RECORD EXCHANGE TOP 20 SELLERS (WEEK ENDING OCTOBER 20, 2013)

avettmagpie1. Magpie and the Dandelion, The Avett Brothers
2. Lightning Bolt, Pearl Jam
3. Let’s Be Still, The Head and the Heart
4. New, Paul McCartney
5. Pure Heroine, Lorde
6. Mechanical Bull, Kings of Leon
7. Whales and Leeches, Red Fang
8. Mountains of Sorrow, Rivers of Song, Amos Lee
9. Vengeance Falls, Trivium
10. Country Music Dead, New Transit
11. Walk the Moon, Walk the Moon
12. Pura Vida Conspiracy, Gogol Bordello
13. Babel, Mumford and Sons
14. Get Happy, Pink Martini
15. AM, Arctic Monkeys
16. Hesitation Marks, Nine Inch Nails
17. Days Are Gone, Haim
18. Shulamith, Polica
19. Silver Bell, Patty Griffin
20. Static, Cults

'NEW' MCCARTNEY $9.99 RIGHT PRICE!

PaulMcCartney_New_Standard_post_480x70418455656095-300Paul McCartney has a new album out Tuesday called, fittingly enough, New, and for one week only the standard edition CD is available at The Record Exchange for the $9.99 Right Price!

New, which features all McCartney-penned tunes, also comes with a free color-changing cube (pictured) while supplies last!

THE VINYL WORD: THE HEAD AND THE HEART FLESH OUT SOUND ON 2ND LP

headandtheheartalbumPREVIEW/PURCHASE ALBUM HERE

When The Head and the Heart self-released their debut album back in ‘09, who could’ve guessed they’d sell over 10,000 copies by word of mouth alone? That got the attention of Sub Pop, the label who snatched up the Seattle band and sent them on tour to seek their fortune. The title of The Head and the Heart’s second LP, Let’s Be Still, can be read as an appeal for respite following two years of relentless touring. The same goes for the album’s idyllic cover photo, which has two band members sprawled atop raw sienna grass, gazing up at a clear blue sky. It’s a rare moment of peace for the young folkies, a well-earned rest following their interminable string of gigs.

According to frontman Josiah Johnson, Let’s Be Still is “imbued with the experiences of traveling the world…a snapshot of a band that didn’t exist just four short years ago.” Johnson credits touring with groups like Iron and Wine, Death Cab for Cutie, and Dr. Dog for inspiring The Head and the Heart’s expansion into “new sonic spaces.” Guitarist Jonathan Russell, having been struck with the urge to go electric while opening for My Morning Jacket, agrees wholeheartedly: “I’m sick of just strumming my acoustic guitar.” Let’s Be Still benefits tremendously from this expanded and diversified approach, as the Seattle sextet experiments with groovy electric guitar riffs, coruscating synths, and deft time signature shifts that keep the listener off balance in all the right ways.

When The Head and the Heart landed on Sub Pop, many dismissed them as one-trick ponies. Sure, they had fantastic vocalists, but Let’s Be Still proves the Seattle band is more than just a crisp set of pipes. Here, they draw upon lessons gleamed from touring with veteran groups, tinker and tweak their sound to the tune of fresh instrumentation and unconventional timing, and stick their toes in the swampy morass of sociopolitical commentary. And, in flashing the confidence to step outside their comfort zone of folksy harmonies and Guthrie-derived lyrics, The Head and the Heart insist they’re moving forward, not being still.Consequence of Sound

CLICK HERE FOR MORE NEW VINYL RELEASES!

NEW RELEASE OF THE WEEK: THE AVETT BROTHERS' 'MAGPIE & THE DANDELION'

avettmagpiePREVIEW/PURCHASE THE CD
PREVIEW/PURCHASE THE DELUXE CD
PREVIEW/PURCHASE THE VINYL

Coming out of the same Rick Rubin-produced sessions as [The Avett Brothers’] last release, it’s understandable that Magpie and The Carpenter are somewhat similar in sound and tone. However, don’t think of these tracks as a collection of B-sides or numbers that were cast off from The Carpenter’s workbench. Like most of the band’s previous work, Magpie and the Dandelion continues to explore time-honored themes like love and loss in all their many forms. But where The Avett Brothers of records like Emotionalism or I and Love and You often seemed emotionally overwhelmed by the gravity of the issues they sang about, on Magpie the brothers seem a little more confident. It’s a transition that can be clearly seen over the course of the last three records as well. Consider the list of desires and subtle fears in I and Love and You’s “The Perfect Space” or the admission of insecurity of that album’s closer. Then compare them with a statement from The Carpenter like “If I live the life I’m given, I won’t be scared to die.”

Earlier in their career, the great unknowns of life seemed to leave the brothers awestruck and perhaps a little frightened, and understandably so. Who can say they haven’t been there before? But over time, they’ve come to accept the fact that you don’t have to have all the answers to get along in this world, that “a life lived in fear is a life half-lived,” to quote Baz Luhrmann. Even on some of the more heavy-hearted Magpie tunes, the boys seem to be rolling with the punches a little easier. In “Bring Your Love to Me,” for example, the lovelorn singer claims he can go on without the object of his affection if need be. “If it’s meant to be, I will go alone—God knows I can—just not as well,” he sings before coyly adding, “And besides, what kind of fun is there to be had with no one else.”

