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IMPORTANT (Please read to avoid confusion):
Some items below may be tagged with a bold, red, all-caps "out of print/unavailable" notice. This does NOT mean that all other items not so tagged are, in fact, in stock -- or for that matter, in print and available, though there's a good chance they are. Some folks get confused on this point, and we can see why, so please read this for further clarification and other important before-you-order information. Unlike some mailorder websites, we don't have an electronic inventory system linked to our site, so you can't be sure of what we actually have or don't have in stock at any given moment without asking us -- please email our mailorder department for availability status -- or better yet, just go ahead and place your order using our shopping cart function and we'll get back to you with the status of each item. If you have general non-mailorder questions, email the store.


album cover PORRO, CHRIS Lampreys And Gigolos (self-released) cd 11.98
Lampreys And Gigolos is the debut album from this SF storytelling songsmith, and quite an impressive introduction it is! The songs that Chris Porro crafts run the gamut from earthy heartfelt folk ("Secret Story") to straight-up catchy pop ("Pop Star") -- often akin to the broad scope of Robert Pollard of Guided By Voices. His warm, lilting voice is sometimes reminiscent of Ken Stringfellow and Jonathan Auer of The Posies and other times of Chris Isaak. Along the way, Porro embellishes his path with interesting lil' noise details and lush string and organ treasures here 'n' there. Nice!
MPEG Stream: "Secret Story"
MPEG Stream: "Pop Star"

album cover PORT O'BRIEN All We Could Do Was Sing (self-released) cd 15.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
If the exuberant outpouring of song from the likes of Arcade Fire, Bright Eyes, Hidden Cameras, and Wolf Parade get you all giddy and weak in the knees, then we might have a new fave for you! But particularly like the former two, Port O'Brien can get serious too and take a more solemn tone. On the more hushed songs (which are also some of the album's best) such as "Stuck On A Boat", "Don't Take My Advice" and "Will You Be There?" the lights are dimmed and the instrumentation stripped down to a skeletal folksy assembly of Van Pierszalowski's brittle, emotive young voice and guitar, and Cambrian Goodwin's comforting pluck of the banjo. Glowing warmly throughout the proceedings, almost as if at a distance, are some understated violin and cello backing. The album's title says it all. When everything else fails you (whether you be the player or the listener), music is where you will always find solace, stimulation, escape. And Port O'Brien does so in each of these achingly bittersweet songs.
MPEG Stream: "I Woke Up Today"
MPEG Stream: "Stuck On A Boat"
MPEG Stream: "Will You Be There?"

album cover PORT O'BRIEN Threadbare (TBD Records) cd 12.98

album cover PORT O'BRIEN When The Rain Comes (self-released) cd 8.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
On the opening track of their debut album When The Rain Comes, Oaklanders Port O'Brien struck us as being quite vocally reminiscent of the frailty of This Heat (particularly their vocals in "Fall Of Saigon" from their self-titled album). From there though mainman Van Pierzalowski keeps things much more in a straightforward rough-hewn folkiness mode that in turn brings to mind early Bright Eyes. Some rousing whistlin' and hollerin' embellish the tune "Split" which is followed by the ultra hushed delicate number "Dance With Our Ashes". Nice.
MPEG Stream: "Two Suns"
MPEG Stream: "Split"

album cover PORT-ROYAL Flares (Resonant) cd 17.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
Joining the likes of AQ fave M-bands Mogwai, M83, and Magyar Posse (and they've also even been compared to a few S-artists Ulrich Schnauss, Stafraenn Hakon and Sigur Ros), This Italian group ever so gallantly and gracefully toss their finely crafted musical hat into the ever-expanding global atmospheric postrock arena. Port-Royal's sprawling 78-minute long Flares is a soft, hazy blissed-out dream of an album filled with shimmery ambient washes of glacial guitars peppered with occasional wisps of electronics and samples. Each and every time we've played this in the store, it draws many enthused queries. Really really calming and really really pretty. Positively sigh-inducing.
MPEG Stream: "Jeka"
MPEG Stream: "Flares Pt.1"

album cover PORTASTATIC Autumn Was A Lark (Merge) cd ep 11.98
You just never know what to expect from Mac McCaughan's Portastatic project. He's taken it through playful numbers based around keyboards, samples and programmed beats, some respectful '60s Tropicalia inspired excursions and film soundtracks. Yet, he quite often brings it all back to sweet, breezy guitar-driven pop that evokes the glow of a summer evening sunset and draws Portastatic closer to Superchunk territory. Autumn Was A Lark is the newest release, and although this appears to be a five song EP, it actually boasts fourteen songs total. That's right folks, you get eight bonus live on the radio acoustic performances). The band tackles covers of songs by Bruce Springsteen ("Bobby Jean" and "Growin' Up"), Ronnie Lane ("One For The Road") and Badfinger ("Baby Blue") with great aplomb, and offers up an alternate version of "In The Lines" (the original appears on their last album) as well as a punchy new song called "Autumn Got Dark". If you enjoyed Summer Of The Shark, scoop this goodie up too. It's sure to please!
MPEG Stream: "Autumn Got Dark"
MPEG Stream: "Baby Blue"

album cover PORTASTATIC Be Still Please (Merge) cd 14.98
Oh Mac McCaughan, we will always have the softest spot for you and the remarkable pop gems you never run out of. From the heyday of Superchunk, to the fine label you run, to the way you helped put Chapel Hill on the musical map, to the way you always come through with that perfect song that we will undoubtedly have stuck in our heads for months to come. Be Still Please is a pretty great representation of the current state of Mac's song writing. From the all out catchy rock of "Sour Shores" and "I'm In Love With Arthur Dove" (contender for song of the year!), to the multi instrumentation and more somber grown up sentiments of "Black Buttons" and "Song For A Clock." Last week when Mac's buddy Ira Kaplan from Yo La Tengo did a guest DJ spot at KUSF all his selections came from older records from the 50's 60's and 70's, while his last selection was the sole contemporary track and it was the closer from this album, proving that what makes Mac such a great songwriter is exactly how and why he has created such an impressive catalog of timeless pop gems.
MPEG Stream: "I'm In Love (With Arthur Dove)"
MPEG Stream: "Song For A Clock"

album cover PORTASTATIC Bright Ideas (Merge) cd 14.98
Mac McCaughan reins in his Portastatic project even closer to his main band Superchunk's sound. It seems he just can't keep the power pop out of the mix, and y'know what? We don't mind one bit 'cause despite his being adept at many other musical styles, he's a master of energetic pop. While some other veteran popsters' recent releases have elicited groans of "ho hum more of the same?" That's definitely not the case with Bright Ideas. Somehow at his hands, it's always fresh'n'new, and never seems tired or reheated. On past Portastatic releases he's dabbled with Tropicalia, jazz and electronics, and he does occasionally toss things up a bit on this album. Check out the breezy sixth song "Truckstop Cassettes". The super-duper Bright Ideas highlight though is the song that follows it, "The Soft Rewind". It's McCaughan in absolute top form, and seems tailor-made for your friends' mixtapes... let alone your own repeat listens. Great stuff!
MPEG Stream: "Truckstop Cassettes"
MPEG Stream: "The Soft Rewind"

PORTASTATIC Del Mel, De Mel‹o (Merge) cdep 9.99
Born of his compulsive love for Tropicalia, that distinctly Brazilian take on '60s psychedelia that Aquarius also loves, Mac of Superchunk has recorded 5 of his most favorite pieces made famous by Gilberto Gil, Caetano Veloso, Gal Costa, and Os Mutantes. Although we feared the worst, actually it's not bad at all. Very pleasant. And another thing we like to see -- there are very detailed credits so that Tropicalia newcomers may seek out the original versions. Plus it's a hoot to hear the voice of Superchunk singing in Portugese!

