31 August 2010

VERBENA Souls for Sale 1997


 by request

Verbena was named after a small town near Birmingham, Alabama.

Artist Biography by


Pilot Park
Wearing their animosity on their sleeve, Birmingham, Alabama-based Verbena bear more than a slight resemblance to Nirvana with their gritty, aggressive rock and singer/guitarist Scott Bondy's soul-bearing vocals. Bondy began playing with Les Nuby (drums) and Duquette Johnston (bassist) when the three were in high school in the early '90s. Ann Marie Griffin (singer/guitarist) joined the trio, called Shallow, and shared songwriting duties with Bondy. Nuby left the group and was replaced by original Remy Zero drummer Louis Schefano. The band renamed itself Verbena and released the EP, Pilot Park, on Merge. Nuby rejoined the band a year later. Verbena's debut full-length, Souls for Sale, attracted attention from Capitol and Foo Fighter Dave Grohl, who agreed to produce the band's major-label debut, Into the Pink. In 1999, Johnston left the band, making Verbena a trio once again. It would be another four years until Verbena would rise again. In 2003, Nuby and Bondy, along with bassist Nick Daviston, resumed their schedule with Capitol for their third album, La Musica Negra, which continued the band's move toward straight-ahead rock. 

Tracklist


1 Hot Blood
2 Shaped Like A Gun
3 Junk For Fashion
4 The Song That Ended Your Career
5 The Desert
6 Hey, Come On
7 Me & Keith
8 So What
9 Postcard Blues
10 Kiss Yourself

29 August 2010

THE DARLING BUDS

Pop Said...
1988

Crawdaddy
1990

Erotica
1992

PSYCHEFUNKAPUS

self titled
1990

Skin
1991

28 August 2010

26 August 2010

BAREFOOT CONTESSA


self titled
(year unknown - this is not the original artwork)


You Can't Go Home Again
1996

Happy Together EP
1997

LOUD LUCY Breathe 1995


By request


DAISYCUTTER Shithammer Deluxe 1992

THE VESTRYMEN Ruby Ranch 1993





SUBROSA Never Bet the Devil Your Head 1997


By request

23 August 2010

THE MENDOZA LINE Like Someone In Love 2000


This is one of my requests. Thanks to Michael for sharing this with us!
Reupped December 2012

22 August 2010

SCHTUM Grow 1995

By request


21 August 2010

19 August 2010

SINCOLA What the Nothinghead Said 1995


By request


ST. JOHNNY



1993

1994

1995

By request

18 August 2010

FREEDY JOHNSTON The Trouble Tree 1990


By request


Artist Biography by


A gifted songwriter whose lyrics paint sometimes witty, often poignant portraits of characters often unaware of how their lives have gone wrong, Freedy Johnston seemingly appeared out of nowhere in the early '90s and quickly established himself as one of the most acclaimed new singer/songwriters of the day. Johnston was born in 1961 in Kinsley, Kansas, a small town with the odd distinction of being equidistant between New York City and San Francisco. Growing up, Johnston developed a strong interest in music, but living in a city without a music store or a record shop, doing something about it took some effort. When he was 16, Johnston bought his first guitar by mail order, and a year later, a friend drove him 35 miles to the nearest record store so he could buy an album he'd read about: My Aim Is True by Elvis Costello. After high school, Johnston enrolled at the University of Kansas in Lawrence; while his academic career didn't last very long (less than one year), Johnston wasted no time immersing himself in the city's new wave scene and became a passionate fan of local legends the Embarrassment. Johnston also began listening to everything from Neil Young to XTC and developed a taste for country music. After several years of working in restaurants and writing songs on a four-track recorder in the evening, Johnston pulled up stakes in 1985 and moved to New York City. After several years of making the rounds, Johnston's work caught the attention of Bar/None Records, a respected independent label based in Hoboken, New Jersey.

