TVD Los Angeles

TVD’s The Idelic Hour with Jon Sidel

Greetings from Laurel Canyon!

Oh, the dirty of it ripped the label / You were chosen, man holy / Party people, they all wanna start at me / All I want’s an office in the country

Wanted to see me, what you gonna do? / Now that you see me / Ticktock / Wanted to see me, what you gonna do? / Now that you see me / Ticktock

Oh, the dirty of it ripped the label / I believe him, holy / All I want’s an office in the country / All I want’s an office in the country

Tick tock, tick tock, the clock has begun on summer days. For a second week in a row, here’s an attempt to communicate the passage of time through an “Idelic Hour playlist” of songs.

Where did these years run off to? Where did it all run off to? Yep, it’s a strange brew.

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TVD Radar: Joy Division, Eternal (Live) 14CD + 2DVD set in stores 9/25

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Joy Division announce Eternal (Live), their first-ever official collection of live concert recordings, available to pre-order now via Warner Music. Years in the making, this landmark release from one of the most seminal bands of our time, brings together audio from 16 live performances across 14CDs, meticulously sourced from audience recorded cassettes, soundboard tapes, and broadcast recordings, all mastered at Abbey Road Studios.

Eternal (Live) documents some of Joy Division’s most significant live performances of their career, including two previously unreleased shows, Hope & Anchor and Acklam Hall, and three previously unheard recordings, The Factory, Lyceum, Moonlight Club (April 2). It also features the band’s final live performance, at High Hall Birmingham in 1980, where they played “Ceremony” for the first and last time on stage.

There are two DVDs featuring over 2 hours 30 minutes of live shows, including the previously unseen Plan K, Brussels concert and two concerts and soundcheck from the Apollo Theatre, Manchester that have only been partially released on VHS (in 1982) and a brand new edit of Joy Division – A Malcolm Whitehead Film.

Housed in a 12″ x 12″ lift-off lid box with artwork by Warren Jackson, Peter Saville, Howard Wakefield, and Brett Wickens, the cover photography is Sirius Through a Defocused Telescope, 2023 by Wolfgang Tillmans. Eternal (Live) is completed by a 16 page booklet, including personal notes by Simon Armitage and photography by, amongst others, Anton Corbijn and Kevin Cummins.

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Graded on a Curve:
Big Bill Broonzy,
Live in Amsterdam 1953

Remembering Big Bill Broonzy, born on this date in 1893.Ed.

Born on June 26, 1903, William Lee Conley Broonzy, aka Big Bill Broonzy, was a giant of the blues. Cutting his first sides for Paramount in 1927, an extensive stretch of recordings followed across the next two decades. After a break in the late 1940s, he experienced a career resurrection that lasted until his untimely death in 1958, a sustained second wind that carried him to Europe, where he cut records for the Vogue label in France and was captured in performances of astonishingly high fidelity in the Netherlands. Grooving into vinyl a substantial portion of Broonzy’s shows in the titular city, Liberation Hall’s Live in Amsterdam 1953 arrived for Record Store Day Black Friday in 2022.

To appropriately comprehend the level of Big Bill Broonzy’s popularity, please consider his prolific output across the decade of the Great Depression. The brutal 1930s economic downturn decimated the young record industry, which had been thriving before the crash, and snuffed out recording opportunities for dozens of bluesmen, with a handful of those musicians later “rediscovered” in connection with the folk music boom of the 1950s-’60s. Broonzy was an early catalyst-beneficiary of that boom, and would’ve surely experienced further success had he not died in ’58.

Broonzy’s late ’40s sabbatical from touring (reportedly through doctor’s orders) found him working as a janitor at Iowa State University. It didn’t take him long to return to activity, and when he did there was a comfortable shift into folk blues mode as he kept company with Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee and Pete Seeger.

That Big Bill choose to hang around with ol’ Pete and Studs Terkel as he pivoted into a somewhat easygoing style no doubt ruffled the feathers of many a subsequent blues purist, particularly as the two Yazoo volumes of his early stuff, The Young Big Bill Broonzy 1928-1936 and Do That Guitar Rag: 1928-1935 are loaded with hokum smokers, wicked rags, and uncut bluesy oomph. Columbia’s Roots N’ Blues comp Good Time Tonight is also an excellent survey of his more urban 1930s motions that benefit from the cleaned up sound that was the Roots N’ Blues series specialty.

