ESCAPE THE FATE SIGNING THURSDAY, FEB. 20; PRIORITY-LINE WRISTBAND AVAILABLE WITH CD/LP PURCHASE!

escape the fate 700Escape the Fate will visit The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St.) for an album signing at 4 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 20. As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages. Escape the Fate is performing at Knitting Factory later that evening (7 p.m.) and we have tickets for sale at the store!

Want priority line placement at the signing? Beginning Monday, Feb. 10, purchase Ungrateful on CD, deluxe CD or vinyl prior to the event and we’ll give you a VIP line wristband! (There will be a secondary line for customers without wristbands, which will follow the VIP line.) The first 25 people to purchase Ungrateful also get a free ticket to the Knit show!

ABOUT ESCAPE THE FATE

Escape-the-Fate3.jpg?94a171While their previous, self-titled album found them taking their sound in a more muscular direction, Escape the Fate find their knack for melody again on their fourth album, Ungrateful. Though the album retains a lot of the heaviness of their last effort, there’s a soaring quality here that feels like the band is opening its sound up more, allowing the big moments to go in whatever direction is natural rather than trying to give everything a hard edge. With more room to stretch out, it definitely feels like Escape the Fate are moving into more familiar — and more comfortable — territories, making Ungrateful an album that feels like a return to form for the band.Allmusic.com

Originally from Las Vegas, Escape The Fate features Craig Mabbitt, Robert Ortiz, TJ Bell and Max Green. The band’s fifth studio recording and first for Eleven Seven Music, Ungrateful, is an example of the foot-to-the-throat intensity combined with soaring choruses that has set the band apart from their contemporaries.

OUTBURN Magazine says of the album, “Ungrateful is a marauding alt-metal manifesto that establishes that Escape The Fate just might be entering their prime.”

The album was co-produced by John Feldman, Monte Money and Brandon Saller (Atreyu) and mixed by Josh Wilbur.

NEW RELEASE TUESDAY 2/18: PHANTOGRAM, SUZANNE VEGA, MASTODON, LADY GAGA AND MORE

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

CD

Phantogram – Voices

Suzanne Vega – Tales from the Realm of the Queen of Pentacles

Bayside – Cult

Allman Brothers Band – Play All Night: Live at the Beacon Theatre 1992

Allman Brothers Band – Boston Common 8/17/71

Lydia Loveless – Somewhere Else

We Are the In Crowd – Weird Kids

Patrick Wilson – Just Another Ordinary Day

Adrenaline Mob – Men of Honor

Suicide Silence – Ending is the Beginning: The Mitch Lucker Memorial Show (CD/DVD)

Cripple Bastards – Nero in Metastasi

Benmont Tench – You Should Be So Lucky

Jimbo Mathus and the Tri-State Coalition – Dark Night of the Soul

Sun Araw – Belomancie

Ralph Stanley and Ralph Stanley II – Side By Side

Old and In the Way – Live at the Boarding House

Matt Schofield – Far As I Can See

The Sheds – I’ll Be Fine

Helloween – Dark Ride Special Edition

Helloween – Rabbit Don’t Come Easy Special Edition

Guided By Voices – Motivational Jumpsuit

Nico – All Tomorrow’s Parties

Cynic – Kindly Bent to Free Us

Solids – Blame Confusion

Home Free – Crazy Life

St. Paul and the Broken Bones – Half the City

Bear Hands – Distraction

Bootstraps – Bootstraps

Swamp Dogg – Cuffed, Collared and Tagged

Junius – Days of the Fallen Sun

Sahg – Delusions of Grandeur

Aborted Fetus – Private Judgement Day

Sarke – Aruagint

Slough Feg – Digital Resistance

Nebelung – Palingenesis

Pale Divine – Cemetery Earth

Artificial Brain – Labyrinth Constellation

Body Farm – Coming Scourge

Down Among the Dead Men – Down Among the Dead Men

Benighted – Carnivore Sublime

Ron White – A Little Unprofessional

VINYL

Lady Gaga – Artpop

Mastodon – Call of the Mastodon

Phantogram – Voices

Bonobo – One Offs, Remixes and B-Sides

Orchid – Through the Devil’s Doorway: The Zodiac Sessions

Sun Araw – Belomancie

Jimi Hendrix – Purple Haze 51st Anniversary

Mark Banning – Journey to the Light

Cripple Bastards – Nero in Metastasi

Converge – Unvolved and Weeded Out

Lost in the Trees – Past Life

Tommy Castro and the Painkillers – The Devil You Know

Glenn Branca – Lesson No. 1

Guided By Voices – Motivational Jumpsuit

Dead Moon – Trash and Burn

Gang Starr – Step in the Arena

Waylon Jennings – White Lightnin’

William Fitzsimmons – Lions

Bear Hands – Distraction

Cryptic Slaughter – Money Talks

Good for You – Fucked Up

Jimbo Mathus and the Tri-State Coalition – Dark Night of the Soul

DVD/BLU-RAY

Allman Brothers Band – Live at Great Woods DVD

Asleep at the Wheel – Then and Now DVD

The Legend of Boggy Creek DVD

Austin High DVD

RECORD EXCHANGE TOP 20 SELLERS (WEEK ENDING FEBRUARY 16, 2014)

lucius wildewoman1. Wildewoman, Lucius
2. Ungrateful, Escape the Fate
3. After the Disco, Broken Bells
4. Croz, David Crosby
5. Foreverly, Billie Joe and Norah
6. Pure Heroine, Lorde
7. Benji, Sun Kil Moon
8. Love Death Immortality, Glitch Mob
9. Give the People What They Want, Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings
10. Doo-Wops and Hooligans, Bruno Mars
11. Four Foot Shack, Les Claypool’s Duo de Twang
12. +++, Crosses
13. Night Visions, Imagine Dragons
14. The Outsiders, Eric Church
15. The Satanist, Behemoth
16. Transgender Dysphoria Blues, Against Me!
17. High Hopes, Matt Hopper
18. Jump Ups and Jollites, Travis Ward
19. Babel, Mumford & Sons
20. Magnetic, Goo Goo Dolls

WIN A BILLIE JOE & NORAH/EVERLY BROS. PRIZE PACK WITH VINYL & MORE!