PORTASTATIC Looking For Leonard (OST) (Merge) cd 14.98
Mac McCaughan of Superchunk and Merge Records composed a bright little soundtrack for what is probably a bright little indie film. Portastatic has always been his bedroom side project and while at times that has resulted in wonderfully inventive stuff played out on synths and samplers, this time any originality has been subsumed under the need for innocuous background music that helps the film along. Nice but non-essential.
RealAudio clip: "Stumbling Music"

album cover PORTASTATIC Original Film Score For Who Loves The Sun (Merge) cd 14.98
Diehard Portastatic fans might experience a few glimmers of recognition when they hear this score that the band did for For Who Loves The Sun, an indie film by Matt Bissonnette (this is the second time they've worked with Bissonnette, previously they did the soundtrack for his 2002 film Looking For Leonard). For the most part though if no one told you the name of the artist you probably couldn't tell. There aren't any big tell-tale signs such as vocals to give it away. What you would know though is that this is one fine piece of soundtrack work. The twenty two lush instrumentals (ranging from 32 seconds to just under three minutes long) feature an elegant blend of fluttery oboe, trillsome flute, warm piano and strings. Breezily pleasant and unobtrusive incidental music. Sure sounds like Mac MacCaughan has been studying his collection of Henry Mancini and George Gershwin film scores!
MPEG Stream: "The Search For Daniel"
MPEG Stream: "Snake Music"

PORTASTATIC Slow Note From a Sinking Ship (Merge) cd 14.98

PORTASTATIC Slow Note From a Sinking Ship (Merge) lp 10.98

album cover PORTASTATIC Some Small History (Merge) 2cd 14.98
Mac McCaughan is really one of indie rock's true heroes. First there was his band Superchunk that helped define indie rock and helped put Chapel Hill on the map in the '90s. Then there's the label he runs, Merge, who have put out incredibly influential records by everyone from Magnetic Fields to Neutral Milk Hotel to the Arcade Fire. And then there's his so-called side band Portastatic who actually have been more active and prolific then Superchunk have in recent years. In many ways Portastatic served as his outlet for sketches and stripped down songs that maybe weren't meant for Superchunk yet still had his trademark vocal and guitar sound. This two disc set compiles a slew of singles, b-sides, demos and covers. We have to say while it's sort of an uneven collection there are some total gems on here, especially the covers, hearing Mac do The Undertones "Teenage Kicks" and Hot Chip's "And I Was A Boy From School" makes it all worth it. And despite a few tracks that cold have been left in the vaults, there are some total classic sounding Portastatic jams making this a must have for all bigtime Mac fans.
MPEG Stream: "Trajectory"
MPEG Stream: "Power Supply"
MPEG Stream: "And I Was A Boy From School"

PORTASTATIC The Nature of Sap (Merge) cd 12.98
Mac of Superchunk's latest solo foray finds him playing more and more with looped beats and playful keyboard doodlings.

PORTASTATIC The Nature of Sap (Merge) lp 8.98
Mac of Superchunk's latest solo foray finds him playing more and more with looped beats and playful keyboard doodlings.

album cover PORTASTATIC The Summer of the Shark (Merge) cd 14.98
There it is again, Mac McCaughan's unmistakable sweet boyish voice! His new Portastatic album is filled with the loveliest, breeziest pop warmth. One dozen super pretty and lovingly crafted tunes with slip-slidin' guitars, violin accents and female vocals courtesy of Ms Janet Weiss (Quasi, Sleater-Kinney) on the album's opening song and highlight "Oh Come Down". Aaaah, delightful! And to top it all off, there's a petal pink watercolor painting on the cover by Mac, as well as a little flower painting in the cd insert by Yo La Tengo's Georgia Hubley. Hurrah!
MPEG Stream: "Oh Come Down"
MPEG Stream: "Clay Cakes"

album cover PORTASTATIC FEAT. KEN VANDERMARK AND TIM MULVENNA The Perfect Little Door (Merge) cd 10.98
Mac McCaughan must never have a moments rest! The blazing batons in his successful juggling act? To name just a few: running the fab indie label Merge Records, leading the supremo-pop outfit Superchunk as well as assorted side projects, and composing film soundtracks. This particular incarnation of his main side project Portastatic was assembled for the Noise-Pop Fest in Chicago earlier this year. Mac is joined by improv saxophonist Ken Vandermark and percussionist Tim Mulvenna. Of the five tracks on this EP, one is new, one is a live performance, one is a Vandermark composition, and two older Portastatic songs get reworked - "When You Crashed" from 1995 and "Had" from their splendidly titled '94 release "I Hope Your Heart Is Not Brittle". Crisp and bittersweet performances as captured by Steve Albini. Please note: absent from these recordings are the Tropicalia influenced sounds of his last two Portastatic releases. Limited pressing of 2500.
RealAudio clip: "Hey Salty"

album cover PORTISHEAD Chase The Tear (XL) 12" 9.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
This song has been floating around for a couple years now, but it's so fucking cool to get it on wax along with an awesome remix as well. "Chase The Tear" may be the most uptempo and potentially dancefloor ready track we've ever heard from Portishead, without losing any of the sensuality and seduction that is always at the core of their songs.
The song was originally released as on online only benefit for Amnesty International (and proceeds from this 12" will be going to AI as well!)
It's one of the most exhilarating tracks the group has ever made, it's a total kraut-synth show stopper! The remix/cover version by Doldrums on the B side is fucking cool too.
NOTE for mailorder customers, if you're considering ordering this: Unfortunately this week's shipment from Matador/4AD/XL arrived today with one corner of every single piece of vinyl in the box slightly bent, argh. So, don't order this now if you're super anal about such things. We'll get replacements next week. Folks buying this in person in the shop, of course, can see for themselves if they mind the bent corner or not. Sorry!

album cover PORTISHEAD Machine Gun (Mercury) 12" 6.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.

album cover PORTISHEAD Third (Mercury) cd 15.98
It seems a bit strange to spend very much time writing about the new Portishead. Since by now, odds are you're probably sick to death of hearing about it. Sure we all loved Portishead back in the day, they were one of those rare 'electronic' bands whose appeal knew no boundaries, metalheads, moms, indie kids, the sound of Portishead was dark and sexy and mysterious, sinister and ominous, dark and rife with crackle and buzz. Perfect drugged out late night bliss out music, their strange way of creating sound and composing music, recording their own samples on to vinyl and then spinning and scratching those samples to create new textures, made for a totally unique sound.
So what does a band do after taking almost a decade off? Do they return with a record that sounds just like the last one, which is probably what most folks want, or do they return radically altered? With a sound bold and brash, reinventing the sound they themselves invented in the first place.
On first listen, Third definitely sounds like the latter, but with repeated listening, the record slowly and subtly begins to slip toward the former. Which most definitely speaks to the magic of Portishead, and the new record, which at once embraces the old sound, while turning it into something new. More than past outings, Third is dirty, out of tune, atonal, noisy, chaotic, urgent, sure past records had all that crackle and buzz and fuzz, but those elements were carefully placed, and kept well within line. Third sounds much more, well, loose for lack of a better word, like actual musicians, feeling each other out, maybe even improvising. Less like a studio concoction and more like a real live band. And the sound suits them. And makes for a record at once warm and familiar, but also alien, sort of 'rocking' and rife with WTF? moments.
Take the opener, "Silence", which begins with some sort of radio broadcast, which gives way to a killer loping breakbeat, immediately the fastest tempo Portishead have ever explored, strings swoop in, the sound raw and urgent, almost like the chase scene from some spy movie, gorgeous distorted chiming guitar harmonics ring out, until finally the track slows down, and slithers sexily, the vocals a sexy sultry croon, but it's not long before the track kicks back into the haunting and tense, string laden cinematic jam that opened the track.
Then there's "Hunter", which begins like classic Portishead, all smokey and late night sounding, soft muted reverbed guitars, a lush gauzy production, the vocals ethereal and ghostly, but even here, a few seconds in, the song is interrupted by a super distorted crumbling guitar chord that halts things in their tracks, before fading out, and allowing the song to resume. The a few minutes later, a strange noodly synth freakoutsurfaces, again derailing the song's slow motion groove, but It just sounds perfect. It doesn't at all sound like random weirdness for random weirdness' sake. The first time is jarring, the second time, you find yourself waiting for those parts, even humming along as if they were as crucial to the song as the main melody or the vocals, and the thing is, they are.
Near the end lurks the single, "Machine Gun", with its very machine gun like rhythm, herky jerky, stuttery and not at all fluid, reminiscent of Art Of Noise, the vocals sweetly soaring over this jagged rhythmscape below, which only really varies part way through when the original machine gun drums are replaced by BIGGER, more distorted drums, and wrapped in strange moaning horns (or maybe synths), only to shift once again moments later becoming more electronic, the beats awash in strange FX and metallic buzz. It's so unlikely, that it makes perfect sense as the first single. If you can embrace that strange rhythm, that relentless and very un-Portishead like sound, then the rest of the record will make perfect sense, unfolding in front of you, revealing both the warm familiar sounds missed, and the new, bizarre sonic elements never even imagined
All over the record, the band confounds and confuses, gloriously, the brooding whispery "Small" shifts gears partway through and transforms into a fuzzy organ drenched krautjam, "Deep Water" is a straight up old timey folk song, the vocals and strings soaked in fuzzy ambience (and reminding us a bit of vocalist Gibbons' post Portishead project Rustin Man), "We Carry On" is a sort of atonal Stereolab style jam, relentless percussion, thick swaths of synth, very repetitive and hypnotic, "The Rip" is part whispery folky flutter, part synthy electro buzz, every track here offers some sort of surprise, whether it's the song itself, or some little sonic strangeness lurking within, but never is the song or the sound sacrificed, each track is perfect in its own beautifully twisted way, catchy but never obviously so, groovy, but often convoluted and fractured, it's a difficult record to explain for sure, which is perhaps why so much ink has been spilled, and while we may be sick of reading about it, we sure are finding it nearly impossible to imagine ever getting sick of listening to it, which is precisely why it's one of our Records Of The Week.
MPEG Stream: "Silence"
MPEG Stream: "Hunter"
MPEG Stream: "Machine Gun"

