VIA PRESS RELEASE | Toronto indie rock collective Broken Social Scene announced Old Dead Young: B-Sides & Rarities, a career-spanning collection of B-sides, rarities, and outtakes pulled from 20 years of 7-inches, compilations, soundtracks, and hard-to-find releases. Fans can pre-order the album and stream the first single “This House Is On Fire,” a lush and heartbreaking dream pop track taken from the 2009 Forgiveness Rock Record recording sessions.
Once a two-person basement recording project, Broken Social Scene came to life onstage as a shadowy improvisational entity with a revolving-door roster, each concert a wholly unique experience dependent on the room, the weather, what they ate for dinner that night, and who was dropping in to play.
Where the band’s 2001 debut album, Feel Good Lost, presented BSS as an anonymous ambient project that reflected its humble, homespun origins, their electrifying live performances from that era rallied an extended family of performers with roots in post-rock (Justin Peroff; Do Make Say Think’s Charles Spearin), Latin jazz (Andrew Whiteman), art-folk (Feist), synth-pop (Amy Millan and Evan Cranley, also of Stars), dance-punk (Metric’s Emily Haines and Jimmy Shaw), and country rock (Jason Collett).
But by pursuing improvisational freedom over commercial considerations, Broken Social Scene set a new gold standard for indie rock in the 21st century with 2002’s You Forgot It In People, an album that pushed the genre far beyond its noisy ’90s slacker roots toward a more sonically expansive, emotionally expressive vision. And with follow up releases like the blissfully chaotic Broken Social Scene (2005), the rapturous Forgiveness Rock Record (2010), and the intricate, insidiously melodic Hug of Thunder (2017), Broken Social Scene have amassed a thrillingly amorphous, unpredictable body of work. Old Dead Young: B-Sides & Rarities is everything that happened in between.
Any good collection has a great number of different niches and subcategories: music and record collecting is no different. Some of us focus on rare soundtracks or hard-to-find instrumental music from Europe and the US that was released in the 1960s and ’70s. One could scour record stores for years and spend a great deal of money trying to chase down these revered sounds, or you could just pick up some releases by Frank Maston and be done with it.
Frank Maston—who goes just by Maston—is an American musician, composer, and producer who pays homage to those sounds, but through his own lens. In fact, Maston has chosen to live abroad in search of authenticity and finding musicians to work with who share his own visions. What’s most interesting is that, while Maston is a musician and composer, he appears to be most at home producing and arranging his projects much the way that record producers like David Axelrod or Jack Nitzsche did. While Matson creates the pieces of the puzzle, his true art comes to light in putting it all together.
Recently, Maston teamed up with the Swiss sextet, L’éclair to produce an album titled Souvenir which has all of the deep, funky, melodic grooves of those rare records we crazy collectors are always chasing. If you’re listening to us at The Vinyl District, you’ll hear our conversation, but if you’re joining us on the radio at WFDU, 89.1 FM, you’ll be treated to the music taken directly from vinyl. On this episode, Maston joins me from his apartment in Paris, France to discuss the makings of the new album, leaving his home to set out in search of his musical destiny, and how he sets the stage to bring his musical concepts to life.
Evan Toth is a songwriter, professional musician, educator, radio host, avid record collector, and hi-fi aficionado. Toth hosts and produces The Evan Toth Show and TVD Radar on WFDU, 89.1 FM. Follow him at the usual social media places and visit his website.
It’s that time of year again, when carolers stand a’caloring outside your house and just won’t shut up. It’s also the time when musical artists of all types release Holiday albums. Said albums come in three types. First, you have the ones who sing the hoary old classics, second (see Bob Dylan), and then you have the ones who write their own Christmas songs in hopes they’ll become hoary old classics (see just about everybody).
