The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Descendents, Enjoy! reissue variants in stores 4/24

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Org Music continues its comprehensive Descendents reissue series with Enjoy!, the third installment in the campaign celebrating the band’s foundational catalog and the latest release since the group reclaimed ownership of their master recordings. Originally released in 1986, Enjoy! captures Descendents pushing fully into their instincts, doubling down on short, fast, melody-driven songs that balance juvenile humor with sharpened songwriting and unmistakable urgency.

While the band had already helped define what would become pop punk, Enjoy! finds them expanding the formula without losing intensity. Tracks like “Hürtin’ Crüe” and “Get the Time” channel irreverence through speed, melody, and tension, while subtle new wave and pop touches—including a punked-up take on The Beach Boys’ “Wendy”—broaden the band’s sound without dulling its edge. Forty years on, Enjoy! remains a defining entry in the Descendents catalog and a crucial document of the band’s restless evolution.

This new edition arrives April 24, 2026 on LP, CD, and cassette, with multiple color-vinyl variants. Produced in close collaboration with the band, the reissue brings Enjoy! back into print across formats with careful attention to presentation and detail.

Among the vinyl offerings is a limited “Punk Note” edition featuring alternate packaging by John Yates (Stealworks), inspired by the iconic jazz designs of Reid Miles and Francis Wolff, whose work helped define the Blue Note label. This visual reimagining of punk classics continues the aesthetic series that began with Org Music’s Bad Brains reissues. Each “Punk Note” title includes new liner notes by BrooklynVegan senior editor Andrew Sacher and is housed in a deluxe case-wrapped jacket.

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TVD Radar: Digital Underground, Sex Packets 2LP, 2CD 35th anniversary reissues
in stores 3/27

VIA PRESS RELEASE | “Alright, stop what you’re doin’ ’cause I’m about to ruin / The image and the style that you’re used to…” With those words, Digital Underground’s “The Humpty Dance,” pushed hip-hop into a bold, new direction, sonically inspired by the sound of George Clinton’s Parliament-Funkadelic, mixing the creativity of the Bay Area and Miami scenes with memorably funny verses.

Sex Packets, their breakthrough debut album that offered “The Humpty Dance,” “Doowutchyalike” and more, returns for its 35th anniversary as a remastered and expanded edition from Tommy Boy Records on March 27, boasting redesigned 3-D artwork and rare and unreleased bonus tracks. Fans can pre-order Sex Packets (35th Anniversary) now here.

Available on 180-gram light blue/black on clear splatter 2LP vinyl, 2CD or digital, Sex Packets (35th Anniversary) will boast the extra tracks “A Tribute to the Early Days” (originally available on cassette versions of the album) and “The Humpty Dance (Humpstramental Mix)”; the previously unreleased “Blue View”; and the rare full version of “Gutfest ’89,” exclusively available on the 2CD and digital products. The digital version includes an exclusive bonus track: the Mini-Hump Radio Mix of “The Humpty Dance.” All five tracks will be available to stream or download for the first time ever.

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Graded on a Curve: The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Axis: Bold As Love UHQR Edition

Axis: Bold as Love, the second album from The Jimi Hendrix Experience (Jimi Hendrix, Noel Redding, and Mitch Mitchell), originally released in December 1967, is the middle child of the trilogy of albums that introduced guitarist Jimi Hendrix to the world and often receives much less attention than the other two albums.

As detailed in an overview of the Bold As Love box set from 2025, the album was recorded quickly at Olympic Studios in London, following the startling group debut of Are You Experienced?, and was released just seven months after that album in the UK. Hendrix often lamented that the album was rushed, but a listen to it reveals a musician burning with inspiration as a songwriter, guitarist, and studio innovator. The album features some of Hendrix’s most beloved songs, including “Little Wing” and “Spanish Castles.”