album cover PORTISHEAD Third (Mercury) 2lp 14.98
Now available on vinyl (for a minute or two anyway)!
It seems a bit strange to spend very much time writing about the new Portishead. Since by now, odds are you're probably sick to death of hearing about it. Sure we all loved Portishead back in the day, they were one of those rare 'electronic' bands whose appeal knew no boundaries, metalheads, moms, indie kids, the sound of Portishead was dark and sexy and mysterious, sinister and ominous, dark and rife with crackle and buzz. Perfect drugged out late night bliss out music, their strange way of creating sound and composing music, recording their own samples on to vinyl and then spinning and scratching those samples to create new textures, made for a totally unique sound.
So what does a band do after taking almost a decade off? Do they return with a record that sounds just like the last one, which is probably what most folks want, or do they return radically altered? With a sound bold and brash, reinventing the sound they themselves invented in the first place.
On first listen, Third definitely sounds like the latter, but with repeated listening, the record slowly and subtly begins to slip toward the former. Which most definitely speaks to the magic of Portishead, and the new record, which at once embraces the old sound, while turning it into something new. More than past outings, Third is dirty, out of tune, atonal, noisy, chaotic, urgent, sure past records had all that crackle and buzz and fuzz, but those elements were carefully placed, and kept well within line. Third sounds much more, well, loose for lack of a better word, like actual musicians, feeling each other out, maybe even improvising. Less like a studio concoction and more like a real live band. And the sound suits them. And makes for a record at once warm and familiar, but also alien, sort of 'rocking' and rife with WTF? moments.
Take the opener, "Silence", which begins with some sort of radio broadcast, which gives way to a killer loping breakbeat, immediately the fastest tempo Portishead have ever explored, strings swoop in, the sound raw and urgent, almost like the chase scene from some spy movie, gorgeous distorted chiming guitar harmonics ring out, until finally the track slows down, and slithers sexily, the vocals a sexy sultry croon, but it's not long before the track kicks back into the haunting and tense, string laden cinematic jam that opened the track.
Then there's "Hunter", which begins like classic Portishead, all smokey and late night sounding, soft muted reverbed guitars, a lush gauzy production, the vocals ethereal and ghostly, but even here, a few seconds in, the song is interrupted by a super distorted crumbling guitar chord that halts things in their tracks, before fading out, and allowing the song to resume. The a few minutes later, a strange noodly synth freakoutsurfaces, again derailing the song's slow motion groove, but It just sounds perfect. It doesn't at all sound like random weirdness for random weirdness' sake. The first time is jarring, the second time, you find yourself waiting for those parts, even humming along as if they were as crucial to the song as the main melody or the vocals, and the thing is, they are.
Near the end lurks the single, "Machine Gun", with its very machine gun like rhythm, herky jerky, stuttery and not at all fluid, reminiscent of Art Of Noise, the vocals sweetly soaring over this jagged rhythmscape below, which only really varies part way through when the original machine gun drums are replaced by BIGGER, more distorted drums, and wrapped in strange moaning horns (or maybe synths), only to shift once again moments later becoming more electronic, the beats awash in strange FX and metallic buzz. It's so unlikely, that it makes perfect sense as the first single. If you can embrace that strange rhythm, that relentless and very un-Portishead like sound, then the rest of the record will make perfect sense, unfolding in front of you, revealing both the warm familiar sounds missed, and the new, bizarre sonic elements never even imagined
All over the record, the band confounds and confuses, gloriously, the brooding whispery "Small" shifts gears partway through and transforms into a fuzzy organ drenched krautjam, "Deep Water" is a straight up old timey folk song, the vocals and strings soaked in fuzzy ambience (and reminding us a bit of vocalist Gibbons' post Portishead project Rustin Man), "We Carry On" is a sort of atonal Stereolab style jam, relentless percussion, thick swaths of synth, very repetitive and hypnotic, "The Rip" is part whispery folky flutter, part synthy electro buzz, every track here offers some sort of surprise, whether it's the song itself, or some little sonic strangeness lurking within, but never is the song or the sound sacrificed, each track is perfect in its own beautifully twisted way, catchy but never obviously so, groovy, but often convoluted and fractured, it's a difficult record to explain for sure, which is perhaps why so much ink has been spilled, and while we may be sick of reading about it, we sure are finding it nearly impossible to imagine ever getting sick of listening to it, which is precisely why it's one of our Records Of The Week.
MPEG Stream: "Silence"
MPEG Stream: "Hunter"
MPEG Stream: "Machine Gun"

album cover PORTRAITS s/t (Important) lp 17.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
Deeeeeeep spiritually-charged drones from this supergroup of Bay Area heavy experimentalists. You are going to want to just hammer the "Add To Cart" button when we list all the members involved: folks from Barn Owl, Date Palms, Tarentel, En, Higuma and The Alps! The Root Strata All-Stars, basically, though this is on Important. Three tracks, the first, "D" is a side long affair, delving into the most harmonically aligned keys of the western scale utilizing both electric and acoustic instruments including violin, harmonium, tamboura, koto, sine wave oscillator, bass clarinet, tapes, shruti box and electric guitar in rich layered tones and frequencies. Side 2 begins with the all vocal meditation, "Sa" reminding us of David Hykes and The Harmonic Choir's cathedral amplified minimalist hymns before unleashing the deepest and heaviest track here, "Gong", which focuses on the shifting and shimmering metallic reverberations of the titular instrument. A beautifully honed study of harmony and frequency within a wonderfully attuned collective and collaborative spirit.
Housed in a hand screened heavy stock foldover jacket. LIMITED TO 500 copies, so act fast!

