09 August 2020

COME Near Life Experience 1996

by request


Discogs


Tracklist  

1 Hurricane 5:55
2 Weak As The Moon 4:11
3 Secret Number 4:02
4 Bitten 4:28
5 Shoot Me First 3:44
6 Walk On's 3:17
7 Half Life 3:26
8 Sloe-Eyed 3:34

05 August 2020

JUNCTION A Collection of Random Mishaps 1995




emo/hardcore on the Art Monk Construction label


Tracklist  

1 Mouth As A Gun 3:39
2 Sugar Mess 4:52
3 Pinewood Derby 3:11
4 Timepiece 3:37
5 Swoon 2:47
6 Second Skin 4:19
7 Auto Body 3:05
8 Booster 3:46
9 Ivy 4:21
10 Sister 5:20
11 Big Machine 2:36
12 Basking Bridge 3:54
13 Admirable 3:14
14 Saturation 3:53
15 Transit 2:18

THE PHILISTINES JR. The Sinking of the S.S. Danehower 1995

 




Artist Biography by


Brothers Tarquin and Peter Katis and drummer Adam Pierce make up the fun and eclectic Ferris wheel ride that is the Philistines Jr. The Connecticut-based homegrown project has been going since the late 1980s, producing thoughtful, creative indie rock with lyrics that veer from whimsical and playful to introspective and melancholy. Preferring to take their time and develop conceptual song cycles, the group's few full-lengths, including 1995's The Sinking of the S.S. Danehower and 2010's If a Band Plays in the Woods...?, often take a humorous, self-deprecating look at the band's perpetual underdog status, as well as the failures of life. Musically, their music is just as likely to resemble peppy indie pop as well as space rock, exotica, or synth pop played on old Casio keyboards. Outside of the Philistines, the group's members have participated in several other projects, such as the Happiest Guys in the World and the NHL-approved hockey rockers the Zambonis. Additionally, Peter Katis is a highly respected producer and engineer, and has worked on acclaimed albums by Interpol, the National, Frightened Rabbit, and many others.
Greenwich, CT
The Philistines Jr. first began playing when Peter Katis was a freshman at the University of Vermont in 1985; they played their first gig on campus, opening for local heroes Phish. Katis began taking music production classes at SUNY Purchase in 1989. He worked as an intern, assistant, and engineer in various New York City recording studios, and started recording songs with his brother Tarquin. The band's first EP, Greenwich, CT, was recorded and mixed entirely at SUNY Purchase, and was the inaugural release on Tarquin Records, which issued the majority of the group's subsequent output. The record was a hit on college radio, and John Peel became a fan, personally phoning the band up to express his appreciation. The Philistines eventually recorded three Peel Sessions and toured throughout the United States and the U.K. several times.
The Continuing Struggle of...
A second EP, The Continuing Struggle of..., appeared in 1993, and debut full-length The Sinking of the S.S. Danehower arrived in 1995. By this point, Bubble Core Records founder Adam Pierce (later known for his solo project Mice Parade) was the group's drummer. They also frequently played as the backing band for Vermont-based cartoonist and songwriter James Kochalka. Following a few 7" singles (including a split single with a one-off Moby side project called Schaumgummi), the Philistines Jr. reemerged with the sprawling and impressive Analog vs. Digital (Or We Don't Get the Respect We Deserve in Today's Scientific Community) in 2001. The album's concluding song, "55 M.P.H.," featured brief solos by friends and associates such as Guster and R. Stevie Moore.
After keeping busy with side projects and recording duties throughout the decade, the group returned in 2010 with their third album, If a Band Plays in the Woods...? In 2011, the record was reissued as If a Lot of Bands Play in the Woods..., containing a second disc filled with remixes and covers by Mercury Rev, Oneida, Nico Muhly, and many other artists who have worked with Peter Katis. Following another extended period of recording studio work and family raising, the Philistines Jr. issued fourth full-length Help! in 2019. 
 
 

Tracklist

1 Tarquin Descending
2 The Sci-Fi Song
3 Moon River
4 The Sinking Of The S.S. Danehower
5 We Will All Go Down Together
6 The Voyage Of The S.S. Danehower
7 The Impossible Dream Of The Submarine
8 Last Night, James Kochalka Got Really Drunk And Swears He Saw A U.F.O.
9 N
10 The Leaking Of The S.S. Danehower
11 It's Paul & Dave!
12 Wo Ist Das Unterseeboot?
13 The Building Of S.S Danehower

PANIC EAR SERVICE Grand Rapids 1995

 


 
 

AllMusic Review by

Grand Rapids digs back into the history of mostly British rock and finds a sound that didn't really exist, but could have. The album combines slanted guitar jangle, wanly melodic vocals, and song structures that vary between anthemically pretty and compellingly rocking, striking a perfect balance between the early end of art-rock and the tail end of post-punk. It's an entirely appealing sound for anyone who's enjoyed these genres -- tracks like "Last Summer" mirror the earlier and more punk-based recordings from Lush, but with more of a low-fi, buzzy, straight-ahead post-punk feel. Most amazing is the fact that despite the familiarity of all these elements, Grand Rapids remains fairly hard to pin down in terms of style -- it's simply an interesting recontextualization of all these sounds, and a great listen as well.
 

