath Bloom since 2010’s Thin Thin Line, which was released on Mark Kozelek’s Caldo Verde Records. Since she began performing in the late 1970s, Bloom has become renowned for her ’80s private press recordings with avant-garde guitarist Loren Connors, particularly her signature tune “Come Here,” which was featured in Richard Linklater’s film Before Sunrise (1995), and has come to be revered around the world for her devastatingly emotional songwriting. Devendra Banhart called her “one of the most beautiful singers ever,” and Stephen M. Deusner, reviewing 2010’sThin Thin Line for Pitchfork, wrote, “she can snap a heart like a twig.” Chapter Music brought Bloom’s work to a renewed audience with the solo compilation Finally in 2005 and the studio album Terror in 2008, as well as reissues of four of her six albums with Connors as double CD set. Then in 2009, Chapter released the celebrated tribute album Loving Takes This Course, featuring covers of Bloom’s work by the likes of Banhart, Kozelek, Bill Callahan, and Josephine Foster. For Pass Through Here, Bloom travelled far from her Connecticut home to record in California with a coterie of freewheeling west coast folk rock types, including engineer Jeff Hassay and fellow performer Levi Strom. It’s a distinctive new sound for Bloom, uplifted by floating synthesizers and disembodied choruses, while retaining the direct simplicity and power for which she is loved. Bloom faces turbulence head-on in “Criminal Side,” while “Let the Music Come” condenses her 60-something years of music-making into two incredibly affecting minutes. “Bubble Bath” is Kath at her most idiosyncratic and touching, while “Shirt Off Song” is an anthem to the wayward men in her life. Recorded in just a few takes, her vocals are raw and honest, but the overall impression is as masterful as it is ramshackle. For Kath Bloom, music has never been about finesse, but always about feeling. Pass Through Here is emotional, uplifting, haunting, and heartwarming songwriting from a master of the craft.

File Under: Folk
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cast

Cast Five: Popsound N.1 (Sonor) LP
Sonor Music Editions presents a reissue of The Cast Five’s highly collectible Popsound N. 1, originally released in 1971 on Flirt Records, the Italian label responsible for Paese Sotto Inchiesta (1971) by Peymont/Braen and Underground Mood (1972). This is obscure library music by a studio group composed of Ernesto Nicelli, Stellio Subelli, and Pasquale Castiglione. Tons of psychedelic grooves, including those on “Diatomea” and “Gospel 71”, and killer breakbeats on “Speedball Experience.” Generally, the whole record features some of the best b-boy breaks to be found on a library LP. This reissue is pressed on 180-gram vinyl and housed in a heavy cardboard sleeve replicating the original edition. Limited to 500 copies
File Under: Library, Italian, Psych
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contents

Contents Are: Through You (Machu Picchu) LP+7”
“Rumours of a limited demo LP pressing from this renowned Iowa garagey-folk rock band remained unconfirmed until a copy popped up at a 2005 Austin Record Show. Curiosity grew into excitement as the album turned out to feature 13 band originals in a terrific melodic Beatles ‘65-66 style with a sprinkling of Byrds on top. In other words, an ideal sound for a ’lost’ 60s album, reminiscent of the Beauregard Ajax recordings from L.A. Drawing inspiration from the Beatles is usually an indication of both taste and cojones, and the Contents Are deliver a string of skillfully arranged 3-minute gems from the point where beat and folk rock turn into melodic psychedelia.” – Patrick Lundborg, The Acid Archives. The Contents Are’s debut album was originally issued in 1967 in an edition of just 100 copies. Hailing from Quad City, Iowa, these four young men recorded one incredible song after another, their ambitions well beyond that of the typical group at the time.This record, more rumoured than heard, lives at a wild nexus in American culture, simultaneously expansive and reflective, searching for answers in society through music and art. The great German label Shadoks first reissued this legendary set almost ten years ago, and we’re very happy to bring you a new deluxe edition of “Through You”, this time with the very special addition of the band’s two non-album 45s, originally released on the ROK label (these two singles are seeing their first ever reissue on vinyl; previously only available as CD bonus tracks, and well worth rediscovery). Let this record turn you on to new horizons.
File Under: Psych, Folk, Private Press
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imarc4Peppino De Luca/I Marc 4: L’Uomo (Sonor) LP
Originally released by Italian promotional label Pegaso, the 1971 soundtrack to the film L’uomo dagli occhi di ghiaccio (The Man with Icy Eyes) was pressed on very few copies, like all Pegaso editions, becoming a truly sought-after gem among record collectors. Trombonist and arranger Giuseppe “Peppino” de Luca, who died shortly after its release, wrote this magnificent score, ripping off Hugo Montenegro’s main theme from the 1968 film Lady in Cement. The music is played by I Marc 4 (Maurizio Majorana on bass, Carlo Pes on guitar, Antonello Vannucchi on organ) featuring de Luca on trumpet and Vincenzo Restuccia on drums. Magnificent vocals by the scatting queen Edda Dell’Orso with Alessandro Alessandroni’s I Cantori Moderni choir. Includes A3 poster. Limited to 500 copies.