POSIES At Least, At Last (Not Lame) 4cd box 45.00
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
With some of the most atrocious cover art ever (think: promotional giveaway at a kitchen cleaner convention with too many fonts and an unhealthy obsession with photoshop) and woeful lack of publicity we've seen in a while, the long awaited Posies box manages to shine and surprise. Four cds worth of outtakes and live tracks by most bands would be...um...unneccesary to say the least, but almost all the tracks in this box are great. From unreleased gems, to alternate versions, to different demos (ken's vs. jon's) of some of your favorite songs, it's amazing to trace the development of the Posies super polished super complex pop, as well as kind of shocking to hear how mature and almost 'finished' some of the early demos were. While, i'm sure only Posies completists will buy this, most fans of pop music (indie and otherwise) might discover a new favorite band.

album cover POSIES Every Kind Of Light (Ryko) cd 15.98
We've been sitting on this one for a while, not sure why really 'cause we're some of the biggest Posies fans around! Well, co-Posie Jon Auer's solo album reminded us of just how much we love them, and gave a us a kick in the pants to show it. Apologies for our tardiness, fellas. Every Kind Of Light is a total return to stellar form for this Seattle pop duo. The combined forces of Auer and Ken Stringfellow are pretty damn hard to beat. Heart-melting vocal harmonies? You betcha. Sweetheart sentimental lyrics? Uh huh. Utterly infectious hooks? Hell yeah. So damn deliriously good! We could gush on, but why? Just get these songs into your ears, and hear for yourself. We command you... please.
Psst, there's an even newer album on the horizon slated for the end of June. Can't wait!
MPEG Stream: "It's Great To Be Here Again!"
MPEG Stream: "Conversations"
MPEG Stream: "All In A Day's Work"

album cover POSIES Failure (PopLlama) cd 15.98

POSIES In Case You Didn't Feel Like Plugging In (Casa) cd 13.98
When the familiar wonderful chiming vocal harmonies of Ken Stringfellow and Jonathan Auer fell silent a few years back, the pop world fell a quite a few shades paler, but now the Posies are back! Their return comes as quite a surprise to many, but a very, very pleasing one nonetheless. Some of us here are quite giddy about the whole matter to say the least! The first we heard of this rejoining of two brilliant pop forces was when the AQ phone rang a couple of months ago with an offering of a Posies in-store performance in August. Still, we were a bit unsure and puzzled. But now we're happy to know it is definitely true. On this cd, they approach their songs (newer and older) live at the Showbox in Seattle, seated and armed with acoustic guitars. And the oldies sound wonderful --- included among them one of my all-time favourites "I May Hate You Sometimes" from their first full-length. As this is a live recording all the expected crowd noise is intact (though not too intrusive on the music), but it is clear that the Posies are among old friends and fans with moments of singing along and loving cheers.

POSIES Nice Cheekbones And A Ph.D. (Houston Party) cd 11.98
So very glad they're back! And while it's pretty obvious these boys like to rock out live (often at the expense of their glorious vocal harmonies), it is a welcome toning and paring down of the Posies sound that greets us on this EP. Showing the magic pop chemistry Jon and Ken conjure up when they just sit down with their guitars and play. Four new Posie gems and one David Crosby cover. Recorded in Barcelona and Seattle.

album cover POSIES, THE Blood / Candy (Rykodisc) cd 15.98
There's something a little strange about Posies records. And we noticed the same thing about Sloan records weirdly enough. Two of our all time favorite bands for sure. But as excited as we always are for a new record by either, inevitably, when it does finally show up, we're always a bit disappointed, sometimes more than a bit, convinced that maybe that's it, the band is past their prime, done for. And we'll keep the record, just cuz we like the older records so much. It's that same loyalty that compels us to keep listening, and then, without fail, something mysterious happens, and the record, in both cases, Sloan and Posies, begins to grow on us, begins to sound better and better, blossoming, and revealing itself as another great pop record, one that does in fact fit with all the other releases. And then invariably we find ourselves listening to those records incessantly, which we're beginning to think is the magic of both Sloan and the Posies, the difference between spitting out some immediately catchy pop pap, and crafting something deeper and more complex, that does require multiple listens and does eventually end up being catchier in the long run, and certainly becomes the sort of record that we never tire of, unlike some of those hook filled sweet pop jams that we listen to over and over but tire of quickly.
So yeah, we were SO excited for a new Posies record, and experienced the exact same phenomenon described above. In the case of Blood/Candy though, there might be more to it, the fact that the first three tracks feature guests, none of which we'd heard of, but apparently each notable enough to merit mention in parenthesis after the song title. It's not that those songs were bad, they just didn't grab us, could it be that it was the Posies watered down by guest vocalists? Although to be fair, their vocal contributions are not all the noticeable. But if you skip those three tracks, and start the record on the third track, "So Caroline", suddenly, it works, and from there to the end, it's total classic Posies, it still took a few listens, but we can't stop now, from soft focus dreamy soft pop, to crunchy big guitar power pop, the songs split as always between the group's two distinctive vocalists/songwriters, Ken Stringfellow and Jon Auer, hooks galore, lush arrangements, incredible harmonies, another great Posies record! And once you've played tracks three to eleven to death, then head back to those first three tracks, and guess what? Yep, they start to sound great too.
So yeah, Posies fans, you're obviously already gonna want this, and for newbies, while we might recommend Frosting On The Beater or Dear 23 or Amazing Disgrace first, this would not be a bad place to start either (although we'd still recommend starting with track three!). Classic power pop for sure, folks into Jellyfish, The Rollo Treadway, Sloan, Silver Sun, The Stereo and the like should already be WAY into the Posies, but if not, you should probably just get this, and the rest of their records too!
MPEG Stream: "So Caroline"
MPEG Stream: "Take Care Of Yourself"
MPEG Stream: "Cleopatra Street"
MPEG Stream: "Notion 99"

album cover POSIES, THE Blood / Candy (Rykodisc) lp 22.00
There's something a little strange about Posies records. And we noticed the same thing about Sloan records weirdly enough. Two of our all time favorite bands for sure. But as excited as we always are for a new record by either, inevitably, when it does finally show up, we're always a bit disappointed, sometimes more than a bit, convinced that maybe that's it, the band is past their prime, done for. And we'll keep the record, just cuz we like the older records so much. It's that same loyalty that compels us to keep listening, and then, without fail, something mysterious happens, and the record, in both cases, Sloan and Posies, begins to grow on us, begins to sound better and better, blossoming, and revealing itself as another great pop record, one that does in fact fit with all the other releases. And then invariably we find ourselves listening to those records incessantly, which we're beginning to think is the magic of both Sloan and the Posies, the difference between spitting out some immediately catchy pop pap, and crafting something deeper and more complex, that does require multiple listens and does eventually end up being catchier in the long run, and certainly becomes the sort of record that we never tire of, unlike some of those hook filled sweet pop jams that we listen to over and over but tire of quickly.
So yeah, we were SO excited for a new Posies record, and experienced the exact same phenomenon described above. In the case of Blood/Candy though, there might be more to it, the fact that the first three tracks feature guests, none of which we'd heard of, but apparently each notable enough to merit mention in parenthesis after the song title. It's not that those songs were bad, they just didn't grab us, could it be that it was the Posies watered down by guest vocalists? Although to be fair, their vocal contributions are not all the noticeable. But if you skip those three tracks, and start the record on the third track, "So Caroline", suddenly, it works, and from there to the end, it's total classic Posies, it still took a few listens, but we can't stop now, from soft focus dreamy soft pop, to crunchy big guitar power pop, the songs split as always between the group's two distinctive vocalists/songwriters, Ken Stringfellow and Jon Auer, hooks galore, lush arrangements, incredible harmonies, another great Posies record! And once you've played tracks three to eleven to death, then head back to those first three tracks, and guess what? Yep, they start to sound great too.
So yeah, Posies fans, you're obviously already gonna want this, and for newbies, while we might recommend Frosting On The Beater or Dear 23 or Amazing Disgrace first, this would not be a bad place to start either (although we'd still recommend starting with track three!). Classic power pop for sure, folks into Jellyfish, The Rollo Treadway, Sloan, Silver Sun, The Stereo and the like should already be WAY into the Posies, but if not, you should probably just get this, and the rest of their records too!
MPEG Stream: "So Caroline"
MPEG Stream: "Take Care Of Yourself"
MPEG Stream: "Cleopatra Street"
MPEG Stream: "Notion 99"