Tracklist

1 Action
2 Lost Summer
3 Horse
4 6/4
5 Headache
6 Driving Song
7 Infinity
8 A Frgment
9 It's Late
10 Empty Space

PLOT Various Artists 1994

 




Tracklist

A1 Graue Zellen Voice Your Opinion
A2 Cwill Ashamed
A3 Ambush (5) Locuste
A4 Ego Trip (2) Here & Now
A5 Golgatha C.A.C.
A6 The Slumlords Rainship
A7 Zorn (4) Kranke Frucht
A8 Acme (3) New Song
A9 Systral Pretdending Judiciousness
A10 Luzifers Mob 5-19 (Und Der Böse Blick)
B1 Stack Armistice
B2 Time To Suffer Power Animal
B3 Wounded Knee (2) Wake Up!
B4 Mine (3) XXX
B5 Corrosive Mausch Des Irrens
B6 Zelot Lotzeyn
B7 Dawnbreed Menschmotorik
B8 Bohren & Der Club Of Gore Luder, Samba & Tavernen

THE SNEETCHES Slow 1990

 




Artist Biography by

The Sneetches were one of the handful of bands in the U.S. playing classic British Invasion-inspired, mid-'60s West Coast-sounding guitar pop in the late '80s. Their short run of albums and singles never had a large audience, and they never found the major-label success they desired, but the band remains a hidden pleasure for fans of witty, melodically rich pop music.
The band was formed in San Francisco by the duo of vocalist/bassist Mike Levy and guitarist Matt Carges, both of whom had previously spent time playing in punk bands and wanted to move in a softer direction. Beginning in 1985, the duo set about recording a demo tape that sounded like a lo-fi take on Herman's Hermits' tuneful nature mixed with the burnished soul of the Beau Brummels. The songs made their way to the U.K., where the Kaleidoscope Sounds label released an eight-song EP titled Lights Out with the Sneetches. By this time drummer Daniel Swan, formerly of the British punk band the Cortinas, had joined the lineup and the band began playing local clubs. They signed to new local label Alias and hit the recording studio. The resulting album, Sometimes That's All We Have, was released in 1989. After initially playing bass on-stage, Levy switched to guitar, which meant they often played live with no bassist. To fill the gap, another British expat, Alec Palao, joined up. (It was Palao who had gotten Kaleidoscope Sounds' boss Joe Foster interested in releasing the band's demos, and had also been instrumental in convincing Creation Records to release Sometimes That's All We Have in the U.K.)

Slow
The quartet's next trip to the studio resulted in 1989's Please Don't Break My Heart single, which contained a peppy take on the Monochrome Set's classic "He's Frank." That same year, the Sneetches launched a cross-country tour of the U.S. and hit the studio to record their second album, Slow, a more experimental and arranged record. It was released by Alias in 1990. That same year, they toured the U.S. again, collaborated with power pop heroes Shoes at their Illinois studio, and visited the U.K., where they played with John Cale and the Monochrome Set. Over the next couple years, they had the honor of backing ex-Flamin Groovies guitarist Cyril Jordan on a run of concerts, while also recording sporadically. The results of the sessions were released as singles on Bus Stop (1992's "And I'm Thinking," 1993's "A Good Thing"), Elefant (1993's "Sunnyside Down"), and Jellybean Sounds! (1993's "She May Call You Up Tonight").
Chris Wilson & the Sneetches
The band also made friends with another ex-Groovie and ended up playing with Chris Wilson, backing him on-stage and on an album, 1993's Chris Wilson & the Sneetches. After all these detours and side projects, and the release of a collection of early tracks on Rev-Ola in the U.K. (titled Obscureyears), the Sneetches finally found time to record their third album. Moving from Alias to Spin Art, they released Blow Out the Sun in 1994, then basically called it a day soon afterward. Mike Levy began working on a solo album and the rest of the bandmembers began pursuing other avenues (Swan became a booking agent and Palao a respected and very busy producer of reissues for various labels like Big Beat and Numero). When Levy's Fireflies album was released in 2000, the band rallied to back him at various shows, and they played the occasional reunion show under the Sneetches name. In 2017, Palao put his skills as a reissue guru to work on the Sneetches' back catalog, and the U.S. label Omnivore released the career-spanning collection Form of Play: A Retrospective.


