VIA PRESS RELEASE | “If your definition of ‘alternative music’ is Nirvana, The Smiths, and Radiohead, you’re missing out on perhaps a more profound and outrageous collection of talented outliers. Greg Prato’s oral history of alt-rock is an absorbing deep dive into an era when—for a short and wondrous time—freaks and geeks ruled the world.” —Brad Tolinski, author of MC5: An Oral Biography of Rock’s Most Revolutionary Band
No era in rock history delivered a more jarring upheaval—in sound and sensibility—than the 1990s. Practically overnight, hair metal —once dominant on radio and MTV—was swept aside. In its place surged a wave of alt-rock revolutionaries like Jane’s Addiction, Nine Inch Nails, Faith No More, Primus, Smashing Pumpkins, and, of course, Nirvana. These and other bands and artists didn’t just redefine rock—they reshaped the cultural landscape, transforming everything from fashion to politics with a raw, unfiltered ethos that felt like a wholesale rejection of the decade before.
This radical reordering of rock’s DNA is at the heart of Alternative for the Masses: The Oral History of the ’90s Alt-Rock Revolution, where veteran music critic Greg Prato delivers the definitive chronicle of the era, straight from the musicians and figures who lived it. Through more than 60 new interviews conducted exclusively for the book—focused on the pivotal years of 1990 to 1995—Prato assembles an insider’s portrait of the artists, trends, and cultural ruptures that shaped the alt-rock explosion.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Devendra Banhart has announced the 20-year anniversary reissue of his beloved album Cripple Crow. Out on September 12, the Cripple Crow 20th Anniversary Deluxe Edition marks the first release on Banhart’s own label Heavy Flowers, distributed by Secretly Distribution. Along with the announcement, Banhart has released a demo of “I Feel Just Like A Child,” an early version of the fan favorite from the original Cripple Crow release.
The Cripple Crow 20th Anniversary album reissue includes a third bonus LP featuring “The Seventies” (a never-before-released recording from the Cripple Crow sessions), “Shame” (the long out of print B-side to “Long Haired Child”), five previously unreleased demos, and two live recordings. It also includes expanded artwork and liner notes written by Banhart himself.
Of the reissue, Devendra Banhart says: “Cripple Crow! equal parts gag and pride! What a trip! What a ride! What a time! It’s all a bit embarrassing, and yet, it was such a beautifully free time of uncensored experimentation and loving camaraderie that I can’t help but be proud to share this reissue with a bunch of new stuff I can’t believe didn’t get burnt in my ‘burning my archives’ phase! Thank you to everyone for sharing bits of pics and ephemera ya had flopping around!”
Originally released on September 12, 2005 Cripple Crow was met with international critical acclaim. Pitchfork praised it as an “undoubtedly impressive, vastly singular… inspired listening experience” and Rolling Stone called it “terrific,” specifically noting Banhart’s “impressionistic lyrics and a quavery croon.” Meanwhile, NME lauded Cripple Crow as a “cut-and-come-again treat” and The Guardian gave the project a rave four-star review.
On 1992’s Automatic for the People—one of the finest LPs released that year or any other year for that matter—Michael Stipe and R.E.M. play Risk. The goal of the board game is to conquer the world, and that’s exactly what Automatic for the People did. Sure, the LP had its detractors and haters, but they were holed up in Yakutsk and things weren’t looking good.
R.E.M. arose from the burgeoning Athens, Georgia indie rock scene with 1982 EP “Chronic Town,” a record that bore an element of mystery that had as much to do with Stipe’s indecipherable vocals as it did the fact that nothing else sounded quite like it. I spent significant amounts of time trying to figure out what Stipe was saying in “Gardening at Night,” but he may as well have been speaking Quechua. Stipe kept mumbling on 1983’s aptly titled Murmur, but indecipherable lyrics notwithstanding “Radio Free Europe” was one of that year’s best songs.
