From 1996. Despite being released by a major label, this one might have met a better fate had this trio stayed indie.
**Please do not reveal artist in comments!**
power pop * punk * emo * indie rock * shoegazer
From 1996. Despite being released by a major label, this one might have met a better fate had this trio stayed indie.
**Please do not reveal artist in comments!**
01. What Am I Gonna Do?
02. I Don't Know Nothing About Hollywood
03. Doing Life
04. Who's That Man
05. Like a Rolling Stone
06. Blame it on the Brakes
07. The Way I See It
08. Last Man at the Station
09. Strange Man in the City
10. Yesterday's Arrival
11. It's a Shame
**Please do not reveal artist in comments!**
Hear
01. Yeah
02. Close Your Eyes
03. Midnight Love Thang
04. Help and Sympathy
05. It's Only Love
06. Down
**Please do not reveal artists in comments!**
01. Don't Tell Me
02. Calling All Over
03. Come On
04. Outside
05. Walk Away
06. Out of Time
07. Somebody Else's
08. Favorite Song
09. Anytime
10. Certain Kind of Girl
11. Told You
12. Wherever You Go
13. Push It
This is a completely different set of restored links than the one I posted a few nights back. I think I've attended to all (if not most) of your requests from the past four months, and have renewed a couple dozen more on top of that. Again, sorry for the extended delay.
9353 - Overdoses at Your Mother's House
Arcwelder - Jacket Made in Canada/This, singles (MP3/FLAC)
Band of Susans - Blessing and Curse ep & Peel Sessions
Big Star - live Chicago 6/8/94
The Black Watch - Short Stories ep
Blake Babies - Sunburn demos, Nicely Nicely ep, live Columbus, OH 1991 (FLAC only)
Blue Movie - Hearts in Clubs & Milking the Masters
Brown Lobster Tank - Our First Album
Cactus World News - Spin Radio 1986 concert LP
Comsat Angels - Red Planet ep, Unravelled, demos & live
Corduroy - Dead End Memory Lane & Lisp ep
The Downsiders - All My Friends Are Fish & s/t
The Fluid - Clear Black Paper & Freak Magnet
Fudge - The Ferocious Rhythm..., Southside Speedway, singles
The Fugue - Waiting for Something
G-Whiz - Eat at Ed's LP and split 7" w/ Lonely Trojans
Harvey Street - What About George? ep
Imitation Life - Scoring Correctly... & Ice Cubes and Sugar
Jane From Occupied Europe - Coloursound
Liquor Giants - Every Other Day at a Time & Here
Lovers Under Pressure - The Elvis Years & Island tape
Ludicrous Lollipops - A Part & Scrumdiddlyumptious eps
Material Issue - Eleven Supersonic Hit Explosions
Mega City Four - live album, Terribly Sorry Bob, Magic Bullets, cd singles
Mercyland - No Feet on the Cowling
Not Shakespeare - ep & Edge of the World
The Ocean Blue - s/t LP live (MP3/FLAC) & Cerulean (MP3/FLAC)
One Million Pieces - Deep Dark Hole 7"
Outskirts - Heaven's on the Move ep
Plasterscene Replicas - Glow (MP3/FLAC))
Pluto - Shake Hands With the Future & singles
Right As Rain - s/t ep & Undertown
Sheriff Jack - Let's Be Nonchalant ep
Shortfall - Hooray for Everything
Small 23 - Cakes ep, singles, split single w/ J Church
The Town Cryers - All's Well ep
Timco - Friction Tape & singles
Ultracherry Violet - I Fall to Pieces & demo
Ups and Downs - singles & Rash ep
V/A - The Kitty Comp - Pts 1 & 2
V/A - Metrojets, Vols. 1 & 2
Venus Beads - Incision, Black Aspirin/Transfixed, A Client/Shackled, first single
Velvet Elvis - s/t & What in the World
Verichrome Tulips - Le Lac Leman
Visitors - No Sign of Intelligent Life
Walt Mink - El Producto & Listen Little Man/The Poll Riders Win Again!
Well, I'm about four months behind my game in refreshing dead links you've requested. Here's the first of what's looking like three tranches of updates I hope to be posting this week/weekend, and possibly into next week. The emphasis in this list is on requests that were posted in December and January. Thanks so much for your patience, and btw, I'm looking into a more permanent storage solution that I might have up and running later this summer or fall.