Finally we have those artists who release Yuletide albums that have fuck-all to do with Christmas, or any other holiday for that matter. This is where Unsane and Amphetamine Reptile Records come in. Everybody’s favorite noise rock label has given us many a grating band over the years—Killdozer, Cows, Unsane, the Jesus Lizard, Dwarves, the Melvins, the Boredoms, and Lubricated Goats to name just a few. Why not give us their own version of an unholy night?
Which they finally got around to doing with Unsane’s 1997 release Amrep Xmas. It makes for a great children’s gift: little Darcy is likely to run around the house screaming “Everyone must DIE!” while wee Todd plays it continuously until grandma suffers a fatal heart attack, sparing Santa’s reindeer the legal repercussions of trampling her to death. No maudlin sentimentality here. Just musical mayhem that makes Uncle Bob’s traditional shit-faced tumble into the Christmas tree the height of decorum.
First there’s the question of song titles. Nat King Cole never sang a carol entitled “Sick,” Bing Crosby one called “Body Bomb.” As for “Empty Cartridge,” not even that pair of psychotics the Carpenters would touch it. And the songs on Amrep Xmas are rather tame. Cows’ “Peacetika,” Melvins’ “Creepy Smell,” and Jesus Lizard’s “Puss” are enough to make you vomit in the eggnog.
Black Friday & Holiday Shopping Send Vinyl Album Sales Soaring, Led by Adele’s ’30’: Weekly U.S. vinyl album sales jump to their second-largest week since MRC Data began tracking sales in 1991. 2021 Black Friday sales and general holiday shopping promotions helped yield an eye-popping week for vinyl album sales in the U.S. In the week ending Dec. 2, vinyl album sales totaled 1.46 million (up 39%) – marking the second-biggest week for the format since MRC Data began tracking sales in 1991. The only larger week in the MRC Data era for vinyl album sales was registered in the week ending Dec. 24, 2020, when 1.84 million albums were sold. Overall, in the week ending Dec. 2, vinyl LP sales accounted for 46% of all albums sold in the U.S. (1.46 million of 3.17 million). Further, of just physical album sales (vinyl LP, CDs, cassettes, etc.), vinyl LP sales represented 54% of all albums sold for the week (1.46 million of 2.7 million). Vinyl’s influence can be seen in the latest top 10 of Billboard’s Top Album Sales chart (dated Dec. 11), where most of the titles in the region benefit greatly from vinyl sales.
Las Vegas, NV | As vinyl demand soars, Las Vegas record stores struggle to keep up: Along the red shelves at Zia Records are a bounty of CDs, DVDs and, of course, records, sheathed in plastic and tagged with price stickers. The store, which has two locations in Las Vegas, sells the music industry’s most popular physical format, purchases of which have boomed during the pandemic. The process of pressing vinyl—with approximately 23 minutes of music per 12-inch record—remains the same as it was decades ago. What has changed dramatically in recent months, however, is the time it takes stores like Zia to receive new records, or fresh copies of old ones, and get them out where customers can buy them. “It’s more difficult to expect to have everything available all the time,” says Mike Durham, media buyer for Zia. “It never really was [easy], but there’s been more issues with that [lately].” A shortage of vinyl pressing plants and key materials, along with recent supply chain and labor issues, have dragged the process down at a time when demand has skyrocketed.
Miami, FL | Best Record Stores In Miami: There’s nothing like a bit of nostalgia to calm the mind after a busy day. Whether it’s putting on a classic film, enjoying a childhood snack or listening to throwback tunes, all of these activities can provide a sense of comfort. For music lovers, arguably the most nostalgic form of listening to music is through record players. Something about the hum and slight imperfections of records gives the listener a more authentic experience compared to blasting Spotify through your headphones. We have rounded up the best record stores in Miami if you’re craving a slice of nostalgia.
