The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: RoboCop 3 OST 2LP yellow vinyl in stores 1/17

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Varèse Sarabande and Craft Recordings are proud to announce Deluxe Edition reissues of Basil Poledouris’ celebrated RoboCop 3 original score. Set for release on January 17th and available for pre-order and stream today, Poledouris’ 1993 score will be made available on vinyl for the first time ever as a special “Delta City Yellow” 2-LP pressing, which comes housed in a gatefold jacket featuring brand-new artwork from acclaimed illustrator Estevan Silveira.

In addition, the lauded Varèse Encore series is relaunching with a reissue of the 2016 CD Club release of the RoboCop 3 Deluxe Edition score. The revitalized series will focus on out-of-print, highly coveted Deluxe Edition releases from its illustrious catalog, ensuring these cherished works remain available to collectors and new listeners alike. Accordingly, this Encore series edition was produced using the original design elements in order to ensure a faithful recreation and is now available for pre-order in limited-quantity exclusively on the Varèse Sarabande webstore.

Director Paul Verhoeven’s original RoboCop film featured one of Basil Poledouris’ most iconic scores. In 1993, he was recruited to bring his signature sound to RoboCop 3, which featured the titular character defending the citizens of Detroit against the devious Omni Consumer Products in an all-out war for the city.

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Skin Yard, Skin Yard Select 7 x 7” vinyl box set available

VIA PRESS RELEASE | C/Z Records, the influential independent label formed in 1985, announced today the upcoming release of a limited edition colored 7×7” vinyl curated box set consisting of tracks from seminal Seattle proto-grunge band Skin Yard. Entitled Skin Yard Select, the set is in an edition of 1,000. Featuring previously released tracks, alternate versions, rarities, remixes and a new, previously unreleased track, the set is available direct from C/Z Records here for pre-save or pre-sale.

Skin Yard was one of the seminal Seattle bands that launched the scene that would eventually become known as “grunge.” Skin Yard co-founders, bassist Daniel House and then guitarist, now noted producer Jack Endino carefully curated the songs for Skin Yard Select primarily from their four studio albums spanning the years 1985–1991. Skin Yard featured four distinct drummers who appear on these recordings. They are Matt Cameron (Soundgarden, Pearl Jam), Jason Finn (Presidents of the United States of America, Love Battery), Norman Scott (Gruntruck with Skin Yard singer, Ben McMillan), and Barrett Martin (Screaming Trees, Mad Season, Walking Papers).

“The recordings that make up Skin Yard Select are essential tracks that helped birth what the international media would eventually call “‘Grunge.’” said founding Skin Yard member and C/Z Records owner Daniel House. “In many ways, this compilation will help tell the story of Skin Yard and their place in the Seattle scene that rarely gets told—the heavier, more metal side of the scene. Next year, Words on Bone, my upcoming Skin Yard oral history book, is expected to be published to tell the whole history. Over 60 interviews have been conducted as part of the book.”

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Graded on a Curve:
Seals & Crofts,
Greatest Hits

Remembering Jim Seals, born on this day in 1941.Ed.

Seals & Crofts have moved into our house! It’s true! And here’s how it happened. Yesterday we got a knock on our door. I had no intention of opening it because most likely it was our crazy neighbor from across the street who’s been accusing our garden gnome of shitting on his lawn. Then I caught a whiff of jasmine and said to myself, “No way is it the legendary soft rock duo whose gossamer thin sound has enriched the lives of so many.”

But it was! Seals & Crofts in the flesh! And they were wondering if they could move in with us for a couple of days because times were tough and they were tired of living in a lean-to by the railroad tracks running past the lake of toxic sludge near the abandoned nuclear reactor.

And of course I said YES! Who wouldn’t? And they couldn’t express how grateful they were because everyone else had slammed their doors in their faces, including our neighbor from across the street who accused them of shitting on his lawn.

“How could anyone think that?” asked a perplexed Jim Seals. “In the bushes by the railroad tracks, sure. But that’s out of sheer necessity.”

