Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Indian Bingo - Overwrought (1993, Rockville/Dutch East)
01. Ramos
02. Ice Cooler
03. My Leg's Numb
04. I Hate Your Guts
05. Worm
06. Father Thinks the World of Me
07. Sexy
08. Porcelain
09. Treatment
Hear
Monday, July 29, 2013
I'm in the basement with my chemistry set...
Having difficulty accessing the file? Please try again a little later. Too many people hammering the link simultaneously is apparently giving Netkup's servers a headache. With this in mind, I'll leave this up for a few hours past the usual twenty-four, k? You're welcome to comment, just don't give away anything obvious.
Saturday, July 27, 2013
Rods and Cones - New Breed (1988, Invasion)
01. Rumors of a War
02. New Breed
03. Only a Night
04. Nothing to Hold Onto
05. Mistakes
06. Education in Love
07. Forbidden Fruit
08. Push and Shove
09. Waves of Love
10. The Cool Feel of Brick
Hear
Thursday, July 25, 2013
Bitter Pleasures - Eat the Monument ep (1983)
01. My My My
02. Respect For Silence
03. Idler's Lament
04. The Collision Within
05. Guilt Reaction
06. For a Little While
Hear
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Let's Active - Cabaret Metro, Chicago 11/23/84, FM in FLAC/MP3. R.I.P. Faye Hunter
For those of you who interface with us on a regular basis, you've likely seen several posts I've dedicated to Let's Active in the past, whether or not pertaining directly to them, or the myriad of artists who have fallen within the orbit of producer/frontman Mitch Easter. Nationally, Let's Active made a very modest dent during their 1980s tenure, but beyond the confines of their own career, the band's wry and endearingly odd panache informed a generation of indie-rock hopefuls, particularly on a regional scale. A good case in point would be the Sundowners, who I coincidentally featured a mere two days ago. L/A's indigenous aesthetic made some serious, not to mention intoxicating ripples. Consciously or not, I've scattered many of those reverberations around (run a query for Let's Active or Mitch on our page to see what I mean).
In 2010 I posted several Let's Active demos (dating from 1983-85) to fairly good reception. Upon hearing about Faye, my initial reaction was to share another set of demos that they cut in preparation for the third and final L/A album, 1988's Every Dog Has It's Day, however I was quickly reminded that she left the lineup a few years prior. Will save those for another time. In their stead is an FM broadcast of a Chicago performance in late '84, which I believe was Faye's last leg of Let's Active dates before exiting the band. A veritable dream setlist. In a rare deviation from my usual MP3-only shares, I'm also offering this one in lossless FLAC-ophonic sound, for the more discriminating audiophiles in the audience. Enjoy.
01. Intro/In Between
02. Back of a Car
03. Ring True
04. Co-star
05. Crows on a Phone Line
06. Prey
07. Easy Does
08. Flags for Everything
09. A Room With a View
10. Lowdown
11. Every Word Means No
12. Grey Scale
13. Blue Line
14. Waters Part
FLAC or MP3
Monday, July 22, 2013
She likes the Beach Boys more than Radiohead...
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Sunday, July 21, 2013
Pete Donnelly - Face the Bird (2013) - a brief overview
The Figgs are one of those rare and unlikely rock and roll breeds who consistently benefit from the songwriting contributions of all of it's roster mates, both as a four-piece in the early/mid '90s (with the now absent Guy Lyons), and pared down to the current trio of Mike Gent, Pete Donnelly and Pete Hayes. Kicking things off in the late '80s under the name Sonic Undertones, The Figgs have slogged through a quarter century of club gigs, released in the neighborhood of one dozen full lengths, almost as many 45s, and have intermittently served as Graham Parker's backing band - all while accumulating an audience of tried and true believers, one fan at a time. Gent and Donnelly are the Figgs most accomplished songsmiths, and as such it shouldn't come as a shock that they have creative outlets outside the band. Thing is, Mike Gent has been the far more prolific one of that pair, issuing three LPs with his fittingly named spinoff combo, The Gentlemen, and just as many disks under his own name. Slowly but surely, Pete Donnelly is catching up, and is doing so in style with his second proper disk, Face the Bird.
