BANG YOUR HEAD AGAINST THE HEADBANGER’S WALL AT THE RX!

Do you like it hard and heavy? Then come to The Record Exchange and visit The Headbanger’s Wall, a listening station devoted to some of today’s best bands pummeling you with raw power and raw emotion.

The Headbanger’s Wall currently features Turisas, Destruction, Cavalera Conspiracy, Agnostic Front, TesseracT, Woods of Ypres, Within Temptation, Sirenia, Blackguard and Terror. Come melt your face with us.

SUB POP DAY AT RECORD EXCHANGE: THE HEAD AND THE HEART IN-STORE, FLEET FOXES LISTENING PARTY MAY 3

Tuesday, May 3, is Sub Pop Day at The Record Exchange, and we’ll have special sales and a couple of amazing events to celebrate this fine day:

The Head and the Heart in-store (6 p.m.). These Seattle favorites were recently signed to Sub Pop, which re-released the band’s self-titled album on CD and vinyl for Record Store Day. Customers who purchase The Head and the Heart during the in-store will receive a 24-page tour photo scrapbook free with purchase. (See below for more info on The Head and the Heart.)

Fleet Foxes listening party (5 p.m.). Fleet Foxes’ highly-anticipated new album Helplessness Blues comes out on May 3, and we’ll be playing the album on the store hi-fi prior to The Head and the Heart’s performance. We’ll also have a limited-edition silkscreen poster (pictured) to give away with purchase of Helplessness Blues (while supplies last).

The first 25 people to get to the RX for the listening party will be entered to win a nifty Sub Pop prize pack that includes an ultra-limited (100 copies worldwide) white vinyl LP pressing of Helplessness Blues. When you arrive at the store for the listening party, come to the counter and ask for a number. We’ll draw the winning number following The Head and the Heart’s set (you must be present to win).

ABOUT THE HEAD AND THE HEART

So many decisions in life and in the music we love can come down to a critical tug between the logic in our heads and the hot red blood beating through our hearts. Seattle’s The Head and the Heart live authentically in that crux, finding joy and beauty wedged there. Their music pulses effervescently — both explosively danceable and intuitively intelligent. With Americana roots and strong vocal harmonics that swell like a river, this band finds its anchor in solid songwriting that has even the jaded humming along by the second listen.

Leaving a variety of day jobs and academic pursuits, The Head and the Heart came together in the summer of 2009, during frequent visits to the open mic night at Conor Byrne in Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood. California-transplant Josiah Johnson and Virginia-native Jonathan Russell formed the core songwriting partnership, quickly adding keyboardist Kenny Hensley to the mix. Kenny, then 21, had packed up his piano and moved up to Seattle from California to pursue musical score-writing. The luminous Charity Rose Thielen, violin and vocals, had just returned from a year of studying and playing music in Paris. Drummer Tyler Williams cold left a successful band in Virginia after Jon sent him the demo of “Down in the Valley,” relocating across states to be a part of this. Finally, Chris Zasche, was bartending at Conor Byrne and mentioned one day that he’d be happy to play bass for the nascent band. It all felt right: The Head and the Heart was born.

Whether penning songs on the beach at Seattle’s Discovery Park, or working out melodies in the piano practice rooms at the Seattle Public Library, Charity describes the early months of the band’s existence as touched by a shared purpose and connection. She recalls an email she sent to Josiah that summer, confessing that she was “sleepless and penniless, but inspired nonetheless.”

The band entered Seattle’s Studio Litho in early 2010 to record these songs that had been kicking and twisting in the catalytic development of their live show. Recorded by Shawn Simmons at Studio Litho and Steven Aguilar at Bearhead Studio, the band was selling burned copies in handmade denim sleeves at local shows within a few weeks. Self-released in June 2010, the debut album helped build an impressive head-of-steam for the band through the second half of the year, gaining fans at influential Seattle station KEXP, local record shops (a consistent top 10 seller for Easy Street and the #1 album of 2010 at Sonic Boom), and venues up and down the West Coast, culminating with signing to Sub Pop Records in November. For the 2011 re-release of the album, “Sounds like Hallelujah” has been re-recorded, live favorite “Rivers and Roads” has been added, and the album has been re-mastered.