File Under: Library, Italian, OST
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imarc

I Marc 4: GLP 1004 (Sonor) LP
Sonor Music Editions presents a reissue of the first of cult library music group I Marc 4’s self-titled albums, originally released in October of 1970 on Nelson Records (catalog number GLP 1004). This is probably the toughest and most psychedelic Nelson release from I Marc 4. A killer blend of down-tempo funk, atmospherics, psych, lounge, and bossa nova. Includes such fantastic tracks as “Distorsion-Mind” and “The Trip”, both heavy psych with screaming organ, and “Compression,” which features mellow, laid-back acoustic guitar and a fat, raw drum break, plus other rare and raw tracks with sounds samples and loops. This reissue is pressed on 180-gram vinyl and housed in a heavy cardboard sleeve replicating the original edition. Limited to 500 copies.
File Under: Library, Italian, Psych, Lounge
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kurzmaanChristof Kurzmann: Then & Now (Trost) LP
Christof Kurzmann, Austrian musician and composer, curator, label-founder (Charhizma), co-founder of the legendary Viennese bar for electronic music (Rhiz) with many releases/bands/projects over the years, turns 50. A perfect time for a big multi-variant collection of his unreleased work: solos, duos, special collaborations, groups, for instance with B. Fleischmann, Ken Vandermark, Robert Wyatt, Mats Gustafsson,Tony Buck, and many more. From electronica to avant-garde and improvisation to political chansons.

File Under: Electronic, Avant-Garde, Improv

mahog

Mahogany Brain: With (Junk-Saucepan) When (Spoon-Trigger) (Souffle Continu) LP
Souffle Continu Records presents the first official vinyl reissue of With (Junk-Saucepan) When (Spoon-Trigger), Mahogany Brain’s 1971 debut album. This LP is the second in Souffle Continu’s series of ten reissues from the catalog of the cult French label Futura Records, fully licensed by Futura founder Gérard Terronè. Mahogany Brain was led by street poet and underground filmmaker Michel Bulteau and Patrick Geoffrois, and shared a raw aesthetic with The Velvet Underground fully realized on this album’s savage and unhinged songs, built upon distorted guitars and crude lyrics. Presented in a gatefold sleeve with obi strip and matte finish. Limited to 1000 copies: 700 on black vinyl.
File Under: Psych, Freakout, Futura, Experimental
blueOST: Blue Valentine (MVD) LP
First time on vinyl for the soundtrack of the acclaimed film, Blue Valentine, with music by Grizzly Bear. Numbered edition of 2000 pressed on blue vinyl.