-1Happy Valentine’s Day! To celebrate, The Record Exchange and our friends at WEA have a Billie Joe & Norah/Everly Brothers prize pack up for grabs!

Send an email with the subject “Foreverly” HERE by midnight, Monday, Feb. 16 and you’ll be entered to win a prize pack that includes vinyl and cassette versions of Foreverly, an Everly Brothers CD Billie Joe & Norah lithograph!

94.9 FM THE RIVER PRESENTS THE TREEFORT WARMUP PARTY WITH LUCIUS FEB. 13; WIN A MUSIC LOVERS PRIZE PACK, INCLUDING NIGHT AT MODERN!

lucius94.9 FM The River presents the Treefort Music Fest Warmup Party featuring Lucius live at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St.) at 4 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 13. As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages. Lucius is performing at Neurolux later that evening and we have tickets for sale at the store!

We will be raffling a Music Lovers Prize Pack — including goodies from Treefort 2014 artists, a $25 Record Exchange Gift Card and night at The Modern Hotel and Bar* — at the event. To enter, purchase a Treefort Music Fest pass at The Record Exchange between now and Feb. 13. The winner will be drawn following Lucius’ in-store performance on the 13th.

* Subject to availability; room may not be redeemed during Treefort.

ABOUT LUCIOUS

lucius wildewoman“Perfect, magnetic pop music.” -NPR
“The best band you may not have heard yet.” -Rolling Stone

Lucius knew from the start they were on to something special. Centered around the powerful voices and compelling songwriting of Jess Wolfe and Holly Laessig, the Brooklyn band has evolved from a promising duo into the dynamic quintet that released its debut LP, WILDEWOMAN (Mom + Pop) in 2013.

Hailed by Rolling Stone as a Band to Watch, alliteratively lauded by The New York Times for their “luscious, luminous, lilting lullabies” and praised by NPR for their “charisma and charm,” Lucius pairs the synchronous vocals of Wolfe and Laessig, who play synth and keyboards, with guitars and drums from Dan Molad, Peter Lalish and Andrew Burri. Together, they make music that evokes classic girl-group pop and iconic rock ’n’ roll with a modern twist, that belongs solely to Lucius. But none of it happened overnight.

“We’ve been singing together for almost nine years, and this will be our first record as a band,” Wolfe says. “We never wanted to rush anything. We never looked for a record deal before it felt like we needed one, and we never wanted to be on tour until we felt like we could sustain ourselves on the road. It was important for us to hone our craft.”

Wolfe and Laessig met in college in Boston, bonding over a love of old-school soul, David Bowie and the Beatles. They sing as though each is one half of the same voice, with riveting, resonant unison parts on songs like “Hey Doreen,” the propulsive first single from WILDEWOMAN; and harmonies that feel instinctive as their voices diverge and then meld together on the ineffably catchy title track.

“We started singing in unison because we were always drawn to doubled vocals on recordings,” Wolfe says. “We figured it couldn’t hurt to try it in a live setting and it just felt like our voices were supposed to be sitting together – an automatic vocal kinship. In truth, many of our intentional decisions, when it comes to sounds and arrangements and even band setup, have been happy accidents.”

After their initial musical gathering, the pair started writing songs together, exploring a sense of otherness that each had felt growing up, and pairing it with arresting musical arrangements: from bright acoustic guitars and heartbroken vocals to layers of irresistible rhythm and bold melodies.

“Jess and I have shared unusually parallel experiences,” Laessig says. “We were both bullied during adolescence, which lit a fire in each of us. We have both experienced relationships and love on a similar timeline, so when we write songs together we have a natural empathy. The themes that run through this record reflect the struggles and realizations of becoming an adult, and of being a bit of an outsider sometimes, but embracing it. I think that’s something people can relate to.”

In 2007, Wolfe and Laessig moved to Brooklyn’s Ditmas Park, taking up residence at the Bromley House, which had, unbeknownst to them at the time, been a music school and recording studio for more than 60 years prior. Wolfe and Laessig established an open-door policy for the strong local community of musicians. First came Molad, a drummer, producer and engineer whom Lucius sought out for some early recording sessions (he also co-produced WILDEWOMAN). He introduced them to Lalish, his former bandmate in the indie-pop trio Elizabeth and the Catapult. Later, Molad met Burri while working on a different recording project, rounding out the Lucius family.

At the same time, Lucius was developing the memorable visual look the band employs onstage — “dressing the sound,” they call it. Taking inspiration from strong visual artists, and citing Bjork, Bowie, Warhol and Prince as style icons, the women are bedecked in a seemingly endless array of identical head-to-toe ensembles, complemented by the men’s sharp, tailored style.