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TVD Radar: The Podcast with Dylan Hundley, Episode 209: Adi Newton

Adi Newton is a founding figure of British experimental music whose work has shaped the genre for nearly five decades.

Before founding Clock DVA and TAGC/The Anti Group in 1978, he was an original member of The Future, the project that evolved into The Human League. Clock DVA stands alongside Throbbing Gristle and Cabaret Voltaire as a pioneer of late-’70s and ’80s experimental sound, with releases like the 1980 debut Thirst on Fetish, named by Paul Morley in his NME review as one of the best debut albums of the decade, and the 1988 electronic landmark Buried Dreams.

Through TAG, a shifting collective working under his direction, Newton has pushed into extreme electronic territory with works like the ambisonic Digitaria and the Test Tones series. His art has been presented at ARS Electronica Linz, the V&A London, and the Reina Sofía in Madrid. He describes music-making as research, guided by intuition and arcane, occult, and futuristic knowledge.

Adi remains very busy working in all these projects and performing live with Clock DVA and TAG. Clock DVA recently released the 45th Anniversary reissue of Thirst, remastered and out on double “thirst-red” vinyl, CD, and digitally via The Grey Area of Mute.

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Graded on a Curve: Radiohead, Kid A

Celebrating Colin Greenwood, born on this day in 1969.Ed.

Not long after Radiohead released 2000’s Kid A, my friend Patrick and I gave it a scathing review without having actually listened to it, on the basis that its only appeal was to depressives better served by listening to the Archies. We also surmised that if Thom Yorke was such a creep why bother, because who wants to hang out with a creep? And seems we weren’t alone. Author Nick Hornby lambasted Kid A, and a critic for England’s Melody Maker dismissed it as “tubby, ostentatious, self-congratulatory, look-ma-I-can-suck-my-own-cock whiny old rubbish.” You won’t hear that sort of language on The Crown.

It was the Melody Maker review that finally convinced me to give Kid A a listen–if the damn thing was really that bad, I wasn’t going to miss out on the opportunity to pile on. But Kid A isn’t the space age fiasco I’d hoped for; its Pink Floyd/Brian Eno vibe make it the perfect accompaniment to a hard day over a hot bong. Your more active types, on the other hand, risk drowning in its ambient ooze. That sound you hear off in the distance is a non-fan, crying out hopelessly for a lifeguard.

The band itself was split over Kid A’s new direction; vocalist/songwriter Thom Yorke went into the studio convinced rock music had “run its course,” while guitarist/keyboardist Jonny Greenwood and bass player Colin Greenwood worried that they risked producing “awful art-rock nonsense just for its own sake.” Yorke was full of it–folks have been writing rock’s obituary since the early 1960s. The Greenwoods were wrong as well–Kid A may not be my cup of studio overkill, but it’s a noble foray into the realms of electronica that works, at least in parts, very well indeed.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 6/26/26

Victoria, AU | New Report Outlines The Full Depth Of Victoria’s Vinyl Ecosystem: “Victoria’s direct-to-consumer vinyl economy exists because artists and labels choose to build it, one pressing run at a time,” the report notes. Six months after an in-depth report named Melbourne the vinyl capital of the world, the second part of these findings has been released, showing the full depth of Victoria’s vinyl ecosystem. It was back in December that For The Record was released, placing the state’s vinyl ecosystem under the microscope, and looking at figures relating to how vinyl goes from the pressing plant to the retail shelf. The results showed that Melbourne’s 5.9 record stores per 100,000 residents exceeded Tokyo (2.3), London (4.9), and Berlin (2.9), and that Victoria’s store count grew 18% since 2023, while national vinyl sales increased 5.6% to $44.5 million.

