Wilfully Obscure
power pop * punk * emo * indie rock * shoegazer
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Blood Uncles - Petrol ep (1985, Drastic Plastic)
Sunday, February 15, 2026
The Lost Tropics - s/t (1983)
Sunday, February 8, 2026
Hard times right now might be bliss deferred...
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V/A - Succulents - The Letter "S" folder mix.
Since I'm not going to be revealing a full tracklist, I can at the very least provide you with a few spoilers. There's rarities from the likes of Slowdive, Schatzi, Swimming Pool Q's and Steve Malkmus & the Jicks, live action from the Scientists, and strangely enough field recordings of radio emissions from Saturn (yes, the planet). And if you want covers, we've got you covered - literally with about ten remakes total, including Silverstein, Screamfeeder, Scared of Chaka, and Seafood all getting in on the action. Naturally, I'm tossing in some huge under-the-radar personal favorites from Swollen Members, Sebadoh, The Secrets and Shrapnel among oodles of others. And if you're curiosity is piqued, please visit similar setups for already attended-to letters "E" "D" "H" "O" "P" "B" "T" "Z" and "G."
Sunday, February 1, 2026
...test your faith, you shimmer like a godsend
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Bpeople - Petrified Conditions 1979-1981 (1986, Restless)
Sunday, January 25, 2026
If this is your world take it with you.
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Hetch Hetchy - Swollen (1990, Texas Hotel)
Sunday, January 18, 2026
Looked inside to a world within, this time it's no easier than it's ever been...
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Saturday, January 17, 2026
The Icicle Works - The Palace, Hollywood, 1984
This undated set comes on the heels of their 1984 debut, and naturally features said hit, but also entails virtually every significant song from that near-flawless record (save perhaps for "In the Cauldron of Love"). Lumped in with the new romantic contingent the Works bore chilly post-punk affectations aplenty that unlike many of their major label cohorts weren't tampered with, not thoroughly anyway. A little credibility went a long way in distinguishing them the strenuously coifed poseurs they found themselves among. It was unfortunate they couldn't stay in the good graces of the fans that readily flocked to "Birds Fly...," but no matter. The proof was in the pudding and the Icicle Works absolutely sparkled in their brief moment in the limelight. I'm making this available in FLAC as well as MP3.
Monday, January 12, 2026
City Lights - Blackout ep (1980, City Lights)
Sunday, January 11, 2026
So we lifted up our eyes, and the light of the sun was the light of our love...
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Tuesday, January 6, 2026
Best of the blog mix 2025
Sunday, January 4, 2026
I don't wanna be with you, but I don't want to be alone too.
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Saturday, January 3, 2026
Jellyfishbabies - s/t (1986, Plot)
Sunday, December 28, 2025
I'm taking a raise with a slap in the face in so many ways.
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Saturday, December 27, 2025
Blackmarket - St. Vincent Decor (2010, TMG)
Sunday, December 21, 2025
...and now the two of them are lost In a screaming battleground.
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...broken bits of you and me.
Saturday, December 20, 2025
Guided by Voices - Pissing in the Canal, (1984, aborted album) & Nate Farley Sessions (2003)
Per GBVDB, the Pissing in the Canal "sessions" from 1984 represent one of the last bastions of untapped early GBV recordings, and even some of these have already seen the light of day on various Suitcase box sets, which were often composed of demos and rough cuts from Robert Pollard's nascent, '80s home recordings. In it's entirely PitC is said to consist of ten songs, and I was only capable of locating 90% of them. Had this sucker actually hit record racks it would've pre-dated 1986's, Forever Since Breakfast, the band's maiden release. In keeping with GBV's sonic tendencies of that era, these nine cuts skew predominantly to their (relatively speaking) "conventional" era, with clean, song structures bearing a folk-ish guitar-pop lilt, with more than a wink and a nod to the still burgeoning R.E.M. There's veritable gold here in the guise of the brisk, melodious tilt of "Angry Pillows (Gone Away)," which easily qualifies as one of ten most inviting songs of their '80s tenure. "Lockets of the Empress" could have given Stipe and Buck some serious competition had GBV enjoyed greater visibility in the Reagan-era. Elsewhere, there's an early incarnation of "Quality of Armor" with significantly different lyrics, and also a few more tunes previewing the basis for future songs that would be fully realized in the band's more renown '90s heyday.