Hendrix grew to love working in the studio, and this album takes some of the raw fury and guitar dazzle of Are You Experienced? and adds songs of great depth, often with more emphasis on mood and spirit than sheer guitar prowess. Hendrix was becoming more involved in shaping the sound of his music in the studio and did so on the album’s mix, alongside engineer Eddie Kramer and manager Chas Chandler. Unfortunately, side one of the album had to be remixed in one night at the last moment by Hendrix, Kramer, and Chandler, as Hendrix lost the master tape in a taxi. Over the years, those involved in the making of the album have said this added to the rushed nature of the album.

This new UHQR release of the album from Acoustic Sounds marks a slight departure in design for the UHQR package. The new outer box is a flip-open, clam-shell package with gold foil lettering, with the change being a flip-open design replacing the rounded dowel spine, slip-case box. Released previously in a UHQR package as a single-33 1/3 vinyl album, this set is a double 45- RPM Clarity vinyl set, with the two vinyl records in audiophile archival sleeves in a plastic sleeve.

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TVD Radar: Independent Label Market London returns to Coal Drops Yard, 5/9

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Independent Label Market takes over Coal Drops Yard, King’s Cross, on Saturday 9 May, bringing together the best in independent music, vinyl culture, artist-makers and local brewing. Now 15 years strong, Independent Label Market is both a showcase for independent labels and a key meeting point for music fans, labels and industry alike. This year, ILM joins forces with Bristol New Music Festival, to launch ILM Bristol, a new pop-up market at Bristol Beacon.

This spring, ILM London will transform Coal Drops Yard into a vibrant hub of independent culture. A carefully curated line-up of the UK’s most exciting indie labels, will be joined by local brewers pouring their finest wares at the London Brewers’ Market, alongside the ILM Live Stage spotlighting emerging artists from participating labels. Label and artist DJ sets, powered by Audio Gold, will provide a high-fidelity soundtrack to ILM’s open-air party, while Voices Radio broadcasts live from King’s Cross, championing the area’s creative community. Selected sets will be uploaded to their Mixcloud channel after the event. Full programme details coming soon.

The market brings together the gold standard of UK independent labels alongside a new wave of rising names, including 4DAD, BBE Music, Because, Bella Union, Big Dada, Brainfeeder, Brownswood, Chess Club, Chrysalis, Communion, Erased Tapes, Far Out, Fire, Full Time Hobby, Ghostly, Hyperdub, Jagjaguwar, Late Night Tales, Mute, Ninja Tune, Nonclassical, Secretly Canadian, Sonic Cathedral, Speedy Wunderground, Transgressive, Tru Thoughts and Wah Wah 45s. Beyond the label stalls, the market also welcomes Disco Pogo, Rock & Roll Public Library, War Child and Mr Bingo.

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Graded on a Curve: Ragger,
Euphonic Sounds

Marc Riordan and Jon Leland are multi-instrumentalists, extensive collaborators, members of Sun Araw and also Ragger, an undertaking dedicated to playing the ragtime compositions of Scott Joplin on synthesizers (Riordan) and electronic V drums (Leland). If Wendy Carlos springs to mind, that’s a solid conclusion to jump to, but think of Carlos composing for Nintendo while sitting on a big-ass synthetic mushroom.

This electronic ragtime impulse isn’t revivalist, but neither is it a gimmick. Instead, Euphonic Sounds connects as a thoughtful and fascinating reinvigoration that retains its recognizability and is a sheer pleasure to listen to, even for those who’ve never, or hardly ever, brutalized a joystick or commandeered a controller in their lives. Ragger’s debut release is out now on compact disc, cassette, and digital through Hausu Mountain.

There’s nothing inherently boneheaded about tackling the ragtime style in a purist manner. When a skilled pianist who understands the music is sitting at the bench, ragtime’s worthiness can still be very much in evidence. It’s Joshua Rifkin’s three volumes of Scott Joplin compositions recorded for Nonesuch from 1970–’74 that set the standard and, crazy as it might seem now, rescued The King of Ragtime from obscurity.