album cover POSSESSED Exploration (Rise Above Relics) cd 17.98
First things first, this Possessed has nothing to do with the '80s Bay Area metal band of the same name. No, this Possessed hails from even further back in time, the early '70s to be precise. And that leads us to say this: oh man, if we only had a time machine! Sure we'd go back and kill Hitler's parents and buy Google stock and all that... but our time machine day dream today is dominated by a flyer reproduced in the cd booklet to this release, advertising a month's worth of "progressive concerts" upcoming at a venue, somewhere in England, featuring performances by T2, Judus [sic] Priest, Israel's Jericho Jones, Thin Lizzy and this very band, Possessed. Good grief. We'd have been very very broke blokes back then, spending our last dime, I mean, farthing, on going out to such shows! What a time for hairy, heavy proto-metal awesomeness!
Thinking along those lines, Cathedral vocalist Lee Dorrian *has* built a time machine of sorts, though -- his label Rise Above now has an archival/reissue imprint called Rise Above Relics, dedicated to unearthing the heavy sounds of the past for them to be heard again today. This Possessed album (along with Luv Machine, also reviewed) is one of the first releases and we've gotta say they've dug up a gem, hitherto unknown to us.
Possessed, who you'd think might be some sort of occultic, Comusy folk band from the name and the Art Nouveau, Aubrey Beardsley style cover art, actually play a kinda proggy, kinda glammy hard rock that definitely bears some resemblance to aspects of Led Zeppelin. Just coincidence that Possessed's singer and guitarist, the India-born Vernon Pereira, had been in the original lineup of an outfit called The Band Of Joy, which also included Zeps-to-be Robert Plant and John Bonham? In any case, Possessed's most notable attributes would have to be the sinuous, crunchy riffing of guitarist Pereira, and also his Plant-like lead vocals. Furthermore, the band's spiralingly complex and bombastic songwriting ventures into the variety of "funk" displayed by Led Zeppelin on such songs as "Trampled Underfoot". Then there's the acoustic break of "Exploration Pt. II", also very Zeppish to be sure, though besides Zep, we'd compare this to Thin Lizzy and also to obscurities like Hard Stuff and even AQ faves Zolar X!
Despite being so worthy, Possessed never released an album, though they did record one in 1971 that, due to label disinterest, was shelved (until now, this is it). Sadly, three key band members, including Pereira, died in a motorway accident in 1976 ("Driver of Pop Group Death Van Dozed Off" reads the headline to one of the vintage newspaper clippings reproduced in the cd booklet), bringing a tragic end to the hopes and history of Possessed. The '70s rock star glory experienced by their chums in Led Zeppelin was never to be for this ill-fated band, though things could have, should have, turned out much differently, as at the time of the accident, they were on the verge at last of a major record deal. And they were supposedly slated to play shows in the USA with the Sex Pistols, bizarrely enough. Of course, that never happened.
So we're left with Exploration, while not the best unreleased album of the era ever (Jacula? Bedemon? Sproton Layer?), definitely a pretty darn cool one. It's a bit raw sounding, maybe a still a work in progress with some of the riffing rather similar in a couple of the songs, but it's definitely something that fans of both Led Zep and all the early '70s hard rock rarities we love should investigate! Nicely packaged with a fat, 20 page booklet full of notes and photos, slipcased to boot.
MPEG Stream: "The Love That You Gave"
MPEG Stream: "Darkness, Darkness"

album cover POSSESSED Exploration (Rise Above Relics) lp + 7" 27.00
Now on vinyl!! And with a bonus 7" single!
First things first, this Possessed has nothing to do with the '80s Bay Area metal band of the same name. No, this Possessed hails from even further back in time, the early '70s to be precise. And that leads us to say this: oh man, if we only had a time machine! Sure we'd go back and kill Hitler's parents and buy Google stock and all that... but our time machine day dream today is dominated by a flyer reproduced in the cd booklet to this release, advertising a month's worth of "progressive concerts" upcoming at a venue, somewhere in England, featuring performances by T2, Judus [sic] Priest, Israel's Jericho Jones, Thin Lizzy and this very band, Possessed. Good grief. We'd have been very very broke blokes back then, spending our last dime, I mean, farthing, on going out to such shows! What a time for hairy, heavy proto-metal awesomeness!
Thinking along those lines, Cathedral vocalist Lee Dorrian *has* built a time machine of sorts, though -- his label Rise Above now has an archival/reissue imprint called Rise Above Relics, dedicated to unearthing the heavy sounds of the past for them to be heard again today. This Possessed album (along with Luv Machine, also reviewed) is one of the first releases and we've gotta say they've dug up a gem, hitherto unknown to us.
Possessed, who you'd think might be some sort of occultic, Comusy folk band from the name and the Art Nouveau, Aubrey Beardsley style cover art, actually play a kinda proggy, kinda glammy hard rock that definitely bears some resemblance to aspects of Led Zeppelin. Just coincidence that Possessed's singer and guitarist, the India-born Vernon Pereira, had been in the original lineup of an outfit called The Band Of Joy, which also included Zeps-to-be Robert Plant and John Bonham? In any case, Possessed's most notable attributes would have to be the sinuous, crunchy riffing of guitarist Pereira, and also his Plant-like lead vocals. Furthermore, the band's spiralingly complex and bombastic songwriting ventures into the variety of "funk" displayed by Led Zeppelin on such songs as "Trampled Underfoot". Then there's the acoustic break of "Exploration Pt. II", also very Zeppish to be sure, though besides Zep, we'd compare this to Thin Lizzy and also to obscurities like Hard Stuff and even AQ faves Zolar X!
Despite being so worthy, Possessed never released an album, though they did record one in 1971 that, due to label disinterest, was shelved (until now, this is it). Sadly, three key band members, including Pereira, died in a motorway accident in 1976 ("Driver of Pop Group Death Van Dozed Off" reads the headline to one of the vintage newspaper clippings reproduced in the cd booklet), bringing a tragic end to the hopes and history of Possessed. The '70s rock star glory experienced by their chums in Led Zeppelin was never to be for this ill-fated band, though things could have, should have, turned out much differently, as at the time of the accident, they were on the verge at last of a major record deal. And they were supposedly slated to play shows in the USA with the Sex Pistols, bizarrely enough. Of course, that never happened.
So we're left with Exploration, while not the best unreleased album of the era ever (Jacula? Bedemon? Sproton Layer?), definitely a pretty darn cool one. It's a bit raw sounding, maybe a still a work in progress with some of the riffing rather similar in a couple of the songs, but it's definitely something that fans of both Led Zep and all the early '70s hard rock rarities we love should investigate! Nicely packaged too with tones of notes and photos.
Also includes a super limited 7", a replica of Possessed's ultra rare Zella Studios demo single!!!
MPEG Stream: "The Love That You Gave"
MPEG Stream: "Darkness, Darkness"

album cover POSTAL SERVICE Give Up (Sub Pop) 2lp 15.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
Now, at long last, this extremely popular album is available on vinyl! Indie darlings Dntel's Jimmy Tamborello and Benjamin Gibbard of Death Cab For Cutie join forces in The Postal Service. Apparently these collaborations did indeed take shape via tapes mailed back and forth between the two. Each track is subtle variation of the following: bashfully boyish vocals, chiming music box melodies and soft jangly guitars that play off one another over a simple thumping or clicking programmed beat. Gibbard sings oh so sweetly in his melted ice cream voice while Tamborello delivers the delightfully pretty electronics and bounding rhythms. Just what you might expect from a project starring these two fellows. Plus there's an added aural delight here and there in the form of lovely vocals by Jen Wood and Rilo Kiley's Jenny Lewis. It's easy to draw comparisons to Kings Of Convenience vocalist Erlend Oye's new solo album which also sets a gentle male voice -- more familiarly heard with soft guitars and drums - singing atop light electronic dancey tracks. However unlike Oye's Unrest on which music and voice sound somewhat detached from each other, Postal Service's Give Up has a wonderful chemistry that swirls everything together perfectly. Recommended!
Includes an extra lp filled with remixes, and b-sides.