The songs resulting from those first inspired months pick at the multicolored threads of leaving home, finding home, and through that process of deconstruction, finding yourself. These are songs about crossing rivers and roads to get to the one you love, about family far away, and the desire to chase Technicolor dreams down foreign horizons. When people hear these songs, or see the band live, the first thing they have to do is tell someone else. Their shows are, simply, one hell of a lot of breathless fun. Each song explodes into a potent supernova on stage, where half the audience is zealously singing along with every lyric, and the other half is wishing they knew the words. The band has accepted nearly every show offered to them in the past year, from backyards strung with Christmas lights to coffee shops, open mics, and even high school classrooms in Middle America. From the first months of the band’s life, their reputation as a phenomenal live band has preceded them wherever they play.

The strength of Josiah, Jon and Charity’s vocal harmonies on the album makes it feel like these three were born to pour their voices together, as the band’s songs revel in jaunty bass lines with ebullient handclaps peppering the best moments. A palette of orchestral elements weave their way through the album, including cello, glockenspiel, and violin, all shading in the songs’ development. For all the times your toes tap while enjoying this band, often the lightness will deceptively belie the depth of ache in the lyrics when you sit down to really listen. There is magic in the music, but not magic contrived by trickery or posturing. “It seems actually that the more genuine and honest we are in the songwriting and performing, the more people relate to that transparency,” Charity muses.

This is an album for people who unabashedly sing and drum along on the steering wheel, and also for those who appreciate a well-crafted collection of songs that build into something wholly beautiful.

There is in this music a counter-cultural optimism, with roots that grow deep and melodies that lodge themselves far into that place inside you where the head meets the heart.

$9.99 RIGHT PRICE CD AVAILABLE AT THE RX: EXPLOSIONS IN THE SKY’S ‘TAKE CARE TAKE CARE TAKE CARE!’

$9.99 RIGHT PRICE CD AVAILABLE HERE

It is tempting, when speaking about the music of Explosions In The Sky, to get diverted into biographical details. Details not of the band, but of the listener, of moments made more vivid by the accompanying soundtrack of this most emotional of instrumental ‘post-rock’ groups. Programming oneself and one’s CD player to wake up to the slow crescendo of “First Breath After Coma,” for example, or plugging in the earphones and wandering the streets of the city to a soundtrack of Those Who Tell The Truth Shall Die, Those Who Tell The Truth Shall Live Forever. Hurtling through the world by automated transport to the loud-slow, fast-slow dynamics of All Of A Sudden I Miss Everyone. Indeed, it’s revealing how many net-reviewers of the band’s albums seem drawn to this temptation, describing personal experiences connected to the music or imagining scenarios that it could accompany.

What this means is that listeners’ subjective responses to EITS’s music are more often reflected upon than the band’s particular socio-musical context. As intriguing as it might be to connect the band’s roots in Austin, Texas to that town’s association with progressive country music (to explore, for example, different ways of marrying blatant emotionalism with generic innovation), the work of EITS always seems to dislodge itself from any particular place, to float free on the soundscapes of memory and imagination. Rather than reflecting place, it offers to take us to new places. If there is reflection, it is the reflection of the acoustic mirror, a misremembered sonic subjectivity fueled by fantasy.

Reflecting on the relationship between music, automation, and sonic immersion in his book on 1990s popular music, the British music journalist Ben Thompson described the “paradoxical realization that life never feels more real than when it feels like a film,” the way that, enclosed in the sonic balm of the Walkman (now iPod/iPhone), one can imagine oneself out of the most dreary settings, where “even the man sitting opposite eating a Pot Noodle with his hands looks like a movie extra.” Thompson was writing about electronic music (Orbital, Underworld, The Future Sound of London), tying his observations to those of fellow writer Kodwo Eshun and his “sonic fiction” account of Black Atlantic Futurism. But, as generically removed as they might be from such considerations, as anchored as they appear to be in a Luddite pose of guitar/bass/drums electric rock, as potentially mired as their detractors say they are in the unimaginative drudgery and obvious emotionalism of the quiet-loud post-rock template, Explosions In The Sky are nothing if not sonic fictioneers and reality-enhancers of the highest order.

