Tuesday, May 30, 2023

Beth Orton - SuperPinkyMandy (1993)

Elizabeth Caroline Orton was born on 14 December 1970 in Dereham, Norfolk, but moved to Dalston, East London, at age fourteen. She studied A-levels at City College Norwich, and after the death of her mother when Orton was 19, she travelled to Thailand for a short period, living with Buddhist nuns. On returning to London, she worked at jobs such as a waitress at Pizza Hut, and she even briefly owned her own catering company. She was an actress before becoming a musician, initially enrolling at the Anna Scher Theatre School, and she toured in an experimental stage adaptation of 'Une Saison en Enfer' with a theatre company touring throughout the UK, Russia and Ukraine, playing Rimbaud's lover. In 1993 Orton began working with William Orbit on an LP together as Spill, entitled 'Burn Blind', but 'Don't Wanna Know 'bout Evil' was the first of their collaborations that ended up being released in just Orton's name. The album that it was taken from was called 'Superpinkymandy', after a rag doll which she bought at a jumble sale at the age of six, and it was only granted an extremely limited release in Japan, with reports of as few as 5,000 copies being pressed. The sound is very much Orbit's, but all of the songs, with the exception of John Martyn's 'Don't Wanna Know 'Bout Evil', were Orton/Orbit co-writes, with some tracks later being recycled in very different versions, such as 'She Cries Your Name' on 'Trailer Park', and 'Yesterday's Gone' becoming 'Montok Point' on 1995's 'Hinterland'. These days Orton largely passes over the release when interviewed, citing 1996's 'Trailer Park' as her first album, and while it has more of a dance influenced style than the folktronica of her subsequent albums, it's still a very enjoyable record in its own right, and I can't see why she hates it so much that she's tried to expunge it from her discography.  



Track listing

01 Don't Wanna Know 'bout Evil
02 Faith Will Carry
03 Yesterday's Gone
04 She Cries Your Name
05 When You Wake
06 Roll the Dice
07 City Blue
08 The Prisoner
09 Where Do You Go
10 Release Me

Friday, May 26, 2023

Hole - Over The Edge (1999)

In her mid-20's Courtney Love had been living a nomadic life, immersing herself in numerous music scenes, and living in various cities along the West Coast. After unsuccessful attempts at forming bands in San Francisco and Portland, she relocated to Los Angeles, where she found work as an actress in two Alex Cox films, 'Sid And Nancy' and 'Straight To Hell'. In 1989 she placed an ad in The Recycler saying that she wanted to start a band, and Eric Erlandson answered and was invited to join her in her new band, to be called Sweet Baby Crystal Powered By God, although the name was later changed to Hole instead. Hole's first official rehearsal took place at Fortress Studios in Hollywood with Love, Erlandson and Lisa Roberts on bass, and initially the band had no percussion until Love met drummer Caroline Rue at a Gwar and L7 concert in Long Beach. The band subsequently recruited a third guitarist, Mike Geisbrecht, but by early 1990, Geisbrecht and Roberts had both left the band, which led to the recruitment of bassist Jill Emery. Hole released their no wave-influenced debut single 'Retard Girl' in April 1990 on Sympathy For The Record Industry, and followed it with 'Dicknail' in 1991 on Sub Pop. That year, the band signed with Caroline Records to release their debut album, and Love sought Kim Gordon of Sonic Youth to produce it, sending her copies of the band's early singles and  mentioning that the band greatly admired Gordon's work. Gordon was impressed enough to agree to produce the album, and in September 1991 'Pretty On The Inside' was released to positive reception from underground critics, who branded it loud, ugly and deliberately shocking. 
The album spawned one single, 'Teenage Whore', which entered the UK Indie Chart at number one, and the band embarked on a European tour in the fall of 1991 supporting Mudhoney. In mid-1991, they began to get the attention of the major labels, but an offer from Madonna's label Maverick was turned down as Love didn't think the label would understand her. Love and Erlandson began writing new material for a second Hole album in 1992, in the midst of Love's pregnancy with Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain, but her desire to take the band in a more melodic and controlled rock format led bassist Emery to leave the band, followed by drummer Caroline Rue, who was replaced by Patty Schemel after an audition in Los Angeles, although the band spent the remainder of the year without a bassist. Hole signed to Geffen's subsidiary DGC label with an eight-album contract in late 1992, and in the spring of 1993 they released their single 'Beautiful Son', which was recorded in Seattle with producer Jack Endino as a fill-in bass player. It wasn't until the spring of 1993 that Love and Erlandson managed to recruit Janitor Joe bassist Kristen Pfaff, and the band then toured the UK in the summer, mainly performing material from their upcoming major label debut, 'Live Through This'. The album was released on 12 April 1994, one week after Love's husband, Kurt Cobain, was found dead in his Seattle home. In the wake of Love's family tragedy, 'Live Through This' was a critical success, and spawned several popular singles, including 'Doll Parts', 'Violet', and 'Miss World', going multi-platinum and being hailed as album of the year by Spin magazine. Despite the critical praise for 'Live Through This', rumours circulated that Cobain had actually written the majority of the album, though the band vehemently denies this, and Patty Schemel has confirmed that Love and Erlandson wrote 'Live Through This'. 
In 1994, bassist Kristen Pfaff went into a drug treatment facility to treat her heroin addiction, and was contemplating leaving the band for health reasons, but in June 1994 she was found dead of a heroin overdose in the bathroom of her Seattle home. Hole put their impending tour on hold, pulling out of the upcoming Lollapalooza festival, but after recruiting bassist Melissa Auf der Maur over the summer, they commenced their world tour on 26 August at the Reading Festival in England, giving a performance that John Peel described as "teetering on the edge of chaos". In September 1995 the band released their first EP, titled 'Ask For It', which featured 1991 Peel session recordings, as well as covers of songs by Wipers and The Velvet Underground. In 1996 they released a cover of Fleetwood Mac's 'Gold Dust Woman' for the soundtrack to the film 'The Crow: City of Angels', which was the first studio song to feature Melissa Auf der Maur on bass. In 1997, the band entered Conway Recording Studios in Los Angeles after attempts to write new material in Miami, New Orleans, London, and New York, and Hole's third studio album 'Celebrity Skin' was released in 1998. It was a completely new sound for the band, incorporating elements of power pop, and had Love drawing influences from Fleetwood Mac and My Bloody Valentine. According to Erlandson, Love was more focused on song-writing and singing than playing guitar on the record, and also enlisted the help of Smashing Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan to perfect five of the album's twelve songs. Although Schemel is listed as drummer in the liner notes of the record, her drumming does not actually appear on the record, as she was replaced by session drummer Deen Castronovo, under pressure from producer Michael Beinhorn. This led to her quitting the band, and although Love and Erlandson had agreed to Schemel being replaced on the record, they both expressed regret in retrospect, with Love stating later that Beinhorn was notorious for replacing drummers on sessions. 
Schemel was replaced by Samantha Maloney for their upcoming tour and music videos. 'Celebrity Skin' was a critical success, with strong sales and successful singles, including the title track, 'Malibu' and 'Awful', and peaked at number 9 on the Billboard 200. In the winter of 1998–99, Hole went on tour to promote 'Celebrity Skin', joining Marilyn Manson, who was promoting his album 'Mechanical Animals', but they dropped out of the tour nine dates in, due in part to the fact that the majority of the fans were Manson's. After leaving Manson's tour, Hole carried on touring, and on 17 June 1999, during Hole's set at the Hultsfred Festival in Sweden, a 19-year-old girl died after being crushed in the mosh pit behind the mixing board. Hole played its final show at Thunderbird Stadium in Vancouver on July 14, 1999. In October Auf der Maur quit the band and went on to become a touring bassist for The Smashing Pumpkins, with Samantha Maloney also quitting a few months later. The band's final release was a single for the 1999 movie 'Any Given Sunday', with the 'Celebrity Skin' out-take 'Be A Man' coming out in March 2000. In Spring 2002 Love announced via the band's website that she and Erlandson had officially disbanded Hole. Love began a solo career, releasing her debut, 'America's Sweetheart', in 2004, while Melissa Auf der Maur also embarked on a solo career, and released her self-titled debut album the same year. The twelve years of Hole's existence was a roller-coaster ride for all involved, but they did manage to produce some great music, and as well as their three albums, their singles and b-sides are all worth hearing, so here they all are collected together in one place for you to enjoy. 