As Stipe began to enunciate the band lost some of its luster—1984’s Reckoning, 1985’s Fables of the Reconstruction, and 1986’s Life’s Rich Pageant all had their moments, but none broke new musical ground, and R.E.M. seemed a band going nowhere. Then came 1987’s Document and “It’s the End of the World As We Know It (and I Feel Fine)” and suddenly R.E.M. found itself with a mass audience. They cemented their place as a commercial pop contender with the playful “Stand” on 1988’s Green and “Shiny Happy People”on 1991’s Out of Time. Both showed the band had a lighter sound, while “Losing My Religion” on the latter LP proved R.E.M. could produce a commercial blockbuster.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Daniel Johnston’s legacy is legendary. The quintessential DIY artist started his career in Austin, TX whilst hawking cassettes from his day job at McDonald’s. The rest, as they say, is history, and fans of US alternative music from the 1980s onwards know about his work and the people he went on to inspire.
This, however, is not a biography; it’s a simple piece of communication to let people know about the second pressing of Daniel’s radio sessions recorded for the BBC as a double album entitled Love Lives Forever (BBC Sessions 2003-11). A project inspired by BBC Radio 6 Music’s Marc Riley, the tracks have been licensed from the BBC and approved by Daniel’s family, management, and charity. The sessions were spread across an eight-year period, with two sessions for Rob Da Bank and three with Marc Riley (both of whom are executive producers of this album).
A few bootleg recordings of these sessions have been available across the years but now they have been lovingly mastered and cut by Frank Arkwright at Abbey Road Studios in London. Daniel was a lifelong fan of The Beatles and the overwhelming consensus from those who knew him was that he would be so proud and excited to have his music mastered above the legendary Studio 2 at Abbey Road.
Celebrating Chuck D in advance of his 65th birthday tomorrow.
—Ed.
Between 1986 and 1998, Public Enemy released six albums for Def Jam, and they’ve been gathered across nine 180-gm LPs in the 25th Anniversary Vinyl Collection. Yes, that means their knockout debut Yo! Bum Rush the Show, the explosive second installment It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, and its odds-defying follow-up Fear of a Black Planet, are all included, but perhaps the biggest insight this hefty collection holds is in how well Apocalypse 91…the Enemy Strikes Black,Muse Sick-n-Hour Mess Age, and the He Got Game soundtrack have endured over the years.
So much ink has been spilled over the music of Public Enemy that endeavoring to approach the subject at this remove can be more than a little daunting. Bluntly, it can seem like the possibility of adding anything new to the discourse is basically nil. In searching for fresh twists on the subject, there is a recurring problem; any attempts to shed new light upon the group’s achievements can reliably lead right back to a very familiar place.
It’s a story that relates to the severe but worthwhile lesson their music dealt to the many listeners with the curiosity to drift away from the imposed safety zones of the time. For in the ‘80s, musical tastes were quite often still segregated. And it can feel downright tired to restate how Run DMC and The Beastie Boys essentially set the table for this audience, bringing certain expectations over what exactly this fresh form of music was supposed to encompass, with PE turning up right on time to craftily pull the tablecloth out from underneath it all.
For this observer, having not even reached seventeen years of age when Public Enemy’s second album, 1988’s It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, tore the roof of the sucker so sweetly, rap connected largely as party music. This isn’t to belittle those achievements, of course. Sometimes the party was a generational one ala the Beasties. Run DMC, LL Cool J, and especially The Fat Boys differed somewhat, providing examples considerably less threatening to concerned parents.
Bridgeport, WV | Roundabout Records is Open in New Location on East Main: With a week under his belt at his new location, Chris Lacaria is adapting and is adamant that Roundabout Records will be a continued success. “I’m confident that Roundabout Records will still do great things,” he said. “This shop is what we call a collector’s dream. It has all the top-notch classic rock must-haves down to the super rare stuff you would never expect to see in person.” Some of those rare, obscure titles include Dexter Wansel, Life on Mars and The Beatles White Album Mono, British Press. In mid-July, the well-known record shop moved from 103 West Main Street to 103 East Main Street, just next door and on the east side of Center Street. Formerly in a basement location, Roundabout Records is now on the top floor with store entrance and ample parking in the rear of the building.