Off Broadway - live in the studio & unreleased
Gladhands - All is Well (That Ends Well)
Senselesss Things - Empire of the Senseless
Buzz of Delight - Soundcastles ep
Bangtails - Hypnotic Downpour ep
Winter Hours - live Cabaret Metro 1989 (MP3 or FLAC)
Dramarama - Live at House of Blues San Diego 2008
Summercamp - unreleased second album & Tonight ep
Reeve Oliver - California ep, You're Gonna Win ep & Reevolution ep
V/A - 2015 Chanukah Singles bundle
Sheer Thursday - Expecting the Grass
Frontier Theory - Atlantic & No Waltz in the Meadow
Pop Art - Long Walk to Nowhere, Perfect Mental Picture, s/t ep
Pooh Sticks - Formula One Generation
The Dentists - Heads and How to Read Them, Powdered Lobster Fiasco, Naked ep
Otis & the Elevators - Some Career & Cross the Bridge
Third Floor Strangers - Last Chance
NoNames - End of the Beginning
Nothing But Happiness - Detour
China Shop - Atomic Notions ep
Expando Brain - Mother of God LP
The Bardots - Eye-Baby & Sad Anne
Velo- Deluxe - House of Sin Recordings
The Special Goodness - At Some Point...
Cost of the Living - Comic Book Page & Day of Some Lord
Opossums - (marsupial eruptus)
Newkeys - Acts of Love & Not Just Alright 7"
Enemies in the Grass - Blind Crossing ep & 7"
Kid With Man Head - Awful, Terrible.... 7" & demo
Pitchfork - Needle in a Haystack demo
Gentleman Jesse & His Men - Singles and Rarities
Shaking Hands - No Laughing Matter ep
The Wrench - Worry When We Get There & Cop Krueller ep
Sammy - Babe Come Down 7" & Chili Lite 7"
Gathering Ground - Figure it Out ep
V/A - Wiener Dog Comp - part 1 & 2
The Mockers - Culprit and the King
Two CD compilation of b-sides spanning this band's career from 1991-2003, including an entire disc dedicated to covers.
**Please do not reveal artist in comments!**
Hear
AWGT starts with a bang, via a combo called Pastiche, an edgy power pop act who only bore a trio of singles in their lifespan, sadly without a proper LP to show for themselves. Pastiche's hooky merger of guitars and keys should have cemented them as Boston's answer to the Pointed Sticks, and a definitive compilation of their studio recordings has been decades overdue. The Outlets punky "3rd Floor for Me" is perhaps the most aggressive song they ever attached their name to, Swingers Resort were splendid power pop kids who really epitomized what was so enticing about that turn-of-the-decade aesthetic, and Future Dads wield a catchy sax line amidst their bangin' foray "New Feeling." And we're still not done talking about side one! We're also treated to no less than two cuts from Boston's legendary punks La Peste whose "Lease on Life" plays out like a delightful re-write of Agent Orange's "Bloodstains." Finally, the Young Snakes featured future 'Til Tuesday front-woman Aimee Mann, who exudes a very different vocal dialect then we're used to on "Brains and Eggs." Love the Pylon-esque guitarwork on this one.
The album's second side is a bit spottier and somewhat more avant, with the likes of abrasive no-wavers Bound & Gagged, and on the opposite end of the spectrum Bird Songs of the Mesozoic (featuring Mission of Burma alum Roger Miller) whose instrumental "Pulse Piece" channels a Tubular Bells vein. We get another tasty nugget from Pastiche, and the otherwise unheard of Someone and the Somebodies lead us on a quick post-punk tear. Hometown heroes Boys Life also get it on the action with a pair of sassy, mid-paced punk churners.