File Under: OST
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candyman
OST: Candyman (One Way Static) LP
One Way Static Records is really proud to be bring you their latest release where we had the chance to work with two icons in their own respective fields! Today we present to you the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack to Clive Barker’s 1992 ‘Candyman’ composed & performed by Philip Glass. Clive Barker who wrote the story for Candyman is a multi talented artist, painter, director & producer. The extent of his work is endless. Spawning Nightbreed, Hellraiser, Lord Of Illusions and the Books Of Blood just to name a few. Philip Glass also needs no introduction. Considered one of the most influential composers of the last century his works are featured in a multitude of movies like Koyaanisqatsi, Hamburger Hill, The Truman Show, etc. Mr. Glass was nominated for and won several Golden Globes, Bafta & Academy Awards.
File Under: Horror OST
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class

OST: Class of Nuke Em High (Ship to Shore) LP
The Ship to Shore Phonograph Company is proud to announce the release of The Class of Nuke ’Em High Original Soundtrack and finally give this classic unreleased soundtrack a proper release! With artwork by Godmachine and liner notes by director Lloyd Kaufman and Nuke ’Em High theme song composer Ethan Hurt, this is a release that we are sure fans of horror cinema will go nuclear for!

File Under: OST, Troma
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dance
OST: Dance of Reality (Real Gone) LP
“The release in 2014 of The Dance of Reality marked the triumphant return, after a 23-year hiatus, of Alejandro Jodorowsky, the visionary Chilean filmmaker behind cult classics El Topo and The Holy Mountain. In the radiantly visceral autobiographical film, a young Jodorowsky (played by his son, Brontis) is confronted by a collection of compelling characters that contribute to his burgeoning surreal consciousness. Adding to the autobiographical nature of the work, the film was shot in Tocopilla, a coastal town on the edge of the Chilean desert, where the filmmaker was born in 1929. Blending his personal history with metaphor, mythology, and poetry, The Dance of Reality reflects Jodorowsky’s philosophy that reality is not objective but rather a ‘dance’ created by our own imaginations. Jodorowsky’s films have always placed a special emphasis on music — his soundtracks rank as among the most daring and fascinating in film history — and for The Dance of Reality, Jodorowsky tapped his own son Adan Jodorowsky (aka ‘Adanowsky’), whose work as a composer and performer (with Devendra Banhart among others) has won him an international following in his own right. Adanowsky’s score is alternately lush and comical, blending brooding string passages with hypnotically repeating piano figures that create a mood that is at times foreboding, at times wistful and, as is always the case with a score to a Jodorowsky film, surreal. As part of its continuing association with ABKCO Music & Records, Inc., Real Gone Music is proud to present the complete soundtrack to The Dance of Reality on LP, mastered by Joe Yannece and with lacquer cutting by Carl Rowatti at Trutone Mastering. The album jacket includes a number of production stills from the film. Alejandro Jodorowsky’s tradition of remarkable film soundtracks lives on with The Dance of Reality.”
File Under: OST, Jodorowsky
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knick

OST: The Knick (Milan) LP
The acclaimed soundtrack to The Knick is finally being released on vinyl! Illustrator Kilian Eng designed the whole layout for the release. This release features additional music from the show not available on the CD and digital release! THE KNICK is the new exciting TV series by writer/director Steven Soderbergh (HBO’s Behind the Candelabra, Side Effects…). Cinemax is to premiere The Knick on August 8. Starring Clive Owen and set in New York 1900, the show centers on Knickerbocker Hospital and the groundbreaking surgeons, nurses and staff, who push the bounds of medicine in a time of astonishingly high mortality rates and zero antibiotics. The soundtrack features a fantastic score by acclaimed composer Cliff Martinez (Drive, Springbreakers, Only God Forgives, Solaris).