Sydney, AU | 7 Of Sydney’s Best Vinyl Stores For The Music Lover In Your Life: The extinction of old-school vinyl is a conversation of the past—it’s alive and well in Sydney/Eora, and it’s being played everywhere, from bedrooms to bars. Whether you are planning a day of flicking through vintage records, searching for a gift for the music lover in your life, or simply looking to break into the scene (and finally use that record player for more than home decor), here are Urban List’s top picks for the best vinyl stores in Sydney. Red Eye Records: Boasting the title of Sydney’s largest independent record store and one of Australia’s oldest, there’s a reason Red Eye Records is first on the list. Since its opening in 1981, this vinyl haven has operated out of its York Street location, helping both local and global customers find rare, out-of-print and unique items…
Washington, DC | New and Noteworthy: Spin Time Records. “It’s all my mom’s fault,” said Spin Time Records proprietor Jon Lottman. Lottman had turned six when his mother returned from a trip to Jamaica with an LP the soundtrack to the famous reggae crime epic, “The Harder They Come.” “You’re six years old and that dude is speaking your language,” Lottman recalled about first hearing Jimmy Cliff’s rendition of “You Can Get It If You Really Want It.” He was hooked for life. Growing up on the Hill in the 70s, Lottman attended Capitol Day School. He purchased his first record at a now closed branch of Olsson’s, “September” by Earth, Wind and Fire. Fleetwood Mac’s “Rumors” was his second. At age 14, he began seeing bands at the old 9:30 Club and DC Space, the venues made famous by DC punks. “It’s easy to fall in love with the Hill,” Lottman said of moving back in 1994, working as a nonprofit policy analyst.
Chicago, IL | Miyagi Records’ DJ School To Celebrate 10th Graduating Class This Weekend: Eight novice DJs who have spent weeks learning from three veteran performers will show off their new skills with original sets during an all-day party Saturday at the South Side record shop. Budding DJs who have been learning the tools of their new trade at a South Side record shop will celebrate graduating from their courses by soundtracking a daylong party this weekend. DJs Hameedullah, RTST and Will To The will host the graduation for the 10th cohort of their DJ classes 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday at Miyagi Records, 307 E. Garfield Blvd. in Washington Park. The event features 30- to 45-minute sets from the eight DJ students who participated in the most recent session: J45, Srimaye, The Ether, BigAl, DJ Lil g, DJ th3m, laysh and Cocoa B. The program teaches the basics of DJing, from song structures and tempo to manipulating audio frequencies, beat-matching and working with vinyl and digital setups.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats celebrate the tenth anniversary of their beloved, breakout 2015 self-titled debut album, Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats this year. In commemoration, Rateliff today confirms a reissue of the record with an additional album’s worth of demo recordings, offering a glimpse at the feverish weeks of inspiration that uncovered a new form of creative expression. The reissue is set for release October 10—preorder/presave here.
A monumental album in Rateliff’s career, Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats kickstarted a ride that has only accelerated in the ensuing decade with career-making moments along the way: From the band’s first appearances on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon and Saturday Night Live, tours and collaborations with everyone from Paul Simon to Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson, and ever-growing venue sizes from clubs to theatres to Rateliff’s beloved Red Rocks to arenas including a sold out Madison Square Garden show.
The band began at just the right time for Rateliff: after years of toiling as a more folk-leaning singer-songwriter to moderate acclaim, Rateliff was considering returning to his previous, more stable, career as a gardener. Fate intervened in the form of a song—toying with the concept of “What if Sam & Dave were in the Band?” Rateliff was inspired to write “Trying So Hard Not to Know,” a devastating yet mesmerizingly soulful confessional of romantic disillusion.
The spigot was opened and the songs poured out in the exact blend he’d imagined of bracing Stax-style R&B and richly crafted roots rock. Recording demos in his attic on GarageBand, this experimentation ultimately comprised the band’s eponymous, gold-selling 2015 debut album, which spawned four top twenty Triple A hits in “I Need Never Get Old,” “Look it Here,” “Wasting Time,” and the two-times platinum “S.O.B.”
VIA PRESS RELEASE | “When We Rocked isn’t just a book, it’s a loud, sweaty dive back into Philly’s rock heartbeat…” —The Brutally Delicious Podcast
This unique and first-of-its-kind telling of Philadelphia’s rise to Rock and Roll royalty is now available through March Baby Media on several major online platforms. The book focuses on Philadelphia’s musical history and diversity over the years, particularly its contributions to Rock music during the late ’70s to the early ’90s.
