GHOST’S ‘MELIORA’ OUT AUGUST 21!

418456730605-500Ghost‘s new album Meliora will be available at The Record Exchange on CD and LP on Friday, Aug. 21!

Steeped in subversive themes of humanism, counterculture and anti-establishmentarianism, Ghost’s third album was produced by Klas Ahlund, mixed by Andy Wallace and is their heaviest and most melodic project to date. Lead singer Papa Emeritus II has been “let go” and was replaced by the younger, more powerful Papa Emeritus III, who expertly leads his Ghouls through 10 scorching tracks, including “Cirice,” which means “church” in Old English and is an ode to institutions inventing the problem so that they can offer the solution.

NEW RELEASE FRIDAY: DR. DRE, WILCO, FOUL WEATHER, THE SWORD, RYAN ADAMS, GHOST, LENNON VINYL & MORE!

new release fridayHere’s a quick look at the bright and shiny new releases this week at The Record Exchange:

CD

Foul Weather – Soft Opening

Dr. Dre – Compton

Wilco – Star Wars

The Sword – High Country

Pop Evil – Up (deluxe edition available)

Disturbed – Immortalized (deluxe edition available)

Ghost – Meliora

Method Man – Meth Lab

The Weeknd – Thursday

Noah Gundersen – Carry the Ghost

Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats – Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats

Rob Thomas – The Great Unknown

Wavves/Cloud Nothings – No Life for Me

The White Buffalo – Love and the Death of Damnation

Barrence Whitefield and the Savages – Under the Savage Sky

Mike Flanigin – The Drifter

Kip Moore – Smoke

The Fratellis – Eyes Wide Tongue Tied

The Devil Wears Prada – Space

Raise Hell – Written in Blood

Mark Lanegan – Houston (Publishing Demos 2002)

Carly Rae Jepsen – Emotion (deluxe edition available)

Trevor Hall – Kala

Bon Jovi – Burning Bridges

Buckcherry – Rock n Roll

P.O.D. – Awakening

Wildlights – Wildlights

Battlecross – Rise to Power

Butcher Babies – Take It Lake a Man

Freddy Jones Band – Never Change

Drinks (Cate le Bon and Tim Presley aka White Fence) – Hermits on Holiday

Royal Headache – High

AFX (Aphex Twin) – Orphaned Deejay Selek 2006-2008

Johnny Cash – Sings the Songs that Made Him Famous

Jason James – Jason James

Buick 6 – Plays Well with Others

Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra – Live in Cuba

Lee Ritenour – Twist of Rit

Pentagram – Curious Volume

Myrkur – M

Publicist UK – Forgive Yourself

Kadavar – Berlin

Hate Eternal – Infernus

Wolfheart – Shadow World

Rivers of Nihil – Monarchy

Rotting Christ – Lucifer Over Athens

Lynch Mob – Rebel

Bohicas – Making Of

Jackie Greene – Back to Birth

Avengers – Avengers

Act of Defiance – Birth and the Burial

Randy Newman – Live at the Boarding House ’72

Marshall Crenshaw – #392: The EP Collection

Asleep at the Wheel – Havin’ a Party Live

Spock’s Beard – Oblivion Particle

VINYL

Ryan Adams – Willow Lane

Faith No More – Sol Invictus

Ghost – Meliora

The Sword – High Country

Daft Punk – Tron: Legacy Soundtrack

John Lennon – Various Reissues

Dangerdoom – The Mouse and the Mask

Empire of the Sun – Walking on a Dream

Joy Division – Martin Hannett’s Personal Mixes

Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats – Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats

Johnny Cash – Sings the Songs that Made Him Famous

The Modern Lovers – The Modern Lovers

Dead Moon – Nervous Sooner Chances

Pere Ubu – Dub Housing

Pere Ubu – Modern Dance

Reatards – Grown Up Fucked Up

Myrkur – M

Prurient – Frozen Niagara Falls

Public Image Ltd. – Double Trouble

Liquid Liquid – Liquid Liquid

Liquid Liquid – Optimo

Liquid Liquid – Successive Reflexes

Liquid Idiot/Idiot Orchestra – Liquid Idiot/Idiot Orchestra

Ludacris – Chicken N Beer

Ludacris – Red Light District

Twiztid – W.I.C.K.E.D.