Record Labels Are Pressing New Vinyl From Old Records and Blind Tests Already Exposed What the Marketing Won’t Admit: The defect only surfaces on certain genres, and your favorites might be one of them. When seven expert listeners at Abbey Road Studios evaluated recycled vinyl pressings in a blind test, the 100% recycled variant finished last. Panelists reported more crackle, more clicks, more background noise. And the defects weren’t evenly distributed across the test record. Side A, pressed with acoustic post-rock spanning a wide dynamic range and quiet passages, exposed pressing artifacts that Side B’s louder, compressed rock concealed. Recycled vinyl might be inaudible on a pop album mastered to hit hard. On a record that breathes, the surface noise breathes with it.

Bang & Olufsen revives vintage turntable in exclusive Beosystem 3000C release: Bang & Olufsen has introduced a new limited-edition audio package that blends one of its classic turntable designs with modern wireless speaker technology, creating a system aimed at vinyl enthusiasts who want contemporary streaming features alongside analogue playback. Called the Beosystem 3000c Dune Grey Edition, the setup combines a restored Beogram 3000 Series turntable with a pair of Beolab 8 speakers. The launch forms part of Bang & Olufsen’s ongoing Recreated Classics programme, which focuses on bringing historic products back to life through refurbishment and integration with current-generation technologies. The centrepiece of the package is an original Beogram 3000 turntable from the mid-1980s.

Two Japanese Hi-Fi Icons Just Introduced a Stunning Pair of Audiophile Headphones: The brands say the headphones will “captivate guitar enthusiasts and enjoyers of high-quality, portable audio.” Audio-Technica introduced the ATH-WP900 back in 2020. The beautifully designed, over-ear headphones are a joint collaboration with Fujigen, the iconic Japanese guitar brand, as their earcups are made of the same maple hardwood that it exclusively uses to build its guitars. Audio-Technica still currently sells the ATH-WP900 for $699. Fast forward to the present, and the two Japanese audio makers are collaborating again on a special edition version of those same headphones. The all-new ATH-WP900SE has a new look and promises improved sound (as well as a significantly increased price).

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TVD Radar: Uh Huh Her, Nocturnes: Redux 15th anniversary reissue in stores 8/7

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Divine providence brought Camila Grey and Leisha Hailey together once. Now, more than two decades later, Uh Huh Her, the synth duo that would help define the indie sleaze era and inspire contemporaries like Metric, Dum Dum Girls, and Magic Wands, are back and ready to beckon a new generation of fans to the dance floor with the re-release of their 2011 electropop classic, Nocturnes.

The reissue, titled Nocturnes: Redux, is due out August 7 via Kill Rock Stars across digital platforms and as limited edition goth confetti vinyl. It features the never-before-heard original mixes by super producer Tchad Blake (The Bangles, Arctic Monkeys, Sheryl Crow, Cibo Matto), plus two never-before-heard songs: the sensual and moody new song “Shook” and a cover of Sonic Youth’s classic “Kool Thing.”

Harnessing the band’s signature poetic lyricism and mesmerizing musicianship, the new single “Shook” released today is Uh Huh Her for the modern age. Cam, a singer and multi-instrumentalist whose credits include touring with Morrissey and Adam Lambert, and as a member of Strokes bassist Nikolai Fraiture’s supergroup Summer Moon, explains that the song is “particularly relevant in a time where everything and everyone feels so unstable.

We are living through a profound assault on our central nervous systems by the barrage of media we ingest on a daily basis. While “Shook” is more about a personal situation, the title speaks volumes about what we feel as humans on a daily basis.”

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TVD Radar: L.A. Guns, Live from The Guild Theatre 2LP in stores 7/3

VIA PRESS RELEASE | When L.A. Guns hit the Guild Theatre stage last summer, for the launch of their new album Leopard Skin, few in the audience knew what to expect.

Reviews of the album were unanimously impressed, and the band could easily have focussed on that alone. As rocket.net remarked in its review, “This isn’t some nostalgic retread. L.A. Guns aren’t stuck in the past—they’ve evolved naturally, delivering a record that feels fresh while staying true to their roots.”