Take Care, Take Care, Take Care, the band’s fifth ‘proper’ album (and first since 2007’s All Of A Sudden…) makes a mockery of claims that the band are mere peddlers of music that has been done better before, either by others or themselves. Suggestions that the band basically deal in the same sonic material served up by, say, Mogwai or Godspeed You! Black Emperor are both lazy and misleading. Sure, there are elements that connect these (and many more) groups, relationships that can be usefully mapped out, but they all have their own distinctive voices. “Voice” is the right word to use here because it is largely the absence of voice (i.e., of “songs” or “lyrics”) that prompts the comparisons in the first place. But to say that one instrumental rock-informed group drawn to lengthy mood pieces is the equivalent of another is like saying that one jazz group is like another, or that composers of classical music are somehow all the same.

Which is a rather wordy and over-defensive way of saying that this music needs time and space to breathe, to get to know, to encounter the subtleties nestled within the more obvious programmatic post-rock moves. To spend time with this album is to discover moments of graceful repose, calm beauty, and mature restraint. There is still an invitation to dream, to set sail upon the swells and retreats of those chiming guitars, that dark undertow of bass and drums. And this is still music to take with you as you go out into the world, as you navigate its streets, plains, and highways, fly above it, shuttle beneath it, walk through it gazing in wonder and disappointment. It is music to take out into the real world, to add as a soundtrack to everyday ramblings.

To be a flâneur in the company of this music is to invite all manner of additional reflections, realizations, and imaginings to the synaesthetic experience of the stroll. And, like the wanderer’s world, the music resets its contextual parameters on each listen, each trip. Some critics have dismissed EITS’s music for its apparent forgettability. While such claims are probably rooted in an anxiety on the part of the listener rather than a deficiency of the music, it is worth wondering whether they also have something to do with this resetting of contexts, this potential of music to remake itself and its surroundings.

Some brief details of the trip, unfixable as it is, scenes grabbed from the whirring world outside the window. “Last Known Surroundings” glides in on a combination of drawn-out, fed-back guitar and delicate, noodled guitar, insistent, explicit drums building the whole thing up to a plateau that determines the rest of the piece: a cruising altitude and speed that calls to mind the motorik pulse of classic Neu and Kraftwerk. This sensation is aided by an almost Oneohtrix- or Emeralds-like arpeggiation leading into “Human Qualities.” That synthsation is quickly drowned out by a familiar EITS-faithful guitar figure that leads us through nearly seven minutes of sublime lull before the album’s first real noise onslaught. Okay, so perhaps we’ve been somewhere pretty much like this before, but the action is unfurled masterfully and the denouement is breathtaking. As metteurs-en-scène, Explosions In the Sky show themselves to be at the top of their game here.

The textures explored on “Be Comfortable, Creature” are among the most interesting on the album, showing a more sustained exploration of previously latent tendencies. The drones and layering used on this number invite comparison to Rhys Chatham’s compositions for guitars and to the Chatham-inspired instrumental work of Band of Susans. It’s a mesmeric, beautifully layered composition, one that shows EITS to be wo in directions quite distinct from many of their contemporaries.

There are echoes of earlier work on the album, most notably perhaps in “Postcard From 1952,” with its “First Breath”-like heartbeat drum, its high register guitar, the inevitably with which its sonic tributaries flow into the main river. Again, though, it’s beautifully done and provides many reasons to rejoice and none to complain. Album closer “Let Me Back In” moves on from weird, backmasked vocals to a fairly established EITS-style piece, which only serves as a blissful reminder at how good the group are at soundtracking your life. Things happen around you in unusual ways when you’re listening to this music, acquiring a hyper-reality that is intoxicating, as if what was implicitly filmic and fascinating and wonderful in your immediate environment is made manifest by being underlined sonically, sensually.