Disturbed – Immortalized

Drinks (Cate le Bon and Tim Presley aka White Fence) – Hermits on Holiday

John Fahey – The Dance of Death and Other Plantation Favorites

Mike Flanigin – The Drifter

Pentagram – Curious Volume

Rita Marley – Who Feels It Knows It

Various Artists – Soul Jazz Records Presents Rastafari: The Dreads Enter Babylon 55-83

Various Artists – I’m in a Strange Town: Blues and Gospel 1927-1967

Years and Years – Communion

Yes – Like it Is: Yes Live at the Bristol Hippodrome 2014

DVD/BLU-RAY

NOFX – Backstage Passport 2 DVD

BEACH HOUSE’S NEW ‘DEPRESSION CHERRY’ OUT FRIDAY, AUGUST 28!

418456734715-500Beach House‘s new album Depression Cherry will be available at The Record Exchange on CD and LP on Friday, Aug. 28!

Depression Cherry was recorded at Studio in the Country in Bogalusa, Louisiana, from November 2014-January 2015. This time period crossed the anniversaries of both John Lennon’s and Roy Orbison’s deaths. In general, this record shows a return to simplicity, with songs structured around a melody and a few instruments, with live drums playing a far lesser role.

FOUL WEATHER ALBUM RELEASE PARTY FRIDAY, AUGUST 21 – FREE, ALL AGES!

foul weather screenFoul Weather will perform an album release party concert at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St., Downtown Boise) at 6 p.m. Friday, Aug. 21. As always, this Record Exchange in-store performance is free and all ages. Foul Weather’s debut album “Soft Opening” will be available for purchase at the event!

ABOUT FOUL WEATHER AND ‘SOFT OPENING’

The band is Foul Weather. The players are Jeremy Stewart, Danny Kerr and Logan Hyde. The debut album, “Soft Opening,” will be available August 21, 2015. The album is a pulsating living thing, with Stewart’s churning, sometimes disorienting but always buttery keys paired with Kerr and Hyde’s afrobeat/jazz-informed rhythm section. The trio create a cosmic storm that transports the listener through the loungey, slinky Sixties and the freaky new wave synths found deep in the Eighties. Foul Weather will be opening three dates with Youth Lagoon in September, culminating with a performance at the historic Egyptian Theatre in Boise.

100.3 FM THE X PRESENTS THREE DAYS GRACE ALBUM SIGNING TUESDAY, AUG. 18 – GET A VIP LINE WRISTBAND WITH PURCHASE OF ‘HUMAN’ (CD/LP) OR TICKET TO THE REVOLUTION SHOW!

3DG Credit Michael Muller100.3FM The X presents the Three Days Grace album signing at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 18 at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St.). As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages. Three Days Grace is performing at the Revolution Concert House later that evening (8 p.m.) and we have tickets for sale at the store!

Want priority line placement at the signing? Beginning Friday, Aug. 7, purchase Human on CD or LP or a ticket to the show* we’ll give you a VIP line wristband – the first 25 people to purchase the album get a FREE TICKET to the show! (There will be a secondary line for customers without wristbands, which will follow the VIP line.) Listen to 100.3 The X for a chance to win front-of-the-line access at the signing!

*Ticket must be purchased in person at The Record Exchange in order to get the VIP wristband. One wristband per album or ticket purchased.

ABOUT THREE DAYS GRACE

TDG HUMAN coverHumanity constantly seeks connection. In fact, it’s almost as essential as breathing. Since first catapulting on to the scene in 2003, Three Days Grace consistently connected to audiences via hard-hitting, honest, and hypnotic anthems. The platinum-selling, chart-topping, record-setting quartet—Matt Walst [lead vocals], Barry Stock [lead guitar], Brad Walst [bass], and Neil Sanderson [drums, percussion, keyboards, programming]—once again continue that tradition on their fifth full-length album, HUMAN [RCA Records]. Their link to listeners is the most natural and human thing of all.

“When Matt joined the band last year, there was not a fleeting moment that we didn’t think we would forge ahead,” agrees Neil. “Life is all about chapters. Matt’s first show was in front of eight-thousand people on a co-headliner with Shinedown, and he came out guns blazing. He brought this fiery new energy to the band. We never looked back.”