But those roots were still flourishing, and though the show opened—as did the album—with “Taste It,” it quickly became apparent that the band’s entire history was going to be on display tonight, a truly crowd-pleasing set that delved back to their very first LP—the band’s last single, “Electric Gypsy,” span from that still epochal debut, and it sounds as fresh now as it did way back then.

Whetting the appetite even further, today sees another single come driving into view, the mighty “The Ballad Of Jayne,” first heard on the Guns’ second album, 1989’s Cocked And Loaded, and occupying much the same place in the live show as it did back then, as the band neared the end of the show.

Live, it is a triumphant power ballad that leaves the audience drained and the Guns triumphant. But it was also L.A .Guns’ first major hit single, reaching #33 in the US and #53 in the UK; and, while the song is widely believed to have been composed about Jayne Mansfield, the impossibly glamorous actress who died in a car accident in 1967, Tracii Guns says no, and he should know!

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Graded on a Curve:
Blue Öyster Cult,
Blue Öyster Cult

Remembering Allen Lanier, born on this day in 1946.Ed.

Good news! You don’t have to fear the Reaper! Blue Öyster Cult were only joking!

For years morons like yours truly were so wrapped up in Blue Öyster Cult’s ethos (evil as career choice) that we never caught on to the (manifestly obvious in hindsight) fact that the band was pulling our collective leg!

That’s right. Here we hayseeds thought they were, like, a bunch of Satan-worshipping Aleister Crowleys dabbling in Nazism and S&M when in reality they were just a coupla nice Jewish boys from Long Island sniggering down their collective sleeve at the hard-rock-loving suckers retarded enough to take them seriously. As occasional lyrics contributor and full-time rock critic Richard Meltzer said of the boys’ music, “This is really hard rock comedy.”

I don’t want you to get the impression that I’m some kind of terminal moron; I caught on to the joke a long, long time ago, and would have never fallen for it in the first place if I hadn’t been spending all my time smoking pot with pig farmers. Pig farmers and bikers make up the bulk of the Blue Öyster Cult fan base, and by that I don’t mean to imply pig farmers and bikers are stupid. Most of them are in on the joke too, and love it, because not only were Blue Öyster Cult funny back in 1972, they were one hotshit boogie band writing great songs that sounded even better after you drank a bottle of Wild Turkey and popped a few Placidyl.

Blue Öyster Cult’s eponymous 1972 debut may have less laughs than some of their later LPs, but it’s heavy on screaming diz-busters, inspiring anthems, a lil taste of the rock ’n’ roll apocalypse, and one very cool psychedelic threnody to a foot. In short it’s one helluva rock record, and well deserved the plaudits it received from just about every critical luminary (Christgau, Bangs, etc.) of the time.

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TVD Radar: Blow by Blow: The Jeff Beck Story by Brad Tolinski & Chris Gill in stores 7/14

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Blow by Blow: The Jeff Beck Story, by acclaimed music journalists Brad Tolinski and Chris Gill, is the first biography to fully capture the life, music, and mystery of this singular artist. Drawing on more than 30 hours of original interviews with Beck, as well as extensive conversations with friends and collaborators including Jimmy Page, Johnny Depp, Clive Davis, and many others, the book delivers the most complete and revealing portrait of Beck ever assembled.

A follow-up to the bestselling Eruption: Conversations with Eddie Van Halen, this book goes far beyond the myth, uncovering the restless creative force behind Beck’s relentless reinvention—from his groundbreaking work with the Yardbirds to his genre-defying solo career.

Beck’s story is not one of steady ascent, but of constant evolution—marked by bold risks, missed opportunities, and moments of staggering brilliance. He turned down superstardom with the Rolling Stones, briefly joined Elton John’s band before walking away, and helped spark one of rock’s most enduring controversies over Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition.” His platinum-selling masterpiece Blow by Blow—an instrumental jazz-rock album few believed would succeed—became his biggest commercial triumph.

At the same time, Beck remained a deeply private figure. Through new reporting and firsthand accounts, Tolinski and Gill illuminate the man behind the music: fiercely independent, obsessively creative, and guided more by instinct than ambition. The book also explores Beck’s unexpected late-life friendship with Johnny Depp and the quiet, deeply personal circumstances surrounding his final days.