File Under: OST, Soundtrack, Electronic, Drive
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sauvageOST: La Planete Sauvage (Superior Viaduct) LP
Animated sci-fi masterpiece La Planète Sauvage (a.k.a. Fantastic Planet), winner at Cannes Film Festival in 1973, is a bizarre and beautiful film. Towering blue-skinned figures, tiny humanoids in the midst of revolt, and drug-induced Tantric sex transport viewers to a truly magical setting. Composer Alain Goraguer creates an equally hypnotic score from a palette of effects-laden guitars, flutes, Fender Rhodes and strings. While the lush arrangements are reminiscent of Goraguer’s collaborations with Serge Gainsbourg in the 1960s, space-age synth flourishes suggest a more psychedelic era. Moody vignettes flow together in tense, slow-paced funk rhythms and Baroque textures. It comes as no surprise that La Planète Sauvage has been cited as an influence on contemporary artists such as French duo Air and American hip-hop producers J Dilla and Madlib. Gorgeous, interplanetary soundscapes resemble the surreal meeting point between Pink Floyd’s Obscured by Clouds and Broadcast’s Future Crayon. This long out-of-print vinyl release features the original soundtrack recording and newly designed artwork. Recommended for fans of Ennio Morricone, Basil Kirchin and David Axelrod.File Under: OST, Classics, Animation
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lungs

Evan Parker/Derek Bailey/Peter Brotzmann: Topography of the Lungs (Otoroku) LP
Otoroku caps off the 2014 celebrations of saxophonist Evan Parker’s 70th birthday with a vinyl reissue of The Topography of the Lungs, by Parker, guitarist Derek Bailey, and percussionist Han Bennink — Parker’s first recording as a leader. Originally released in 1970, this was the first LP issued by Incus, the label that Parker founded with Bailey and drummer Tony Oxley. This reissue has been produced from an original vinyl pressing from Parker’s archives, carefully transcribed and restored by Andreas (Lupo) Lubich at Calyx Mastering, Berlin.
File Under: Free Jazz, Skronk
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pesCarlo Pes: Un Uomo Dalla Pelle Dura (Sonor) LP
Sonor Music Editions presents a reissue of the 1972 soundtrack to the film Un uomo dalla pelle dura (The Boxer), originally released on Italian promotional label Pegaso. The score was composed by I Marc 4 guitarist Carlo Pes, who most likely recorded it with the other members of I Marc 4. The amazing jazz-funk track “Tough Guy” is the main theme of the record, appearing in three different versions. The album also features the tense, dramatic “Morte di un Hippie,” Hammond organ improvisations, guitar, and flute on the lounge track “Relaxing in New Mexico,” and bossa nova jazz piano on “Joinin’ the Swimming Pool.” Includes two A3 posters. Limited to 500 copies.

File Under: OST, Library, Italian
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radian

Radian/Howe Gelb: Verses (Radian) LP
“A seemingly curious collaboration. A wrangling and grappling, a confrontation, a quarrel. A checking-out, a weighing of compromises. The Viennese trio Radian has recorded an album with songwriter Howe Gelb from Tucson, Arizona. Here the situation is different: Radian Verses Howe Gelb is primarily a Radian release. In four sessions that were rather freely dispersed over time, Howe Gelb, usually devoting himself to a cosmopolitan rethinking of Americana and desert country in his day job, fed acoustic contributions into the microphone for Radian: piano, guitar, above all: voice — sometimes as a reaction to material prepared by Radian, sometimes pulled liberally and unexpectedly from his own vast and tangled pool of ideas. The tones of Howe Gelb provided further material for Radian: They were dissected, dissolved, reoriented, mutated and made to fit into their own world. Radian Verses Howe Gelb is the first Radian release with guitarist Martin Siewert, who joined the band in 2011 and here also is responsible for processing and sound treatment. As usual, drummerMartin Brandlmayr was in charge of the selection and arrangement of sounds, and John Norman of the bass. As always with Radian, this record resembles a particularly carefully and cautiously-assembled collage: sounds, tones, noises — the tracks are busy. They are teeming, quavering, vibrating. As before, the kinds of things that Brandlmayr, Norman and Siewert scrape and tease out of their machines and instruments make up an exuberant buffet of ideas and strangeness. The way the sounds are arranged here however creates an aura of fragility, a lean design. The tones appear to be artfully suspended in space, and you can feel the air flowing between them. You can hear Howe Gelb croaking and whining in the process of disintegration, and the entanglement and fusion with this highly-focused free music. The categories and genres crumble away ? whether it’s exploring jazz, intricate tinker-electronics, dub, growling, hissing, bubbling, rock, a lot of things wondrously permeate this music, one that is indeed rather post-everything.” –Philipp L’Heritier; Howe Gelb (voice, guitars, piano); Martin Brandlmayr (drums, vibraphone, electronics, synths, editing and arrangement); Martin Siewert (guitars, lap-, and pedal steel, electronics, synths, processings); John Norman (bass).
File Under: Jazz, Electronic, Dub
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firstSchlippenbach Trio: First Recordings (Trost) LP
Found in the archives of FMP! The very first — never released — recordings of the Schlippenbach Trio: Alexander von Schlippenbach (piano); Evan Parker (tenor and soprano saxophone); Paul Lovens(drums). Recorded by an unknown engineer on April 2nd, 1972 during the Workshop Freie Musik at the Acadamy of the Arts, Berlin.

