
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.”




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.
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).
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.
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 


Do you fish?

Yes, the road to a wickedly hot musical eternity is paved with good intentions. No musician deliberately sets out to make a record that’s truly, non-ironically bad, after all. And nobody that loves The Shaggs’ Philosophy of the World, a record often cited by journalists scribing for list-happy magazines or websites as one of the Worst of All Time (a musical cousin to Ed Wood’s film Plan 9 From Outer Space essentially), I mean sincerely values it as a musical document and not as the aural equivalent to a velvet painting, would describe it as a “bad” record. And the Wiggins’ Sisters sure as hell weren’t trying to make music that would fall under the (admittedly ambiguous) definition of “bad”.
Port Angeles, WA | Funky Grooves offers gathering place for artists: New store open Monday through Saturday. A new creative space has opened in Port Angeles, offering more than just records and retro clothing. Funky Grooves, located at 232 W. Eighth St. and open from noon to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, is shaping up to be a gathering place for artists, music lovers and anyone looking for community. The shop carries a curated selection of new and used vinyl records, vintage and second-hand clothing, and it features a rotating gallery of work by local artists. But at its core, Funky Grooves is about creating
Morrow, OH | Tri-State record store reopens after floods from severe rain: A record store in Morrow has reopened following historic rainfall that damaged their building and threatened to ruin their inventory. Tara Heilman told FOX19 NOW that she was actually in the building late at night in late June when a storm rolled through town. There was a program being held in the gymnasium of the Morrow Arts Center, where Strange Records resides, for a movie screening event. Her employees were in the store when rain started to leak in from the roof. “By the time that they came to get me, it had already come through the roof through the ceiling, all the way down,” she said. The roof’s drainage system was overwhelmed, dumping gallons upon gallons of water into the business. The record store contains not only vintage records, but also comic books and even custom art. Heilman said they’re all things that are either 













