The so-called Nate Farley Session is comprised of seven numbers tracked in a basement studio on June 23, 2003, ostensibly in preparation for that year's Earthquake Glue LP. I'm tempted to deem it as a rehearsal or even demos, but the performances strike me as more competent than that. To refer to to it as the "Nate Farley" session isn't really saying much, as Nate was brought on board as a full-time guitarist for ...Glue. The title gives me the impression Nate's roll was a one-off for this particular recording, but at the end of the day who knows. At any rate, solid stuff, and only one more album would follow before GBV's short-lived "breakup." For more fun, check out some of my previous forays with Pollard & Co. here.
Friday, December 19, 2025
Game Theory - Lolita Nation demos (1987?)
There's not much more commentary I can impart regarding Lolita Nation beyond my assessment of it's widely expanded, 2016 double CD reissue. It was the third in a trifecta of almost infallible, not to mention beaucoup criminally lauded full lengths, commencing with 1985's Real Nighttime, and Big Shot... coming hot on it's heels a year later. Lolita, a double album, swelling with 27 new songs, landed in 1987. It wasn't their final record (that would come soon enough via the band's swan song, Two Steps From the Middle Ages), but it seems to be the final item in the Game Theory cannon that people truly raved about. This set of 19 prototypes, whether they be actual studio demos or well-versed rehearsals, has some occasional overlap with the bonus goodies on Omnivore's revamped incarnation, but nothing excessive.
In most cases when it came to tracking the album, the versions on the finished product didn't greatly deviate from the demos, but if you're intimately familiar with Lolita... it won't take long to identify the variations and nuances. While the entire album isn't represented here, all of the major components are present and accounted for - "The Real Sheila," "Chardonnay," and no less than two versions of "The Waist and the Knees." An untitled instrumental in the middle of this whole shebang isn't particularly enlightening, but slots in seamlessly anyway. I promised myself I wouldn't reveal too much in this write-up, so I'm tempted to cut the line here. For the uninitiated, if this is your first exposure to Game Theory and/or this album, you'll be happy to learn the reissue is still available here (and presumably streaming), and the band is responsible for a rich body of work that you'd do well to explore.
Thursday, December 18, 2025
Sleep of Reason - Building 27 (1987, Top)
I'd been putting off playing Sleep of Reason's Building 27, even at a cursory level. This wasn't completely by design, but on some subconscious level maybe I was waiting to uncork this like a bottle of fine wine. Upon finally diving in I largely encountered what I anticipated based on a number of factors, namely album graphics, band member photos, and even song titles. There were few if any surprises when I started to ween myself on SoR's collegiate indie rock - primarily guitar driven, mid-tempo, four-minute setups with intelligent, albeit not-too-erudite subject matter. In a nutshell, not quite a revelation, but far from a disappointment.
Wednesday, December 17, 2025
Six seismic singles!
Tuesday, December 16, 2025
Baby Lemonade - 1995 demos & live in Hollywood 11/13/98
I've featured two B/L records previously. First, 1993's Wonderful ep and the "Local Drags" single. Additionally, I even pitched you a live recording of a 1996 Reseda, CA performance on top of that. There isn't much more that I can tell you now, that I didn't back then, however I can't emphasize enough the closest the band came to delivering an outright masterstroke was their '98 sophomore LP, Exploring Music, an album that encompassed B/L's ever-maturing aptitude and acumen. Not quite Forever Changes or Pet Sounds (okay, relatively far off in fact), Exploring... often suggested a patina of orchestral pop classicism. Before that album the band dropped 68% Pure Imagination in 1996. If not the most stunning jewel in their collective crown, they were nonetheless gathering steam and speed at a rapid clip.





