Upon even the briefest examination (30 second samples on iTunes if you must), ...Bird takes the listener on a tremendously varied flight, diving in, out, and around a myriad of genres - virtually the antitheses of any given Figgs album. In a solo context, Donnelly is demonstrably more nuanced and lucid, adopting a sonic penchant that affords his songs exponentially more breathing room than the often volatile power pop of his main gig. I hasten to use the term "solo," as Pete receives no shortage of accommodation from a slew of backing musicians - and one particularly special guest, Shelby Lynne who contributes vocals to ...Bird's arguable centerpiece, "Got Caught Up." Robust and assured, this tune could pull it's own weight in radio-ready gold, but I don't think our man intends to play that game. Let it be known that "Always Something" shares a similar ambition quotient.
The sheik, cosmopolitan groove propelling it's way through "Delicate Elocution," is another sublime departure, while a more wistful tone is struck on the acoustic "A Thing of Two," and the nearly as spare "Low Flying Planes." "Toodle-oo" merges bluegrass textures with snappy lounge pop, and a bevy of clever keyboard juxtapositions infiltrate the concluding "Yet to Be Made." Some amusing interjections from Pete's kids add to the unpredictable but thankfully rewarding anomalies of Face the Bird.
For a limited time, I'm offering a brief taster below, but for the main course, move thy mouse in the direction of Pete's store page, and soon to come iTunes and Amazon downloads.
Bird's the word...and so is Bandcamp.
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Sundowners - tape (1994)
01. Follow Me So
02. Long Gone
03. Soultwin
04. Straight Line
05. Faith
06. Like Gold
07. I Belong to Me
08. Polaroid
Hear
Thursday, July 18, 2013
The Dambuilders - God Dambuilders Bless America (1996, Cortex)
01. New Jersey
02. Wyoming
03. Louisiana
04. Idaho
05. Maryland
06. Colorado
07. Montana
08. Pennsylvania
09. Oregon
10. Delaware
11. North Dakota
12. Arkansas
13. Oklahoma
14. Mississippi
15. Michigan
Hear
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
The Trace - Chilling With Binky (1988, Skeptical Rodent)
01. No Horizons
02. What You're Looking For
03. Telling Signs
04. Paradise
05. This Time
06. Monkey Tune
07. Cover Girl
08. Too Late
09. Mary Knows
10. D.C.S.
11. Humphrey
Hear
Monday, July 15, 2013
I can see you in the middle of a doubt. You told them we had a falling out.
Sunday, July 14, 2013
The Dickies - 941 Theater, Philadelphia, PA 1/3/09
Setlist:
Rosemary/Jim Bowie/I'm Ok/See My Way/Nights in White Satin/Got it at the Store/spiel/Give it Back/Paranoid/Waterslide/Manny, Moe and Jack/My Pop the Cop/You Drive Me Ape/Going Homo/Poodle Party/Bowling With Bedrock Barney/If Stuart Could Talk/Gigantour/Rockin' in the Free World/Banana Splits/Eve of Destruction
Hear
Saturday, July 13, 2013
The Nobodys 7" (1982, Whatever)
A. Sex is a Bottomless Pit
B. Boiling in the Melting Pot
Hear
Thursday, July 11, 2013
Paisley Jungle - s/t (1986, My Grain)
01. The World
02. The Trouble With You
03. I Just Wanna Be Left Alone
04. We Don't Twist
05. S.B.D.
06. Old Fashioned Meal Ticket
07. I Rely on Myself
08. Riptorn
09. Cool Vacation
10. Baby's on Fire
Hear
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Indian Bingo - Scatological (1990, Independent Project)
Six-stringer Phil Carney eventually migrated to the Red House Painters posse. A less enticing follow-up LP, Overwrought materialized in 1993. A nice piece on Indian Bingo can be read at the Record Robot.
01. Stan
02. Separation Days
03. The Ulcer Prophecy
04. Flow
05. Drowsy
06. Pathetic Thing
07. Goon Lagoon
08. Plaid
09. Casim Glue Co.
Hear
Monday, July 8, 2013
Blood glow vapour wave.
Sunday, July 7, 2013
The Braves - Los Bravos ep (2001?)
Six fleeting cuts are presented here, including an early take of the passionately melodic "I Am a Patriot," which later found it's way onto That's the Hot Part. "I'm a Sad Girl," bears one of the most delicious hooks the Braves ever put their stamp on, but it clocks in at only a teasing 50 seconds. A faithful cover of the Velvet's "Candy Say" closes this affair out with class. If you're curiosity is piqued, click on the link in the first paragraph to learn more about the Braves, and download ...Hot Part. Braves vocalist Joe currently fronts Wire Sparrows, while his former bandmates have embarked on La Historia.