Hamburg, DE | New record store opens in Hamburg: Remoto-Rec occupies the site formerly home to Smallville Records. A new record store called Remoto-Rec has opened in Hamburg. After Smallville Records’ long-running shop closed last month, the team behind Remoto-Rec took over the space in Neuer Kamp. The new store will stock fresh electronic releases, as well as second-hand vinyl, tapes, merch and DJ equipment. The space also plans to host workshops, in-stores and intimate shows, with the aim of becoming a “meeting point for the exchange of musical ideas in the field of electronic music and beyond,” cofounder Lars Witte told Resident Advisor. Additionally, in partnership with local shop 70s Stereo, Remoto-Rec will stock a selection of vintage hi-fi systems and turntables, and run a repair service in-store.
After a year and a half of concert postponements due to Covid-19, Blue October finally made it back to southern California for a handful of rescheduled shows supporting their 2021 “This is What I Live For Tour.” Justin Furstenfeld and company delivered a “welcome-back” performance that challenged the mind and stirred the soul on a crisp winter’s night here in Orange County.
To be completely transparent, I was never a huge Blue October fan growing up. My brother Mark absolutely loved this band, but for some reason I just couldn’t get into them. He always told me, “You won’t get it until you see them in concert.” Lucky for me I took his advice, and immediately became a huge fan after witnessing my first live performance (and since have never looked back). Sunday’s show at the House of Blues was my first time seeing them in a few years and was excited to see if they were going to pickup up where they left off pre-Covid. Only time would tell.
Opening for Blue October was a Minneapolis based pop band called Yam Haus. I’d never heard of these guys before and the pessimistic devil on my shoulder kept chirping that I’d probably be underwhelmed (at best) by their performance. Boy, was I wrong.
This quartet, featuring Lars Pruitt (vocals/guitar), Jake Felstow (drums), Zach Beinlich (bass), and Seth Blum (guitar), hit the stage with fury and kept the energy high throughout an abbreviated set that I really wanted to continue. The chemistry between bandmates was palpable, and the crowd was digging every minute of their killer performance. I see great things over the horizon for Yam Haus and look forward to digging further into this up-and-coming band.
Limited to 1,500 copies worldwide, the stunning release offers fans the ultimate window into the creation of the groundbreaking project and includes four LPs on exclusive color variants, featuring all 18 songs from Big Mess along with bonus discs containing unreleased reinterpretations of tracks from the album. In addition to the heralded duet version of “True” featuring Trent Reznor, the bonus discs will be comprised of new remixes from HEALTH, clipping. and more, as well as never-before-released songs with featured vocalists including Rebekah Del Rio, FEVER333, Blixa Bargeld, and a second vocal collaboration with Reznor.
Each record is held in its own unique jacket featuring a 3D lenticular print on the cover and is accompanied by a 60 page, hardcover artbook containing never-before-seen renderings of the distinctively unsettling digital sculptures of Elfman done by Sarah Sitkin, who crafted the album’s original artwork.
The special box set also includes a 20 page stitched soft cover lyric book with behind-the-scenes photos, a 12” x 9” art print signed by Danny himself, a detailed life-sized light up model of Elfman’s peculiar hand designed to be a stand-alone showpiece or one-of-a-kind night-light, and a code which provides downloadable digital audio files and a behind-the-scenes mini documentary on the making of Big Mess. All components are housed in a high quality two-piece box with liquid embossing on the cover and spot gloss embossing on the cover and sides.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | 1970 was a time for heady experimentation in popular music, but very few records—and even fewer on major labels—come close to matching the stylistic ground covered by William S. Fischer’s album Circles.
Composer/ arranger/ keyboardist/ saxophonist Fischer grew up woodshedding with the likes of Ray Charles, Fats Domino, Muddy Waters, and Percy Mayfield…and then took a sudden left turn by studying electronic music in Vienna during the mid-‘60s. There, he met Joe Zawinul, and ended up penning five of the six tunes on Zawinul’s groundbreaking 1968 album The Rise and Fall of the Third Stream.