Ragger establishes that straight ahead isn’t the only route to ragtime success. Euphonic Sounds includes four Joplin pieces handled by Rifkin on those Nonesuch sets—the title track, “Paragon Rag,” “Original Rags,” and “Weeping Willow.” And adds four more. The final selection, “Wiggle Rag,” was composed by George Botsford. As said, this album isn’t a gimmick on Ragger’s part and is also not an attempt at twisting or otherwise distorting the ragtime form into something deliberately strange.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 2/25/26

Loveland, CO | Look inside northern Colorado’s latest funky vinyl shop: As of February 2026, there was another reason to visit Downtown Loveland, as a record shop opened. Any Coloradan that has a love of music, will need to put this spot on their list of places to browse and find that one of a kind vinyl. A man, working on what was his third career, opened PigStyle in February of 2026. He’d been a forestry researcher, and a software engineer in his life; owning and operating a record store would be his third endeavor. It must have been exciting for him to get into the business of “vinyl,” as opposed to his other careers. Downtown Loveland did have a record shop for more than a few years on 4th Street, but Downtown Sound ended up moving to Greeley in 2024. A record shop is something, in my opinion, that all downtowns should have; so PigStyle is more than welcome.

Carmel, IN | CTYZN Records Opens In Carmel: The newest Central Indiana record shop was started by a father-and-son duo looking to fill a void in their community. Last month, the father-and-son duo of Moden and Oliver Thibideau celebrated the grand opening of CTYZN Records in the Carmel Arts & Design District, bringing a record shop to Carmel for the very first time. Located at 420 W. Main St., CTYZN (pronounced Citizen) Records carries a curated blend of vinyl, CDs, cassettes, thrifted finds, new releases, rare pulls, and oddball treasures. As a musician and longtime music lover, Oliver (age 18) couldn’t be more excited about opening the shop. “I have wanted to open a record store for two years now,” he says. “It had been a dream of mine. That initially started because I’ve always been into music. And growing up, my parents always had vinyl record players…”

Stroud, UK | From vinyl to CDs: Memories of Stroud’s Woolworths. Woolworths was a mainstay of Stroud’s retail scene for almost a century, serving generations of shoppers on the town’s high street. …Many residents will remember the store’s escalators to the upper floor, its popular pick-and-mix counter, vinyl records and the later arrival of CDs, alongside a wide range of goods including fishing tackle and bicycles, TVs, Amstrad hifi, ZX Spectrum, Vic 20, C64, watches, toasters and hairdryers. Stroud Times editor Ash Loveridge recalled Woolworths in the 1980s: “As a child, I’d head into Woolworths to watch the football results roll in on the TVs for sale. Riding the escalators felt like an adventure, and flicking through the vinyl racks was a genuine thrill—how times have changed.”

Los Angeles, CA | DVDs are the new vinyl records: Why Gen Z is embracing physical media. Before the lights dimmed for the film, “The Lady from Shanghai” at Vidiots, Aidan Gannon and Jason Fine were busy perusing the aisles of endless DVDs. For these young cinephiles, the Eagle Rock hub isn’t just a theater—it’s a gateway to film history. In a matter of minutes, the 24-year-olds found themselves in the thick of its “Star Wars” DVD and Blu-ray collection, reminiscing about the special features they enjoyed as kids. But for them, collecting and watching DVDs isn’t merely a childhood memory. They’ve rediscovered the medium as adults. “I want something I can put on my shelf,” Gannon said, having recently collected 200 discs. “I can go shopping in my closet and grab something and pop it in, instead of spending an hour scrolling through Netflix to find something and then just turning on the same TV show.”

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TVD Radar: Terry Callier, At The Earl of Old Town 2LP in stores 4/18

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Time Traveler Recordings will release the recently unearthed Terry Callier At The Earl Of Old Town, the influential singer/songwriter’s captivating 1967 solo performance at Chicago’s intimate and historic folk club, as an exclusive RSD 180-gram two-LP set on April 18, 2026. The package, recorded by longtime jazz venue owner Joe Segal, will be available on CD on April 24, which would have been Segal’s 100th birthday.