Track listing

Disc I - 1990-1994
01 Retard Girl (single 1990)
02 Phonebill Song (b-side of 'Retard Girl')
03 Johnnies In The Bathroom (b-side of 'Retard Girl')
04 Turpentine (previously unreleased from the 'Retard Girl' sessions)
05 Drown Soda (b-side of 'Teenage Whore' 1991)
06 Dicknail (single 1991)
07 Burnblack (b-side of 'Dicknail')
08 Beautiful Son (single 1993)
09 20 Years In The Dakota (b-side of 'Beautiful Son')
10 Old Age (b-side of 'Beautiful Son')
11 Do It Clean (b-side of 'Miss World' 1994) live
12 Over The Edge (b-side of 'Miss World' 1994)

Disc II - 1995-1999
01 The Void (BBC Live Version) (b-side of 'Doll Parts' 1995)
02 He Hit Me (And It Felt Like A Kiss) (b-side of 'Violet' 1995)
03 Whose Porno You Burn (Black) (b-side of 'Violet' 1995)
04 Season Of The Witch (bonus track from 'MTV Unplugged' 1995)
05 Pale Blue Eyes (from the 'Ask For It' EP 1995)
06 Forming/Hot Chocolate Boy (from the 'Ask For It' EP 1995
07 Gold Dust Woman (single from the soundtrack of the film 'The Crow' 1996)
08 Best Sunday Dress (b-side of 'Celebrity Skin' 1998)
09 Drag (b-side of 'Malibu' 1999)
10 It's All Over Now, Baby Blue (b-side of 'Malibu' 1999)
11 Be A Man (single from the soundtrack of the film 'Any Given Sunday' 1999)

Michelle Branch - Everything Comes And Goes (2010)

Michelle Jacquet DeSevren Branch was born on 2 July 1983, in Sedona, Arizona, and began singing at the age of three, enrolling in voice lessons at Northern Arizona University when she was eight. She received her first guitar for her 14th birthday, and after teaching herself chords, she composed her first song 'Fallen' within a week of receiving her guitar. She initially attended Sedona Red Rock High School, but finished the last two years of her high school education through home schooling so that she could focus on her music career, and to support her interests, her parents helped her book local gigs in Sedona, and later financed her independent album 'Broken Bracelet'. In December 1999, she posted two of her songs on the Rolling Stone website, which caught the attention of both pop rock band Hanson, and former Rolling Stone writer and Los Angeles record producer Jeff Rabhan, eventually leading to two gigs opening for Hanson in 2000. In June 2000, her 'Broken Bracelet' album was released on the independent record label Twin Dragon Records, and by 2001 she had signed to Maverick Records, where she began working with John Shanks to produce her major-label debut. 'The Spirit Room' was released in August 2001, and produced the hit single 'Everywhere', which was a commercial success, winning the 2002 MTV Video Music Awards Viewer's Choice Award. The mainstream success of 'Everywhere' and her other singles helped propel 'The Spirit Room' to double platinum status, selling over two million copies in the United States. In 2002, Branch teamed up with Santana, alongside songwriters Gregg Alexander and Rick Nowels, to produce the song 'The Game Of Love', which went on to win a Grammy Award for Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals. Her second major label album, 'Hotel Paper', was released in 2003, and debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 chart, although it was met with mixed reviews, despite the lead single 'Are You Happy Now?' being a chart success. The following singles, however, 'Breathe' and ''Til I Get over You', did not match the first single's success, and it was at this time that she branched out into television, appearing in several shows, including 'Buffy The Vampire Slayer' and 'American Dreams', and as herself in 'Charmed'. In July 2005, Branch began collaborating with her backup singer and long-time friend Jessica Harp, calling themselves The Wreckers, and released an album in 2006 that attempted to combine their respective genres or pop/rock and country. The Wreckers split in 2007, and in October Branch announced that she was working on a new solo album, to be titled 'Everything Comes And Goes', but when it eventually appeared in July 2010 it had shrunk to a six-track EP. In December 2010, she announced her return to her pop/rock roots for her album 'West Coast Time', and in early 2011 she released three previously unheard songs from the 'Everything Comes And Goes' sessions,  being 'Texas In The Mirror', 'Take A Chance On Me', and 'Long Goodbye'. This meant that we now had nine of the proposed thirteen songs from the album, and so by tracking down the remaining few recordings we can piece together the full album version of 'Everything Comes And Goes' that should have appeared in 2010.