MPEG Stream: "The District Sleeps Alone Tonight"
MPEG Stream: "Nothing Better"

album cover POSTAL SERVICE Such Great Heights (Sub Pop) cd ep 3.98
This four song introductory ep offers barely a peep of Postal Service's effervescent crushworthy tunes. Ah, such a sweet peep it is! A perfect accessory to their full length that's out now too. Definitely see the full album review for all the PS nitty gritty, but in particular regards to this ep, the title track is an instantly catchy gem that's sure to find its way onto friends' mixtapes everywhere. The second half is actually PS songs performed by two other bands - fellow Sub Poppers The Shins and Iron And Wine. The brief encounter ends with Iron And Wine's drowsy acoustic rendition of "Such Great Heights". And y'know what? This lil' cd is worth picking up for that track alone. Beautiful! Each version is strong on its own and great in contract to one another. Recommended!
RealAudio clip: POSTAL SERVICE "Such Great Heights 1 "
RealAudio clip: IRON AND WINE "Such Great Heights 4"

album cover POSTAL SERVICE The District Sleeps Tonight (Sub Pop) cd ep 3.98
Arguably the second best song on Jimmy Tamborello and Benjamin Gibbard's Postal Service Give Up album, "The District Sleeps Tonight" is featured on this new cdep along with an alternate, much more percolated'n'squidgy mix by DJ Downfall, as well as a much more languid yet still thumpin' John Tejada remix of the aforementioned album's *best* track "Such Great Heights", plus... this cd version includes a very mellow cover of the Flaming Lips' "Suddenly Everything Has Changed"!
MPEG Stream: "The District Sleeps Tonight"
MPEG Stream: "Suddenly Everything Has Changed"

POSTAL SERVICE The District Sleeps Tonight (Sub Pop) 12" 5.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
Arguably the second best song on Jimmy Tamborello and Benjamin Gibbard's Postal Service Give Up full length, "The District Sleeps Tonight (album version)" is featured on this new cdep along with an alternate, much more percolated'n'squidgy mix by DJ Downfall. On the flipside, there's the album version of the aforementioned album's *best* track "Such Great Heights" along with a much more languid yet still thumpin' John Tejada remix. This all makes for a little quandary tho'... whether to sigh and bliss out or get up and shake yer thang!
RealAudio clip: " "

album cover POSTAL SERVICE We Will Become Silhouettes (Sub Pop) cd ep 3.98
Sub Pop continue their recent string of cd and 12" singles that's threatening to become sort of the unofficial descendent of their old Sub Pop Singles Club. Okay, maybe we're jumpin' the gun, but this is already the third one for Postal Service. The title track is once again drawn from their full length Give Up, and is accompanied by a suitably dreamy new song "Be Still My Heart" as well as two remixes (by Styrofoam and Matthew Dear). Oh such sweetness just in time for Valentine's Day!
MPEG Stream: "Be Still My Heart"
MPEG Stream: "Nothing Better (Styrofoam Remix)"

album cover POSTAL SERVICE We Will Become Silhouettes (Sub Pop) 12" 4.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
Sub Pop continue their recent string of cd and 12" singles that's threatening to become sort of the unofficial descendent of their old Sub Pop Singles Club. Okay, maybe we're jumpin' the gun, but this is already the third one for Postal Service. The title track is once again drawn from their full length Give Up, and is accompanied by a suitably dreamy new song "Be Still My Heart" as well as two remixes (by Styrofoam and Matthew Dear). Oh such sweetness just in time for Valentine's Day!
MPEG Stream: "Be Still My Heart"
MPEG Stream: "Nothing Better (Styrofoam Remix)"

album cover POSTAL SERVICE, THE Give Up (Sub Pop) cd 14.98
Indie darlings Dntel's Jimmy Tamborello and Benjamin Gibbard of Death Cab For Cutie join forces in The Postal Service. Apparently these collaborations did indeed take shape via tapes mailed back and forth between the two. Each track is subtle variation of the following: bashfully boyish vocals, chiming music box melodies and soft jangly guitars that play off one another over a simple thumping or clicking programmed beat. Gibbard sings oh so sweetly in his melted ice cream voice while Tamborello delivers the delightfully pretty electronics and bounding rhythms. Just what you might expect from a project starring these two fellows. Plus there's an added aural delight here and there in the form of lovely vocals by Jen Wood and Rilo Kiley's Jenny Lewis. It's easy to draw comparisons to Kings Of Convenience vocalist Erlend Oye's new solo album which also sets a gentle male voice -- more familiarly heard with soft guitars and drums - singing atop light electronic dancey tracks. However unlike Oye's Unrest on which music and voice sound somewhat detached from each other, Postal Service's Give Up has a wonderful chemistry that swirls everything together perfectly. Recommended!
MPEG Stream: "The District Sleeps Alone Tonight"
MPEG Stream: "Nothing Better"

album cover POSTAL SERVICE, THE Give Up (Deluxe Tenth Anniversary Edition) (Sub Pop) 2cd 14.98
It's hard to believe it's now been more than a decade since the original release of this fantastic little slice of indie electronica, a collaboration between Dntel's Jimmy Tamborello (the electronics and production) and Benjamin Gibbard of Death Cab For Cutie (the bitter sweet indie jangle and that voice!) a project they called at the time The Postal Service (with a little bit of protest from the actual USPS!). Since then, their sound has served as a template for a million other bands, mining much of the same territory, sad boy, mix tape break up indie jangle pop, but all wound up in percolating beats, and warm lustrous electronic shimmer, not indie club music by any stretch, it still had that sort of homebrewed 4-track bedroom vibe that made (and makes) music like this so relatable, but it expanded the typical indie pop sonic palette, and resulted in a serious of glistening, dreamily propulsive, nearly anthemic electronic pop, that does indeed sound just as good now as it did when everyone was freaking out about it the first time around. This tenth anniversary collection, gathers up the Give Up album in its entirety, along with two of the eps from around the same time, as well as some unreleased gems and rarities, and houses it all it a big fancy package, that incorporates the various iconic album art as well as lyrics, liner notes etc. Here's our slightly updated/revised review of these records from the first time around.
The Give Up record originally took shape via tapes mailed back and forth between Tamborello and Gibbard. Each track is subtle variation of the following: bashfully boyish vocals, chiming music box melodies and soft jangly guitars that play off one another over a simple thumping or clicking programmed beat. Gibbard sings oh so sweetly in his melted ice cream voice while Tamborello delivers the delightfully pretty electronics and bounding rhythms. Pretty much exactly what you might expect from a project starring these two fellows. Plus there's an added aural delight here and there in the form of occasional lovely vocals by Jen Wood and Rilo Kiley's Jenny Lewis. The Postal Service's Give Up has a wonderful chemistry that swirls everything together perfectly.
The first single from that record, also included in this anniversary collection, is another gorgeous display of the Postal Service's effortlessly effervescent crushworthy tunes. And ah, such a sweet peep it is! A perfect accessory to the full length. The title track "Such Great Heights" is an instantly catchy gem that's sure to find its way onto friends' mixtapes everywhere (even still) and is most definitely the best song on Give Up. The rest of the ep is filled out actually by PS songs performed by two other bands - fellow Sub Poppers The Shins and Iron And Wine. The brief cover love ends with Iron And Wine's drowsy acoustic rendition of "Such Great Heights". And y'know what? It's definitely different, but in its own way just as good as the original. Beautiful! Each version is strong on its own and great in concert with one another.
Also included is the second ep, The District Sleeps Alone Tonight, the title track, arguably the SECOND best song on Tamborello and Gibbard's Give Up album, "The District Sleeps Tonight" is accompanied by an alternate, much more percolated'n'squidgy mix by DJ Downfall, as well as a much more languid yet still thumpin' John Tejada remix of the aforementioned album's *best* track, the previously mentioned "Such Great Heights", plus... there's also a very mellow cover of the Flaming Lips' "Suddenly Everything Has Changed"!
Single number three is here as well, which in addition to the album track, includes two dreamy mixes from Styrofoam and Matthew Dear. And in addition to all that this new version tacks on a bunch of unreleased and rare tracks as well, including more collaborations with vocalist Jenny Lewis, their awesome Phil Collins cover, which was originally released on the soundtrack to the movie Wicker Park, there's also a John Lennon cover, originally from an Amnesty International benefit compilation, a Nobody remix, originally an iTunes only exclusive, and finally a live on the radio track from 2003.
And as mentioned above, the cd is gorgeous packaged in an oversized booklike package, 8 full color panels, multiple pockets, two booklets, tons of rare photos and more!! The vinyl too, in a similarly over the top multi paneled / pocketed jacket, and while they last we have the Loser Edition (i.e. colored vinyl!)
MPEG Stream: "The District Sleeps Alone Tonight"
MPEG Stream: "Nothing Better"
MPEG Stream: "Suddenly Everything Has Changed"