Fischer went on to arrange for Herbie Mann, who signed him to his Embryo imprint for Atlantic Records; Circles was Fischer’s one and only release for the label. And he didn’t waste the opportunity; an utterly mind-blowing mix of Sly Stone funk, heavy Hendrix-y metal, southern soul, jazz fusion, and Stockhausen-esque explorations on the Moog synthesizer, Circles enlisted the same band (bassist Ron Carter, guitarists Eric Weissberg and Hugh McCracken) that Fischer had worked with while acting as Musical Director on Eugene McDaniels’ underground classic Outlaw, complemented by drummer Billy Cobham and a five-piece cello section.
Part two of the TVD Record Store Club’s look at the new and reissued releases presently in stores for December 2021. Part one is here.
NEW RELEASE PICKS:Duane Pitre, Omniscient Voices (Important) Pitre is an American experimental composer and musician (borrowing the description from his website) with an extensive discography in the ballpark of 20 full-length releases including collaborations (and excluding compilations, like this year’s outstanding The Harmonic Series II, also on Important), though for Omniscient Voices Pitre is in solo mode on electronics and a justly tuned piano. Equally prioritizing the piano and the electronics, Pitre employs a Max/MSP-based generative network to convert his piano motifs into data that is then fed into a pair of polyphonic, microtonal hardware synths with patches of Pitre’s own authoring. There is also controlled improvisation. The complexity of Pitre’s method (and I’ve even synopsized a bit) might suggest a rigorous if not quite unrelenting experience, but the five pieces (fitting nicely onto LP) engage with the minimal (cited influences: Morton Feldman, Arvo Pärt, Philip Glass, Steve Reich) in a productive and often surprising manner. Tense resonances are plentiful, but also an underlying sense of order. A
Gas, Der Lange Marsch (Kompakt) Gas is the ambient-techno project of Wolfgang Voight, debuting with a self-titled record in 1996, followed by Zauberberg the next year and Königsforst in 1998 (these three were compiled in the 10LP set titled Box in 2016), and then a long break that ended in 2017 with Narkopop. Arriving in 2018 was Rausch, and now Der Lange Marsch, which is comprised of 11 pieces, all of them title-tracks numbered sequentially. Purchasing either the 2LP, CD, or digital from Kompakt’s online store comes with an email download of the 11 files plus all the music in one file as a continuous track (not sure how this works with purchases made in brick-and-mortar shops or even other online retailers, as there is no download card). I mention the continuous track because it would seem to be the best (though certainly not the only) way to experience this set, partly because once the rhythm kicks in, it doesn’t let up, and it doesn’t really change). Still, don’t let the ambient or minimal descriptor give you the wrong idea. There is a lot going on throughout Der Lange Marsch, all of it worthy. A-
REISSUE/ARCHIVAL PICKS:V/A, Etching the Voice: Emile Berliner and the First Commercial Gramophone Discs, 1889-1895 (Archeophone) Captured by Emile Berliner’s disc gramophone in Europe (Germany to be exact) between the years of the title, these 102 tracks on two CDs represent, per Archeophone (frankly experts on the matter), the earliest and also the scarcest manufactured sound recordings in the world. That wall of LPs you’re (hopefully) cultivating? These sounds are square one. But if it’s a lengthy plunge into late 19th century musicality you seek, please adjust those expectations. Musical pieces, mostly played or sung solo but occasionally by bands or choirs, are certainly part of the weave, but so are recitations of speeches, nursery rhymes, jokes and prayers (mostly in German, sometimes in English or Spanish). There’s even a person clucking like a chicken and barking like a dog. Sweet. Surface noise is abundant, but in fact these recordings sound better now than they ever did before, even when new. It is a fascinating trip enhanced by the wonderful 80-page booklet. A