When We Rocked includes personal accounts from a number of Philadelphia-based artists who were interviewed for the book and explores the city’s musical evolution from its Quaker origins to the Grunge era. When We Rocked is written by author and historian Antonio Aloia and musician and The Cosmick Voice podcast host Mick Michaels with famed Philly drummer Johnny Dee (Doro/Britny Fox/Tyketto) contributing to the book’s heartfelt foreword.
“Being so close to Philadelphia, I am excited to see that the city’s respective music scenes are chronicled and encapsulated for future generations,” says co-author Aloia. “I hope that others will be inspired to share their stories and experiences that made the Philadelphia music scene unique!”
When We Rocked has been released in paperback and available on major online retailers like Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Ingram. Additionally, author-autographed copies will be available for purchase on the book’s website in August. “It’s been such a trip back through time,” says co-author Michaels. “There are always the things you remember, but it’s those things that you forgot about that are always a rush when the memories come back… there’s a lot of that in this book.”
Otis Redding only released five solo albums and one collaboration with Carla Thomas in his lifetime. Otis Blue/Otis Redding Sings Soul, his third album and second in 1965, is often regarded as his best.
In addition to including the song “Respect,” which he wrote and which became a massive hit for Aretha Franklin, the album includes one other composition by him as well as a co-write with Jerry Butler, “I’ve Been Loving You Too Long,” one of his other signature songs. The other two stand-out tracks that were a highlight of his live shows of the time are covers of Sam Cooke’s “Shake” and “Satisfaction,” written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones.
So much of what makes the album such a stone-cold, soul classic, is that it was recorded at Stax Studios in Memphis, was supervised by Jim Stewart and engineered by Tom Dowd, and the backing band is made up of Booker T. and the MG’s as well as the Memphis Horns and backing singers William Bell and Earl Sims. There is no way to overstate just how important and integral these musicians were to the success and long-lasting influence of this album. Soul, R&B or American music from the 1960s doesn’t get much better than this. Redding would only record two more albums in his lifetime, before his tragic death in December of 1967.
The Meters were one of the legendary groups of the New Orleans music scene from the late ’60s through most of the ’70s. Along with the Neville Brothers, they helped to move the rich and singular sound of New Orleans in new directions during the rock era. The group featured Art Neville, Ziggy Modeliste, Leo Nocentelli, and George Porter Jr.
Joe Concra is a painter, a builder, and the CO+ founder of the O+ Festival, based in Kingston, New York.
O+ is a community-rooted organization that connects artists and musicians with health and wellness care through a radical exchange model that started with an annual music and healthcare exchange festival and has expanded into year-round care.
In this episode, we talk about how it all began, what it takes to create systems of care outside of the system, and the deep link between art, service, and place. Joe’s perspective is thoughtful, kind, and rooted in lived experience.
This is a conversation about action, belief, building something meaningful from the ground up, and creating real positive change in communities.
Radar features discussions with artists and industry leaders who are creators and devotees of music and is produced by Dylan Hundley and The Vinyl District. Dylan Hundley is an artist and performer, and the co-creator and lead singer of Lulu Lewis and all things at Darling Black. She co-curates and hosts Salon Lulu which is a New York based multidisciplinary performance series. She is also a cast member of the iconic New York film Metropolitan.
Celebrating Kenny Burrell in advance of his 94th birthday tomorrow. —Ed.
In March of 1958 producer and Prestige Records owner Bob Weinstock organized a session with two up-and-comers in a very fertile scene. Kenny Burrell & John Coltrane was the result, pairing one of the most consistent guitarists in Modern Jazz with the now long renowned tenor saxophonist. It took over five years for those recordings to hit the retail racks via the Prestige subsidiary New Jazz, but the contents have been reissued numerous times since, reinforcing the high level of play.
Kenny Burrell & John Coltrane is certainly a notable album. While Coltrane had played with guitarists before, this set is the only studio album to feature him leading (in this instance, co-leading) a band with that instrument (Wes Montgomery did join Coltrane’s sextet featuring Eric Dolphy for some West Coat live dates in 1961, even playing the Monterey Jazz Festival, but any tapes of those performances have yet to surface).