01. I Am a Patriot
02. You Harlot
03. Barley on the Ground
04. I'm a Sad Girl
05. Are We Kings
06. Candy Says
Hear
Friday, July 5, 2013
Cube Steak 7" (1993, Matt Label)
A1. Lunar Cycles
A2. Urchin
B. Ready-mix
Hear
Thursday, July 4, 2013
Get Smart! - Action Reaction (1984, Fever)
Well if this isn't quintessential college rock, than I don't know what to tell ya. Many moons ago someone emailed me with a friendly suggestion to investigate Get Smart! For better/worse, it took a couple years to accept that invitation, specifically when I happened upon Action Reaction at Jerry's in Pittsburgh last fall. GS's origins were rooted in the unlikely locale of Lawrence, KS, but it would appear that by the time this disk was tracked the co-ed trio had relocated to the considerably more happening Chicago. Brandishing skittish rhythms and post-punk angularity in spades, Get Smart possessed something resembling a poppy undercurrent as well, not unlike numerous contemporaries I'm inclined to compare them to: X, Mission of Burma, Pylon, and to a lesser degree even the Wipers and the Embarrassment. As mentioned in my intro, Action... skews squarely to the left end of the radio knob, and as it would appear they didn't make much headway beyond that particular market. A second album, Swimming With Sharks, was launched in '86. You can check out a complete discography here.
01. Because of Green
02. What it is We Fear
03. Knight
04. Ankle Deep in Mud
05. You've Got to Stop
06. On and On
07. Just For the Moment
08. The Difference
09. Face
10. Black Mirror
11. Berlin on the Plains
12. They Walk in Pairs
Now available on Bandcamp.
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
The Three O'Clock - The Hidden World Revealed (2013, Ominvore) - A brief overview
And what of that "legend" I just spoke of? Alongside other southern Cali aggregations of the mid-80s, the Three O'Clock were fixtures and figureheads in a mini-movement commonly referenced as the Paisley Underground, that also included the Rain Parade, Dream Syndicate, and The Last. The Paisley tag was a tip of the hat to the swarmy, psychedelic undercurrent that permeated the sonic textures of that vanguard, however it's application to The Three O'Clock was just about as useful as the dystopian "emo" nomenclature that was casually thrown at bands like Jimmy Eat World and Sunny Day Real Estate in the '90s. If anything, TOC's defining facet was Quercio's falsetto croon and pretty new wave flourishes. Definitely more dB's than Jefferson Airplane, if you catch my drift. There wasn't a particularly "trippy" subtext to the bulk of TOC's catalog, save for some occasional Roger McGuinn inspired guitar jangle that imbues vintage pearls like "Stupid Einstein" and "In Love In Two." Not coincidentally both of those titles made the final cut for the newly released The Hidden World Revealed, a twenty song compilation predominately comprised of unreleased material, neglected fan club singles, and import only tracks, some dating as far back to the dawn of the Reagan era.
In the midst of the rewarding flow of rarities are several signature pieces, including the aforementioned "Cantaloupe Girlfriend" and just as key, "Jet Fighter" from the first TOC full length, Sixteen Tambourines. Grand without the burden of grandiosity, "Jet Fighter" transports the "car song" aesthetic 30,000 feet into the atmosphere, and is one of the greatest "lost" anthems of the wave era. Bearing a smoother hue, "Stupid Einstein," "I Go Wild," "A Day in Erotica," are equally as sublime, and even if you've heard the original incarnations the latter two appear here in unreleased versions. In regards to some of the other treats that stuff-up the unreleased portion of Hidden World, it's relieving to hear a horn-less mix of "In My Own Time," plus an acoustic demo of "The Girl With the Guitar" (co-written by Quercio and the late Scott Miller) and a crude garage recording of a Salvation Army (pre-TOC) song are the icing on a succulent cake. If this is all new to you, Hidden World is a fine jumping off point, but I would equally recommend exploring the Sixteen Tambourines/Baroque Hoedown CD/digital reissue on Frontier Records.
The Hidden World Revealed is available through Amazon and iTunes.
Monday, July 1, 2013
I endeavour to struggle at the puzzle that surrounds me...
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http://netkups.com/?d=6d5c6dd510c9d