Doug Carn, Adam’s Apple (Black Jazz – Real Gone) This is the fourth and final record multi-instrumentalist (with a focus on keyboards) and bandleader Doug Carn made for the Black Jazz label (nobody made more, not even the guy who founded the label, Gene Russell). It’s also often nearer to progressive R&B than jazz (“Mighty Mighty” by Earth, Wind & Fire gets a nice cover, that in a sweet twist, delivers Adam’s Apple one of its jazziest moments), but with other enhancing elements integrated into the scheme, e.g. proggy organ (see “The Messenger” for evidence), numerous spiritual jazz motions, and some very interesting use of Moog synth (again, scope out “The Messenger”) Plus, even as Carn’s vocalist wife Jean Carn has departed the scene, there’s still an abundance of vocals (John Conner and Joyce Green joining Doug for the duties). Also: Calvin Keys on guitar. While Adam’s Apple strives for accessibility, it lacks in any brazen commercial gestures, unless you consider R&B to be a brazen commercial gesture. In which case…what in the fuck are you thinking? A-
Fort Wayne, IN | Welcome Back: Morrison Agen plans new vinyl record store: Morrison Agen, who sold his Fort Wayne vinyl record store Neat Neat Neat Records and Music about two years ago, plans a new venture: Welcome Back Records. And he won’t be alone in the new storefront. Come mid-January, Agen will share retail space with his stepdaughter Caitlin Dostal and her significant other, Isaac Sparks, in the former Wildwood Liquors, 3019 Broadway. The couple will operate their Dead Stock Vintage clothing store there as a separate business. Agen started Neat Neat Neat in 2011 and sold the business on South Calhoun Street to Wooden Nickel Music, which maintains the name. He had moved on to Agen Andersen Electronics with a business partner, but then something called COVID-19 hit. “We were developing some new devices for the audio-visual market,” he said. “We were pretty close to getting our first round of funding when coronavirus hit, which put a stop to that pretty quickly.”
Chicago, IL | No supply-chain worries for vinyl at record store: A slickly wrapped album under the Christmas tree still stirs emotions and piques curiosity for all those who will listen to the unique vinyl offerings during the extended holiday vacation. Music is synonymous with Christmas celebrations and gatherings. At Beverly Records, 11612 S. Western Ave., last-minute shoppers will find “everything Uncle John needs” right up until 3 p.m. on Christmas Eve, when second-generation owner Jack Dreznes closes shop “to spend time with my grandchildren.” “The Christmas shopping panic comes through our door like everyplace else,” said Dreznes. “Fortunately, there is no bottle neck in our supply chain. We’ve got something for everyone.”
Cambridge, WI | Madison record shop Strictly Discs to bring its collection, and a retail store, to Cambridge: Ron Roloff and his wife Angie opened Strictly Discs on Monroe Street in Madison in 1988. They expect to open a second store in Cambridge in May. A longtime independent Madison record seller plans to open a storefront and house its extensive inventory in a historic building in downtown Cambridge. Strictly Discs will keep its flagship store at 1900 Monroe St. in Madison, out of which it has sold CDs and new and vintage vinyl records for more than 30 years. It also plans to maintain its online presence at strictlydiscs.com., and on a variety of online collector platforms. “The Monroe Street store is not shutting down,” stressed Ron Roloff, who opened Strictly Discs with his wife Angie in 1988. He said he’s finalizing a lease for the main floor of 101 W. Main St. that most recently housed The Wood Shed. The hope is to open for retail sales in May.
Glasgow, UK | Glasgow music collective Hen Hoose gifted ‘rare vinyl’ by Yoko Ono: A Glasgow music collective recently received a special ‘early Christmas present.’ Hen Hoose, a grassroots music production house based in the city, was gifted a limited edition vinyl of Happy Xmas (War is Over) by Yoko Ono and her son Sean Ono Lennon. The record is one of fifty “rare” copies of the single, created as part of 50th anniversary celebrations of its original release. Twenty-five of the “extremely rare” records have been sent to a range of “hand-picked” music charities, non-profits, and grassroots organisations that Yoko and Sean feel are “undertaking great work across the UK music scene.” Founder and director of Hen Hoose, Tamara Schlesinger said it was “surreal” to receive the package and she could not believe it when she opened it last Thursday.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | 50 years since its release, the original motion picture soundtrack for Hal Ashby’s 1971 classic cult film Harold and Maude, made up exclusively of songs by Cat Stevens, will be released on 11th February 2022 in new 180g 1LP / 1CD / Digital release formats via Island / Cat-O-Log / UMC. The new edition of the soundtrack will combine Cat Stevens’ 9 original songs, as well as dialogue from the film, for the first time.