This album is the latest release from premier archivist and “Jazz Detective” Zev Feldman and illuminates the early work of a widely influential and remarkably singular artist. Recorded a year before the release of his debut LP, Callier infused the repertoire and format of folk music with the energy and spirit of jazz improvisation. Segal, founder of Chicago’s beloved Jazz Showcase, recorded the performance which was among the vast treasure trove of Joe Segal’s archives which Wayne Segal opened to Feldman in 2025.

Along with Joe Lizzy’s pristine restoration and Matthew Lutthans’ expert mastering, the package includes liner notes by Callier’s longtime friend, Real Jazz Sirius XM program director Mark Ruffin. Callier’s daughter, Sunny Callier, serves as an executive producer.

Callier, who was 22 years old when he performed at The Earl Of Old Town, grew up in Chicago’s North Side Cabrini-Green public housing projects alongside such R&B stars as Jerry Butler and Curtis Mayfield. But his own music took a different path when he brought his acoustic guitar and quietly compelling voice to the counter-culture folk music clubs that shaped the Old Town neighborhood in the 1960s. His voice and guitar are centered here with the club’s background sounds adding a sense of historic ambiance. Ultimately, this recording presents Callier’s early command of a stage and indicates where he would go in the future.

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TVD Radar: Hurray for the Riff Raff, Live Forever 2LP in stores 5/8

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Today (2/23), on the exact two-year anniversary of The Past Is Still Alive—named one of the Best Albums of the 2020s So Far by Pitchfork, and one of the Best Albums of 2024 by The New York Times, The Atlantic, Associated Press, NPR Music, Rolling Stone, Billboard, OUT, Mojo, Uncut and a multitude of others—Hurray for the Riff Raff announces the release of a new live record.

Arriving digitally on March 20th, and physically on May 8th via Nonesuch, Live Forever was captured over the course of two sold-out summer nights at the Old Town School of Folk Music in bandleader Alynda Segarra’s new home of Chicago, Illinois. Spanning 14 songs, Live Forever presents The Past Is Still Alive in its entirety, as well as a selection of Hurray for the Riff Raff’s show-stopping, set-defining staples: decrying ICE on the poetic “Precious Cargo” and The Navigator’s anthemic “Pa’lante”; the prescient digital age critique of “Pyramid Scheme”; and ripping through a folk-rock rendition of LIFE ON EARTH’s “Rhododendron,” which is out today with a new video shot at Old Town School of Folk Music.

“I moved to Chicago in September 2024, the year I released The Past Is Still Alive and hit the road with a new band—a group of musicians recommended by my front of house/production manager, Johnny Wilson. Everyone had ties to the city, and had been playing together in the DIY scene for over a decade.

Since then, we’ve traveled the world together, becoming family, playing the best shows of my life. Chicago has become home for me, and I feel grateful for the welcome I’ve gotten into the best music scene in the country.

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Graded on a Curve:
The Session Man:
Nicky Hopkins

Remembering Nicky Hopkins, born on this day in 1944.Ed.

Ever since the late ’50s/early ’60s pop music explosion, session or studio musicians were integral to recording. Whether they be backing singers, soloists, part of such illustrious posses as the famed Wrecking Crew, or the musicians who were the heart and soul of the Motown sound, these formerly somewhat anonymous players have been given their due over the years in books and in such movies as Standing in the Shadows of Motown from 2002, The Wrecking Crew from 2008, and 20 Feet from Stardom from 2013.

For anyone who has followed the birth and evolution in particular of British rock, from the singles-based British Invasion or album-based ’70s, one name stands out for those who read liner notes: British pianist Nicky Hopkins. In 2011 the book And on Piano …Nicky Hopkins: The Extraordinary Life of Rock’s Greatest Session Man by Julian Dawson was published. The book came many years after Hopkins passed away in 1994 at the age of 50. That book did a lot to recognize what an important musical artist he was and solidified his place in rock music history.