Magpie and the Dandelion as a whole takes on a carefree attitude that seeks to revel in all life has to offer. It’s a solid record that showcases all of The Avett Brothers’ talents and captures them, as well as their songwriting, in an interesting emotional place on their journey further down the road. — Paste

NEW RELEASE TUESDAY 10/15: AVETT BROTHERS NEW ALBUM AND SIGNING, PLUS PEARL JAM, THE HEAD AND THE HEART, CULTS, PAUL MCCARTNEY, PELICAN, RED FANG AND MANY MORE!

avettmagpieThe Record Exchange and 94.9 FM The River will host The Avett Brothers New Album Signing at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct 15 (release date for their latest album Magpie and the Dandelion) at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St.). Want priority line placement at the signing? Beginning Friday, Oct. 11, purchase Magpie and the Dandelion on CD, deluxe CD or vinyl prior to the event and we’ll give you a VIP line wristband!

READ MORE HERE.

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

CD

The Avett Brothers – Magpie and the Dandelion (deluxe edition also available)

Pearl Jam – Lightning Bolt

Paul McCartney – New (deluxe edition also available)

The Head and the Heart – Let’s Be Still

Red Fang – Whales and Leeches (deluxe edition also available)

Pelican – Forever Becoming

Cults – Static

Willie Nelson – To All the Girls

Will Hoge – Never Give In

Paul Simon – The Complete Albums Collection

Paul Simon – Over the Bridge of Time: A Paul Retrospective 1964-2011

Fall Out Boy – Save Rock and Roll PAX-AM Edition

La Luz – It’s Alive

Diane Birch – Speak a Little Louder (deluxe edition also available)

Jerry Garcia Band – Garcia Live Vol. 3: December 14-15, 1975

The Poets of Rhythm – Anthology

Depeche Mode – Should Be Higher

Cole Swindell – Chillin’ It

Trivium – Vengeance Falls

Joshua Bell – Musical Gifts: Joshua Bell and Friends

Anberlin – Devotion (deluxe edition also available)

Doomriders – Grand Blood

Death Angel – Dream Calls for Blood (deluxe edition also available)

Morcheeba – Head Up High

Gary Numan – Splinter (Songs from a Broken Mind)

Cass McCombs – Big Wheel and Others

Lucius – Wildewoman

Flying Colors – Live in Europe

Four Tet – Beautiful Rewind

Dean Wareham – Emancipated Hearts

Frank Turner – Second Three Years/Take to the Road

Bloc Party – Tapes

Eric Clapton – Unplugged Deluxe Edition

The Dismemberment Plan – Uncanney Valley

Scotty McCreery – See You Tonight (deluxe edition also available)

Halestorm – Reanimate 2 EP

Crystal Antlers – Nothing is Real

Gavin DeGraw – Make a Move

Mary J. Blige – Mary Christmas

Black Oak Arkansas – Back Thar N Over Yonder

Black Milk – No Poison, No Paradise

Fink – RCO

Arthur Channel – Arthur Channel

Tristen – Caves

Jonathan Wilson – Fanfare

Monster Magnet – Last Patrol (deluxe edition also available)

Deep Purple – Complete Albums 1970-1976

Deep Purple – Perfect Strangers Live

Jeff Healey Band – Live at the Bottom Line

Meshuggah – Catch Thirty Three

Meshuggah – Obzen

Kevin Devine – Bubblegum

Kevin Devine – Bulldozer

Various Artists – Studio One Ska Fever! More Ska Sounds

Various Artists – The Organization of Pop: Music From The First Thirty Years of ZTT Records

Various Artists – Trevor Jackson Presents Metal Dance 2: Industrial, New Wave, EBM Classics and Rarities 79-88

VINYL

The Avett Brothers – Magpie and the Dandelion

Pearl Jam – Lightning Bolt

The Head and the Heart – Let’s Be Still

Cults – Static

Red Fang – Whales and Leeches (deluxe edition also available)

First Aid Kit – Drunken Trees EP

The Clash – Various Reissues

Botch – We Are the Romans

Yuck – Glow and Behold

Doomriders – Grand Blood

Four Tet – Beautiful Rewind

Jamie Lidell – Big Love Remixes

Dismemberment Plan – Uncanney Valley

Various Artists – Trevor Jackson Presents Metal Dance 2: Industrial, New Wave, EBM Classics and Rarities 79-88

Sarah Jarosz – Build Me Up From Bones

Happy Jawbone Family Band – Happy Jawbone Family Band

Band of Heathens – Sunday Morning Record

Bayside – Shudder

DVD/BLU-RAY

Jason Aldean – Night Train to Georgia DVD

The Doors – Live at the Bowl ’68/Soundstage Performances/Live in Europe 1968 DVD

Frank Zappa – Baby Snakes/Dub Room Special/The Torture Never Stops DVD

Deep Purple – Perfect Strangers Live DVD

Flying Colors – Live in Europe DVD