File Under: Free Jazz
seasrchSearch Party: Montgomery Chapel (Lion) LP
Search Party was the brainchild of (then Reverend) Nicholas Freund. Having left Wisconsin to join a burgeoning West Coast religious scene, Freund made his way to San Francisco in 1968 to lay down this sole effort with some of his students. The result is a spooky trip that’s equal parts acid-soaked mind expansion and God. Laced with haunting vocals and dreamlike passages, sinister farfisa, blasts of fuzz guitar and downer lyrics, Montgomery Chapel is psychedelic music at its most evocative and thanks to its depth and sense of anxiety, most truly spiritual. The ominous nine-minute drifter ‘So Many Things Have Got Me Down,’ for example, tackles the difficulties of an unfulfilled married life, depression and spiritual apathy, all while riding a stripped down, grooving beat. If you can imagine a lo-fi United States of America/Jefferson Airplane hybrid, you have an idea of how cool this band sounds. Only 600 copies were pressed and issued on the custom Century label; they’ve become holy grails of collectors. Artists as disparate as Current 93’s David Tibet and Sonic Boom have heaped praise on it. We’re thrilled to give this lost classic a proper reissue. Audio restoration by Anders Peterson. Insert is packed with info thanks to Nick Freund, who was gracious enough to delve into his memory, scrapbook, and photo albums to help us flesh out the portrait of one of the most potent—and perhaps most unlikely—psychedelic groups to ever record an album.

File Under: Psych, Soul, Xian
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SD44-Mock8.inddShindig! #44 Mag
The Damned: Punk pioneers in dark psychedelia shocker! The Rockingbirds: British country-rockers back on the road. Neighb’rhood Child’n: Overlooked West Coast psychedelic folk-rockers. Xian Rock: The strange world of underground Jesus freak music. Plus: Cool Christmas Records, Jim Noir, Fairport Convention, White Hills.

File Under: Psych, Magazine
visitorVisitors: s/t (Lion) LP
Visitors was the brain-child of French producer/composer/genius, and enfant terrible Jean-Pierre Massiera. In 1974, he recruited a group of nineteen musicians (most notably jazz violinist Didier Lockwood, who made an indelible mark on Magma’s 1975 live album), to record his latest compositions. Massiera had been impressed by violin-fronted jazz-rock acts such as the Mahavishnu Orchestra and Jean-Luc Ponty. He decided that his new psychedelic nightmare should be a concept album on the theme of extra-terrestrial contact. It is a truly startling mix of prog, psych, fusion and zeuhl elements, with complex arrangements and grandiose vocals. Massiera kept the basics: keyboards (Hammond organ and mini-Moog), guitar, and rhythm section. That said, he also insisted on a type of vocal polyphony, with voices singing in unison or performing call-and-response echo effects in the style of Vanilla Fudge. To push it further, Massiera peppered the album with special effects. Samplers were non-existent, which meant that he had to transfer location-recorded “found sounds” onto the master-tape by hand! The Visitors album which resulted from this musical alchemy is a dark and doom-laden psyched-out masterpiece: other-worldly, with outer space violins, burning guitar leads, layers of lysergic organ, and twisted choral voices creeping up on you from behind the shadows. It’s hardly surprising that it has attained cult status around the world!