Track listing 

01 This Way
02 Sooner Or Later
03 I Want Tears
04 Crazy Ride
05 Ready To Let You Go
06 Show Me A Sign
07 Long Goodbye
08 Summertime
09 Texas In The Mirror
10 I'm Not That Strong
11 Pretty Little Lyin' Eyes
12 Everything Comes And Goes
13 Take A Chance On Me

Missy Elliott - Block Party (2008)

Melissa Arnette Elliott, better known as Missy Elliott or Missy "Misdemeanor" Elliott, embarked
on her music career with R&B girl group Sista in the early-to-mid 1990's, and later became a member of the Swing Mob collective along with childhood friend and long-time collaborator Timbaland, with whom she worked on projects for American R&B acts Aaliyah, 702, Total, and SWV. Following several collaborations and guest appearances, she launched her solo career in 1997 with her debut album 'Supa Dupa Fly', which spawned the top 20 single 'Sock It 2 Me'. The album debuted at number three on the Billboard 200, the highest charting debut for a female rapper at the time. Her second album, 'Da Real World', was released in 1999 and produced the singles 'She's A Bitch', 'All n My Grill', and top five hit 'Hot Boyz'. The remix of the latter song broke the record for most weeks at number one on the US R&B chart in January 2000, as well as spending 18 weeks at number one on the Hot Rap Singles chart from December 1999 to March 2000. With the release of 'Miss E... So Addictive' (2001), 'Under Construction' (2002), and 'This Is Not A Test' (2003), Elliott established an international career that yielded hits including 'Get Ur Freak On', 'One Minute Man', '4 My People', 'Gossip Folks', and 'Work It', with the latter winning her a Grammy Award for Best Female Rap Solo Performance. Since 2007, Elliott's seventh studio album has had several different forms with extensive delays. Initially she worked with Timbaland, Swizz Beatz, Danja, T-Pain and DJ Toomp and planned to release the album at the beginning of 2008. In January 2008, 'Ching-A-Ling' was released as the lead single for the soundtrack of the film 'Step Up 2: The Streets', which also featured 'Shake Your Pom Pom', produced by Timbaland. 'Best, Best' was released the same year, and Elliott renamed the album from 'FANomenal' to its new tentative title 'Block Party'. Things went quiet over the next few years, and then in 2012 she released two Timbaland-produced singles, '9th Inning' and 'Triple Threat', exclusively to iTunes. Though the songs managed to chart on Billboard Hot Digital Songs, this was not the impetus that Elliott needed to resurrect 'Block Party', saying in an interview with Yahoo's The Yo Show, that sometimes "Your brain needs time to refresh!". In between the recording of her seventh album, Elliott found success behind the scenes, with her writing and production being involved in hits for Keyshia Cole ('Let It Go'), Jazmine Sullivan ('Need U Bad'), Monica ('Everything To Me'), Fantasia ('Free Yourself'), and Jennifer Hudson ('I'm His Only Woman'). All this extra-curricular work has kept her from completing her own music, and so it's now unlikely that 'Block Party' will ever see the light of day, so it's up to us to piece it together so that we can hear what could well have turned out to be Elliott's final album under her own name. 



Track listing

01 Ching-A-Ling
02 Shake Your Pom Pom
03 Best, Best
04 Warped (interlude)
05 Talk That Shit
06 All 4 U
07 9th Inning (feat. Timbaland)
08 Swat That Fly
09 Act A Fool
10 Pep Rally
11 Put It On Ya (feat. Teyana Taylor & Pharrell)
12 Triple Threat (feat. Timbaland)

Tuesday, May 23, 2023

The Frantic Elevators - Production Prevention (1982)

The Frantic Elevators were a punk band who formed in 1976 after the members met each other at a Sex Pistols gig at the Lesser Free Trade Hall in Manchester in June 1976 The group consisting of vocalist Mick Hucknall, drummer Kevin Williams, guitarist Neil Smith, and bassist Brian Turner, and their first single, 'Voice In The Dark', was released in June 1979 by TJM records, after which they hopped over to Eric's Records, the label affiliated with the Liverpool club of the same name. 'You Know What You Told Me'  was released near the end of 1980, and by then DJ John Peel heard the band through the TJM record, and on one show from 12 June 1979 he played all three tracks from their 'Voice In The Dark' single, and then offered them a session on his show, which was broadcast in March 1981. Their third single, 'Searching For The Only One' was released on the Crackin' Up label in 1981, and a second Peel session was broadcast in September of that year. After that, an extended recording hiatus ensued, predating what would become their final single, 1982's 'Holding Back The Years' on the No Waiting label. In 1984 The Frantic Elevators disbanded, and Hucknall linked up with manager Elliot Rashman, assembling a band of local session musicians in 1985, who began to attract record-company attention. The band were christened Simply Red, and signed a contract with Elektra in 1985, and after a few low-charting singles they re-recorded 'Holding Back The Years', which became their first major hit. Bit enough about them, we're here to listen to the raucous punk-rock of The Frantic Elevators, with this collection of all their singles, b-sides and exclusive Peel sessions.  



Track listing

01 Hunchback Of Notre Dame (from the 'Hunchback Of Notre Dame' EP 1979)
02 See Nothing And Everything (from the 'Hunchback Of Notre Dame' EP 1979)
03 Don't Judge Me (from the 'Hunchback Of Notre Dame' EP 1979)
04 Voice In The Dark (single 1979)
05 Passion (b-side of 'Voices In The Dark')
06 Every Day I Die (b-side of 'Voices In The Dark')
07 You Know What You Told Me (single 1980)
08 Production Prevention (b-side of 'You Know What You Told Me')
09 Searching For The Only One (single 1981)
10 Ding Dong (John Peel session March 1981)
11 I Am The Man (John Peel session March 1981)
12 And I Don't Care (Nobody Stays Here) (John Peel session September 1981)
13 After Hanging Around (John Peel session September 1981)
14 What To Do? (John Peel session September 1981)
15 I'm Not To See Her (John Peel session September 1981)
16 Ice Cream And Wafers (John Peel session September 1981)
17 Holding Back The Years (single 1982)
18 Pistols In My Brain (b-side of 'Holding Back The Years')

Friday, May 19, 2023

Lyres - We Sell Soul (1995)

