Tag: vinyl

  • The Clash, Sandanista!, 1980 on CBS Records

    The Clash, Sandanista!, 1980 on CBS Records

    The Clash’s fourth album, released in 1980 on CBS Records, distributed by Epic in the US. Sprawling, six-sided 3xLP collection that truly is all over the map, including a cover of Mose Allison’s “Look Here.” The FSLN catalog number on the labels is a nod to Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, the name of the…

  • Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown, San Antonio Ballbuster, 1974 on Red Lightnin’

    Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown, San Antonio Ballbuster, 1974 on Red Lightnin’

    Although it was originally released in 1974 on Red Lightnin’, my copy is a reissue from 1979 on Charly Records. Red Lightnin‘ is a blues label started in 1968; Charly a reissue label started in 1975; both are UK labels. Not sure how this ended up in Mel’s Record Shop in Amesbury MA, but that’s…

  • Thelonious Monk, The Complete Genius, 1976 on Blue Note

    Thelonious Monk, The Complete Genius, 1976 on Blue Note

    Though this compilation was released in 1976 – part of The Blue Note Re-Issue Series – it actually collects sides he recorded for Blue Note in 1947, 1948, 1951, and 1952. Note: This album contains the complete Monk on Blue Note with the exception of his appearance as a sideman on two of his compositions…

  • Neil Young with Crazy Horse, Toast, 2022 on Reprise

    Neil Young with Crazy Horse, Toast, 2022 on Reprise

    Back in the early part of the new millennium, Neil Young and Crazy Horse recorded a bunch of songs at Toast, a recording studio at 1340 Mission St. in San Francisco (pictured on the cover). The songs they recorded got shelved and not released until 2022. Volume 8 in the Neil Young Archive’s Special Release…

  • The Decemberists, Castaways and Cutouts, 2002 on Hush / Jealous Butcher

    The Decemberists, Castaways and Cutouts, 2002 on Hush / Jealous Butcher

    The last in a series of records I was happy to pick up from the merch table at the Decemberists show in Boston earlier this year. Originally released in 2002 on Hush Records, then reissued in 2003 by Kill Rock Stars, then released on vinyl in 2005 by Jealous Butcher. My copy is a later…

  • Midnight Oil; 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1; 1982 on Columbia

    Midnight Oil; 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1; 1982 on Columbia

    The fourth full-length from Midnight Oil, released in 1982 on Columbia in the US and CBS in the UK and Australia. The album reached #3 on the Australian charts and 178 on the Billboard charts in the US. Having found Midnight Oil via Deisel and Dust I came back to this record but love “Power…

  • Neil Young, Decade, 1977 on Reprise

    Neil Young, Decade, 1977 on Reprise

    It’s amazing to me that all of this music was before 1977. I came to Neil Young’s music well into the 1980s and while I knew some of the legacy (Buffalo Springfield, CSN&Y and combinations thereof) I didn’t know just how many great songs he’d put out in the first decade of his career. This…

  • Justin Townes Earle, Single Mothers & Absent Fathers, 2022 on Vagrant Records

    Justin Townes Earle, Single Mothers & Absent Fathers, 2022 on Vagrant Records

    Combination of two previously released Justin Townes Earle LPs: 2014’s Single Mothers and 2015’s Absent Fathers, issued as a 2xLP release in celebration of Vagrant’s 25th Anniversary on yellow/black splatter vinyl. Putting these two together isn’t crazy, of course – the recording sessions were originally intended to be a double album but turned into two…

  • The Decemberists, The Tain / 5 Songs, 2004 on Jealous Butcher Records & Hush Records

    The Decemberists, The Tain / 5 Songs, 2004 on Jealous Butcher Records & Hush Records

    Two EPs released in 2004 as a single LP – 5 Songs was originally self-released (not on a label) in 2001 and The Tain on Acuarela Discos (an independent Spanish label) in 2003 . Although The Tain is broken up into five parts, it’s really one single 18 minute song, named after an Irish epic…