Explosions In The Sky continue to tap into this special vector of imagination, emotion, and possibility, making everything that much more vivid. Their music traces out those brief constellations of hope that give meaning to the void. It’s like Freud said: life’s supposed to be transient, like the seasons. You’re supposed to forget it, to lose it, so you can be awed when it comes around again. –TMT

FREE OZZY OSBOURNE POSTER WITH PURCHASE OF ANY OZZY RSD TITLE!

Ozzy Osbourne is the official ambassador for Record Store Day 2011, and this ain’t some token appearance to drum up some publicity (like he needs any).

No, Ozzy is releasing three Record Store Day exclusives (Blizzard of Oz vinyl LP, Dairy of a Madman vinyl LP, Flyin’ High/I Don’t Know 7-inch), and The Record Exchange has a quantity of limited-edition Ozzy RSD posters to give away with purchase of any Ozzy RSD title!

SUB POP RECORD STORE DAY SAMPLER: FREE WITH PURCHASE OF ANY SUB POP RSD RELEASE ON SATURDAY, APRIL 16!

There’s a reason Sub Pop is one of our favorite record labels. Well, there are many reasons, and one of which is the way these cats celebrate Record Store Day.

Among the 200+ exclusive releases available Saturday, April 16, are some fresh Sub Pop platters from Fleet Foxes, Blitzen Trapper, Lower Dens and The Head and the Heart. And to sweeten the deal — as if new releases from these bands aren’t sweet enough — the Sub Poppers sent us a quantity of bitchin’ CD samplers to give away with purchase of any Sub Pop RSD title.

Terminal Sales Vol. 4: Please to Enjoy, the 2011 Sub Pop label sampler, comes housed in an embossed, die-cut package and includes 18 art prints with information about each of the artists and a folded poster. (Preview the tracks HERE.)

The track listing is as follows:

1. Daniel Martin Moore “Dark Road” from the album In the Cool of the Day (SP860), available January 2011
2. Aurelio “Tio Sam” from the album Laru Beya (NXA002), available on Next Ambiance January 2011
3. The Twilight Singers “On the Corner” from the album Dynamite Steps (SP844), available February 2011
4. Mogwai “Slight Domestic” from the “Mexican Grand Prix” 7″ single on Rock Action Records, available February 2011
5. Papercuts “Do What You Will” from the album Fading Parade (SP885), available February 2011
6. Dum Dum Girls “Wrong Feels Right” from the He Gets Me High EP (SP917), available March 2011
7. J Mascis “Not Enough” from the album Several Shades of Why (SP859), available March 2011
8. Obits “You Gotta Lose” from the album Moody, Standard and Poor (SP857) available March 2011
9. Low “Try to Sleep” from the album C’mon (SP905), available April 2011
10. The Head and the Heart “No One to Let You Down,” previously unreleased. The album The Head and the Heart (SP915) is available for Record Store Day, April 16, 2011
11. Blitzen Trapper “Maybe Baby” from the “Maybe Baby” 7″ single (SP929), available for Record Store Day, April 16, 2011
12. Lower Dens “Deer Knives” from the “Deer Knives” 7″ single (SP927), available for Record Store Day, April 16, 2011
13. Fleet Foxes “Helplessness Blues” from the album Helplessness Blues (SP888), available May 2011
14. Chad VanGaalen “Peace on the Rise” from the album Diaper Island (SP871), available May 2011
15. Shabazz Palaces “lost foundling.” This Shabazz Palaces track is not from the album Black Up (SP900), available May 2011
16. Memoryhouse “Sleep Patterns” from The Years EP (SP925), available at some as-yet-undetermined point in 2011
17. Mister Heavenly “Mister Heavenly” from the as-yet-untitled Mister Heavenly debut album (SP926), available August 2011
18. Niki and the Dove “The Fox” From “The Fox” 12″ single (SP930), available June 2011
19. Blouse “Shadow” From the “Shadow” 7″ single (SP939), available May 2011