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Graded on a Curve:
F/i, Invisible Men

Anybody seeking a full understanding of the 1980s underground music scene must reckon with the prolific if largely undercelebrated project F/i. Founded by Richard Franecki out of a creatively stalled early ’80s Milwaukee, WI hardcore scene, F/i honed a sound betwixt doom-laden early Industrial, surly experimental noise, abstract electronics, and even a smidge of kosmische atmosphere.

As one of the many outfits that helped define ’80s cassette culture, F/i favored self-releasing on said format before making arrangements with a few discerning labels. Invisible Men is Birdman Records’ reissue of a 1985 tape, plus a bonus track, on double vinyl in an edition of 500 with liner notes by Kark J. Palouček. It hits stores on June 26.

Milwaukee has a worthy punk history, but F/i sprang from the later period of the original hardcore wave, morphing out of the stylistic stagnation alongside the highest-profile hardcore band from the city, Die Kreuzen. Starting as straight-up hardcore (but good… real good, in fact), Die Kreuzen became one of the few post-hardcore bands to incorporate both post-punk and non-doofus heavy metal into their sound. This made Die Kreuzen a solid fit for the Touch and Go Records experience.

Prior to F/i, Franecki had played in The Drag (no known recordings) and The Shemps (a couple of tracks on Mystic Records compilations) and was part of The Surfin’ Führers together with Greg Kurczewski (an ex-bandmate from The Drag) and Brian Wensing. The Surfin’ Führers released a six-song demo, “Peewaukee Surf,” in 1983 that was eventually reissued in 2013 as a 10-inch metal acetate in an edition of 20 copies.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 6/25/26

Milwaukie, OR | Milwaukie record shop asks for help identifying burglar after $5,000 in records and cash stolen: B-Side Record & Vintage posted a photo of the burglar on social media that was taken from a surveillance camera and captured the theft in progress. The owners of B-Side Record & Vintage, a Milwaukie record shop, are asking for help identifying a burglar who broke into their store and stole approximately $5,000 worth of records and cash. B-Side Record & Vintage posted a photo of the burglar on social media that was taken from a surveillance camera and captured the theft in progress. The person appears to be wearing a black hoodie, a black baseball cap and a red bandana covering part of their face.

Denver, CO | Wax Trax is opening a “real store” at Stanley Marketplace: The new branch will be the mini-chain’s fifth location. Pete Stidman has learned firsthand that the Mile High City has a serious addiction to vinyl since taking over Wax Trax Records, a mini-chain that’s in the midst of expanding its kiosk at Aurora’s Stanley Marketplace to what he refers to as a “real store” set to debut next month. “I do think Denver is unique in terms of how many records people buy and how many people love to buy records,” he says. “I chalk that up to shops like Wax Trax and Twist & Shout being here all along and never leaving. People have a tradition that they’re passing along to their kids of buying records.” Wax Trax certainly has a rich history.

Jacksonville, FL | Vinyl is back in style: 5 record stores in Jacksonville worth visiting. Making a cassette mixtape for your high school sweetheart to rocking a portable Walkman down the street were the early days of engaging with top hits. Today, the main way to listen to the latest chart-toppers is through streaming services. Recently, there has been a shift in mainstream pop culture aesthetic by embracing the past, from clothes to TV shows, including “vintage” ways of listening to music. Modern artists are starting to gain inspiration from legacy artists before them, and older music itself is also resurfacing. Specifically, vinyl records are one of the biggest music-listening forms that are on the surge, making what once was the past, the present. …Here are a few local record shops worth checking out.

US | 14 Vintage Images of Seventies Record Shops: Before everyone could access all the music in the world at their fingertips, discovering your taste in music meant spending time in one of the coolest places in the world. Record shops in the seventies were more than just stores; they were hangouts and cultural hubs where people flipped through vinyl sleeves, asked for song recommendations, and spent entire afternoons surrounded by music. Rows of album covers, people listening to albums together, and browsing customers reveal a slower, more hands-on way of engaging with music. Each photo reflects a time when finding a new favorite record meant wandering the aisles and talking with staff. Let’s take a look at 20 vintage images of seventies record shops.