“Where’s your stuff,” I asked. All they had with them were their acoustic guitars.

“We had to hock everything,” said Dash Crofts, “including our gold record for ‘Summer Breeze.’ I don’t know if you’ve heard, but the railroad hobo economy is in the tank.”

“Would you like to take a shower?” asked my wife. “You’re caked with coal dust and radioactive slime. And I’m catching the distinct aroma of urine.”

“That would be me,” said Seals. “And that shower would be much appreciated.”

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Tom Waits, The Heart of Saturday Night color vinyl reissues in stores 12/6

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Fifty years ago a young and aspiring Tom Waits released The Heart of Saturday Night, his attempt to immerse himself in the romance of longing for adventure, trouble, mystery of love and lust, and the after-hours clubs where jazz, blues, lounge, piano bar crooners would gather and play for and with each other in their search for the ruby eye of the heart that only shone on a Saturday night.

He imagined a concept album with a small bebop jazz ensemble, filled with the literary influences of the two Jacks—Kerouac and London—along with classic American songbook songwriters and the language and sound of the piano played in intimate clubs for and with musicians who had finished their regular Saturday night engagements. In searching for the voice for these characters, he evoked Sinatra’s “In the Wee Small Hours” and was inspired to mould his fingers to the keyboard by the bold, improvisational and unique Thelonius Monk.

180g Raspberry Beret-coloured vinyl, limited to 3700 copies, will be available worldwide from record stores on 6th December and 180g slightly gold vinyl, limited to 800 copies, is available for pre-order via the Tom Waits webstore now.

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The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve:
The Supremes, A Bit of Liverpool, Jackson 5, Third Album & The Temptations, Sky’s the Limit

The latest additions to Elemental Music’s Motown Sound Collection come from three of the Motor City label’s heavy hitters. There’s a mono edition of A Bit of Liverpool by The Supremes, Third Album by the Jackson 5 on red vinyl, and Sky’s the Limit by The Temptations. All three are available October 18.

No scientific testing has been done in connection with this roundup, but it sure seems like A Bit of Liverpool is the least esteemed record from The Supremes’ ’60s catalog. It’s an observation that applies to general listeners but also music writers, as not much print space has been devoted to the set’s thematic contents.

Hitting stores in 1964 as the British Invasion was in full swing, The Supremes’ third full-length record has often been described as a cash-in, though it’s unlikely many people were bothered about this at the time of the record’s release. Per the title, The Beatles get the most attention, but this focus reaches beyond just the hits.

There are versions of “A Hard Day’s Night,” “Can’t Buy Me Love,” and “I Wanna Hold Your Hand,” all pretty good as straight covers go, but there’s also a likeable take of “You Can’t Do That” and an even better “A World Without Love,” a chart topper by Peter and Gordon that was written by Lennon-McCartney, don’tcha know. Getting even deeper into the weeds is “You Really Got a Hold on Me,” a well-loved nugget by the Miracles that was an album cut on With the Beatles (and The Beatles’ Second Album in the USA).

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 10/17/24

Vinyl Sales Have Plummeted 33% Year Over Year—What’s Going On? After more than a decade of rising sales for the vinyl format, sales have fallen off a cliff this year with an estimated plummet of more than 30% year-over-year. What’s going on? Luminate data reveals a 33.3% drop in vinyl sales for the year 2024 compared to 2023. That’s a drop from 34.9 million units in 2023 to just 23.3 million sold in 2024. Luminate data for other formats reveal this isn’t a vinyl-only problem, either. CD sales have fallen 19.5%, while sales of digital albums have dropped 8.3%. Album sales across all formats have dropped 23.8% year-over-year—dropping from 75.5M sold in 2023 to just 57.5M sold in 2024. …Vinyl fatigue may also be a factor for some consumers. For example, Taylor Swift has released 34 variants of The Tortured Poets Department, each with exclusive tracks, album art, or acoustic versions of songs. The intent there is to get superfans to collect all of these vinyl releases to complete their collection—but fans may be getting burned out on re-purchasing a vinyl album at $50 a pop for a single bonus track.

