New records in the collection
Early Nov, eBay:
Soul/funk lot. We’ve been feeling a little deficient around the Bradshaw house in the area of soul/funk/R&B. I pulled this lot off from eBay, actually in trying to save on shipping or another auction I ended up losing (Tiger Trap, self-titled LP). A decent lot for a total of ten bucks.
Platters, Encore of Golden Hits. Overproduced 50-60’s pop/soul. Innessential.
Earth, Wind and Fire, Greatest Hits, Volume 1. Far exceeds expectations, great sound, solid funk/soul in a good way, great songwriting.
Pointer Sisters, Having a Party. Solid set of adequate party funk which thankfully stays away from disco.
Love Unlimited Orchestra feat. Barry White, Rhapsody in White. Likely to be overproduced crap, in no hurry to listen to this one.
Staple Singers, City in the Sky. Haven’t listened yet, but has good funk potential.
Mid- October, Exile on Main Street,
REM, Murmur. It’s not a bad thing to have a good supply of early REM on hand.
Los Lobos, And a Time to Dance. Their first proper release, this predates their blossoming into one of the greatest bands in the world. That said, it’s a very solid slab of Mexamerican boogey music, and is no black mark in a record collection.
Halloween 2006, Exile on Main Street,
Kinks, Kinks Kronikles.
Robyn Hitchcock and the Egyptians, Globe of Frogs. Pretty good slab of psych-pop weirdness with an accent on the pop, mid-80’s college style. Decent, but not on par with Element of Light of Fegmania!.
Willie Nelson, Stardust. Great collection of Willie’s take on classic pop tunes from yesteryear. $1, only needed a good cleaning.
Patti Smith, Dream of Life. Another one-bucker. Nothing really special, like a lot of records great artists released in the mid-eighties.
Cheap Trick, S/T. Killer debut from these pop greats. This has been a gaping hole in the collection for some time. Incidentally they also had an LP copy of CT’s pretty good 2003 record Special One, but I have it on cd and it’s not essential enough to archive on vinyl.
Pretenders, II. Must have if only for “Talk of the Town”. Sonically not great, and this track is the last one on side 1 where tracking distortion is greatest, so probably not the best buy. But then again, it is their best song.
Vulgar Boatmen, You and Your Sister. Indie folk-rock from late ‘80’s. Only soun it once so far, and need to digest it again sometime. Of course the Chris Bell allusion in the title might have suggested I pick it up, but I also remember reading something about them in the Trouser Press Record Guide.
Rank & File, S/T and Long Gone Dead. First two from country/roots-punks led by the brothers Kinman. First record has Alejandro Escovedo. Pretty good but I think my collection is maxing out on this vein (Green on Red, Gear Daddies, Beat Farmers, Guadalcanal Diary, etc.) By the way, their third record sucks.
Sir Douglas Quintet, Border Wave. New wave meets
November 14,
In town for a work meeting, I flew in too early the day before and had some time to kill. No rental car so I was on foot and explored the NC State University area and found two good records shops.
First was Schoolfish records, a typical indie shop in a college town with a nice selection of new vinyl at new vinyl prices. After much browsing picked up:
Minus 5, Down with Wilco. Passed this one up at Pure Pop in
Richard and Linda Thompson, Shoot out the Lights. Their masterpiece written during the total collapse of their marriage and partnership. I was familiar with a lot of the songs from the tribute cd Beat the Retreat but this package blows it all away. Incredible sonics to start, with amazing songwriting and guitar work. This piece damn near pulls you into the room with these two as their breaking apart. Powerful shit.
Dave Alvin, Romeo’s Escape. Bought this one mainly for the version of “4th of July”. It’s not as pretty harmony-wise as the X version, but this tale of desperation almost sounds better in the solo croaky voice of a lonely man. Rest of the album is decent roots music.
Neville Brothers, Treacherous. In keeping with my desire for some good soul/funk/R&B I couldn’t pass this one up. A great two-disc collection from Rhino.
Thin White Rope, Moonhead. About the only release I’m lacking from this underlooked but incredible desert-freak guitar band from the mid-late 80’s.
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