
Celebrating Nancy Sinatra on her 86th birthday. —Ed.
The pairing of singer Nancy Sinatra and singer-songwriter-producer Lee Hazlewood made for one of the 1960’s most delightfully unusual pairings, though the collaboration was a relatively short one, consisting of a slew of singles and a sole LP…until they reunited for a follow-up in 1972. Nancy & Lee Again is that album.
It might seem like the delayed nature of Nancy & Lee Again’s reissue is to some extent down to neglect on the part of the rights-holders, but please understand that the duo’s 1968 debut Nancy & Lee wasn’t given a standalone new edition until last year, also by Light in the Attic, the label that has, along with the Nancy Sinatra Archival Series, returned a fair portion of Hazlewood’s solo catalog to print since early last decade.
The main reason for Nancy & Lee’s belated appearance is due to the easy availability of the contents on compact disc, the entire record included on Rhino’s 1989 compilation Fairy Tales & Fantasies: The Best of Nancy & Lee. Plus, secondhand copies of the LP were easily findable (in varying degrees of condition, of course) in thrift shops, if not necessarily music stores. Unlike Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass’ Whipped Cream & Other Delights, Nancy & Lee wasn’t ubiquitous, but like Herb Alpert Presents Sergio Mendes & Brasil ’66 and The Association’s Greatest Hits!, it was quite a common find.
As these comparisons should help make clear, the descriptor of unusual isn’t interchangeable with strange. Now, anybody familiar with “Some Velvet Morning” and to a lesser extent, “Sand,” knows that pop psychedelic strangeness was part of Sinatra and Hazlewood’s stylistic bag. But weird took a back seat to playful C&W duets and proto-Vegas Middle-Of-The-Road-isms, with the palatability of both modes, and especially the latter, intensified by the combination of Sinatra’s youthful verve and Hazlewood’s buzzsaw tones and general eccentricity, a quality that was only laid on thick when it benefitted the song.





Berks County, PA | From Nostalgia to Sound Quality: The Modern Vinyl Revival: Vinyl records have made a resurgence over the past decade, and both collectors and artists have taken note. “The comeback started probably 20 years ago and then picked up steam about 15 and started to really go like crazy around 10,” said Chris Holt, who opened Young Ones Records in Kutztown 35 years ago. Record Store Day is a huge part of that resurgence, he said. Launched in 2008, the semi-annual event held the third Saturday in April and every Black Friday in November draws collectors and fans to thousands of independent record stores around the world. Many records are pressed specifically for the occasion, making that limited pressing
Falmouth, UK | Falmouth record shop Jam premises licence bid approved: Falmouth record shop Jam has had a premises licence bid approved – but a dispute over building repairs means the lease for the High Street shop has still not been signed. In April record shop owner Mandy announced that she was selling the business as a going concern to an unidentified business, which was later revealed to be Verdant Brewery. However at the end of May she posted on Instagram that the deal was on hold for an undisclosed reason, which wasn’t known until now. …Alex Morrell, representing Verdant and Green Spaces Cornwall, told the hearing the plan was simply to add a drink to the existing record-shopping experience. “It’s just basically to apply for a premises licence to be able to add an option of people 




Unfortunately, I disliked new wave, because in the wake of first-generation punk it sounded too wimpy, emasculated, and dance-oriented for my tastes. To paraphrase one David Bowie, “I never got it off on that new wave stuff/How bland/Too many Duran Durans.” Or to quote the great Minutemen, “Do You Want New Wave or Do You Want the Truth?”

When Stone finally dragged his bad self into the Record Plant in Sausalito to record the band’s fifth album, the results were completely unlike any previous Family Stone release. What is surprising, given Stone’s precipitous psychic decline, is that the result, 1971’s There’s a Riot Goin’ On, is perhaps the most brilliant LP he ever recorded.
Altadena, CA | Rebuilding Their Collection: Altadena Record Shop helps fire survivors build music catalogue. Altadena Musicians, a nonprofit organization that helps individuals affected by natural disasters replace lost instruments, has opened the Altadena Record Shop, giving fire survivors who lost record collections an opportunity to rebuild them for free. The record shop, located inside the Altadena Music Center, officially launched with an open house on May 30 and will offer monthly shopping sessions beginning Saturday, June 27. “We don’t have the ability to replace everybody’s entire record collection but at least we can give people a little bit of joy and let them have the experience of shopping
UK | Qobuz And Rough Trade Announce Global Co-Promotion Partnership: While vinyl records continue to thrive, like all physical media, record stores have to work harder than ever to compete with streaming services. As the saying goes, if you can’t beat them, join them, which explains why Rough Trade, the famous independent record store, has announced a deal with Qobuz, the France-based streaming service. As part of an initial two-year deal, Qobuz will be 



And to be blunt, Thunderclap Newman is a questionable entry into the club of the One Album Wonder anyway. They have the solitary LP down pat, but a passionate bout of quibbling just might break out over the Wonder part of the equation. For Hollywood Dream, released after “Something in the Air” spent three weeks as a UK number one hit, was something of a stiff in terms of sales. It climbed no higher than #161 in the US album chart, and the single was a bit of an American sleeper, making it to only #37. And in an odd twist, apparently the LP was even more coolly received in their home country.










