Forest Park, IL | Old School Records survives at the last minute: But streaming services’ threat to music stores remains. For a brief time this fall, a sign reading “lost my lease” was posted outside of Old School Records, a Forest Park staple that has been in business for more than 21 years. Peter Gianakopoulos, the owner, put up the sign when he fell behind on his rent for the months of August and September after a “very tough year” for the store. The store managed to survive, and the sign has since been removed from the facade of Old School Records. But that, Gianakopoulos said, doesn’t change the challenges that record stores are facing locally and indeed across the world. He said that music streaming services is the main culprit. During his more than two decades as a business owner, Gianakopoulos has noticed many ups and downs in the business of selling records. …In spite of this adversity, Gianakopoulos said, record stores have persevered thanks to dedicated customers, a revival of vinyl in popular cultures and, perhaps most notably, the sense of community that the stores offer.

Kansas City, MO | KC staple counterculture shop 7th Heaven set to close after 50 years: After serving the Kansas City community for half a century, record store 7th Heaven has announced that it will be closing its doors by the end of the year. On Sept. 30, store manager Sebastian Gonzales took to 7th Heaven’s Instagram to confirm the end of an era. Customers expressed their grief in the comment section, while also sharing their favorite memories at the shop, and wishing the owner Jan Fichman a happy retirement. “There’s been an intense, outpouring of grief from the community,” Gonzales says. “Everyone I’ve talked to has said that this is the first record store they ever went to, or they bought their first bong here. We hear these fantastic stories, and people are coming in and stocking up.” Fichman opened 7th Heaven in 1974, where it debuted in a former Taco Via at 7653 Troost Ave before relocating to its current location down the street.

Kelowna, BC | A decade living a childhood dream: Vernon record store owner calls it a day: Growing up as a child in the 1960s, Kelvin Forgo’s home was full of music. His mother was a huge Elvis fan and the house echoed with 1950s rock and roll, played on 7-inch records, on what he calls a “kick-ass” tube console stereo. …Fast forward 40 years and Forgo found himself working part-time in a used record in Vernon, playing vinyl and trying to wind down from his full-time job as an armed security van driver. It was only when the shop’s owner decided to pull the plug on the business that Forgo’s brother gave him some advice. “He bought a little… sprint race car. And he says, ‘Let’s go sprint car racing, and you can own a record shop,'” Forgo said. “And I’m like, what? Where did this come from… (but) that is what ended up happening.” While owning a record store had been a fantasy in the back of his mind since childhood, both brothers—now in their 50s—decided to make their boyhood dreams a reality.

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TVD UK

TVD Live Shots: Jet at the O2 Forum Kentish Town, 10/12

Jet stormed the O2 Kentish Town Forum last weekend with the subtlety of a sledgehammer, obliterating any doubts about their staying power. The Aussie rockers unleashed a blistering set that shook the venue to its foundations and rekindled the raw energy of their early 2000s heyday after a 15-year absence from UK stages.

Let’s cut to the chase, “Cold Hard Bitch” might just be the best rock riff of the 2000s. Period. When those opening notes hit, it was like a jolt of electricity. If you weren’t losing your shit with the rest of the crowd erupting and singing every word then you were clearly in the wrong place.

These guys aren’t just coasting on past glories. Their new track “Hurry Hurry” is a sonic time machine, hurling us back to the fuzzy, dirty rock of the late ’60s. It’s Jet shifting gears, trading their usual late ’70s swagger for a grittier, more psychedelic romp. The relentless beat is still there, but now it’s wrapped in layers of fuzzy guitar that sound like they’ve been dragged through a Marshall stack and back. There’s a hook buried in that beautiful mess that’ll have you humming for days. Nic Cester’s calling it “a little appetizer” for their upcoming album.

