BRING IN YOUR FITZ/DALE EARNHARDT JR. JR. TICKET & GET A FREE CD SINGLE!

Maybe you went to the Fitz & the Tantrums show at the Knitting Factory. Maybe you got there early and checked out opener Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. Maybe you fell in love with them and want to hear more of their music.

Well, you’re in luck. The fine folks at Warner Bros. Records sent us a quantity of Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. CD singles to give away free when you bring in your ticket stub from the show. The CD features two tracks and a code to download a third.

Race to The Record Exchange and get you some!

RECORD EXCHANGE TOP 20 SELLERS (WEEK ENDING JANUARY 1)

1. Raise My Glass, Micky and the Motorcars
2. El Camino, The Black Keys
3. Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming, M83
4. 21, Adele
5. Barton Hollow, The Civil Wars
6. The Head and the Heart, The Head and the Heart
7. Ceremonials, Florence + the Machine
8. Sigh No More, Mumford & Sons
9. I’m With You, Red Hot Chili Peppers
10. This One’s For Him: A Tribute to Guy Clark, Various Artists
11. Retrospective, Pink Martini
12. Ashes and Fire, Ryan Adams
13. The Year of Hibernation, Youth Lagoon
14. Lungs, Florence + the Machine
15. The Harrow and the Harvest, Gillian Welch
16. Lioness: Hidden Treasures, Amy Winehouse
17. Camp, Childish Gambino
18. Betty Wright: The Movie, Betty Wright and the Roots
19. Hardcore Will Never Die, But You Will, Mogwai
20. Disappearing Night, a.k.a. Belle

WIN A KILLER MASTODON PRIZE PACK!

You may have noticed that Mastodon‘s new album The Hunter was in The Record Exchange Top 5 last week (and there was some stiff competition). Or that the band is coming back to the Knitting Factory in November.

Well, if you haven’t heard this record yet (and you should), or you have heard it and you like free stuff, then you’ll want to enter to win our Mastodon Prize Pack, which includes:

• Hunter head T-shirt (men’s large)
• CTS military hat
• Claw finger koozie
The Hunter CD

To enter, send an email with the subject “Mastodon” HERE by midnight Monday, Oct. 10. We’ll draw a winner at random and notify the lucky duck on Tuesday, Oct. 11.

BUY THE CD AT RX, GET A FREE TICKET TO THE SHOW AT KNITTING FACTORY!

The Record Exchange has partnered with the Knitting Factory to offer you a sexy deal on upcoming concerts: Buy the artist’s new CD at the RX and get a free ticket* to the show at the Knit!

Current concerts, with eligible CD titles, are listed below:

Amon Amarth, Sept. 3, Surtur Rising (on sale for $15.99; tickets at the door are $20)

* While Supplies Last

Y LA BAMBA RECORD EXCHANGE IN-STORE WEDNESDAY, JULY 6 (3 P.M.)

Y La Bamba will perform live at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St., Downtown Boise) at 3 p.m. Wednesday, July 6. As always, this Record Exchange in-store performance is free and all ages. Y La Bamba is opening for Neko Case at Knitting Factory later that night (8 p.m.) and we have tickets for sale here at the store!

ABOUT Y LA BAMBA

With Y La Bamba (ylabamba.com), Luzelena Mendoza draws from both her strict Catholic upbringing as an only daughter of a Mexican immigrant and a debilitating illness that led her to fall away from her faith, to create what LA Weekly calls “Devendra Banhart-influenced art-folk with hazy femme vocals and traditional Mexican sounds.”

Mendoza’s father immigrated to the Bay Area from the Michoacan region of Mexico after meeting her mother, who had received her U.S. citizenship as a teenager. Her father got a job at a southern Oregon sawmill and Luzelena would spend her childhood summers on a farm in California’s San Joaquin Valley among peach, almond and fig orchards. It was in these strong Mexican communities that she would soak up the melodies and the stories that were being told while, as she remembers it, “the men with tassel hats” strummed their guitars and sang their traditional folk songs in three part harmonies. “I remember singing along, mimicking my father’s voice and dancing like a little wild child,” she recalls. For Mendoza, this music was the only way she could relate to her father, and was a bright spot in a rough childhood.

In 2003, Mendoza traveled to New Zealand and India, in a quest for a deeper understanding of her spiritual growth as an active Christian, hungry for the tools to create a shift on this planet. During her trip to India, she contracted amoebic dysentery and giardia, causing her to suffer from insomnia, lose 60 pounds and fear her loss of sanity. “It shook me in ways I was not expecting, leading me to struggle with my prayer life and search for a healthy relationship with God, the universe, and with myself,” says Mendoza of her condition, which was only complicated with a misdiagnosis.  “I gave up on Christianity and what religion was starting to mean to me due to a natural awareness that was knocking on my door.”

Upon her return to the U.S., she took in a white six-toed cat to keep her company as she fought to regain her physical, emotional and spiritual health. She christened her new feline companion La Bamba, a name that she incorporated into a moniker for her home recordings and performances at open mic nights in her new home, Portland. Bassist and vocalist Ben Meyercord caught some of Mendoza’s open mic performances and the two quickly found a musical connection. In a whirlwind week that she said happened magically, Mendoza recruited Mike Kitson on drums and David Kyle on guitar. Luzelena played in an Ashland band with Kitson when she wanted a more quiet alternative to her early punk roots and Kyle was a musician she met online that shared her spiritual and eccentric philosophies. Intuition told her that she was going to meet the final piece in her musical puzzle and, sure enough, she stumbled upon accordion player Eric Schrepel playing the squeezebox at a puppet show.

With a raw songbook of home recordings under her belt and a new group of musicians to help Mendoza with her musical vision, Y La Bamba began to captivate audiences in Portland and tour stops around the U.S.  Eventually, the quintet would attract the attention of The Decemberists guitarist Chris Funk, who offered his production skills for the band’s first studio recording. Funk worked tirelessly to capture Y La Bamba’s rustic tones, songs inspired by the traditional tunes of Mendoza’s childhood, and her signature vocals that resemble the sounds spilling out of a 1930’s Victrola. Dubbing the confidently stunning body of songs Lupon (after a nickname that Mendoza’s father despised), Y La Bamba has emerged from the studio, ready to wow listeners everywhere.