Showing posts with label Antenna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antenna. Show all posts
28 November 2014
I HATE THE 90S Volume 12
1. THE DAMBUILDERS Smooth Control
2. CATHERINE Whisper
3. SEAFOOD We Felt Maroon
4. DRUNK Carved Slope
5. ANTENNA Delta 88
6. THE MINDERS Hooray for Tuesday
7. SPECULA Sacred God
8. THE LOUD FAMILY Jimmy Still Comes Around
9. AGNES GOOCH Mom's Secret
10. KOREA GIRL Serpentine
11. SPARE SNARE Thorns
12. TRAMPOLINE Shocked by a Revelation
13. BARNABYS Global Teen
14. VERBOW The Chronicals of Agent Kidd
15. GOODNESS Superwise
16. INCREDIBLE FORCE OF JUNIOR Walrus
17. DITCH WITCH Pistol and Pen
18. THE SPINANES Oceanwide
19. THE CAULFIELDS Figure it Out
20. VEHICLE FLIPS Insincerity Showcase
21. PIPE Favorite Dirty Flavor
22. THE RAYMOND BRAKE Easter
23. IDA RETSIN FAMILY Log Ride
29 May 2013
ANTENNA Sleep 1992
by request
Thanks to Mud
Tracklist ▼
1 | Sleep | 3:21 | ||
2 | All I Need | 4:47 | ||
3 | Wall Paper | 3:33 | ||
4 | Outdoor Miner | 1:52 |
Labels:
Antenna
11 June 2012
ANTENNA Hideout 1993
320kbps
By request
Although the Blake Babies broke up in early 1991, just as they seemed to be on the verge of success in the post-Nevermind alternative music scene, there were no underlying personality conflicts or artistic disagreements. John Strohm and Freda Love
simply wanted to go home. The couple had moved to Boston from their
native Indiana to attend the Berklee School of Music, but had gotten
sidetracked when they formed the Blake Babies with singer/bassist Juliana Hatfield in 1987. Over the course of their four-album career, Strohm had grown as a songwriter to the point that he could lead his own band, so when he and Love resettled in Bloomington, IN, the guitarist and drummer formed Antenna with local musicians Jacob Smith on bass and Vess Ruhtenberg on second guitar. Strohm apparently had built up quite a backlog of songs during the later days of the Blake Babies because Antenna's first album, Sway, was recorded and released less than a year after that group split up. A clear continuation from Blake Babies songs like "Girl in a Box," the songs on Sway are lyrically dark but sunnily melodic jangle pop, with Ruhtenberg's rhythm guitar creating a much fuller sound than Strohm and Love's previous trio ever had. The newfound country tinge of a few songs would become more prominent in Strohm's post-Antenna solo career. Ruhtenberg left Antenna shortly after the first album was recorded, and, unexpectedly, Love followed in early 1992. Patrick Spurgeon took over the drum seat and the refurbished trio released the EP Sleep, combining two of Sway's best tracks, "Sleep" and "All I Need," with a rough demo of Smith's "Wall Paper" and a noisy, punky blast through Wire's minimalist classic "Outdoor Miner." With second-guitar help from Strohm's friend Ed Ackerman (Strohm returned the favor on a couple of albums by Ackerman's group Polara), the trio recorded the outstanding Hideout in 1993. The twin-guitar interplay of Strohm and Ackerman recalls both Television and My Bloody Valentine, and the songs -- this time all Strohm/Smith co-compositions -- rock with a newfound verve and confidence. Unfortunately, Antenna ended at that point, with 1993's (For Now) EP serving as their farewell. Reunited with Love on drums, the three new songs, particularly the storming title track, are among the best things Antenna ever did. When the group split, Smith and Love got married, had a son, and formed the countryish pop group the Mysteries of Life with Vulgar Boatmen keyboardist Dale Lawrence. Strohm
quickly formed yet another short-lived band, the even darker and
noisier Velo-Deluxe, before finally embarking on an alt-country solo
career in the mid-'90s.
Labels:
Antenna,
Blake Babies,
Polara
03 October 2010
ANTENNA Sway 1991
Labels:
Antenna,
Blake Babies,
Juliana Hatfield
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