Jet’s evolved sound is matched by their sharpened image. Cester struts on stage in white tailored jeans that flirt with bell-bottom territory, paired with sleek cowboy boots and a simple shirt. It’s a look that screams rock star confidence without trying too hard. The rest of the band follows suit, each member sporting their own version of cleaned-up rock ‘n’ roll cool. It’s clear they’ve traded their scruffy early-days of leather for a more curated edge, but their sonic punch remains as potent as ever.

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TVD Radar: Plastikman, Musik 30th anniversary edition in stores 12/6

VIA PRESS RELEASE | The 30th anniversary edition of Plastikman’s Musik, the groundbreaking second studio album by Richie Hawtin, has been announced for release on NovaMute on December 6, 2024. It is manufactured with environmentally-conscious packaging, pressed on bio-vinyl.

The album, originally released via NovaMute / Plus 8, followed 1993’s Sheet One and propelled Hawtin into new levels of international success. On its initial release, in November 1994, Hawtin was central to a burgeoning underground scene in Detroit, and the album, which expands on his unique and innovative minimal techno world, was launched with Plastikman’s first ever live performance in Aug 1994, at the derelict Packard Plant in Detroit, in a room encased in black plastic sheets.

Before the full album hit the shelves, “Plastique” (later described by Q as “… the flipside to Hawtin’s early singles, all ticking percussion, feline acid tweaks and cushioned sub bass”), set the stage for a more dance floor friendly album, albeit one with an unsettling and sinister side.

Musik, which featured tracks such as “Freek,” “Kriket” (which Raf Simons used earlier this year in the Prada Men Spring/Summer 2025 show), “Fuk,” and “Marbles” was soon heard by a much wider audience. Plastikman live appearances at Glastonbury, Tribal Gathering and a headline slot at Megadog followed soon after, prompting NME to declare Plastikman to be “Fiercer than Orbital, funkier than the Prodigy and more insatiably danceable than anything else on the bill.”

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Graded on a Curve:
David Gilmour,
Luck and Strange

David Gilmour, formerly of Pink Floyd, doesn’t make many solo albums. He made one while the first post-Syd Barrett incarnation of Pink Floyd was still together in 1978, one in 1984, which was one year after that lineup’s last album, and then didn’t record another solo album until 2006. The next one was in 2015.

This new one, like all his previous solo albums, is more than worth the wait. Few artists who began their careers in the 1960s and who are releasing new albums these days have made a record this good. While still reflecting the sound (both vocally and musically) that fans of Gilmour most love, this new album is something truly new and fresh. The most striking thing about the album is how understated the music is and how, other than in the moments where orchestration is added, the instrumentation is minimal and very organic.

Naturally, this is a very guitar-heavy recording, with Gilmour’s iconic guitar sound prevalent throughout. Rob Gentry’s tasteful synths and keyboards are subtly a major part of the sound, with Roger Eno contributing keyboards to the album opener “Black Cat” and Gilmour’s late, ex-bandmate from Pink Floyd Richard Wright, playing keyboards on the title cut, which was taken from a jam at Gilmour’s home in 2007. Other notable musicians who contributed to the album include Guy Pratt and Steve Gadd.

Gilmour’s wife Polly Sampson wrote most of the lyrics, which often deal with growing older, but which are very complex, nuanced, and in no way morose. There is a cover of “Between Two Points,” from The Montgolfier Brothers, with Romany Gilmour on vocals and harp, who also performs backing vocals on the album. Both Romany Gilmour and Gabriel Gilmour, two of his children with Sampson, contribute to the album.

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TVD Radar: Laura Nyro, Hear My Song: The Collection, 1966–1995
19 CD deluxe box set in stores 12/6

VIA PRESS RELEASE | 2021’s vinyl only American Dreamer box set reintroduced the world to the undisputed but somewhat overlooked talents of Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee Laura Nyro, the brilliant Brooklyn-born female artist who, in four decades of recording, would merge r&b, doo-wop, pop, jazz, Broadway, opera, folk with her own individual brand of blue-eyed soul across several critically acclaimed studio albums she recorded before her tragic passing in 1997 aged 49 years. Now, Madfish Music is proud to present Hear My Song: The Collection, 1966–1995, a 19 CD deluxe box set that is the deepest dive yet into the creativity of the extraordinary, unmistakable musical force that is Laura Nyro.