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TVD Radar: Can,
Live in Arles 1975 2LP
in stores 9/25

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Mute / Future Days have announced details of the newest installment in a long running series of Can live albums: Can Live in Arles 1975. The new album—out on 25 September 2026—originates from a fan recording of the show, and documents a performance that founding member Irmin Schmidt remembers fondly.

Recorded on a sultry hot August night at the Roman Amphitheatre, Théâtre Antique d’Arles, Schmidt recalls, “I remember a very beautiful atmosphere. It was a summer night in the South of France, everybody was stoned and the atmosphere was very special.” This incredible recording mirrors the gauzy ambience of the evening.

Can Live in Arles 1975 features the core line up of Irmin Schmidt, Jaki Liebezeit, Michael Karoli, and Holger Czukay. The concert, with Nico and Kevin Ayres as well as Ash Ra Tempel supporting, is remembered by two fans—including the author / journalist Pascal Bussy—for the sleeve notes, which also feature a translation of a French magazine article from the time.

The new album is the latest in a series of live recordings that have been unearthed from the Spoon Records vaults and from fan recordings, then painstakingly assembled by founding member Irmin Schmidt and producer / engineer René Tinner.

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TVD Radar: Music Video Mischief by Nigel Dick in stores 9/15

VIA PRESS RELEASE | In his boisterous and entertaining memoir, Nigel Dick recounts his wild ride from record company motorcycle messenger to one of the world’s leading music video directors.

After a brief stint busking in the Paris Metro, Nigel Dick got his start in the music business at London’s upstart Stiff label in the late ’70s. From helping out on a Madness video, he began a career as a music video director; he went on to work with hundreds of stars, including Oasis, Ozzy, Cher, Paul McCartney, Guns n’ Roses, Toto, Britney Spears, Celine Dion, Alice Cooper, Def Leppard, Alice in Chains, and Tears for Fears. If you’ve watched MTV, you’ve seen his work.

Music Video Mischief goes behind the scenes for a wild ride through the creative process, the egos, the politics, and the logistics involved in making videos for A-listers. Dick shares entertaining tales of things going right and wrong, stars who were wonderful to work with and stars who weren’t, natural disasters, amazing triumphs, and mad dashes around the world—all with self-deprecating wit and the enthusiasm of a lifetime music fan.

Excerpt from Music Video Mischief | Richard Ogden called. Back in my motorcycle messenger days, I often dropped off packages at his office in West London. Back then he was managing Motörhead, but things had changed—I was now making music videos, and he was now managing Paul McCartney.

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Graded on a Curve:
T. Rex, Electric Warrior (Rhino High Fidelity Singles Edition)

There was a time in the early to mid-’70s when Glam was the hottest trend in music. Also referred to as Glitter rock, it had been brewing for a while and often encompassed groups or artists from other musical genres.

The dominant artists, who were all British, were David Bowie, Mott the Hoople, and T. Rex. By the time Glam was at the red-hot center of pop, T. Rex was, for the most part, the primary musical vehicle for Marc Bolan. Bolan had been on the scene for years before he hit big, starting with the short-lived John’s Children in the late 1960s.

Initially called Tyrannosaurus Rex, the group was, in their early days, primarily a duo comprised of Bolan and Steve Peregrin for their first three albums, with Mickey Finn replacing Peregrin for the fourth. The group played a distinctively trippy and heady brand of folk-inspired psychedelia on their first four albums. Two were released in 1968, one in 1969, and one in 1970.

The group became T. Rex in 1970 (thanks to some studio log-sheet shorthand by producer Tony Visconti) with their self-titled debut, which showed a funkier, flashier, more rock-oriented style, although Bolan and Finn were still the two main members. It wasn’t until 1971 with Electric Warrior that the group exploded and became truly a group with the addition of Steve Currie on bass and Bill Legend on drums, and with guests including Ian McDonald on sax, Howard Kaylan and Mark Volman on backing vocals, and Rick Wakeman supplying the keyboards on “Get in On.”

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  • SUPPORTING YOUR LOCAL INDIE SHOPS SINCE 2007


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