01. Pastiche - Psycho Blonde
02. The Outlets - 3rd Floor for Me
03. Future Dads - New Feeling
04. Boys Life - I Wasn't Me
05. La Peste - Army of Apathy
06. Swingers Resort - Hit List
07. Young Snakes - Brains and Eggs
08. Vacuumheads - Preppie Girls
09. La Peste - Lease on Life
10. Suade Cowboys - Master
11. Bound & Gagged - Black Sand
12. Someone and the Somebodies - Before and After
13. Pastiche - This Reminds Me of the Future
14. Birdsongs of the Mesozoic - Pulse Piece
15. The Loners - Planet Spirit
16. Bound & Gagged - Personal Monsters
17. Boys Life - Heroes of the Dead
Doctors' Mob were part and parcel of Austin, TX's so called "new sincerity" indie movement circa the mid-80s, alongside contemporaries Glass Eye and the Reivers among several other bygone aggregations. The word "sincerity" of course is subjective and is a lousy descriptor of any piece of music, but this guitars-y cabal were considerably amped-out and boasted the kind of integrity most of you will appreciate. This three-songer finds the Mob applying a Husker Du-ish treatment to their cover of the Fab Four's "She Said, She Said." They keep things at a rolling boil on this single's pair of crankin' originals, "Time's Up" and "Lost of Course," the latter of which appears to be exclusive to this 12". Additionally, there are two Doctors' Mob full lengths (1986's Headache Machine and '87s Sophomore Slump) to supplement this hearty appetizer.
A. She Said, She Said
B1. Time's Up
B2. Lost of Course
**Please do not reveal artist in comments!**
Hear
I've been a sucker for U2's tell-tale guitar technique upon hearing "Pride (In the Name of Love)" in '85. The Edge's serrated but jangly, echoing chords are impossible to tire of, even in the hands of scores of other guitarists, albeit many less capable. radioblue were no doubt tuned into said innovation, but the Bono & Co. comparisons largely end there on the band's warehouse, mini-LP. Poignant but anything but pompous, this Bethesda, MD foursome didn't merely posses a plethora of raw, tingly licks, rather the songs they're ensconced within were ultimately the main attraction. Sure, by twenty-first century standards this record doesn't strike me as nearly advanced as when these seven tunes were laid down in separate sessions circa the late '80 (side one was committed to 8 track recording apparatus, while the flip went the even more basic 4 track route), but the intervening decades haven't diminished a smidgen of power and appeal from "instead," "love tornados," and "empty sky." Love what I'm hearing, even if I am three decades late to the party. Two more radioblue offerings would surface in the coming years, neither of which unfortunately are readily available anymore.
01. instead
02. siamese
03. everything for you
04. blues
05. untitled interlude
06. lvoe tornados
07. instrumental in d minor, a basic history of art
08. empty sky
A. The Object
B. Silver Lining
**Please do not reveal artist in comments!**
Hear
01. Slouching in My Spine
02. Boxed in a Wind Tunnel
03. We Never Learned How
04. Heaven
05. Keep On
06. Sold Me Out
07. Greener
08. So Sick
09. Knee Deep
10. Rock Star Crush
11. Fragments
Arriving in the London new music scene in 1979, Classic Nouveaux were born a few minutes late to be forerunners of the soon-to-be-ample goth and new romantic movements, but were nonetheless earmarked and shoehorned into the latter whether they desired said placement or not. They bequeathed a catalog of memorable singles and albums, albeit the quartet never ascended to the echelons of the Duran Durans or Culture Clubs of the world, despite bearing a fairly unique image, not to mention a pedigree that consisted of two expats from punk ground-breakers X-Ray Spex. While three quarters of this foursome brandished a well-coifed visual aplomb that could have comfortably slotted them amidst the rosters of A Flock of Seagulls and Kajagoogoo, it was frontman Sal Solo who bore the band's most striking visage. Egg-bald, with pasty white skin and gaunt facial features, Solo also dabbled in gender bending attire and makeup, with an austere, commanding poise to match. Take even the most furtive glance at any Classix press photo and it's a cinch to determine who the alpha male of the group was. Boasting several charting UK singles, sadly none of them were chart toppers. They were hot to trot for a moment across the pond thanks to heavy rotation on MTV, but success was an even more elusive proposition in the States otherwise. Ironically, they translated best in former eastern bloc locales Poland and Yugoslavia, and even performed in those nations while the iron curtain was still a metaphorical sword of Damocles. Cherry Red has remastered and consolidated C/N's three (technically four) LPs with their accompanying singles and remixes into the handy micro-box The Liberty Recordings 1981-83. In addition to one stop shopping it also remedies the fact that the separate CD reissues of their album have fallen out of press.