“We didn’t give him a choice,” smiles Barry. “We hijacked him.”

With Matt as their new lead singer, the band continued barreling forward full steam ahead. In between touring throughout 2014, they reconnected with producer Gavin Brown who helmed the boards on their platinum-certified 2003 self-titled debut and enlisted the mixing talents of Chris Lord-Alge and Nick Raskulinecz. For the first time, Three Days Grace cut songs during short breaks from the road. They would retreat to a dark, uncomfortable rehearsal space and write everything on acoustic guitars, starkly tightening the melodies as much as possible. On HUMAN, Three Days Grace comes full circle, yet they’re also newly energized with the addition of Matt (Brad’s brother). Closing that circle, Matt incidentally co-wrote two songs on the band’s debut album, also produced by Gavin Brown.

“In the past, we’d usually go through a traditional cycle of recording in the studio, releasing an album, and then touring,” says Barry. “It happened so quickly with Matt though. We were writing songs together from the jump. So, we’d go into the studio with Gavin when we got off the road. It was a different approach, but it worked so well.”

“We got the opportunity to really spend time with the songs,” adds Matt. “Right when we began writing, we instantly thought of Gavin. It felt right to go back to him and where Three Days Grace started.”

Seizing that signature spirit, the first two singles from HUMAN, “Painkiller” and “I Am Machine,” both shot to #1 at Active Rock Radio. They became the band’s 12th and 13th number ones and solidified them as the record-holder for “Most Number Ones at Active Rock.”

With its robust refrain and gnashing guitars, “Painkiller” didn’t simply reintroduce Three Days Grace; rather it reaffirmed their place at the forefront of 21st century hard rock.

About the song, Matt explains, “It’s told from the perspective of a drug or love that’s taunting you to come back to it. In the end, it kills you.”

Barry goes on, “These songs describe what we’re about right now. There’s a lot of inner struggle and loss on those record. ‘Painkiller’ illuminated what we were going for right out of the gate. Our goal was to be a little heavier and darker and reflect what we’ve gone through.”

“A lot of this record is pretty hard-edged confessional,” continues Neil. “That’s been apparent on all of our records. There’s the beauty, the rage, the numbness, and the escape. In modern society, we’ve all experienced numbing ourselves to avoid the harsh realities of daily living. Some of the songs are social commentary, while also throwing your hands up and saying, ‘I don’t want to be manipulated. I want to feel pain.’”

Meanwhile, “I Am Machine” matches the intensity of its riffs with haunting synths and programming just before another stadium-size chorus.  Brad says, “That’s about feeling numb to the world. We all go through the same routines every day. You feel like a machine who goes through the same shit every day.”

The third single and album opener “Human Race,” illuminates the group’s fiery focus with incendiary instrumentation and a seismic hook. “It’s about trying to find your place,” asserts Barry. “Often, we’ll ask ourselves, ‘Where do I fit in here? I feel like I’m running the rat race sometimes. Where is my place?’ We all deal with that inner confusion.”

“We all get caught in this rat race,” explains Neil. “We’re chasing something at warp speed, and we never take a break to experience the moment.”

The Three Days Grace machine never stops. 2012’s Transit Of Venus earned the #1 spot on Billboard’s Hard Rock Chart and went Top 5 on the Top 200, in addition to receiving a nomination for “Best Rock Album of the Year” at the Juno Awards. Both Three Days Grace [2003] and One-X [2006] went platinum, while Life Starts Now [2009] reached gold status, bringing the band’s sales to over 6 million in the U.S. alone. Their catalog of number one hits encompasses smashes such as “Chalk Outline,” “The High Road,” “Misery Loves My Company,” “World So Cold,” “Good Life,” “Break,” “Never Too Late,” “Animal I Have Become,” “Pain,” “Just Like You,” and “Home.”

Ultimately, HUMAN sees Three Days Grace connect once again. “We want to help people through tough times with our music,” concludes Matt. “It’s therapy for us, and hopefully it’s the same for everybody listening.”

“We went back to our roots,” Neil leaves off. “We weren’t afraid to be blunt and tap into true emotion. We try not to write lyrics; we try to write conversations. These songs are what you would actually say to somebody. That’s why they resonate. The greatest thing in the world is making that connection to people.”