That this album sat in the vaults for half a decade will understandably lead some to assume it’s a lesser recording, but Weinstock had amassed quite a bit of Coltrane studio material while he had him under contract, sessions methodically issued as the saxophonist’s star continued to rise, often with Coltrane posthumously designated as leader.
To expand a bit, Coltrane and Burrell do play together in a sextet for three tracks on The Cats, a 1957 recording released in ’59. Issued as a leaderless date (sometimes credited to the Prestige All Stars), it sure sounds like it was conceived as a Tommy Flanagan session; the other two tracks feature the pianist in trio with bassist Doug Watkins and drummer Louis Hayes (trumpeter Idrees Sulieman completes the sextet).
Folsom, CA | Local record store adds Folsom location: An independent music store from Rancho Cordova is expanding to Folsom. Fat Elephant Records, Books & Music will open a store Saturday at 303 Riley St. in Folsom, according to a post on the business’s website. The location is in Historic Folsom. With the addition of the Folsom store, changes are coming to the original Fat Elephant location at 2707 Cordova Lane in Rancho Cordova, the announcement states. It says the Rancho Cordova store will temporarily close for two to three weeks as operators “refresh the space and rethink the model.” Planned changes to the Rancho Cordova site include “a more streamlined, curated selection of inventory, even more amazing deals on sale records and CDs, and a stronger focus on live music events and community gatherings with plans for an in store coffee cart,” according to the announcement.
Chicago, IL | Old-school South Side record shop meets modern-day demands: Like independent bookstores, record stores—like Tearched Scott’s House of Music, at 1637 E. 87th St.—offer a cultural experience that big-box stores can’t. On a sunny Saturday afternoon, Frankie Beverly’s silky soul voice travels on East 87th Street. On a weekday afternoon, steppers’ music causes passersby to nod their heads. The music wafts through the brick storefront House of Music—tagline “the widest selection of oldies in Chicagoland”—where the window displays Stevie Wonder, MF Doom and Miles Davis album covers. “We’re an old-school record shop. We feature things like DVD concerts. We have CDs. We, of course, have wax, which has made a great comeback,” said owner Tearched Scott as the 1990s dance track “Show Me Love” by Robin S pulsated in the background. Rows of records arranged by genre crowd aisles: jazz, gospel and R&B, the store’s mainstay. It’s a treasure trove in a digital world.
Austin, TX | Waterloo Records announces opening date of new location after months of prepping for move: Austin audiophiles, you have about a month left to visit Waterloo Records’ store at Sixth Street and Lamar Boulevard before the iconic shop closes those doors and opens new ones at a bigger, renovated space just a few blocks up the road. The Waterloo Records Instagram account announced in a post on Thursday that the last day of business at the record store’s current location, 600 N. Lamar, will be Sunday, Aug. 24. Not even a week later, the new location, 1105 N. Lamar, will open on Saturday, Aug. 30. The move has been in the works all year, and it’s been coming for a while.
Canberra, AU | Albo’s vinyl diplomacy at Landspeed Records: Landspeed Records is officially the best record store in Australia according to online music news, The Music, and one of its regular customers is Prime Minister Anthony Albanese (DJ Albo), who does some diplomatic vinyl shopping there to improve international relations. …“He’s into stuff like Spiderbait, New Order, and he’s bought stuff for his son in the past,” Blake said. “When he first became PM, he got a bunch of records to give to other leaders. He got some for Justin Trudeau and Jacinda Ardern and the previous Indonesian president was a big metal fan, so he got a bunch of Australian metal like AC/DC.” Even before Albo became Prime Minister, he would attend the annual Record Store Day at Landspeed Records to support the national day. “It’s kind of funny that when he comes in, it’d just be totally unannounced and suddenly he’s there,” Blake said.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | In celebration of the 40th anniversary of their US breakout album Crush, Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark have announced an expanded reissue of the LP, which is out October 10 via UMR/Virgin. Today’s announcement also follows the recent 40th anniversary of their acclaimed album Junk Culture.