Hal Ashby’s 1971 film about the unlikely friendship-turned-love story of suicidal teenager Harold Chasen (played by Bud Cort) and 79 year old free spirit Maude (played by Ruth Gordon) is now widely praised as a bona-fide cult classic. Filled with dark humour and existential drama, the film represents the potentially glorious benefits that can arise from a balanced partnership between conservative pragmatism and colourful free-spirited idealism. It reveals the deep lying synergy that exists between seemingly opposing views and how, when united, they can flourish to their mutual advantage.
The movie’s success and cult status has in part been bolstered by its whimsical and poignant soundtrack, in which all songs are performed by Cat Stevens. Originally not wanting to release the soundtrack in fear of it being perceived as a “greatest hits” album in the early days of his career, film director Hal Ashby had to do some convincing. Having listened to songs from landmark albums Mona Bone Jakon and Tea For The Tillerman whilst editing Harold and Maude, Ashby knew from the start that he wanted exclusively Stevens’ songs to sonically narrate his film, and after a significant campaign, Ashby won Stevens over and thus, the soundtrack was brought to life.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | In Winston-Salem, NC, the late guitarist Sam Moss is a legend. A superior, highly versatile musician whose advocacy for the blues and 1960s mastery of the nuances of electric soloing somewhat paralleled Mike Bloomfield’s in Chicago, Moss was an inspiring, charismatic mentor to generations of North Carolina rockers, including Let’s Active and The dB’s. Southern Culture on the Skids’ Rick Miller tells us: “Sam was one of the hippest guys we knew—our Guru of Groove, the Maharishi of Mojo.”
A larger-than-life character, Moss astounded local audiences in his club appearances, yet he never released a record in his lifetime. So producer Chris Stamey was thrilled to discover, in 2020, on the end of an old tape, forgotten masters of Blues Approved, a spectacular Stax– and Muscle Shoals–influenced solo record, made with Mitch Easter in 1977.
This “great lost” record reveals that Moss was also a soulful songwriter and singer. It has now been carefully remixed and produced for release, with a deluxe booklet featuring detailed liner notes and bio, session notes by Easter, and lots of vivid color photos. Peter Holsapple (The dB’s) explains: “Sam Moss was an inspiration to so many of us; with the release of Blues Approved, now people everywhere will understand why.” Blues Approved will be released on CD and digitally by Schoolkids Records on January 28, 2022, with a vinyl edition to follow in early summer.
Moss had made the first of several trips to nearby Chapel Hill to record his own original compositions in early 1977, with old friend Easter on drums (and engineering). Mitch recalls: “I had a ‘studio’ in my house, meaning a Teac 2340 four-track recorder, three or four humble microphones, and for monitoring, the home stereo system. For extra-fancy sessions, I’d rent a Tapco six-channel mixer. . . . Sam came down with two or three guitars, his Fender Twin. I played drums and Sam played everything else. And it was a really good session!”
Paul McCartney The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present (Liveright), edited and with an introduction by Paul Muldoon, is a hefty, two-volume hardcover book, housed in a slip case and clocking in at nearly 1,000 pages. It covers 154 songs that McCartney wrote as a solo artist and while he was in Wings and The Beatles. In some cases, the songs were co-written with others.
The book includes such welcome discoveries as “Tell Me Who He Is,” an unearthed Beatles song discovered in the MPL Communications archives during research for this project. McCartney and Muldoon engaged in 29 sessions, comprising 50 hours of conversations, done between 2015 and 2020.