Tracklist

1 Things We'll Never See 2:43
2 Over 'Round Each Other 3:09
3 Heloise 4:33
4 Broke Up In My Hands 5:04
5 Crystal Ball 3:10
6 What's In Your Mind 2:57
7 Voice In My Head 3:48
8 Wish You Would 3:51
9 How Does It Feel 5:56
10 Let Us Go 4:32
11 She May Call You Up Tonight 2:37

BROTHER'S KEEPER The Continuum 1996

 




Artist Biography by

Few hardcore band have been as universally regarded in the scene for their sincere, positive, and upbeat personalities as the men of Erie, PA's Brother's Keeper. The band's reputation as nice guys is only surpassed by their renown for show-stopping, audience-inclusive performances; vocalist Mike Ski's unmistakable shriek; bass player Eric "EMS" Shauffele's charged stage presence; and guitarist Scott Emhoff's keen songwriting ability. The band's sound shares similarities with Snapcase, though it has transformed into a wail of Brother's Keeper's own unique design over the years, with sharp flashes of the biting social commentary and delivery of Rage Against the Machine and the melody-infused, up-tempo rock & roll of Linkin Park. Shadowcast, a self-financed single, marked the recorded debut of Erie's favorite sons in the mid-'90s, shortly before the release of the Ladder EP. The band's first album, The Continuum (released at the beginning of a long partnership with New Jersey's Trustkill label), was the only record to feature drummer Bob, who would later go on to become a part of Problem Solver Revolver. The record contained many songs that would soon become staples of Brother's Keepers live performances, causing sweaty sing-a-longs from coast-to-coast and even overseas. Brother's Keeper toured in support of the album with Albany, NY's similarly minded One King Down.
Brother's Keeper followed up the album with an EP called Self-Fulfilling Prophecy that was also released by Trustkill and featured the guitar talents of new recruit Chris Bazan, editor of Housebroken fanzine, and new drummer Zach Hudock. Their next big release came in the form of the Sweet Revenge single released through bassist EMS's very own Surprise Attack/SA Mob label. The songs from the single were later put to CD as part of a split with New Zealand's Coming of the New Messiah. Trustkill compiled a bunch of the band's single and compilation tracks as the Foreverneverending CD, which included their charged take on Bad Brains' classic "I Against I." The band also released a cover of Suicidal Tendencies' "Trip to the Brain" as part of a 7" single available exclusively with Louisville, KY, magazine I Stand Alone. The next release from the prolific band was a split with Disembodied called Oxymoron, pairing the Keeper's peppy, positive upbeat hardcore with Disembodied's more punishing and heavy approach. Each band provided two originals and one cover song, with Brother's Keeper offering a unique take on Danzig's "Twist of Cain." In 2000, the band took part in Syracuse, NY's Hellfest, covering a bunch of Misfits tunes (as they would on an EP shortly after), a performance that was eventually included in the Trustkill released Hellfest VHS/ DVD. Florida's The Undecided label released a 7" single that featured Brother's Keeper tackling a Slayer song -- namely, "Dead Skin Mask," alongside their old pals One King Down, who recorded a version of "Spill the Blood."
The early part of 2001 saw the release of Brother's Keeper's long-awaited, long-delayed sophomore full-length album. Produced by Brian McTernan, Fantasy Killer was the sound of the band sticking their noses to the ground and focusing their energy into concise, hook-laden songs. Ski's vocal range narrowed in to a lower pitch as his lyrical scope widened, with the band taking more than a few nods from Adbusters-magazine style politics that attack mass marketed consumerism and lame-brained apathy. Obey Giant creator Shepard Fairey provided cover artwork, while High Roller Studios helped to make a video for the song "I Shot JFK," which was included on the compact disc. Stretch Arm Strong vocalist Chris McLane provided guest vocals on the song "The Poison Plot." To support the album, the band hit the road once again, with Bazan and Hudock exiting the group and being replaced by Florida native Mike Peters and New Jersey resident Rick Cali, respectively. Brother's Keeper was a headlining act at Syracuse, NY's annual summertime Hellfest, which drew a couple-thousand kids. After signing a new publishing deal with a major company, Brother's Keeper spent the latter part of 2001 recording a new demo. Called Box Office Smash, the four-song demo brings to mind melodic rock acts such as Foo Fighters, with crystal-clear production courtesy of Michael "Elvis" Baskette, who has worked with Stone Temple Pilots, Static X, and Incubus, as well as alongside producers like GGGarth and Don Gilmore.