Lyres were the creation of vocalist, keyboard player, songwriter, and uncontested leader Jeff Conolly, who formed them in 1979 shortly after the demise of his like-minded group DMZ. Lyres quickly became mainstays on the Boston rock scene and were one of the key bands on the garage rock revival scene of the '80s, on the strength of the albums On Fyre (1984) and Lyres Lyres (1986). Conolly was nicknamed "Monoman" partly because of his love of monophonic recordings of the 60's, and in part because of his monomaniacal obsession with vintage rock & roll. He was born in Albany, New York, moving first to a town near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and then to Darien, Connecticut, by which time he'd already began playing keyboards, and had developed a taste for the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and Paul Revere and the Raiders. He fell in with a group of musically minded peers in his teens, and hoped to attend music school, but his parents had other ideas, and in 1976 he enrolled at Boston University, although he soon dropped out to play rock & roll. One of his friends at BU, Adam Schwartz, was singing in a band called DMZ, whose style blended raw 60's sounds with the speed and attitude of the burgeoning punk rock movement. Conolly saw DMZ play at a party, and was impressed by them, but Schwartz was soon bounced from the line-up for seeming too mannered, and seeing an opportunity, Conolly volunteered to take his place, and became their lead singer while also playing electric piano. Following the release of an EP on the esteemed independent rock & roll label Bomp! Records in 1977, Sire Records offered the band a major label deal, but their 1978 self-titled debut album, produced by Mark Volman and Howard Kaylan of the Turtles and Flo & Eddie, didn't capture the full impact of their live show, and by the end of that year, DMZ had split. 
By January 1979 Conolly had put together Lyres, who eased back on the 70's punk facets of their music to focus on 60's-style material, with Conolly moving from piano to a Vox Continental organ, and featuring just one guitarist instead of DMZ's two. The first Lyres performances featured the final DMZ rhythm section of Rick Coraccio on bass and Paul Murphy on drums, with Rick Carmel on guitar, and this line-up cut the first Lyres single, 'How Do You Know' b/w 'Don't Give It Up Now', for Sounds Interesting Records in 1979. By August the band has splintered, and Conolly recruited guitarist Alex Kronos, bassist Scott Parmenter, and drummer Bob Mackenzie for live work, but the final line-up of Peter Greenberg on guitar, Mike Lewis on bass, and Howie Ferguson on drums didn't finalise until mid-1980. This line-up would record the first Lyres release for Boston's Ace Of Hearts Records, a four-song EP that came out in 1981 called 'AHS-1005', with the record winning the group attention outside of Boston. The single 'I Really Want You Right Now' b/w 'Help You Ann' followed in 1983, but that line-up of Lyres soon disintegrated, and Dan McCormack came aboard to play guitar, while the initial rhythm section of Rick Coraccio and Paul Murphy returned to the fold. This was the band that recorded the first full-length Lyres album, 1984's 'On Fyre', which was a powerful set that featured five original tunes and five covers, with the band sounding solid enough that it was hard to tell which tunes were which. The album earned great press and good sales for an indie release, and this line-up of the group stayed together until the dawn of 1986. After Johnny Bernardo replaced Paul Murphy on drums, Lyres returned to the studio to cut their second album, 'Lyres Lyres', released by Ace Of Hearts in 1986, which was a more contemplative set than the debut, with a greater number of Conolly originals, and it was once again successful, with the band touring North America extensively. 
1988 saw the release of their third album, 'A Promise Is A Promise', which included guest appearances from Stiv Bators of The Dead Boys and Lords Of The New Church, and Wally Tax of Dutch beat-era heroes The Outsiders, alongside another Lyres line-up, with Conolly, Murphy, Jack Hickey on guitar, and Matt Milkos on bass. This line-up played shows in North America and Europe, while in 1988 they also recorded a version of Love's 'Signed D.C.', later used for an Arthur Lee tribute album, with Judd Williams taking over on drums. In 1989, Conolly decided he'd grown tired of Boston, and moved to San Diego, California, assembling yet another version of the band, with three members of the group the Nashville Ramblers, guitarist Carl Rusk, bassist Tom Ward, and drummer Ron Silva, but by 1991 he'd returned to Boston, and re-formed the Carmel/Coraccio/Murphy line-up. This edition of the group cut the 1993 album 'Happy Now', which was released on their new label, Taang! Records. From the mid-90's onward, Conolly continued to perform with Lyres, often in lineups featuring Rick Coraccio and Paul Murphy, but the group's recording activities were limited to singles for various specialist labels, including Telstar, Feathered Apple, and Living Eye. In 2015, Conolly began work on a new Lyres album, and launched a crowdfunding campaign to help finance the project, although to date the record has not appeared. Lyres are the perfect band for this type of post, as they released a lot of stand-alone singles, each with two new songs on them, and so this two-volume set collects all the non-album tracks from those releases into one place. There have been a number of compilations released over the years, but they all omit some of these songs, so this should be the definitive collections of rarities from the band. 



Track listing

Disc I - 1981-1991
01 Buried Alive (from the 'AHS 1005' EP 1981) 
02 In Motion (from the 'AHS 1005' EP 1981) 
03 High On Yourself (from the 'AHS 1005' EP 1981) 
04 What A Girl Can't Do (from the 'AHS 1005' EP 1981) 
05 I Really Want You Right Now (b-side of 'Help You Ann' 1983)
06 Someone Who'll Treat You Right Now (single 1985)
07 You've Been Wrong (b-side of 'Someone Who'll Treat You Right Now' 1985)
08 I'll Try Anyway (b-side of 'Someone Who'll Treat You Right Now' 1985)
09 Stacey (b-side of 'How Do You Know?' 1987)
10 Jezebel (b-side of 'Touch' 1988) 
11 Go-Go-Girl (b-side of 'Touch' 1988)
12 Signed D.C. (from the Arthur Lee tribute EP 'Unloved', recorded 1988, released 1994)
13 We Sell Soul (single 1991)
14 Busy Body (b-side of 'We Sell Soul')

Disc II - 1992-1995
01 How Can I Make Her Mine (b-side of 'Nobody But Me' 1992)
02 Gettin' Plenty Lovin' (b-side of 'Baby (I Still Need Your Lovin')' 1992)
03 Boston (single 1993) ‎
04 Shake It Some More (b-side of 'Boston')
05 Self-Centered Girl (single 1993)
06 What's A Girl Like You Doing In A Place Like This? (b-side of 'Self-Centered Girl')
07 Stay Away (single 1994) 
08 Grounded (b-side of 'Stay Away')
09 Don't Tell Me Lies (single 1994) 
10 Baby It's Me (single 1994)
11 I'll Make It Up To You (b-side of 'Baby It's Me')
12 "7" (single 1995) 
13 Feeling No Pain (b-side of '"7"')
14 Give Your Love To Me (Come On) (single 1995)
15 Security (b-side of 'Give Your Love To Me')

Alesha Dixon - Fired Up (2008)

Alesha Dixon launched her solo career after Mis-Teeq's break-up in 2005, signing a £500,000, three-album deal with Polydor Records. She spent a year writing and recording her solo debut album, working with a wide range of producers including Richard X, Xenomania, Johnny Douglas, Brian Higgins, Estelle and Paul Epworth, and during this period she performed mononymously, known simply as "Alesha". In June 2005, she announced her first solo single was to be 'Superficial', but at the last minute it was replaced by 'Lipstick' as the lead single from her debut album. It charted at number 14 on the UK Single Charts, and so a second single 'Knockdown' was released on 30 October 2006, only managing to peak at number 45 on the UK Singles Charts, and then falling down to 68 the following week. Work was completed on her album 'Fired Up', which she had worked on with a variety of producers, including the afore-mentioned Douglas, Higgins, Epworth and Xenomania, alongside Peer Ã…ström, Anders Bagge, and Richard Stannard. Initially scheduled for a 6 November 2006 release through Polydor and Victor Entertainment in the United Kingdom, it was postponed indefinitely after Dixon was dropped by Polydor several days before its release. 'Fired Up' eventually received a physical release in Japan and Taiwan in 2008, where it was issued along with new artwork, a re-worked listing order, and additional tracks, including two remixes and the previously unreleased song 'Voodoo'. It was never officially released in the UK or the US, although Dixon later exclusively sold it in the UK as merchandise on her tour, The Alesha Show, supporting the album of the same name. With the new series of 'Britain's Got Talent' bringing her name back to the public's attention, now is the perfect time to re-acquaint ourselves with the beginning of her successful solo career.   