album cover POSTAL SERVICE, THE Give Up (Deluxe Tenth Anniversary Edition) (Sub Pop) 3lp 34.00
It's hard to believe it's now been more than a decade since the original release of this fantastic little slice of indie electronica, a collaboration between Dntel's Jimmy Tamborello (the electronics and production) and Benjamin Gibbard of Death Cab For Cutie (the bitter sweet indie jangle and that voice!) a project they called at the time The Postal Service (with a little bit of protest from the actual USPS!). Since then, their sound has served as a template for a million other bands, mining much of the same territory, sad boy, mix tape break up indie jangle pop, but all wound up in percolating beats, and warm lustrous electronic shimmer, not indie club music by any stretch, it still had that sort of homebrewed 4-track bedroom vibe that made (and makes) music like this so relatable, but it expanded the typical indie pop sonic palette, and resulted in a serious of glistening, dreamily propulsive, nearly anthemic electronic pop, that does indeed sound just as good now as it did when everyone was freaking out about it the first time around. This tenth anniversary collection, gathers up the Give Up album in its entirety, along with two of the eps from around the same time, as well as some unreleased gems and rarities, and houses it all it a big fancy package, that incorporates the various iconic album art as well as lyrics, liner notes etc. Here's our slightly updated/revised review of these records from the first time around.
The Give Up record originally took shape via tapes mailed back and forth between Tamborello and Gibbard. Each track is subtle variation of the following: bashfully boyish vocals, chiming music box melodies and soft jangly guitars that play off one another over a simple thumping or clicking programmed beat. Gibbard sings oh so sweetly in his melted ice cream voice while Tamborello delivers the delightfully pretty electronics and bounding rhythms. Pretty much exactly what you might expect from a project starring these two fellows. Plus there's an added aural delight here and there in the form of occasional lovely vocals by Jen Wood and Rilo Kiley's Jenny Lewis. The Postal Service's Give Up has a wonderful chemistry that swirls everything together perfectly.
The first single from that record, also included in this anniversary collection, is another gorgeous display of the Postal Service's effortlessly effervescent crushworthy tunes. And ah, such a sweet peep it is! A perfect accessory to the full length. The title track "Such Great Heights" is an instantly catchy gem that's sure to find its way onto friends' mixtapes everywhere (even still) and is most definitely the best song on Give Up. The rest of the ep is filled out actually by PS songs performed by two other bands - fellow Sub Poppers The Shins and Iron And Wine. The brief cover love ends with Iron And Wine's drowsy acoustic rendition of "Such Great Heights". And y'know what? It's definitely different, but in its own way just as good as the original. Beautiful! Each version is strong on its own and great in concert with one another.
Also included is the second ep, The District Sleeps Alone Tonight, the title track, arguably the SECOND best song on Tamborello and Gibbard's Give Up album, "The District Sleeps Tonight" is accompanied by an alternate, much more percolated'n'squidgy mix by DJ Downfall, as well as a much more languid yet still thumpin' John Tejada remix of the aforementioned album's *best* track, the previously mentioned "Such Great Heights", plus... there's also a very mellow cover of the Flaming Lips' "Suddenly Everything Has Changed"!
Single number three is here as well, which in addition to the album track, includes two dreamy mixes from Styrofoam and Matthew Dear. And in addition to all that this new version tacks on a bunch of unreleased and rare tracks as well, including more collaborations with vocalist Jenny Lewis, their awesome Phil Collins cover, which was originally released on the soundtrack to the movie Wicker Park, there's also a John Lennon cover, originally from an Amnesty International benefit compilation, a Nobody remix, originally an iTunes only exclusive, and finally a live on the radio track from 2003.
And as mentioned above, the cd is gorgeous packaged in an oversized booklike package, 8 full color panels, multiple pockets, two booklets, tons of rare photos and more!! The vinyl too, in a similarly over the top multi paneled / pocketed jacket, and while they last we have the Loser Edition (i.e. colored vinyl!)
MPEG Stream: "The District Sleeps Alone Tonight"
MPEG Stream: "Nothing Better"
MPEG Stream: "Suddenly Everything Has Changed"

album cover POTEMKINE Triton (Soleil Zeuhl) cd 16.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
Cd reissue of the 1975 second album from obscure French prog-fusion act Potemkine, a "Zeuhl" band in the mold of Magma. Not as heavy or dark as we were hoping for, but still it's cool, complex stuff. Includes tracks some from their debut lp and single as bonus material.

POTION Among Dreams (www.potionmusic.com) cd 9.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
If you love the warm female vocals of Call And Response or in fact those of '70s singers Helen Reddy or Maureen McGovern (remember the theme from "Poseidon Adventure"?), then hop to it! The SF duo known as Potion embrace many genres but most often find their way back to a smooth, lounge-y sound. A low and lilting, calming debut.

album cover POTOMAC ACCORD Silver Line on a Black Sea (TPA) cd 10.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
The debut album by The Potomac Accord from St Louis, MO bears more than a striking resemblance to Godspeed You Black Emperor's "F#A#oo" - heck, the cover is an absolute deadringer with the exact same slant of the horizon in the grey blurry cover photo, letterboxed with matte black even. And the music, song titles, and (lack of) liner notes bear a striking resemblance as well, although the sound itself is a bit more active and less purposefully overwrought. Lengthy sonic journeys across a misty, grey terrain. Slow solemn piano, flute and sparse percussion. Frail, mournful male vocals. Empassioned, dramatic sweeps and swells. Really quite nice.
RealAudio clip: "When I'm Gone This Will All Be Yours"

album cover POTOP Channels (Iron Pig Records) cd 13.98
Been dying to review this slab of bleak brutal blackened doom drenched power violence for a while now. We were first exposed to these guys when they shared a split lp with the equally downtuned and devastating Burmese. Very few bands are up to the task of sharing a record with the mighty Burmese, but these Macedonian (not Russian as we mistakenly thought) slow motion grindcrushers definitely held their own, enough that we were super psyched to discover there was indeed a full length.
Channels takes up right where those split tracks left off. Heaving, massive, lurching, doomy, crusty crush, but this isn't ultra doom, or even classic power violence, Potop fall right in between, the tempos are slow to midtempo, the guitars crunch and buzz, but just as often ring out, there's tons of space, long stretches dotted with spaced out chords, left hanging, slowly decaying, wrapped in Eyehategod-like sheets of feedback. The vocals are tortured and anguished, a feral yowl, way down in the mix and doused in reverb, those two elements, all tangled up and sprawling, create these epic drifting slabs of angular buzz and monstrous pound, weirdly melodic, and dramatic, sometimes mathy, other times seemingly structureless, but the best moments are when the band lock into a woozy groove, crushing and punishing and massive and so weirdly catchy.
The record finishes off with a 40 second blast of twisted pummeling ultraviolence, a blurred blowout of howling grinding pounding fury. And then it's over. And if you're like us, you go right back to the beginning and listen to the whole thing again...
MPEG Stream: "S.S. Eksplozija"
MPEG Stream: "II"