Ten original studio albums, six live albums including 2 previously unreleased live concerts, Laura’s original demo tape from 1966, and bonus disc of rarities including mono versions, alternative versions, and live tracks. All albums remastered especially for this collection.

All housed in a deluxe, lift-off lid box. 90-page coffee-table hardback book with in-depth liner notes by Vivien Goldman, foreword from Elton John and testimonials from Charlie Calello, Will Lee, John Sebastian, Jackson Browne, Clive Davis, Lou Adler, Randy Brecker, Bernard Purdie, Scott Billington, John Sebastian, and Gary Burden. Rare, previously unseen photographs including intimate family shots illuminate the book

Included within this set are all of Laura Nyro’s 10 studio albums: More Than A New Discovery (1967), Eli And The Thirteenth Confession (1968), New York Tendaberry (1969), Christmas And The Beads Of Sweat (1970), the wonderful covers album she made with Labelle Gonna Take A Miracle (1971), Smile (1976), and Nested (1978), Mother’s Spiritual (1984), Walk The Dog & Light The Light (1993) and her posthumously released masterwork Angel In The Dark (2001).

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Graded on a Curve:
Harry Beckett,
The Modern Sound
of Harry Beckett

Barbados born British trumpeter-flugelhornist Harry Beckett had a long and distinguished career that was capped with a delightfully unexpected collaboration with producer Adrian Sherwood, The Modern Sound of Harry Beckett. Released in 2008 by Sherwood’s On-U Sound label, it has just received a worthy reissue, the set now available on vinyl for the first time.

The arrival of The Modern Sound of Harry Beckett shouldn’t have been a surprise given the number of times the horn-man recorded with Jah Wobble (more than a dozen releases across a two-decade span). Indeed, it was the extended relationship with Wobble that hipped Sherwood to the prospect of working with Beckett and sowed the seeds for this album.

Beckett, who passed in 2010 after a stroke, had a deep rep as an ace guest who added value to records spanning from the Small Faces (Ogdens’ Nut Gone Flake) and the regular sized Faces (Long Player) to Jack Bruce (Songs for a Tailor) to Alexis Korner (Both Sides) to Manfred Mann Chapter Three (S/T and Volume Two) to Robert Wyatt (Nothing Can Stop Us) to Weekend (La Varieté) to Working Week (Working Nights) to David Sylvian (Gone to Earth).

The above excludes Beckett’s extensive work in the jazz field, which in addition to his own records (debuting with Flare Up in 1970) found him in bands ranging from big (aggregations organized by Graham Collier, Neil Ardley, John Dankworth, Mike Westbrook, Michael Gibbs, and Oliver Nelson) to mid-size (outfits led by Collier, Elton Dean, and Stan Tracey) to small (groups with John Surman, Mike Osborne, and Ray Russell). Of special note is his connection to South African musicians through his membership in Chris McGregor’s Brotherhood of Breath.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 10/16/24

Vinyl Sales Have Dropped 33% in 2024: Record sales dropped from 34.9 million units sold in 2023 to just 23.3 million in 2024. After vinyl sales saw a significant rise earlier in the decade decade, Billboard’s latest music consumption report reveals a 33% decline in record sales this year. Compared to last year’s music consumption data, vinyl sales fell from 34.9 million units in 2023 to just 23.3 million in 2024. It’s not just vinyl either: CDs and digital album sales also dropped in 2024, with CDs falling 19.5% and digital albums down by 8.3% from where they were in 2023. All told, album sales across the board are down by 23%, decreasing from 75.5 million units sold in 2023 to 57.5 million units in 2024. There have been some notable increases from last year: for one, vinyl is still outpacing CDs, so the revival of collecting and spinning records hasn’t died out completely.