This book is beautifully laid out and offers more than just McCartney’s lyrics and his annotations on how songs were written, and in some cases, what inspired him to write a given song. The photos of handwritten lyrics, complete at times with McCartney’s playfully childlike doodles and basic chord sequences, are fascinating.
There are also family photos, postcards, letters, notebooks, scrapbooks, artwork, and other personal artifacts. Other items drawn from the MPL Communications archives include acetates, concert posters, tape boxes, and promotional items including curios from Apple, as well as a carefully collected handful of photos of some of McCartney’s contemporaries in the ’60s and ’70s—The Beach Boys, Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, and Joe Cocker.
The book has some of the same feel in spots as George Harrison’s book I Me Mine, where lyrics, memorabilia, photos, annotations, and other ephemera create a sense of the creative songwriting process and the man behind the music and his life and times.
Observatory by Aeon Station marks the solo debut from Kevin Whelan. Along with material specifically written for this album, it offers songs that were long intended for the follow-up to The Meadowlands by The Wrens, the band where Whelan played bass and sang. That makes its ten songs something of a big deal in the indie rock scheme of things, for more reasons than one. Glistening and anthemic, the record delivers an unabashed continuation of indie rock’s sound as it thrived in the ’00s and early ’10s of the 21st century. It’s out on vinyl, compact disc, and digital formats December 10 through Sub Pop.
The saga of the follow-up to The Meadowlands, an album released by the small indie Absolutely Kosher in September of 2003 to unexpected widespread acclaim, has come to a partial conclusion with Observatory. In short, Kevin Whelan could no longer wait for The Wrens’ next album to be deemed as finished, and so, took songs intended for that record, added some more, recorded them with Jerry McDonald on drums and his brother Greg Whelan on guitar (both members of The Wrens), plus his wife Mary Ann Coronel Whelan on backing vocals, and released them as Aeon Station.
Still, the inescapable: 18 years in wait for a follow-up is a long freaking time. As someone who writes about music specifically due to a lifetime spent unrelentingly listening to music, it’s my perspective that records are generally best when they come to fruition in a timely manner, which is frankly the case with most of the releases now considered canonical rock and pop masterworks. Of course there are exceptions, as The Meadowlands itself took a long time to make, though it’s not like very many people were waiting for that one (as said, the record’s success was something of a leftfield breakout).
Prolonged anticipation ushers in mounting expectations, with the whole scenario likely to become a burden. Such is the case here, and it’s a circumstance Observatory can’t avoid, even as its existence means the end of the drawn-out waiting period with a narrative twist hardly anybody expected and that fewer fans hoped for, plus a possible positive spin: “Hey, now we get TWO post-Meadowlands albums.”
Bury, UK | Record store Wax & Beans hosts live music day in Bury: A venue in Bury is taking centre stage for a major music showcase today. The Charlatans frontman Tim Burgess has been curating record fairs across Greater Manchester for the past couple of years. This has culminated in the most ambitious gathering to date, with Market Street’s Wax & Beans delivering six live acts, topped up by homegrown act Urban Theory. The rundown for the Bury leg kicks off with Cold Water Swimmers at noon, before Pageant Mum take to the stage at 1.30pm, Izzy at 2.30pm, Clouds and Errors an hour later, alt-folkster Granfalloon and Urban Theory from 6pm. Urban Theory played a well-received set, headlining the second stage at Head for the Hills in September. The outfit also slotted in an intimate gig at Wax & Beans and an acoustic set at The Met in November.
