SELECTED CABLE TV DVDS ON SALE NOW: SAVE UP TO $25 ON SHOWS FROM HBO, SHOWTIME, FX, DISCOVERY, HISTORY, USA AND MANY MORE!

Come on down to The Record Exchange and check out our selection of TV on DVD where we have tons of products on sale. Catch up on all of your favorite shows or find new ones to fall in love with. They make the perfect gift for yourself, friends, family and even girlfriends that you need to get out of the dog house with for forgetting Valentines Day. Whatever your reason, we don’t care, just head on down and check out our huge selection!

RECOMMENDED CABLE TV ON DVD:

Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Season 4 $12 Off
Big Love: Season 3 $22 Off
Big Love: Season 4 $10 Off
Burn Notice: Season 2 $18 Off
Dead Like Me: The Complete Collection $25 Off
Dirty Sexy Money: Season 2 $9 Off
History Channel- Shockwave: Season 1 $16 Off
Life (narrated by David Attenborough) $22 Off
Life on Mars: The Complete Series $9 Off
Monk: Season 1 $25 Off
Monk: Season 7 $25 Off
Psych: Season 3 $25 Off
Rescue Me: Season 5 $17 Off
The L Word: Final Season $12 Off
Tilt: Season 1 $22 Off
When We Left Earth: The NASA Missions $10 Off

AND MANY MORE!

VINYL WORD: MOGWAI’S HARDCORE WILL NEVER DIE BUT YOU WILL. PLUS BRIGHT EYES, DRIVE BY TRUCKERS AND MORE!

BUY VINYL HERE

Mogwai have always seemed to have a much better sense of humor than most of their peers. While most of the bands that sound like them opt for either brooding, austere soundscapes or breathtakingly ethereal musical collages, the Scottish five-piece have a knack for poking fun at everything from the silliness of the genre they’re often lumped into (Really? Post-rock is the best you can come up with?) to the stagnancy of much of today’s music by toying around with dynamics and silence to shake things up aurally.

As far as faults go, though, Hardcore Will Never Die, But You Will is pretty spotless. The band proves they’re as skilled as ever when it comes to entertaining with just their instruments. If you can manage to listen past the lack of conventional song structures and vocals, Hardcore… will likely be a very pleasant listen. It’s a striking snapshot of a band on top of their ever-evolving game, with a fair amount of surprises thrown in for good measure. –MC

OTHER NEW VINYL RELEASES:

Bright Eyes Peoples Key
Drive-By Truckers Go Go Boots
Funeral Party Golden Age Of Knowwhere
Gwar Bloody Pit Of Horror
Chixdiggit! Safeways Here We Come
Dark Funeral Attera Totus Sanctus

Dark Funeral Diabolis
Dio Dio At Donington UK: Live 1983 and 1987
Dismember God That Never Was
Dismember Pieces
Grand Funk Railroad We’re An American Band
Mayhem Ordo Ad Chao
Sonic Youth Bad Moon Rising

THE DRIVE BY TRUCKERS “GO GO BOOTS” AND OTHER NEW RECORD EXCHANGE CD RECOMMENDATIONS!

BUY CD HERE

Go-Go Boots” the latest album from Alabama natives Drive-By Truckers, offers none of the trappings associated with modern music: no auto-tuned vocals or synthesized beats, no guest rappers or emo-pleading. But in its very lack of state-of-the-art, juvenile pandering it may just be the perfect album for this time in history: a sometimes joyous, sometimes harrowing trip up side roads where friends and family are waiting, and down blind alleys where desire and rage boil over into murder and madness. The songs offer a morbid yet joyous meditation on the terrible choices humans face when hope dies, all the while keeping a small flame burning for the renewing grace of love. –JO

OTHER NEW CD RECOMMENDATIONS:

Bright Eyes Peoples Key
Carll, Hayes Kmag Yoyo (& Other American Stories)
P.J. Harvey Let England Shake
Mogwai Hardcore Will Never Die But You Will
Cowboy Junkies Deamons
Rev Theory Justice
Justin Bieber Never Say Never-Remixes
Eddie Spaghetti Sundowner
Death Sound Of Perseve
Tommy Emmanuel Little By Little
Emmure Speaker of the Dead
Mr. Big What if…

NEW RELEASE OF THE WEEK: BRIGHT EYES’ THE PEOPLE’S KEY FOR THE $9.99 RIGHT PRICE AT RX – ONE WEEK ONLY!

BUY CD (ONLY $9.99) HERE
BUY VINYL ($21.99) HERE

For every fan of Conor Oberst, there has been a moment when this precocious voice of troubled youth has come of age; to my mind, this really is the one. What sets The People’s Key apart from Oberst’s prodigious output over the past 15 years isn’t its lyrical density or conceptual assurance, but the taut, bright, propulsive vitality of its musicianship.

This is practically a pop album – albeit a pop album about time, the universe, life as a hallucination and spiritual redemption. ‘Jejune Stars’ rattles off an exuberant chorus that lodges immovably in the mind, and elates, despite articulating an existential crisis precipitated by the weather.

The album is abundant in such choruses, bound together by a chugging, playful rhythm (‘Haile Selassie’), stabbed by authoritative guitars (‘Shell Games’), or embedded in coruscating electronic effects (‘Triple Spiral’) that, in earlier albums, would have disintegrated into chaos. It’s as if Bright Eyes have finally exited their bedroom and entered a brave new musical world.Guardian

WE HEART MUSIC @ RECORD EXCHANGE: JAMES VINCENT MCMORROW FOR $10.99!

ON SALE FOR $10.99! BUY HERE

Be still my beating Irish heart. James Vincent McMorrow is Ireland’s equivalent to Bon Iver, and like Iver, McMorrow’s soft falsetto and high tenor is heavenly. And, it’s McMorrow’s beguiling voice that seduces the listener as quickly as the opening song on his debut album, Early in the Morning (Vagrant Records). What is more remarkable is this record has been out a year, and is now just making its way to the United States.

Recorded over a five month period in an isolated house by the sea, Early in the Morning was completely self-recorded, creating an intimate feel throughout. The album consists of eleven folk-influenced songs that feature the acoustic guitar, banjo, organ, and McMorrow’s beautiful vocals. Most of the songs start quietly and crescendos throughout the span of the songs. For example, the opening track, “If I Had a Boat,” beings serenely with chamber choir harmonies that are followed by a buzzing organ and a slide guitar which helps build to its intense finish. Its lyrics also summarize the entire theme of Early in the Morning, which was written about transformation and change.

In addition to the theme, the tempos and tone of the songs change. The soft and subdued beauty of “Hear the Noise That Moves so Soft and Low” gives way to the up-tempo banjo-driven “Sparrow & the Wolf.” Some of the tracks have pop appeal, like the tempo-shifting “This Old Dark Machine” and the catchy melody of “Breaking Hearts.” In the latter half of the album, McMorrow shows his darker side with a haunting ballad “Follow You Down to the Red Oak Tree,” the ominous “From the Woods!!” and the foreboding “Down the Burning Ropes.” And then the album closes as quietly as it came in, with a simple pop-influenced ballad “And If My Heart Should Somehow Stop” and the modest folk ode to a love in “Early in the Morning, I’ll Come Calling.” Early in the Morning is a great album in which McMorrow clearly takes the listener with him on his journey of transformation. — Common Folk Music