Los Angeles, CA | Revival of L.A. record store Licorice Pizza serves a slice of vinyl nostalgia: As a teen growing up in Orange County in the early ‘80s, Kerry Brown’s immediate career goal was simple. He wanted to work at his favorite record store, Licorice Pizza. Years later, Brown would embark on life as a musician and busy producer-engineer, working on records by the Smashing Pumpkins, Afghan Whigs, Miley Cyrus and his own indie rock band Catherine, but a stint behind the counter always eluded him. As he says now with a shrug, “I was never cool enough to work at a record store.” Even so, he spent many days at his local Licorice Pizza, strolling the aisles, hanging out with friends, and settling into the couch to listen to whatever disc was spinning on the turntable. Brown once spent a night sleeping outside the store waiting for the 1983 release of David Bowie’s “Let’s Dance.”

Tacoma, WA | New business in Tacoma becomes one stop shop for books, thrift and records: The business owners of Last Letter Books, Persona Thrift and Janku Land hope to create unique and specially curated stock not available elsewhere in the city. On Sept. 27, Last Letter Books and Persona Thrift held their grand opening, moving in with Janku Land Records inside of Tacoma’s old Wonder Bread building at 1720 S. 7th St. Suite 104. Janku Land celebrated their six-year anniversary the same day. …“It is a small space, so I really have to manage it, I do not have any room to have any garbage,” John told the Ledger. “I think the stock is pretty good that I opened with but there is always room for improvement. You just keep chasing your vision of the perfect spot, I want it to be a space that I would want to visit.”

Leeds, UK | Leeds vinyl store Released Records re-opens in Hyde Park Book Club: The shop moved out of its original Corn Exchange location last year due to rising rent and service charges. Leeds vinyl shop Released Records, formerly based in the city’s Corn Exchange, has re-opened permanently at local venue Hyde Park Book Club. Since October 6th, the record store has had a selection of genre-spanning £2 LPs and 12-inch records on sale at the new location. (Hyde Park doesn’t presently have the space for Released to show its full collection). Released plans to start hosting a monthly event where guest DJs play a selection of records for sale, with more partnerships and a record fair TBA. First opened in 2017, Released moved out of the Corn Exchange last year due to rising rent and service charges, among other factors. Prior to setting up shop at Hyde Park Book Club, the store had been selling exclusively online.

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TVD Radar: Laurie Styvers, Let Me Comfort You: The Hush Rarities
in stores 10/25

VIA PRESS RELEASE | High Moon Records is proud to announce a new vinyl collection of rare tracks from cult singer-songwriter Laurie Styvers. Let Me Comfort You: The Hush Rarities arrives Friday, October 25, 2024 exclusively on vinyl LP, joined by a 4-page lyric insert with liner notes from 5x GRAMMY® Award-nominated compilation producer Alec Palao. Pre-orders are available now.

Let Me Comfort You: The Hush Rarities follows High Moon’s 2023 release of Gemini Girl: The Complete Hush Recordings, the first-ever comprehensive anthology of Styvers’ remarkable body of work, including her two deeply moving solo albums, Spilt Milk (1971) and The Colorado Kid (1973). Akin to a lost third album, the new collection now gathers 11 alternate takes, demos, and previously unissued songs from the original album sessions, further showcasing the enigmatic Texas singer-songwriter’s honey-voiced intimacy and intangible magic, its lovelorn gems like “Let Me Comfort You” and “Crazy Rainy Spring” equal of anything on either now-rightfully acclaimed albums.

Laurie Styvers may be amongst the lesser-known names within the milieu of 1970s cult singer-songwriters, but anyone who experiences the bewitching innocence on display within her two deeply moving solo albums, Spilt Milk (1971) and The Colorado Kid (1973), will surely fall in love with this enigmatic figure.