Track listing

01 Hypnotik
02 Lipstick
03 Fired Up
04 Knockdown
05 Superficial
06 Ting-A-Ling
07 Free
08 Everybody Wants To Change The World
09 Let It Go
10 A Lil' Bit Of Love
11 Turn It Up
12 Everywhere I Go

Lana Del Rey - Children Of The Bad Revolution (2010)

And for the final collection from 2010, one of my favourite albums from these 2010 recordings. 



Track listing

01 Kinda Outta Luck
02 Dangerous Girl
03 Children Of The Bad Revolution
04 Prom Song (Gone Wrong)
05 Us Against The World
06 Meet Me In The Pale Moonlight
07 You Can Be The Boss
08 Is It Wrong
09 Playground
10 On Our Way
11 Tired Of Singing The Blues
12 Resistance

A gift from PowerPopTOM - Part 3

PowerPopTOM has been busy again and has produced another batch of CD covers for use if you decide to burn any of these albums to CD. Here's a recap of what we have so far, with the new batch at the end.

Bad Company - Easy On My Soul
Big Brother & The Holding Company - Misery
Brian Eno - Textures
Bryan Ferry - Horoscope
Caravan - Looking Left, Looking Right
Cockney Rebel - Another Journey
The Cure - Plastic Passion
The Cure - Mansolidgone
The Cure - Out Of Mind
The Cure - Scared As You
The Cure - The Exploding Boy
The Cure - Listen
Curved Air - Thinking On The Floor
Dave Davies - Lincoln County
David Bowie - Silhouettes And Shadows
Deep Purple - Coronarias Redig
Emerson Lake & Palmer - A Time And A Place
The Faces - A Fifth Of The Faces
Fleetwood Mac - Kiln House
Frank Zappa & Captain Beefheart - Bondage
Free - Songs Of The Free
Kraftwerk - K4
Kraftwerk - Techno Pop
Lemmy - Lemmy Write You A Song
Roxy Music - The Pride And The Pain
The Sex Pistols - Spunk
Soft Machine - Rivmic Melodies
Soft Machine - Soft Machine's Little Red Records
The Stalk-Forrest Group - Hidden Mirrors
Status Quo - Tune To The Music
U2 - The Desert Songs
The Velvet Underground - The Sceptre Studio Sessions
Yes - Works
Mott The Hoople - The Saturday Gigs
Jimi Hendrix - Mosaic
Nazareth - Storm Warning
Van Halen - The Warner Brothers Years
Mick Ronson - ...and on guitar
Mick Ronson - Just Like This

and the new ones
Canned Heat - Blues
Canned Heat - Poor Moon
Chicken Shack - Andalucia Blues
The Doors - Whiskey, Mystics And Men
Fanny - IDEM (Canadian Edition)
Fanny - No Deposit, No Return
The Housemartins - Themes For The Well-Dressed Man
The Kinks - Four More Respected Gentlemen
The Stone Roses - Garage Flower
The Yardbirds - A Yardbirds-Eye View Of Beat
The Yardbirds - Featuring Eric Clapton

and some from Paul's site
The Who live at The Young Vic Theatre 1971
Fanny - Live on TV
The Flying Burrito Brothers
The Byrds - (Untitled) Studio
Alan Bown with Robert Palmer - BBC Sessions Volume 2





The link to the complete folder is in the comments. 

Tuesday, May 16, 2023

Grace Jones - Force Of Nature (2001)

Following the release of Grace Jones' 1989 album 'Bulletproof Heart', she made several comeback attempts throughout the 1990's, including the aborted 'Black Marilyn' project in 1994, but her next full-length record would not appear until almost two decades later. In 1996 she released the 'Love Bites' single, which was taken from the Sci-Fi channel's Vampire Week special, and in 1997 she started a collaboration with trip-hop producer Tricky and his Durban Poison label, recording tracks for an album to be called 'Force Of Nature', with a proposed release date of 1998. The first results of the partnership were 'Cradle To The Grave' and 'Clandestine Affair', but due to heavy disagreements between Jones and Tricky, the album was never completed, and only a scarce white label 12" single featuring two DJ Emily mixes of 'Cradle To The Grave' slipped out. To date, these are the only tracks to ever have surfaced of the three or four that they had apparently finished (Jones once said three, Tricky reportedly alleged four) from their sessions, and 'Cradle To The Grave' was later to be re-recorded as the title track to her 2008 album 'Hurricane'. Tricky himself had also previewed another version – one which he had remixed himself on a radio show that he hosted in September 1999. Despite the apparent demise of her partnership with Tricky, there still seems to have been some resurgent interest in Jones' career at the turn of the millennium, as she appeared with Lil' Kim on 'Revolution' from her album 'Notorious K.I.M', while a remix of 'Pull Up To The Bumper' by Funkstar De Luxe became a top 5 hit on the Billboard Club Charts in November 2000. In 1998 she'd re-recorded the classic 'Walking In The Rain' from her 'Nightclubbing' album, but of all the one offs she did during this time, her finest would have to have been 'Storm' from the soundtrack of the ill-received 1998 'Avengers' movie. With its epic orchestration and Jones' larger-than-life cinematic presence, 'Storm' sounded like the the Bond theme that she had never been given. Having signed a record deal in 2000 with an emerging web-based company, MCY.com (with planned distribution by EMI), things seemed to be looking hopeful once again. A prominent press interview with The Independent gave hints to an imminent album release, with appearances being cited by the likes of Roni Size, Stevie Wonder, and P. Diddy (or Puff Daddy, as he was known then). Around mid-2001, there were also some reports mentioning that 'Storm' producer, Marius De Vries had been enlisted as a co-producer on the project, but not long afterwards hopes of an album release seemed to be dashed with the project appearing to be all but scrapped. She did issue the single 'The Perfect Crime' in 2000, which was featured in the Danish crime thriller 'Rejseholdet', and in 2001 two performances from her character Christoph/Christine were included on the soundtrack to the TV film 'Wolf Girl' (a.k.a. 'Blood Moon'), but it was to be another seven years before she released the 'Hurricane' album, to generally positive reviews. Much of her music which was recorded during this fairly quiet period of her career is too good to be forgotten, and so by taking the best of her singles, collaborations, lost sessions and soundtrack offerings, we can piece together a pretty good album from just before to just after the millennium, with another earlier soundtrack contribution tagged on the end as it seemed to fit the loose 'vampire' concept.    