File Under: Psych, Insanity, JP Massiera
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cyberneticVarious: Cybernetic Serendipity Music(Vinyl Factory) LP
Reissue of the Institute of Contemporary Art’s groundbreaking compilation Cybernetic Serendipity Music, originally released in 1968 to coincide with their exhibition “Cybernetic Serendipity,” which proved to be a landmark in the history of audio/visual art, and the first exhibition of its kind in the UK devoted to the relationship between music and early computers. Both unique and extraordinarily influential, Cybernetic Serendipity Music captured a nascent scene on the cusp of a synth-led electronic revolution and was the only compilation of its kind to bring together the musicians, composers and inventors pushing the boundaries of early computer music on one record, a good six years before Kraftwerk’s Autobahn changed modern music forever. It documented a frontier spirit where pre-eminent composers John Cage and Iannis Xenakis rubbed shoulders with the likes of Peter Zinovieff, the founder of EMS and inventor of the game-changing VCS3 synthesizer, with music that was either composed by computers or, in Zinovieff’s case, even performed by them. With only a handful of copies pressed and exclusively available from the ICA at the original exhibition, Cybernetic Serendipity Music has long held Holy Grail status among collectors and enthusiasts of early electronics, with the original record, on the rare occasions it becomes available, often changing hands for upwards of £150. Now to mark their forthcoming archival exhibition of “Cybernetic Serendipity” in the Institute’s Fox Reading Room, The Vinyl Factory are teaming up with the ICA to reissue Cybernetic Serendipity Music on vinyl for the first time since 1968, faithfully reproducing the artwork — taken from one of Peter Zinovieff’s visual scores — housed in a Garrod & Lofthouse-style sleeve in an edition of 500 copies

File Under: Early Electronic, Experimental
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everywhereVarious: Everywhere Chainsaw Sound (Feed the Mind) LP
This reissue of Everywhere Chainsaw Sound, the legendary 1960s US garage psych compilation, is available on 180-gram vinyl in a strictly limited, hand-numbered edition of 500 copies. Featuring tracks from many legendary 45s, it is presented with remastered sound and includes the original insert and a deluxe, full-color, double-sided info sheet with detailed notes and rarely-seen pictures, making it an essential addition to any psych connoisseur’s record collection. “In a field full of weeds the earliest garage psych/punk compilations still possess a charm that endears them to collectors. Back in the early 1980s a number of now extremely rare compilations were briefly available via mail order. They almost immediately disappeared onto the shelves of a small but hardcore group of US ’60s rock fans. Everywhere Chainsaw Sound was one such compilation that originated in France and was produced in a microscopic numbered edition of only 100 copies. Housed in a plain white card sleeve with handmade artwork, it remains, even to this day, almost unknown by the majority of ’60s US garage psych collectors. Inspired by Elektra’s Nuggets LP, grey area compilations such as Pebbles, Boulders, and Acid Dreams created a demand for underground compilations that grew into the US garage rock reissue market that has since produced many thousands of records. An unceasing demand for music from probably the most exciting period of rock and roll has turned into a minor industry. Thankfully Everywhere Chainsaw Sound is once again available as a limited edition high quality vinyl reissue with improved sleeve notes and sound. You may have some of these recordings on other compilations but somehow the mystery excitement and sense of discovery that fuelled the first era of the garage rock revival is captured on this iconic compilation.” –Richard Allen, founder of The Freak Emporium, now writes for Shindig! Everywhere Chainsaw Sound includes tracks by Lincoln St. Exit, The Spiders, The K-Otics, The Scepters, The Reverbs,Strangers, Ken & the Fourth Dimension, The Guilloteens, Fe-Fi-Four Plus 2, Unchained Mynds, Kan Dells, The Spokesmen, The Original Dukes, Heros, The Monacles, The Music Explosion, and Electric Prunes.

File Under: Psych, Garage, Punk
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