Born in Texas, Styvers was a student at the American School in London when she joined the legendary 1960s psych-folk outfit Justine, guesting on their eponymous 1970 debut LP before heading back to the US to attend college in Colorado. She soon returned to the UK, embarking upon a solo career after signing with Hush Productions, founded by legendary producers Shel Talmy (The Kinks, The Who, Small Faces) and Hugh Murphy.

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TVD Radar: The Fire
Still Burns: Music Inspired by the Post-Punk Message
by David Gamage in stores 11/22

VIA PRESS RELEASE | “The story of people finding their own voice and doing something because they believe in it.”Fear and Loathing

The Fire Still Burns is a story of post-punk adventure, packed full of anecdotes, inspiration and tales from the road with an insightful narrative on what keeps these bands plugging away with such heart; gigging, touring, recording and playing in a rough and ready scene.

With a brief history of the independent, alternative label, Engineer Records, and input from eighty of its bands. You’ll read about Canaan and Crosstide, Fat Heaven and Flyswatter, Kid You Not, Kover, and Kyoto Drive, as well as many more. A follow-up to 2023’s A Hardcore Heart and a must-read for all tuned-in punk-rockers and hardcore kids, especially if they’re forming a new band.

David is a musician and author. He’s played in bands since his teens, including Couch Potatoes, Joeyfat, Rydell, Come The Spring, and The Atlantic Union Project, and is an active part of the alternative music scene, having promoted gigs, edited a fanzine and run a record label. He established his current label, Engineer Records, back in 1999 and continues releasing great records to this day, with well over 400 releases and counting.

His first two books were, Punk Faction, a collection of BHP fanzine excerpts that cover a range of subjects important to the youth of the ‘90s and still relevant to the alternative scene of today, and A Hardcore Heart, a semi-autobiographical account of the UKHC scene in the ‘90s focusing on the artists, promoters, venues, and labels involved. David lives with his wife and two sons in East Sussex, and when he’s not playing with his family and their four cats, or writing, he enjoys traveling, strangling his guitar, and introducing others to obscure rock bands.

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Graded on a Curve: Angel,
Helluva Band

Celebrating Frank DiMino, born on this day in 1951.Ed.

My favorite story about Angel, Washington, DC’s glammed-out, all-white spandex retort to Kiss, which seemed poised for superstardom in the mid-seventies (giant billboards on the Sunset Strip, selection by the readers of Circus magazine as the Best New Group of 1976, and tours of the great American arena circuit with the likes of Aerosmith, Blue Oyster Cult, Journey, and Rush) is pure Spinal Tap.

The band, with some major financial backing from Casablanca Records mogul Neil Bogart, had developed one of the most elaborate stage shows in rock, a fantasia of smoke, magic, and mirrors that led one wag to suggest that the band might be better off staying home and sending its props on the road. One gimmick involved the band appearing magically on stage one by one in puffs of smoke, to be introduced by the face on the giant Angel logo—which none other than Ian MacKaye pointed out to me is ambigrammatic, meaning it reads the same when turned upside down as when viewed normally—that served as the band’s backdrop.

One night, as Punky Meadows, Angel’s guitarist and the most androgynous pretty boy in a band full of androgynous pretty boys, told me: “Of course, all we were doing was coming up through trapdoors from beneath the stage. Well, one night, the big talking head introduces [drummer] Mickie Jones, and Mickie isn’t there. We’re looking at each like, ‘Where the fuck’s Mickie?’ Turns out his trapdoor got stuck. And all those stoned kids in the audience are going [Meadows sucks on an imaginary joint], ‘That’s really weird, man…'”

Angel was ahead of its time as a hair metal band, but while publicity photos featuring Meadows sporting hair the females of the era would have died for and a pout that put Scarlett Johansson’s to shame helped increase Angel’s popularity amongst certain sectors—predominantly teenage girls—it didn’t win them any points with critics.

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  • SUPPORTING YOUR LOCAL INDIE SHOPS SINCE 2007


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