Track listing 

01 Cradle To The Grave (from the 'Force Of Nature' sessions 1997)
02 Love Bites (from Sci-Fi Channel's 'Vampire Week' 1996)
03 World Of Wonders (from the soundtrack of the film 'Wolf Girl/Blood Moon' 2001)
04 Revolution (from 'Notorious K.I.M.' by Lil' Kim 2000)
06 Storm (from the soundtrack to the film 'The Avengers' 1998)
06 Clandestine Affair (from the 'Force Of Nature' sessions 1997)
07 Walking In The Rain 1998 (re-recording 1998)
08 The Perfect Crime (from the Danish TV show 'Rejseholdet' 2000)
09 Two Sides To Every Story (from the soundtrack of the film 'Wolf Girl/Blood Moon' 2001)
10 Vamp (from the soundtrack of the film 'Vamp' 1986)

Friday, May 12, 2023

theaudience - Quiet Storm (1999)

theaudience were founded in 1996 by guitarist Billy Reeves, formerly of the indie group Congregation, and he was joined by vocalist by Sophie Ellis-Bextor, drummer/producer "Patch" Hannan (ex-The Sundays), keyboard player Nigel Butler (ex-The Bridge), guitarist Dean Mollett (ex-Porcupine), and bass guitarist Kerin Smith. After the release of a couple of well-received singles on the Elleffe albel, the band issued their eponymous debut album in 1998, which received critical acclaim and reached No. 22 in the UK Albums Chart. Four singles were released from the album, but shortly after it came out, their main songwriter Reeves left the band due to "extreme frustration", and subsequently their label Mercury opted not to release any more singles from the record. The remaining members cobbled together some music of their own, destined for an unreleased second album which was rejected by Mercury, and then they  disbanded in late 1998. Ellis-Bextor signed a solo deal with Polydor, but before she released any of her own music, her vocals were featured on Spiller's 'Groovejet (If This Ain't Love)' single in 2000, after which she carved out an extremely successful solo career for herself. Fans of her solo work soon discovered her old band, which led to a couple of the former members of theaudience giving around thirty second album demos to a fan, who uploaded fourteen of them to the internet as a bootleg CD, and it turns out that the lost second album, now titled 'Quiet Storm', is well worth a listen. 



Track listing

01 The Greatest Gift
02 How It Should Be Done
03 Day And Night
04 Headcase
05 Wisdom (Out With The Old School)
06 The Fool Will Rise Again
07 So Clever
08 Twilight Of The Teenage
09 Grey With Dusty Rain
10 You Will Do For Now
11 King Of Action
12 Repetition Kills
13 Two Way
14 Sanctuary Hill

Thanks to the sophierazzi blog for the remastering and for the original cover, which I've colourized.

Lana Del Rey - Baby Blue Love (2010)

We're almost at the end of the albums from 2010, with this penultimate collection.



Track listing

01 Caught You Boy (I Want You)
02 Dum Dum
03 Match Made In Heaven
04 Push Me Down
05 Be My Daddy
06 Never Let Me Go
07 Summer Of Sam
08 Off To The Races
09 Coca Cola
10 Other Woman
11 Baby Blue Love
12 True Love On The Side

Foxy Brown - Black Roses (2006)

Following the disappointment in the cancelled promotion of her studio album 'Ill Na Na 2: The Fever', Foxy Brown left Def Jam Records, and in 2004 she began recording new material, later reuniting with Jay-Z and performing dates on the Best of Both Worlds Tour. After signing back to Def Jam under his regime, Brown and Jay-Z began work on her new album 'Black Roses', with production by The Neptunes, Kanye West, Timbaland, Trackmasters, and Dave Kelly. Guest appearances were confirmed from Barrington Levy, Dido, Luther Vandross, Mos Def, Baby Cham, Spragga Benz, Shyne, Big Daddy Kane, Rakim, KRS-One, Roxanne Shante, and Jay-Z, although it was uncertain whether all would make the final cut for the album. In November 2004, Brown confirmed that the title for her upcoming album would be 'Black Roses', explaining that her best friend Barrington Levy has a song called 'Black Roses', and while he'd been traveling all over the world he'd never seen a black rose in any other garden, so when he found his black rose, he knew that shit was special. Brown identified with this, saying "you can have all the female rappers in the world, but there's only one black rose. I feel that's me." Brown also announced that she would be the first artist signed to Jay-Z's upcoming imprint record label S. Carter Records, although rather than launching the imprint, Jay-Z became the new president and CEO of Def Jam Records, where he signed Brown as one of the first artists on his new roster. 
On 08 December 2005, Brown announced she had experienced severe and sudden hearing loss in both ears and she had not heard another person's voice in six months, and so 'Black Roses' was put to one side while her health issues were investigated. In June 2006, she announced that her hearing had been restored through surgery, and that she was planning to resume recording, and although her label did not set a release date, she hoped the album would be out by the end of 2006. It was unsure if the title 'Black Roses' would be retained, but in the end that turned out to be the least of her worries, as in November 2006 there was speculation that Jay-Z was disappointed in Brown's "lack of productivity on the album", and was planning to drop her from the Def Jam label, and so the planned December 2006 release of 'Black Roses' was cancelled. In May 2007, Black Hand Entertainment announced a management deal with Brown, and although she confirmed that the album was nearly complete, the release would be six months later, on 06 September. On August 16, Black Hand Entertainment announced that Brown would leave Def Jam to launch an independent record label, Black Rose Entertainment, distributed by Koch Records, but despite the name of the label, 'Black Roses' would not be the first album to appear on the label. A brand new record titled 'Brooklyn's Don Diva' was eventually scheduled with a release date of December 4, although it was delayed until the following year, coming out on 13 May 2008, after many delays triggered by Brown's prison sentence, after she was jailed for a year in September 2007 for violating the terms of her probation after she was accused of hitting a woman with a cell phone. 'Brooklyn's Don Diva' included two previously unreleased songs from her shelved album 'Ill Na Na 2: The Fever', but none from 'Black Roses', which became yet another legendary unreleased record from the rapper, and although no definitive track listing circulated like that for 'The Fever', most reconstructions agree on about two thirds of the intended songs, and so I've added in the best of the rest to make up this version of this second cancelled album from Foxy Brown. 