A new film entitled The Session Man: Nicky Hopkins is sure to bring his legacy alive for even more fans of great British and in some cases even American music. The film was directed by Mike Treen who has primarily worked in television. The timing is just right as it was just announced that Hopkins will be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame with the “Musical Excellence Award.”

This is a perfectly crafted musical doc and includes a star-studded cast of interviewees with whom Hopkins worked. There are interviews with Keith Richards, Bill Wyman, Peter Frampton, Nils Lofgren, Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady, Jim Keltner, Terry Reid, Chuck Leavell, Graham Parker, P.P. Arnold, Harry Shearer from Spinal Tap, and record producers Glynn Johns, Shel Talmy, and Chris Kimsey, among many others. There’s also an audio interview with Pete Townshend and a previously filmed interview with Mick Jagger.

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TVD UK

UK Artist of the Week: YAKKIE

London DIY mainstays unite in YAKKIE, a snarling new punk force built from serious underground pedigree. Featuring members of Dream Nails, Personal Best, Petrol Girls, and Colour Me Wednesday, the four-piece deal in grit-heavy riffs, dual-vocal bite, and politics that feel lived-in rather than slogan-led.

Debut album Kill The Cop Inside Your Head lands with tape-saturated immediacy, recorded live to capture the band’s raw edge. The title, borrowed from Augusto Boal’s concept of confronting internalised oppression, reframes punk as both external resistance and internal reckoning. It’s as personal as it is political.

The band described embracing imperfection in the studio, urgency over polish, instinct over gloss. That ethos runs throughout the record: taut, confrontational, and unafraid to be messy.

With a launch show at The Victoria in London and more new material already in motion, YAKKIE feel less like a side project and more like a necessary escalation. Direct, DIY, and defiantly loud; exactly as punk should be.

Kill The Cop Inside Your Head is in stores now.

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Graded on a Curve:
The Tomeka Reid Quartet, dance! skip! hop!

The Tomeka Reid Quartet consists of the leader and composer on cello, Mary Halvorson on guitar, Jason Roebke on bass, and Tomas Fujiwara on drums. This lineup has been solid since their debut recording arrived in 2015, and with dance! skip! hop!, they’ve now cut four full-length albums of structurally dynamic and skillfully exploratory contemporary jazz. The set consists of five tracks that range from astute swing to full-throttle scorch. The record is out now on limited vinyl (black, green, multi-colored one-of-a-kind CHROMA), limited compact disc, and digital through Out Of Your Head Records.

A band that stays together can attain exemplary levels of elevated interaction and do it gracefully. Some might say these bands make it sound like they are doing it with ease, but anybody who has played an instrument, or even (especially) tried to play an instrument and failed, will understand there is nothing easy about it. Interacting and improvising with other musicians can increase the level of difficulty but also inspire heightened creativity.

As the leader of this decade-long-running quartet, Tomeka Reid brings the compositions and also an instrument that, while solidly established in jazz history (Fred Katz, Oscar Pettiford, Ron Carter, Abdul Wadud, Hank Roberts, and Eric Friedlander, to name six), still has a captivating freshness about it when played well, and Reid plays with consistent excellence.

And so, the Tomeka Reid Quartet continues to get down to it on dance! skip! hop! This is due to a lack of faltering by any participant, but we’re not done with Reid yet. In the opening title track, she presents a composition that’s almost bebop-like in its sheer infectious groove-verve. Roebke and Fujiwara lay down a foundation that’s massive as a linebacker but still supple like a youthful ballerina, upon which Halvorson and Reid get off and go off mightily.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 2/24/26

Kingston, UK | Kingston record store expands into site of former café: A record store in Kingston has expanded its venue into the site of a former café next door. Banquet Records, which is located in 52 Eden Street expanded into the site of Spuds, located in no.56, yesterday (Thursday, 19 February). In a post on Instagram, the store’s owner, Jon Tolley said: “2025 was our busiest ever year and it became pretty obvious that we need more space and more capacity, so when these really big things come in, when we’ve got thousands of albums to ship out in two days’ time, we can deal with it. “So, this is our solution. Now I’m as big a fan as Spuds as anybody in Kingston. I think I’ve eaten a potato there every week for 20 years. But Spuds, the potato shop two doors down, is no more.”