Bar None Sampler, Vol. 2: Time for a Change

Johnston made his recording debut in 1989 with two tracks on a Bar/None label sampler, Time for a Change, and his first album, the scrappy and genially eccentric The Trouble Tree, followed in 1990. While the album received largely positive reviews and became a minor hit in Holland, sales were poor in the United States, and in order to finance recording of his second album, Johnston was forced to sell some farmland that had been with the Johnston family for generations (an decision Johnston set to music in his song "Trying to Tell You I Don't Know"). However, the risk paid off as 1992's Can You Fly earned enthusiastic reviews and was named among the year's best albums by The New York Times, Billboard, Spin, and Musician Magazine; Robert Christgau in The Village Voice went so far as to call it "a perfect album." The album also earned a healthy amount of alternative radio airplay, and Can You Fly's success convinced Elektra Records to sign Johnston. His first set for Elektra, 1994's This Perfect World, received similarly positive press and spawned a minor hit single in the song "Bad Reputation."

Never Home
While Johnston's next three albums for Elektra -- 1997's Never Home, 1999's Blue Days Black Nights, and 2001's Right Between the Promises -- didn't fare as well in terms of sales, he maintained a loyal fan following and the respect of critics and peers. After Right Between the Promises ran its course, Elektra dropped Johnston and he occupied himself with live work, dabbled in film scoring by writing incidental music for the Farrelly Brothers' comedy Kingpin, and performed occasionally with the Know-It-All Boyfriends, an informal cover band featuring Butch Vig and Doug Erikson of Garbage. A collection of Johnston's early four-track recordings from between 1986 and 1992, The Way I Were, appeared in 2004, and Live at McCabe's Guitar Shop (taken from a show he played at the famous Los Angeles venue in 1999) was released in 2006. In 2010, Johnston released Rain on the City, his first set of new material since leaving Elektra, followed by extensive touring, and in 2012 he teamed up with John Dee Graham and Susan Cowsill to record an album under the group handle the Hobart Brothers featuring Lil' Sis Hobart. In 2014, Johnston launched a crowdsourcing campaign to finance the completion of his next album; the fundraiser was a success, and Neon Repairman, Johnston's first self-produced effort, was released in the summer of 2015. 

Tracklist  


1 Innocent 2:24
2 Down On The Moon #1 3:19
3 No Violins 3:39
4 That's What You Get 3:31
5 Fun Ride 5:14
6 Gina 3:20
7 Nature Boy 4:40
8 Bad Girl 3:04
9 After My Shocks 2:49
10 Tucumcari 2:14
11 Down On The Moon #2 3:43
12 Little Red Haired Girl 4:27
13 Untitled Track 20:39

17 August 2010

TRIPPING DAISY Bill 1992


By request


underGRIND 1996


By request

12 August 2010

FLOP World of Today 1995


By request


Tracklist

1 Act 1, Scene 1
2 Waste Of Space
3 Idle Hands
4 April Ate Our World
5 Of Today
6 North Mason Middle School
7 Eggs And Ash
8 Around
9 We've All Seen Better Days
10 Yellow Rainbow
11 Vancouver Door Company
12 Miniaturize
13 Two Martians Working

hHead


Fireman
1992


Jerk
1994

By request


SALT Auscultate 1995


By request


Tracklist 

1 Impro 0:57
2 Honour Me 3:53
3 Beauty 2:06
4 God Damn Carneval 3:58
5 Obsession 2:54
6 Bluster 3:10
7 Lids 3:59
8 So 3:33
9 Witty 4:04
10 So I Ached 2:43
11 Flutter 3:11
12 Sense 2:12
13 Undressed 5:02

10 August 2010

SUMMERCAMP Pure Juice 1997


By request

08 August 2010

UNCLE GREEN You 1989


This is pre-3 LB Thrill.

SPONGEHEAD Curb Your Dogma 1993


By request

06 August 2010

OLEANDER Shrinking The Blob 1997


I've had many requests for this and I Hate The 90s reader Grinsp was kind enough to send us a link. Thanks Grinsp!

05 August 2010

04 August 2010

DIG

Defenders of the Universe
1996

Life Like
1998

Reupped December 2012

02 August 2010

COWARD self titled 1997


By request

TWENTYFOURGONE The Spin 1991


Reissued and now out of print.

01 August 2010

VELO-DELUXE Superelastic 1994


By request

SCHOOL OF FISH

self titled
1991

Human Cannonball
1993


THE RAKE'S PROGRESS Altitude 1995


By request