Track listing

01 Intro/Dem Don't Like Me
02 That Dude/That Chick (feat. Mos Def)
03 In A Trap (feat. T.I.)
04 X-Clusive (feat. Stacy McKenzie)
05 Hennesey & Bacardi
06 Come Fly With Me (feat. Sizzla)
07 Mr. DJ (feat. Barrington Levy)
08 Boss (feat. Young Gavin & Mousey Baby)
09 Drugz
10 Too Ill (feat. Loon, Coke & Exo)
11 Ride Ya Bike (feat. Ron Browz)
12 All Night (feat. Lady Saw)
13 Why You Hating (feat. Red Handed, Young Gavin & Curtains)
14 Art Of War
15 Up Jumps The Boogie
16 I Don't Need Nobody

Tuesday, May 9, 2023

The Dream Machine - Mountain For My Head (2023)

The Dream Machine are a modern psychedelic pop band from The Wirral in Merseyside, and taking their name from a William Boroughs invention that recreates hallucinations similar to psychedelics without taking substances, the band was formed in 2021 after meeting at The Mosslands School in Wallasey. Comprising Zak McDonnell (vocals, acoustic guitar and percussion,), Matt Gouldson (backing vocals, electric guitar, acoustic guitar, lap steel, piano), Jack Inchboard (backing vocals, bass) and Isaac Salisbury (drums), Zak's dad David McDonnell was a former member of Hoylake heroes The Coral, and so music was in his blood. After hearing an album that his dad had made in his bedroom under the name of The Sand Band, Zak started drumming in his first band The Mysterines when he was 13, and by the time he was 16 he'd left them and started to play guitar and write songs, and while working in Parr Street Studios in Liverpool, The Corals' James Skelly encouraged him to start his own band. After recruiting his school-mates and forming The Dream Machine, the band released a couple of EPs in 2021, and a single and a third EP in 2022, and they have just issued their debut album 'Thank God! It's The Dream Machine...' on Modern Sky Records, and it's great stuff. So much so that I delved into their back catalogue to hear their earlier releases, and I found that a lot of the music on them was not on the album, and so for a band who have only been together for a couple of years they already have enough extra material for a second record, and so here it is. If you like what you hear then do check out the album, as I think that they could turn out to be something special.    



Track listing 

01 Introduction (from 'Vol 1: Sacraments' 2021)
02 Jesus Babe (from 'Vol 1: Sacraments' 2021)
03 I Still Believe (In Jim Jones) (from 'Vol 1: Sacraments' 2021)
04 Days Of Heaven (from 'Vol 1: Sacraments' 2021)
05 Oceans Wide (from 'Vol 2: On The Water' EP 2021)
06 Me And My Ghost (from 'Vol 2: On The Water' EP 2021)
07 The Sea Is My Friend (from 'Vol 2: On The Water' EP 2021)
08 Taking The Reins (from 'Vol 2: On The Water' EP 2021)
09 Too Stoned To Die (from 'Vol 3: Pooch Slingers' Wild Round Up!' promo EP 2022)
10 Wild One (from 'Vol 3: Pooch Slingers' Wild Round Up!' promo EP 2022)
11 Om Kring (from 'Vol 3: Pooch Slingers' Wild Round Up!' promo EP 2022)
12 Peregrine (from 'Vol 3: Pooch Slingers' Wild Round Up!' promo EP 2022)
13 Yokozuna (b-side of 'TV Baby/Satan's Child' single 2022)
14 The Blue Rose (from 'Lola, In The Morning' EP 2023)
15 Mountain For My Head (from 'Lola, In The Morning' EP 2023)
16 Song To Betty (from 'Lola, In The Morning' EP 2023)
17 Trip Away (from 'Children, My England' EP 2023)
18 U-Train (from 'Children, My England' EP 2023)
19 Baby Run (from 'Children, My England' EP 2023)

Friday, May 5, 2023

Kitchens Of Distinction - Elephantine (1996)

Drummer Dan Goodwin met guitarist Julian Swales at college in 1980, who already knew bassist Patrick Fitzgerald from a party he attended in 1985, and the trio began rehearsing together, taking their name from a Hygena advert that Swales spotted on the side of a bus. The band's first single, 'The Last Gasp Death Shuffle', featuring Swales on lead vocals and bass, as well as guitar, was recorded in just one day on an eight-track in a Kennington basement, and was released in December 1987 on the band's own Gold Rush Records. It gained a 'Single of the Week' accolade in NME, and this led to the band signing with British indie label One Little Indian Records. It was around this time that Fitzgerald put his career as a medical doctor on hold to devote himself fully to the band, and their first singles for One Little Indian, 1988's 'Prize' and 1989's 'The 3rd Time We Opened The Capsule', both made it onto the NME Writers' '100 Best Indie Singles Ever' list, published in 1992. Their first full-length album, 'Love Is Hell', was released in April 1989, with Fitzgerald's impassioned, wordy, often bluntly personal vocals careening over what sounded like a mass of swirling guitars, even though the band only had one guitarist. Swales' chiming, effects-laden style of playing drew comparisons to the guitarists of the Chameleons, Cocteau Twins, and A.R. Kane, and the group's melodic yet abstract sound was a precursor to the shoegaze scene of the late 1980's/early 1990's. Despite the promising start, the band faced a subdued reception from the mainstream music industry, generally due to their lyrical content, such as 'Margaret's Injection', from the 1989 'Elephantine' EP, being a fantasy about killing then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Fitzgerald was openly gay, and his lyrics were unapologetic, especially on tracks like 'Prize' and 'Within The Daze Of Passion', but for once their label was very understanding, with A&M never asking him to change his words or closet himself in interviews. However, some indie-focused television programs like Snub TV and Rapido failed to give them much coverage, and they were not at first offered a John Peel radio session, although they did eventually did get one after asking Peel personally. 
The group had signed with A&M Records in the US in 1990, and went into the studio with producer Hugh Jones, with their second album 'Strange Free World' being released in February 1991, and spawning some moderately successful singles which were very well received by college radio in the US. The band went back into the studio in 1992, again with Jones at the helm, and their third album 'The Death Of Cool' came out in August that year, named in honour of the recent passing of Miles Davis, whose influential album titled 'The Birth Of The Cool' had been released in 1950. A&M were wary of the band's choice of 'Breathing Fear' for the first single, due to its touchy subject matter of gay bashing, so 'Smiling' became the album's initial single in the US, although 'Breathing Fear' was released later in the UK only. The band toured extensively, including a high-profile slot opening for their US label-mate Suzanne Vega, and in late 1993 they began work on their fourth album, co-producing it themselves with engineer Pete Bartlett. Their label rejected the album twice, but eventually both label and band agreed to bring in up-and-coming producer Pascal Gabriel to work on a couple of tracks, as one of the label's complaints about the album  was that it seemed to lack a potential hit single. Gabriel produced the new song 'Come On Now', that had been written after the rest of the record was already recorded, and he also remixed two of the album's other tracks. 'Cowboys And Aliens', was released in the UK in October 1994, and although the band admitted that they enjoyed working with Gabriel, his changes did nothing to help the album's dismal sales. When it was released in the US a few months later, it was largely ignored by the same alternative rock radio and media that had championed them just a few years earlier, and by the end of that year, both A&M and One Little Indian had dropped the band. Shortening their name to Kitchens O.D. and signing to the London-based indie label Fierce Panda Records, they issued the single 'Feel My Genie' in May 1996, but despite being named 'Single of the Week' by Melody Maker, the group officially disbanded that summer after a farewell gig at Kings Cross in London. Although I knew of the band's work, I didn't have any of their albums, and so this collection of non-album b-sides is my introduction to the group, and I must say that I was impressed enough to investigate their other recordings, so if you don't know them either then  give them a try. 