Launceston, UK | Meet the people leading a vinyl revival in unexpected Cornish town of Launceston: ‘I send people to him and he sends people to me. We have people who come to the town specifically to visit two records shops.’ …Simon has been into records his whole life and when he moved to Cornwall a couple of years ago—he decided to do what makes him happy and so he opened a records store. “…This little town Launceston has two records shops and people now come because it has two record shops,” Simon agreed. “The guys at Keep Audio Co are great. They offer completely different music from us, so between us we cover all the bases.” Dale Walters, founder of Keep Audio Co, a record store and cafe in Southgate Place which also sells second-hand hifi, guitars and everything else musical, could not agree more.

Rochester, NY | Turning a record shop into a live recording studio: …The audience and the performer are on the same level. This small recording panopticon was set up hours earlier by Dan Gross, who is quick to exclaim to anyone who approaches him after doors open that the show is gonna be great and that the soundcheck was special. His excitement is as genuine as it is contagious. …This all-involved approach allows him to turn Bop Shop Records on Monroe Avenue into a performance venue/recording studio hybrid that provides the audience—and the musician—with a unique experience. While events produced by Stereo Field Recordings aren’t always at Bop Shop, its unconventional layout, sound-reflective tin ceilings, uneven walls of records, and comfy atmosphere make it a perfect space for Gross to stage most of his shows.

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Greenfield, MA | Spinning a new story: Greenfield residents to offer new sober space for music lovers with Turners Falls record store, cafe. Greenfield residents Mark Schwaber and Ada Langford are spinning something new on Avenue A—a record store and cafe with a focus on community building around physical media in a sober and inclusive setting. Schwaber, 53, and Langford, 45, are planning to open Two Ghosts Vinyl Cafe at 104 Avenue A, the former home of Textür Beauty Bar. The store is expected to be open from noon to 8 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. Schwaber is a touring musician and veteran of the New England independent music scene. He co-owned Easthampton’s Night Owl Records from 2003 to 2008 and spent a decade at Platterpus Records in Westfield. He and Langford have worked in the field of substance use disorder and mental health as counselors, and are both in recovery from addiction themselves.

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TVD Los Angeles

TVD Live Shots: Ghost at the Honda Center, 2/21

PHOTOS: GREG VITALICH | On a chilly Saturday evening in Orange County, Ghost brought their Skeletour World Tour 2026 to the Honda Center in Anaheim, delivering a night of theatrical grandeur and demonic mastery that left fans of all ages wide-eyed and spellbound. With an incredible setlist spanning nearly 20 years, the Swedish rockers from Linköping proved once again why they are considered the most amazing live act in modern music today. The show was powerful, intimate, and highlighted the musical genius that we have come to know as Tobias Forge. Let the ritual begin!

From the moment the lights dimmed and the haunting strains of Jan Johansson’s “Klara Stjärnor” played over the speakers, the near-capacity Honda Center was immediately transformed into Southern California’s largest cathedral of rock. The crowd, a sea of face-painted fans and devil-horn salutes, erupted as Papa V Perpetua finally took the stage around 9:15 PM. Ghost’s signature blend of gothic theatrics and arena rock bombast was on full display, with elaborate stage props, pyrotechnics, and a light show that danced in perfect harmony with the music. The energy in the room was electric, a testament to Ghost’s ability to create an immersive experience that feels both intimate and massive.