Winnipeg, CA | Taking a new concept out for a spin: Osborne Village mainstay Urban Waves finds adding vinyl records — Old Gold Vintage Vinyl — a success. If you haven’t visited Osborne Village mainstay Urban Waves lately, don’t be alarmed when you’re met by thousands of vinyl albums, the next time you poke your head through the front door. Pivot has become a bit of a catchword during COVID, what with scores of people switching careers, addresses… even partners. (“Why the pandemic is causing spikes in break-ups and divorces,” screamed a recent, BBC headline.) It would appear pivot is the name of the game at Urban Waves, as well. In early November a new, exterior sign went up there, announcing the presence of Old Gold Vintage Vinyl, a quality, used record shop that had already been on site in one form or another for a little over two years. No need to worry, Michele Arcand, Urban Waves’ founder, assures longtime customers initially perplexed by her and co-owner Brent Jackson’s store-within-a-store concept; neither she nor her array of pop culture paraphernalia, hand-crafted jewelry and funky, fashion accessories are going anywhere, any time soon.
Fort Madison, IA | Record store owners finding FM “feels kinda good.” A couple seasoned in global commerce are finding a very comfortable place in a small shop in Fort Madison. Mike and Allison (Pickard) Park opened Pool 19 Plants and Records in August and are enjoying the resurgence of the retail feel in downtown Fort Madison. The two opened the store in the Hesse Building which also houses Corks and Barrels, and Harvestville Farm Mercantile and have developed a following in just four months. But co-owner Mike Park said some people still come in not knowing they are there. Park is former news consultant with Twitter and Allison has had national success in marketing campaigns while working on the east and west coasts, and living in Japan. He said Allison’s parents wanted to move out of their larger home and the timing worked well for the two to move back to Fort Madison into the home. Allison’s father Jerry was an English teacher at Fort Madison High School for 35 years and Mike said the shop has been effective at rekindling memories of Allison’s childhood.
New York, NY | NYC’s midtown gets a cool indie makeover with hip new shops and restaurants: If you’re dreading the holiday trudge through touristy midtown this season, you’re in for a surprise: Rockefeller Center is rockin’! Tucked behind the Art Deco façade of 30 Rockefeller Plaza, in a space stuffed with some 10,000 vinyl records, there now lives a rock lover’s paradise. Rough Trade, an independent record store from London, opened at 30 Rock in June after closing its Williamsburg location in March. It’s helping usher in an edgy vibe to the long-stodgy area, bringing live performances to the outdoor Plaza and inside the famed 65th-floor Rainbow Room alike. Last month, the rarified venue played host to British post-punk band Dry Cleaning and Brooklyn’s The Muckers. “I feel like it brings a lot of indie and alternative artists to [those who wouldn’t] necessarily hear or see them,” said 24-year-old shopper and East Harlem resident Christian Salhany, of the store’s presence…
Before it was so rudely interrupted, Bob Dylan’s annual touring regimen took on a recurring pattern, playing the same towns the same times of the year. His last time in Washington, DC was the first week of December 2019. The final show in that leg of the campaign that he never called the Never Ending Tour looked like it may well have served as his last live performance ever as the pandemic raged on, closing venues for more than a year and a half, wiping out touring schedules for more than a year as Dylan, deserving a break after so many years of service, was entering his ninth decade.
But a brief month-long tour materialized despite all odds (and during a brief clearing in the gloom of Covid variants) and here was Dylan, back in DC at the Anthem during the first week of December 2021 closing the latest leg of his tour, selling out the place at 80.
With the latest handful of subtle but tasty musicians behind him, Dylan emerged from the shadows a couple of minutes before the 8 o’clock start time, suggesting an early bird special. The ensemble remained in shadows or silhouette for much of the show, which depended on dim footlights and illumination of the curtain folds behind them.
And when they all shambled to a start on an unrecognizable “Watching the River Flow,” it seemed like Dylan, behind a big upright piano, was sputtering to keep up, the river’s flow having gotten away from him. His voice was a froggy growl, as if frayed at the end of the tour, the timing all wrong. Things didn’t much improve on the next song announcing his intention to forge his own direction despite expectations, “Most Likely You Go Your Way And I’ll Go Mine.”