Track listing

Disc I - 1987-1990
01 The Last Gasp Death Shuffle ‎(single 1987)
02 Escape (b-side of 'The Last Gasp Death Shuffle')
03 Concede (b-side of 'Prize' 1988)
04 Innocent (b-side of 'Prize' 1988)
05 Into The Sea (b-side of 'The 3rd Time We Opened The Capsule' 1989) 
06 Elephantine (single 1989)
07 Margaret's Injection (b-side of 'Elephantine')
08 The 1001st Fault (b-side of 'Elephantine')
09 Anvil Dub (b-side of 'Elephantine')
10 These Drinkers (b-side of 'Drive That Fast' 1990)
11 Elephantiny (b-side of 'Drive That Fast' 1990)
12 Three To Beam Up (b-side of 'Drive That Fast' 1990)

Disc II - 1992-1996
13 Goodbye Voyager (b-side of 'Breathing Fear' 1992)
14 Skin (b-side of 'Breathing Fear' 1992)
15 Air Shifting (b-side of 'Breathing Fear' 1992)
16 Glittery Dust (b-side of 'When In Heaven' 1992)
17 Don't Come Back (b-side of 'When In Heaven' 1992)
18 Spacedolphins (b-side of 'When In Heaven' 1992)
19 Jesus Nevada (b-side of 'Now It's The Time To Say Goodbye' 1993) 
20 White Horses (b-side of 'Now It's The Time To Say Goodbye' 1993) 
21 What We Really Wanted To Do (b-side of 'Now It's The Time To Say Goodbye' 1993) 
22 Feel My Genie (single 1996)
23 To Love A Star (b-side of 'Feel My Genie')

The Lilac Time - Tree (1989)

In early 1989, the Lilac Time's record company Fontana/Phonogram asked the band to begin recording their second album, which the band had hoped to record at their country retreat in the Malvern Hills, although Phonogram insisted that it be recorded in a modern studio not far from the company's London headquarters instead. It was originally intended to be a double album titled 'Tree', with one album consisting of singer-songwriter Stephen Duffy's songs and the other one of instrumentals, primarily composed by his brother Nick. Fontana refused to release it in that format, and so the record instead became a single album, with the revised title of 'Paradise Circus', and made up of twelve tracks written by Stephen and one by Nick. Many of the instrumentals that were recorded during the sessions instead saw release on the b-sides of the singles taken from 'Paradise Circus' and its follow-up '& Love for All', as well as on the first album by Nick Duffy's spin-off band Bait. The sound that Duffy and engineer/producer Tony Phillips were attempting to achieve on the recordings was later described by Duffy as a "small folky sound without the de rigueur large ambient snare drums of the age", but as the recording sessions progressed, Fontana became unhappy with the music that the band had committed to tape, and insisted that they return to the studio to cut more commercial songs which could be released as singles, while also urging them to "Americanize" their sound - something that was reportedly parodied by Duffy in his song 'American Eyes'. Fontana also insisted that the pedal steel guitar was lowered in volume, as the wife of one of the Phonogram executives didn't like sound of the instrument (!!). As a result of this, which served to both annoy the band and delay the album's release, it didn't appear until October 1989, two years after the release of the band's debut album. When 'Paradise Circus' was reissued in 2006, its bonus tracks included an additional twelve instrumentals from the recording sessions that had been intended for the second disc of the proposed double album, and so I've extracted them and made them into a stand-alone record, with its own cover art of a Peking lilac tree. 



Track listing

01 Ponderosa Pine 
02 Night Mail/Dirty Armour 
03 Shepherd's Plaid 
04 Ounce Of Nails 
05 Spin á Cavalu 
06 Australian Worm 
07 On Milkwood Road 
08 Night Soil 
09 Rubovia 
10 Silver Dagger 
11 November 
12 Paradise Circus (Old Smithy version)

Lana Del Rey - My Best Days (2010)

And another collection from the prolific Lana Del Rey from 2010.



Track listing

01 Dangerous Girl
02 St. Tropez (Party Girl)
03 In The Sun
04 My Best Days
05 Afraid
06 Behind Closed Doors
07 Jealous Girl
08 Butterflies
09 So Legit
10 Dynamite
11 Noir
12 Velvet Crowbar

Tuesday, May 2, 2023

Nine Inch Nails - Purest Feeling (1988)

While living in Cleveland in 1987, Trent Reznor played keyboards in the Exotic Birds, a synthpop band managed by John Malm Jr., with Malm informally becoming his manager when he left to work on his own music. At the time, Reznor was employed as an assistant engineer and janitor at Right Track Studios, and studio owner Bart Koster granted Reznor free access to the studio between bookings to record demos, and as he was unable to find a band that could articulate the material as he desired, he was inspired by Prince to play all instruments himself, except for the drums which he programmed electronically. In November 1988 Reznor used his free studio time to record nine demos, some of which would later be re-recorded for Nine Inch Nails' debut album 'Pretty Hate Machine'. The first Nine Inch Nails performance, featuring Reznor and Chris Vrenna on drums, took place at the Phantasy Theater in Lakewood, Ohio, on 21 October 1988, with the band later supporting Skinny Puppy, after which Reznor aimed to release a 12-inch single on a small European label, having signed to TVT Records after several labels responded favourably to the demo material. After six of the demos were released in revised form on Nine Inch Nails' first studio album 'Pretty Hate Machine' in 1989, the original demo recordings appeared on a number of unofficial CDs in 1994, released in Germany, Italy and the US. The overall sound of the demos is lighter than that of 'Pretty Hate Machine', with several songs containing more live drumming and guitar, as well as a heavier use of film samples, and both 'Sanctified' and 'That's What I Get' could be considered better versions that those that were officially released. 'Twist' is an early version of 'Ringfinger', featuring different lyrics and less use of sample loops, and some of the songs re-recorded for 'Pretty Hate Machine' had lyrics cut from them, but Reznor chose to print the full lyrics in the 'Pretty Hate Machine' booklet to retain some of the original meanings of his songs. Because of the differences between these demos and the eventual sound of Nine Inch Nails, fan's opinion is divided over them, but newcomers should find them a good introduction to the band, while hard-core fans can now hear Reznor's original vision of his songs before they were re-imagined for official release.   


 
Track listing 

01 Slate (Intro)
02 Sanctified
03 Maybe Just Once
04 The Only Time
05 Kinda I Want To
06 That's What I Get
07 Purest Feeling
08 Twist
09 Down In It