The 21-song setlist was a carefully curated masterclass through Ghost’s demonic evolution, with highlights that showcased their versatility, showmanship, and connectivity with their incredibly loyal fanbase. Here are a few of my highlights from the show:

“Cirice” – This Grammy-winning track from 2015’s Meliora was a standout moment, with its haunting intro building into a thunderous crescendo. The band’s precision and Tobias Forge’s commanding presence as Papa V Perpetua made this performance one of my favorites of the evening.

“Majesty” – Another track from Meliora, this one highlighted the incredible creativity of Tobias Forge as he mysteriously ascended from the ashes into the ethos above the stage to oversee the ongoing ritual. His papal regalia looked 20’ tall if not more as fans’ jaws dropped in complete amazement during this fan favorite.

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TVD Radar: Linda Perry documentary Let It Die Here in theaters 5/19

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Following its critically acclaimed debut at the Tribeca Film Festival, Mercury Studios is announcing that the feature-length documentary Linda Perry: Let It Die Here will launch a global theatrical rollout beginning this May.

Directed by award-winning filmmaker Don Hardy (Citizen Penn, Pick of the Litter) and produced by KTF Films, the film offers an unfiltered portrait of one of the most influential figures in modern music. Evan Saxon Productions will distribute the film theatrically. The film was met with widespread praise following its premiere in Tribeca. Rolling Stone hailed it as “the rawest, most revealing music documentary in years,” while Billboard called the film “riveting,” noting that it captures an artist with “plenty left to say.” The Wrap praised the documentary for revealing “hidden truths” and highlighted Perry’s “vulnerability.”

The theatrical release opens in New York City on May 8 and will feature a special opening night screening followed by a Q&A and live performance. The film will open in Los Angeles on May 15, also accompanied by a Q&A and performance, before expanding through all markets from May 19.

Linda Perry: Let It Die Here chronicles the life and career of the GRAMMY and Golden Globe nominated songwriter, producer, and 4 Non Blondes front woman. Iconic in the nineties for the era-defining hit “What’s Up,” Linda Perry has spent the past three decades reinventing herself as one of pop music’s most prolific behind the scenes hitmakers. Her songwriting and production credits include Dolly Parton, Christina Aguilera, P!nk, Adele, Miley Cyrus, Celine Dion, Alicia Keys, Gwen Stefani, The Chicks, Ariana Grande, Weezer, and more.

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Graded on a Curve:
David Sylvian,
Brilliant Trees

Celebrating David Sylvian on his 68th birthday.Ed.

When UK new wavers Japan broke up in 1982, the members predictably splintered off into various directions, and the highest profiles belonged to Mick Karn and David Sylvian. Over the decades the latter has amassed a solo and collaborative discography of unlikely reach and impressiveness; however, giving a fresh listen to ‘84’s Brilliant Trees makes abundantly clear Sylvian’s career trajectory isn’t as surprising as it might initially seem.

Upon consideration, very few musicians who made their name in the pop sphere have aged as well as David Sylvian. Of course, this is mainly due to his choice after Japan’s dissolution (they briefly reunited for one self-titled ’91 album under the name Rain Tree Crow) to gradually leave the milieu that fostered his initial reputation. The subsequent journey led him into the outlying territories of experimentation and the avant-garde, though this shouldn’t give the false impression that Sylvian’s post-Japan oeuvre is devoid of pop elements.

As a youngster of the ‘80s, I knew little of Japan, my discovery of Sylvian supplied by his ’87 collaboration with Ryuichi Sakamoto, Secrets of the Beehive. The introduction was made through the frequent play and promotion of said disc by my hometown Mom & Pop record mart, an enterprise also involved in the sale of high end stereo equipment.

To my teen mind any system comprised of separate components was high end, and at the time Secrets of the Beehive basically eluded me, as did much “deep-listening” material attached to ambient, new age, minimalism, art-pop etc. Reengaging with Sylvian as a mature adult provided, if not an epiphany than another instance aiding the realization that artistic assessments work in tandem with personal growth, therefore flouting finality.

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  • SUPPORTING YOUR LOCAL INDIE SHOPS SINCE 2007


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