album cover POW! Pretend There (After Life) 7" 6.98

album cover POWELL, ROGER / M. FROG (JEAN YVES LABAT) Air Pocket / M. Frog (Edsel) cd 15.98
Oh, wow. Finally found a reasonably-priced cd reissue of this freaky, far out '70s artifact, that we first heard of being raved about by The Seth Man on Julian Cope's Head Heritage website a while back. We're talking about the "M. Frog" half of this twofer disc (we'll get to the Roger Powell part, in a bit). Originally released in 1973, it's a rockin' psych-prog opus laden with copious EMS Synthi-A workouts and an anarchic spirit of anything-goes fun. This record was the vibrant solo debut from a Frenchman named Jean Yves Labat (aka M. Frog), who at the time was the keyboard player for Todd Rundgren's Utopia - that being the American pop producer's proggier-than-thou outfit, Rundgren's answer to English bands like Yes and Genesis, as you may know. So Labat was quite the keyboard wiz, and also a bit of a weirdo, almost becoming a Benedictine monk, before he gave that up for a life of progressive rock excess. The M. Frog album draws upon his schooling in avant-garde composition - the colorful cover art is actually a part of a graphic score done in Labat's own unique color-coded notation for synthesizer operation. But it's very much hippie, heavy rock n' roll entertainment too.
This album's opener and presumable alternate-universe hit single sold us right away - "We Are Crazy" lives up to its title, coming across like krautrock goofs Guru Guru jamming with Perrey-Kingsley, or Jean-Pierre Massiera endeavoring to outdo the Osmonds' "Crazy Horses"! The song is built upon catchy riffage with a TON of crazy synth action, and brilliant/dumb non-sequitur lyrics (about how they're crazy and stupid and lazy and if you understand you'll win a washing machine or a date with the Queen) that really drive the "We Are Crazy" point home. It's also reprised later in the album in an instrumental version (even more synth!!) and in both cases exemplifies Jean Yves Labat's statement of purpose: "I want the music to pop out. It's funny music. It's alive. It is for the living."
The next track takes the volume but not the weirdness down a few notches, the moodier "Champegarpaen" being a kinda krautrocky percolating groove, adorned not just with synth but with sawing violin, Munchkin voices, Gregorian chant, musique concrete effects, and cowbell...
Speaking of krautrock, some of this reminds us of Faust, in that it's more comic, than cosmic! Really each and every track here pretty wild, a manic mix of heavy rock jams, plenty of synth zips and zaps, and 'novelty' tunage replete with funny voices. There's some calmer, spacey moments too, as on album-ender "Relax Goliath" (such relaxation is needed by then). And Todd Rungren himself contributes a few fuzzed-out & synth-processed guitar solos here and there; not to be outshined, however, by Jean Yves' own indulgences in crazy complex keyboard solo sections too.
They really don't make 'em like this anymore, and M. Frog must be the ultimate at whatever it is, exactly. A worthy reissue we're so glad to have, done quite nicely with lengthy informative liner notes in the thick cd booklet, which also includes more full-color examples of Labat's unusual & eye-catching musical notation.
AND, that's not all, there's actually a whole 'nother album on this disc, by a totally different guy. That's right, the aforementioned Roger Powell, with his album Air Pocket. The rationale for putting these two together on the same cd is that Powell was, in a later lineup, also the keyboard player for Todd Rundgren's Utopia. Also both albums came out on the Bearsville label. But other than that, and total synth overload, they don't have too much else in common. Powell's brand of prog was less nutty, more cheesy, let's sayÉ but not without its charms. Air Pocket, which actually comes first on this disc, non-chronologically for some reason, definitely has got a lot of '80s glossiness to it, with drum machines and plenty of synthesizer wank - enough that it was voted 1980 Album Of The Year by the readers of Keyboard Magazine. The record starts off pretty cool, the spacey "Lunar Plexus" sounding like the lighter side of something along the lines of John Carpenter, definitely the sort of thing today's fans of Zombi/Majeure will probably like. Then, the futuristic disco new wave pop of "Landmark" adds vocals, it's dated but kinda nifty in a wayÉ the singing in particular kinda reminds us of XTC, for a moment anyway, maybe just 'cause Powell is English.
Air Pocket gets a little freakier on "Emergency Splashdown", with klaxon alarm sounds, urgent rhythms, processed voxÉ More blissfully ambient-sounding electronics are represented by the brief "Morning Chorus", with guitar by Todd Rundgren. And then, as the second side of the original lp really gets underway, Roger Powell demonstrates his true prog/fantasy allegiances on a series of instrumentals, with titles like "March Of The Dragonslayers" and "Sands Of Arrakis". Which range from bright and chimey TV theme song tuneishness to more moody swirling ambience. Overall, Roger Powell's Air Pocket is a lightly proggy, soft, synth-laden yacht rock record that's kitschy fun, and not un-catchy.
A bonus track by Powell is also included here, from a single he did in 1978, a slightly sinister synth version of surf classic "Pipeline", with a pounding bass beat. Good times! We probably dig that cover more than the actual Air Pocket album, in fact.
But anyway, we already said the real reason to get this disc is for the M. Frog half, otherwise unavailable on its own, while you can count whichever Roger Powell tracks you like as fun, free bonuses and forget the rest.
MPEG Stream: M. FROG (JEAN YVES LABAT) "We Are Crazy"
MPEG Stream: M. FROG (JEAN YVES LABAT) "Champegarpaen"
MPEG Stream: M. FROG (JEAN YVES LABAT) "Suckling-pigs Game"
MPEG Stream: ROGER POWELL "Lunar Plexus"
MPEG Stream: ROGER POWELL "Dragons 'n' Griffins / Mr. Triscuits Theme"

album cover POWER OF ZEUS The Gospel According To Zeus (Get On Down ) cd 16.98
Hell yeah, '70s proto-metal from Detroit (and not only that, released on a Motown subsidiary)! These dudes have appeared on some cool comps of heavy psych obscurities we've listed (Up All Night, White Lace & Strange) but this is the first time we've seen a legit reissue of their only album, from 1970, entitled The Gospel According To Zeus. This digipacked reish is from the master tapes. The album starts off with stone classic "It Couldn't Be Me", a track that hiphop headz might recognize as having been sampled on an Obie Trice record a few years back. What we also now realize, is that recent AQ fave band Malachai (the sampledelic UK duo on Domino) essentially sounds, at their best, a whole heck of a lot like that one song by Power Of Zeus - it's as if Malachai based their entire sound on the big beat fuzz pop hard rock of "It Couldn't Be Me"! So that's pretty cool.
But Power Of Zeus have a bunch more bellbottomed acid rock goodness to offer here... ten tracks total ranging from upbeat garagey psych nuggets like "In The Night" and "I Lost My Love", to the mellower, harpsichord-laced "Green Grass & Clover" and the epic, aptly titled doomic dirge "The Death Trip", eventually culminating in the freaked out finale of prog opus "The Sorcerer Of Isis (Ritual Of The Mole)", another track that's been sampled by hiphop producers.
Along the way, lotsa bangin' fuzz riffs, wailing organ, lofty vocals, and cowbell knockin' grooviness, real good stuff for all you proto-metal (and popsike!) fans into the likes of Sir Lord Baltimore, Granicus, Atomic Rooster, Dust, Frijid Pink, Bubble Puppy, and last list's proto-metal selections by Bang and Elonkorjuu.
Way cool.
If Power Of Zeus played shows with Funkadelic back in the day, we wouldn't be at all surprised...
MPEG Stream: "It Couldn't Be Me"
MPEG Stream: "In The Night"
MPEG Stream: "No Time"
MPEG Stream: "Realization"

album cover POWER PILL FIST Extra Life (Graveface) cd 11.98
Last year we made Kongmanivong by Power Pill Fist a Record Of The Week, a dizzying blast of crunchy 8-bit tripped out fuzz drenched madness that became an immediate aQ fave, created of course by Ken Fec, one of the guys in Black Moth Super Rainbow, another group we love who plunder the past, taking all sorts of retro sounds and whipping them up into something wild and new. We knew there was another Power Pill Fist record, but couldn't seem to track down enough copies to list, until now. And actually, we barely have enough to list, 10 to be exact, but not everyone who loved that one will dig this one, since unlike Kongmanivong, Extra Life is a bit less playful, a little harder, more muscular, and WAY more noisy.
The core sounds are still the crunch of 8-bit video game music and super lo-fi crumbling distortion, chopped up and arranged into strange rhythms and abstract textures, but where Kongmanivong was a pop record flecked with noisy bits, Extra Life plays out more like a noise record flecked with bits of pop. Dense and thick and a little bit caustic, sounds layered into repeating loops, fractured rhythms, often left to just drone or buzz, it definitely sounds a lot like a room full of arcade games gone haywire, little bits of playful bloop and bleep surface here and there, but they tend to be surrounded by thick sheets of wild corrosive blown out psych noise freakouts and pulsing lo-fi buzz. So fair warning to all the folks into the playful almost hip hopitty vibe and bubbly retro pop feel of Kongmanivong, this one might be on the difficult listening side, and will probably appeal more to drone folks and noiseniks, it's definitely a lot heavier, and darker, and way crunchier, although even adventurous pop nerds might give this a try, strap on some headphones, and Extra Life sucks you right in, burying you in a glorious soft cacophony of crunch and crumble and stutter and glitch and buzz.
MPEG Stream: "Bobby Go Home"
MPEG Stream: "Mashed Potato Legs"
MPEG Stream: "Extra Life"

POWERFIELD Electronic Electric Electronic (Paratactile) cd 17.98
This trio of electronics, guitar, and percussion is a fusion of prog-rock congestion and post-psychedelic guitar (courtesy of Gary Smith of God, Mass, etc...). Joe Gallivan's electronics add a hint of breakbeat skitter. 'Much of the originality of the music comes from an unexpected but forceful sandwiching of intense 70s outer rock explorations and contemporary experiments with lo-fi electronics' - The Wire.

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