Tracklist

1 The Continuum
2 Eternal
3 Two Dollar Bill
4 Drift
5 Sunshine
6 Halfman
7 Spectator
8 The Gift
9 Momentum
10 Identify

AN EMPTY THREAT Various Artists 1992

Thanks to ForAllItsWorth for the suggestion




Cassette only compilation on the Atom label

Tracklist

A1 Some Velvet Sidewalk Peel
A2 Spinanes* Halloween Candy [Kitchen Version 12-91]
A3 Crackerbash Bike
A4 FYP* Teachers Pet
A5 Witchy Poo* Touch & Go
A6 Shadowy Men On A Shadowy Planet 16 Encores
A7 Stiff Woodies Breakdance Boogie
A8 Dukes Of Burl Help Me So
A9 Beat Happening Sea Hunt
B1 Witchy Poo* Heavy Gurl Involvement
B2 Thatcher On Acid Outwardly We're Lying, Inwardly We're Crying [Live]
B3 Melvins Blessing The Operation
B4 Mecca Normal When You Know

 


EGGS Bruiser 1992

by request




Tracklist  

1 Spaceman 3:49
2 John's Bar Mitzvah 2:44
3 Opener 3:16
4 It's Hard To Be An Egg 2:45
5 Cushion 2:55
6 Theme From Bob 2:25
7 Hippie Purple 2:20
8 Bruiser 0:08
9 Ebenezer 4:27
10 President 3:23
11 Ocelot (Party Mix) 4:12
12 This Party Never Ends 5:34

ACME ...To Reduce The Choir To One Soloist 1996

 metalcore/hardcore

 
 

Tracklist

1 Blind 2:56
2 Attempt 2:27
3 Injection 2:07
4 Ordinary 2:05
5 Cathode 2:23
6 Basterdiser 1:48
7 Repress 1:38
8 Attempt 15:50
9 Repress 3:08
 




MEGA CITY FOUR Terribly Sorry Bob 1991

by request
 
 
 
 

Tracklist

1 Miles Apart 2:42
2 Running In Darkness 3:35
3 Distant Relatives 3:12
4 Clear Blue Sky 3:09
5 Less Than Senseless 2:34
6 Dancing Days Are Over 1:50
7 No Time 1:20
8 Awkward Kid 1:54
9 Cradle 2:33
10 Finish 3:03
11 Severence 1:21
12 Thanx 2:30
13 Square Through A Circle 3:51
 

STATION 72 self titled 1997

by request
 
Thanks to ForAllItsWorth
 
Not on Discogs
 
The band released one album, played some shows and broke up.
 
 
Tracklist
 
1. Drown
2. Breathe
3. Me of You
4. Virtue
5. Falling Into Find
6. Bring
7. Broken Ladder
8. Bones
9. Legend
 

03 August 2020

SOAK Born To Suffer 1994

by request




Tracklist

1 Rag Doll 5:40
2 Blood Room 4:54
3 Down On The Farm 3:05
4 Butcher Block 2:28
5 Jing Faucet 3:18
6 Hairysketcher 4:38
7 Jackattack 2:32
8 Rebound 2:58
9 [Untitled] 3:25

28 July 2020

VENT 414 self titled 1996

by request
 
 
 
 

AllMusic Review by

After the demise of the Wonder Stuff in 1994, lead singer Miles Hunt went on to form Vent 414 with drummer Pete Howard and bassist Morgan Nicholls. The band went into the studio to record their self-titled debut album with producer Steve Albini, a clear sign that this band was to sound significantly different from the spirited pop/rock of the Wonder Stuff, and it delivers on that promise. Albini's stamp is all over this release, from the fractured shards of guitar to the unpolished, almost primal vocals from Hunt. The songs on the album have more in common with Ten-era Pearl Jam and early-'90s American grunge than with mid-'90s Brit-pop, a scene in which Hunt's old band could've easily squeezed into. This wouldn't be all that bad, though, if Vent 414 were at all interesting. Instead, only rarely do they stumble across an interesting song (the cinematic opening ballad "Fixer" is okay, as is the tense "Easy to Talk"), while the majority of the songs fail to stand out at all, even on repeated listens. Vent 414 is clearly the sound of Hunt trying to experiment, trying to get as far away as possible from the slick pop on the final Wonder Stuff album, but instead he created an album that fans will not likely enjoy and that few others will even know about. An Albini/Hunt pairing sounds interesting on paper, but Vent 414 is evidence that it didn't work.

Tracklist

1 Fixer
2 Fits & Starts
3 At The Base Of The Fire
4 Last Episode
5 Laying Down With
6 Life Before You
7 Correctional
8 Easy To Talk
9 A Night Out With A Foreign Fella
10 Kissing The Mirror
11 At One
12 2113
13 Guess My God