  • Phantom, Rocker & Slick; Phantom, Rocker & Slick, 1985 on EMI America

    Phantom, Rocker & Slick; Phantom, Rocker & Slick, 1985 on EMI America

    Self-titled debut album for Phantom, Rocker & Slick (I’ll forgive them for the lack of an oxford comma) from 1985. Slim Jim Phantom (drums) and Lee Rocker (vocals, bass) had been part of Stray Cats. They were joined by Earl Slick who had replaced Mick Ronson on the Diamond Dogs tour and played on Young…

  • Gram Parsons, GP, 1973 on Reprise

    Gram Parsons, GP, 1973 on Reprise

    It’s hard to overstate the importance of Gram Parsons’ two solo albums: GP and (posthumously) Grievous Angel. This was his solo debut though he is joined by Emmylou Harris (with whom he was touring) on two duets. It was recorded Sept-Oct on 1972 and produced by Ric Grech from Blind Faith. My copy (via Reykjavik…

  • Mose Allison, Live 1978, 2022 on Liberation Hall

    Mose Allison, Live 1978, 2022 on Liberation Hall

    Although this was recorded (at the Showboat Lounge in Silver Spring Maryland) in 1978, it was unreleased until 2022 when it was put out as a Record Store Day release. Allison is accompanied by Tom Rutley on bass and Jerry Ganelli on drums. As the liner notes put it: Most of the material is fairly…

  • The Decemberists, Her Majesty, 2003 on Kill Rock Stars & Jealous Butcher

    The Decemberists, Her Majesty, 2003 on Kill Rock Stars & Jealous Butcher

    This was the first Decemberists album on Kill Rock Stars, after Castaways and Cutouts came out on Hush Records. Recorded at Jackpot! and Type Foundry in Portland OR and produced by The Decemberists, Adam Selzer, and Larry Crane. Only Colin Meloy could get away with lyrics like this: The bosun calls upon the quay /…

  • Marty Stuart, Busy Bee Cafe, 1982 on Sugar Hill Records

    Marty Stuart, Busy Bee Cafe, 1982 on Sugar Hill Records

    No, that’s not the same Sugar Hill that put out Rapper’s Delight – it’s a folk/bluegrass label out of North Carolina, later merged in Concord and now Rounder. Although Stuart’s recorded output starts in the 80s, he spent years touring with Lester Flatt and in Johnny Cash’s road band. This was his second album, the…

  • Coleman Hawkins, Sirius, 1974 on Pablo

    Coleman Hawkins, Sirius, 1974 on Pablo

    Recorded by Val Valentin December 1966 but released posthumously in 1974 (Hawkins died in 1969). Produced by Norman Granz, with liner notes by Benny Green: This is the album which none of us ever wanted to hear, the last milestone on that long fascinating road which stretches back to the day in 1922 when, as…

  • St. Paul & The Broken Bones, Angels in Science Fiction, 2023 on ATO Records

    St. Paul & The Broken Bones, Angels in Science Fiction, 2023 on ATO Records

    This is the fifth full length album from Alabama’s St. Paul & The Broken Bones, and their second on ATO. Beautiful packing with a lovely lyrics booklet. It’s also a great record, with its origins reportedly in letters Paul Janeway wrote to his (at the time) not yet born child. It’s the kind of album,…

  • Leonard Cohen, Songs From The Road, 2010 on Columbia

    Leonard Cohen, Songs From The Road, 2010 on Columbia

    Leonard Cohen’s output is nothing short of spectacular, across studio albums and live recordings. These songs were recorded on tour in 2008 and 2009 when he was in his mid-seventies. The liner notes catalogue in detail why each performance was selected from across a lengthy tour. He sounds great, as does the band. In Europe…

  • The Decemberists, Picaresque, 2005 on Kill Rock Stars

    The Decemberists, Picaresque, 2005 on Kill Rock Stars

    The Decemberists may be my single most favorite band of the new millenium. Colin Meloy’s lyricism can seem cloying or pretentious to some but I love it – perhaps having spent the 1990s in grad school myself prepared me well. Picaresque was their third studio album and the last on Kill Rock Stars before moving…