Despite the aforementioned inclusion of two X-Ray Specs (Jak Airport and BP Hurding) Classix did not specialize in avant punk meanderings in the least, instead opting for a more current and streamlined forte wherein the band opted for a quasi-noir tact on their debut platter, Night People, a record that at it's apex yielded a catchy-as-all-get-out stunner of a single, "Guilty." It's driving rhythm and keen melodic strengths garnered them modest chart placement in their native Britain, and the video was a cult hit in America thanks to the quickly burgeoning MTV. Night People wasn't Classix' most accessible record, and that could be due in part to Sal's discernibly gruff vocal aplomb on several of the deeper album cuts. Still, the album offered plenty of fun respites with some tunes even exuding a mild theatrical sway (e.g. "Inside Outside" and "Tokyo). Comparatively raw and frenetic stacked up to later triumphs La Verité and Secrets, Night People was fit for release in North America as a self-titled release with a slightly altered and reshuffled song selection and entirely unique art. But why? I have yet to come across a definitive account for the alternate Yankee version, but strictly by virtue of my own perceptions, I reckon Liberty wanted to substitute some of Night People's less approachable cuts for a smoother listening experience for discriminating American ears. Both versions of the record are presented in their entirety on The Liberty Recordings, with unique but contemporary b-sides added to each.
Classix Nouveau's swan song, Secrets found the band making a break for the dance floor without tripping over themselves, and better yet, maintaining enough restraint to keep themselves from spilling over the brink altogether. More in keeping with what David Bowie was offering around the same era than caffeinated troupes like Dead or Alive, Classix Nouveau adopted sophistication as their new calling card on Secrets, splitting the difference between rhythmically sentient appeal and plush, deftly crafted songwriting. Though a departure from their early modus operandi, "Forever and a Day" and "Never Never Comes" downplay the melodrama, and instead reroute the emphasis on accessibility, if not sheer infectiousness. As with the other albums in this collection, we're treated to a phalanx of supplemental material, entailing extended remixes, and a fine stand-alone single "The End...or the Beginning," which preceded the album.
In 1985 the band called it a career, with singer Sal Solo literally going solo with his first album Heart & Soul arriving later that year. He soon thereafter pursued arranging and performing Christian music.
Classix Nouveau's The Liberty Recordings 1981-83 collection is available direct from Cherry Red Records and Amazon.
**Please do not reveal artist in comments!**
Hear
I was only able to find a couple of relevant references to these guys, including the Unknown's follow-up, Fall, here. On YouTube you can check out frontman Jonny Alonso many years after the fact performing a solo version of this album's closing piece "Songinsee."
01. Eternity
02. I Wonder Why
03. Perfect Ground
04. The Clock
05. Dear Mrs. Jones
06. Slow Song
07. Salvation
08. Songinsee
01. Laugh at the Breakage
02. Drive Me
03. This Hook
04. Swim to Me
01. Crime Scene
02. Sincerely
03. Indian Gin and Whiskey Dry
04. Prayer for Survival (acoustic)
05. It's Only Money
06. The Swamp Song
07. Everyday
08. 7 Minutes More or Less
09. Raw Ramp
**Please do not reveal artist in comments!**
Not to be confused with a covers band of the same name, this DT and the Shakes called the environs of Washington D.C. home and were mostly active in the late '80s, bleeding into the next decade a tad as well. Per the Washington Post (who provide more details than I ever could) this foursome were purveyors of "garage thrash." Fairly accurate assessment, as were other acts in their league like early Soul Asylum plus late, great lesser knowns Carnival Season, Finger and The Junk Monkeys. Call it a melodically-informed holy racket, or whatever, but despite the 31 year-old carbon date on this sucker, I'll take "I Found My Disguise" and the dazzling title cut over most of what passes for 'rock' these days. The only legitimate curiosity surrounding Masquerade is the inclusion of no less than four, minute-long unlisted pieces which are predominantly mellow instrumentals providing no logical continuity or segue, and add not one iota to the eight structured songs that surround them. Why? Because they could I suppose. I included them in the audio but omitted them in the tracklist below.
Finally, if you enjoy what you've heard here, dive into, Smooth Studio Crafted Teen Fodder over on Amazon downloads, which evidently compiles an early DT&S ep and single.
Masquerade
Thirty Miles
Brother John
Lotus
Garage Song
I Found My Disguise
Take a Dive
Last One Out
01. I Blame You
02. Woodblock
03. Relationsheeps
04. Drug Yacht
05. God's Words