
Born in Moscow in 1986 and currently based in Berlin via Tel Aviv, Mary Ocher is the daughter of Jewish-Ukrainian parents and a fiercely committed musician who’s been on the international scene for 25 years. With her new album Weimar, she shifts gears from her art-punk foundations to deliver an album of considerable intensity and beauty. It features Ocher in truly solo mode. It’s out March 13 on 130-gram 10-inch vinyl and digital through Underground Institute.
Mary Ocher has amassed a sizable discography, but she’s also a prolific collaborator. The folks she’s grooved with creatively include King Khan (producer of her 2013 LP EDEN), the drum duo Your Government (co-credited on her eponymous 2016 LP and other releases), Die Tödliche Doris and Felix Kubin (guests on her 2017 LP The West Against the People), Julia Kent (cellist on a sweet cover of Robbie Basho’s “Blue Crystal Fire” on her 2017 10-inch Faust Studio Sessions and Other Recordings), and pianist-composer Roberto Cacciapaglia and Mogwai (on her 2023 LP Approaching Singularity: Music for the End of Time).
But with one exception, Weimar is just Ocher singing and playing a piano she purchased during the pandemic after she left her now ex-husband. As track four on this concise but powerful LP (released on heavy 10-inch vinyl to maximize the sound quality) is titled “Divorce,” it’s clear this collection of compositions is quite personal.
The record does include two new versions of piano-based songs from Ocher’s discography, “(As Free as) the Great Outdoors (revisited)” (originally from EDEN) and “On the Streets of Hard Labor (revisited)” (first recorded on her debut CD, 2011’s War Songs). The EDEN recording of “(As Free as) the Great Outdoors” hit a sweet spot between Lotte Lenya-style torch songs and crafty avant-pop. The revisit here ups the torchy quality by leaning into a zone reminiscent of Diamanda Galas, but mildly so.


Liverpool, UK | Jacaranda Record’s ‘huge announcement’ 10 years in the making: Graham Stanley, director of Jacaranda Records, said: “There is currently no facility like it in the UK.” Liverpool’s Jacaranda Records has announced bands, artists and people will be able to create their own vinyl records in the Baltic Triangle location. The collaboration with Fat Monkey Studios, a local vinyl cutting company, has been in the aether for more than a decade. Jacaranda Records will make use of Fat Monkey Studios for its Jac Cuts project, an initiative where Jacaranda works with artists to create unique releases and special editions of existing records. The first release will be exclusive to Jacaranda Records Record Store Day customers. Graham Stanley, director of Jacaranda Records, said: “What this means, any band, no matter how small, can now release
Denver, CO | PigStyle becomes Loveland’s newest—and only—record store: Arjan Shaw launched new business after DOGE cuts affected his career. Arjan Shaw wanted to be his own boss. After he was laid off from his software engineering job when budget cuts from the Department of Government Efficiency canceled work his company was doing for the United States Department of Agriculture, he began to consider what that would involve. He had experience in landscaping, and enjoyed being outdoors in the summer, but that was ultimately just another job, another salary, and he wanted to pursue a passion. He found it in music, and after plenty of effort opened PigStyle, Loveland’s newest, and currently only, record store. “I’ve always been a collector myself, and (the record business) hasn’t been swallowed up by the box stores,” he said. “








Bristol, UK | Record shop to showcase local heavy metal female artists: The upcoming Mothering Sunday is expected to bring together some of the proverbial mothers of the city’s heavy metal art scene under one roof. The South West’s only specialised heavy metal record shop, Black City Records, will host the event. Heavy metal may conjure up sights and sounds of distorted guitars and abrasive noise, but that is only one aspect of a genre—it is as much
North Liberty, IA | After flipping vinyl to pay for film school, Isaac Smith now operates a store of his own: Zig Zog’s Records in North Liberty. The vinyl collector bug bit Isaac Smith hard after he asked his parents for a turntable on his 13th birthday. After acquiring a few thousand records since that pivotal moment in 2015, the Bettendorf native recently opened a record store of his own in North Liberty. …I first met Smith at a record fair in the summer of 2022. While making small talk at his booth, I learned that he was selling records to cover the cost of attending the University of Iowa—a self-made Vinyl Revival Scholarship, if you will. Coincidentally, it turned out that he had already enrolled in my Music & Social Change class that fall semester (for which he wrote a final paper titled “The Beach Boys Encounter Counter Culture”). I kept buying LPs from this tall young man over the years, and by this point, I have shelled out about as much as he paid in tuition to take my class, 



Two long years passed before Boston released Don’t Look Back, amidst legal squabbles with Epic Records and Scholz’s legendary perfectionism. One gets the sense that, had he had his way, Don’t Look Back wouldn’t have seen the light of day until 2078. Anything less than one hundred years, in Tom’s view, and you were listening to a demo. As it was, the follow-up to Don’t Look Back, Third Stage, wouldn’t see the light of day until 1986, and something tells me the LP had to be pried from his fingers as he screamed, “There’s a note on track three I’ve been working on for two years and still can’t get right!”


US | Why Vinyl Is Dominating the Comeback Era of Music Culture: In an age where music is often streamed at the click of a button and digital playlists dominate, vinyl records have quietly staged one of the most surprising comebacks in modern music culture. Once considered a relic of the past, vinyl has evolved into a symbol of authenticity, a tactile experience that reconnects listeners with the music itself. From seasoned collectors to a new generation of music enthusiasts, vinyl is proving that some analog traditions are too meaningful to disappear. Vinyl’s resurgence isn’t just a nostalgic trend. According to industry reports, vinyl sales have been growing steadily over the past decade, even outpacing CD sales in some markets. This revival is fueled not only by older generations reliving the music of their youth but also by younger audiences discovering
Freeport, IL | Freeport record store draws fans for Harry Styles album release: Fans of pop star Harry Styles gathered at a local record store in Freeport this week for one of hundreds of listening parties held around the world celebrating the release of the singer’s highly anticipated fourth studio album, Kiss All the Time Disco Occasionally. At Re-Spun Records and Resale, fans from small towns across northern Illinois packed into the shop to hear the album together shortly after its release. “I was honestly shocked to see that Freeport was a location,” said Susan Sanchez of Lanark. The event was one of many official fan gatherings hosted by record stores worldwide to mark the album’s debut. For some attendees, the chance to celebrate locally made the experience 










