Originally released on June 17, 1985, the band’s sixth album Crush took OMD across the pond and became their breakthrough record Stateside. Spearheaded by the irresistible single “So In Love,” which entered the Billboard Top 40, and the radio smash “Secret,” the album received acclaim across the board and also saw success in the UK and Europe, peaking at #13 on the UK Official Album Chart. It remains a firm favorite with the band and their fans.
Working from a batch of demos, Andy and Paul, plus multi-instrumentalist Martin Cooper and drummer Malcolm Holmes, began recording Crush in Liverpool’s Amazon Studios in the late winter of 1984. Having laid down what they could in Amazon, they then relocated to the more secluded facilities of The Manor, in the heart of Oxfordshire, where they enlisted US-born producer Stephen Hague to help pull the record together.
“We felt for the first time like we needed somebody to help us focus on the production,” McCluskey says. “We were too close to these half-written songs and needed someone who could be a little bit more objective. Stephen had a very slick production sound. Maybe unconsciously, we were also thinking, ‘If we’re going to break America, we need to be a bit more polished’.”
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Craft Latino is pleased to announce a 180-gram vinyl reissue of 1981’s Canciónes del Solar de Los Aburridos, the GRAMMY®-nominated album from bandleader, producer, and trumpet player Willie Colón and singer-songwriter Rubén Blades.
Marking the legendary duo’s third collaborative album, Canciónes del Solar de Los Aburridos carried on Blades’ pioneering tradition of “conscious salsa” through politically charged songs like “Tiburón,” plus such fan favorites as “Te están buscando” and “Ligia Elena.” Now freshly mastered with (AAA) lacquers cut from the original master tapes, the long-out-of-print title returns to its original format on September 19th, while fans can also stream the album in high-resolution audio—available now on select platforms. In addition, a limited-edition (only 300) “Azul Ahumado” (Blue Smoke) color vinyl variant is available exclusively at Fania’s online store, bundled with a collectible T-shirt. Both vinyl options are available for pre-order starting today.
The story of Canciónes del Solar de Los Aburridos begins more than a decade earlier with Willie Colón (b. 1950). A pioneering force in salsa music, the bandleader and trumpet player was just 15 years old when he signed to Fania Records, where he became a sensation alongside singer Héctor “El Cantante” Lavoe.
Together, the pair released 11 genre-defining albums, including 1967’s El Malo, 1970’s Cosa Nuestra, and the 1971 Christmas classic Asalto Navideño, before amicably parting ways. While Colón pursued a variety of behind-the-scenes projects as a producer, composer, arranger, and musical director, he soon found himself eager to return to the studio for his own projects—when a rising Panamanian singer-songwriter caught his ear.
I’m here in the Jade Suite of Vancouver’s Pan Pacific Hotel, where Rush’s Geddy Lee has been conducting interviews to promote the 2020 40th Anniversary Edition of Permanent Waves. Geddy’s looking quite relaxed in his 2112-era white kimono, an Alexandrite pendant of the Egyptian God Ra around his neck. He’s sipping a cup of Da Hong Pao tea, attention riveted on some fishing show on what looks to be 900-inch television, and the first words he utters are, “Professional fishing. Who knew that was even a thing?” He pauses for a spoonful of Beluga caviar, then adds, “Fellow in the funny cap just pulled in a muskellunge. I’m no expert, but it looks to be a 59-pounder.” This is as good a place as any to begin the interview.
Do you fish?
Gave it a try once. Caught a walleye, and the damn thing attacked me. I meant to release him, but he had no intention of returning the favor.
You sound nothing like you do on stage. I might as well be talking to Barry White. How do you sing the way you do?
It’s quite simple, really. We toured with this gargantuan roadie whose only job it was to kick me in the balls before I went on stage.
Didn’t it hurt?
You can’t imagine. It was all I can do not to play the show doubled over in pain. I basically owe the man my career. But I had to let him go when he started nutting me as I was coming off stage as well. Overjealous, he was,
1980’s Permanent Waves marked a great departure from its predecessors. The songs are shorter, for instance.
They are, and I can tell you why. Someone handed me a copy of Never Mind the Bollocks, and I knew immediately this was the direction we needed to take.
So Permanent Waves was your punk rock statement.
Sure. We wanted the songs to be quick punches to the throat of uptight society. We originally intended to call the album Anarchy in the Great White North.