HEY MARSEILLES IN-STORE OCTOBER 1!

hey marseillesHey Marseilles will perform live at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St., Downtown Boise) at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 1. The band is playing Radio Boise Tuesday at Neurolux later that evening and we have tickets for sale here at the store! As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages!

ABOUT HEY MARSEILLES

HeyMarseilles_LinesWeTraceFive miles south of downtown Seattle is the neighborhood of Columbia City—a leafy stretch of old brownstones and new condos which, according to local legend and loosely interpreted census data, boasts the most diverse zip code in America. Not far from Columbia City’s main drag, amidst a swirl of languages and colors and food and accents, sits a 100-year-old, two-story house that’s home to the world-weary, seven-piece orchestral-pop ensemble known as Hey Marseilles.

World-weary in spirit if not in practice: Hey Marseilles first won hearts across the U.S. with its 2010 debut, To Travels and Trunks, an album that reveled in the education and inspiration only globe-trotting exploration can provide. With Matt Bishop’s lyrical wayfaring abutting an instrumental palette that embraced folk tradition—accordion, strings, and horns; gypsy, Gallic, and classical—To Travels and Trunks gave musical voice to the universal longing for unfettered freedom. NPR called the record “sublime and heartfelt.”

A lot has changed in the world since 2010—that house in Columbia City, for instance. The vacillations of the economy allowed Hey Marseilles violist Jacob Anderson to acquire it in 2011; he and his younger brother, cellist and producer Sam Anderson, helped renovate it. Since then, most of the band has lived in it, and the entirety of their new album was written and recorded in it. Not surprisingly, Lines We Trace is not about going out and searching. It’s about finding you’re already where you need to be.

Make your way back home again, Bishop sings on the dusky ballad “Café Lights.” I am here still.

The 12 songs on Lines We Trace represent a band steady enough in its sound—poignant, panoramic, unreservedly gorgeous—that it can expand beyond it. The string section that hums throughout “Elegy”—quintessentially sweeping, Hey Marseilles style—shifts into finely composed abstraction for the song’s final minute. Colin Richey’s skittering rhythm on “Bright Stars Burning” is a gentle breakbeat, a sly nod to atmospheric drum ‘n’ bass. “Madrona” and the album-closing “Demian” are Hey Marseilles’ first fully instrumental songs, a pair of echo-laden piano-and-cello dirges that are simultaneously solemn and sumptuous. “Dead of Night” trots along on an almost-funky, waltzy swing and gives the album its titular lyric, trumpet triumphant as Bishop sings, The lines we trace have a thousand ends/We’ll count the ways we can’t begin/And stay in our homes, remain on our own…

Throughout, Philip Kobernik’s accordion is less pronounced than previously, Nick Ward’s guitar more so. The result is less old-world, more new school. An update. A progression. A musical analog to a line Bishop sings in “Looking Back”: If you’re looking back that’s all you’ll ever see.

Six years after Bishop first got together with Kobernik and Ward to jam at Seattle’s Gasworks Park, Hey Marseilles is an experienced band with a slew of major festivals (Bumbershoot, Sasquatch!) and a national tour under its belt. They’ve come a long way—only to find themselves back home.

Put another way, as Lines We Trace suggests, sometimes you don’t have to go far to find a meaningful experience. Sometimes the comfort of the familiar is all you need to grow.

NEW RELEASE MONDAY 9/30: LORDE, DELTRON 3030, BLITZEN TRAPPER, DR. DOG, BONNIE RAITT, YUCK AND MORE!

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

CD

Lorde – Pure Heroine

Deltron 3030 – Event II

Blitzen Trapper – VII

Dr. Dog – B-Room

Justin Timberlake – The 20/20 Experience 2 of 2

Justin Timberlake – The 20/20 Experience: The Complete Experience

Bonnie Raitt – Slipstream and Opus (Now and Then)

Yuck – Glow and Behold

The Blind Boys of Alabama – I’ll Find a Way

Saint Rich – Beyond the Drone

Nelly – M.O. (deluxe edition also available)

Moby – Innocents (deluxe edition also available)

Rush – The Studio Albums 1989-2007

Rush – Vapor Trails Remixed

Johnny Flynn – Country Mile

Those Darlins – Blue the Line

Soulfly – Savages

Deep Dark Woods – Jubilee

Basia Bulat – Tall Tall Shadow

Fates Warning – Darkness in a Different Light

Hank 3 – A Fiendish Threat

Hank 3 – Brothers of the 4×4

Joan Jett and the Blackhearts – Unvarnished

All Time Low – Don’t Panic: It’s Longer Now!

The Old 97’s and Waylon Jennings – The Old 97’s and Waylon Jennings

Agnes Obel – Aventine

Alborosie – Sound the System

Oceano – Incisions

Paper Kites – States

Polvo – Siberia

Haim – Days Are Gone

Broken Hope – Omen of Disease

Browning – Hypernova

Tim Snakeoil Berne – Shadow Man

The Grateful Dead – Dick’s Picks Vol. 21: Richmond, Virginia 11/1/85

The John Abercrombie Quartet – 39 Steps

Nick Hexum Quintet – My Shadow Pages

Dwight Yoakam – 21st Century Hits: The Best of 2000-2012

Randy Travis – Influence Vol. 1: The Man I Am

Tired Pony – Ghost of the Mountain

Scar the Martyr – Scar the Martyr

Grails – Black Tar Prophecies Vol. 4-6

Crookes – Hold Fast

Tyler Farr – Redneck Crazy

Paul Hardcastle – Chill Lounge Vol. 2

Various Arts – Gangsta Lean: Classic West Coast Rap

(Hed) P.E. – The Best of (Hed) P.E.

Brad – Shame

Brad – Interiors

Smile Empty Soul – Chemicals

New Model Army – Between Dog and Wolf

Gladys Knight and the Pips – Imagination

Julie London – Silk and Satin: The Rare Songbook

Family Force 5 – Reanimated

Steven Curtis Chapman – Glorious Unfolding

VINYL

Macklemore and Ryan Lewis – The Heist

Blitzen Trapper – VII

Dr. Dog – B-Room

Deltron 3030 – Event II

Deltron 3030 – Event II Instrumentals

Justin Timberlake – The 20/20 Experience: The Complete Experience

Minus the Bear – Acoustics II

Polvo – Siberia

Rush – Vapor Trails

Bonobo – Animal Magic

Bad Brains – The Omega Sessions

Hank 3 – Brothers of the 4×4

Austin Lucas – Stay Reckless

The Blind Boys of Alabama – I’ll Find a Way

Moby – Innocents

Uncle Acid and the Deadbeats – Mind Control

Matt and Kim – Lightning Remixes

Gogol Bordello – Trans-Continental Hustle

Brad – Shame

Brad – Interiors

Blue October – Sway

Jungle Rot – Skin the Living

Tossers – Emerald City

7 Seconds – My Aim is You

RECORD EXCHANGE TOP 20 SELLERS (WEEK ENDING SEPTEMBER 29, 2013)

newsted1. Heavy Metal Music, Newsted
2. Mechanical Bull, Kings of Leon
3. Pedestrian Verse, Frightened Rabbit
4. Deep, Delicious, Secret Surprise, Jupiter Holiday
5. The Bones of What You Believe, Chvrches
6. Nothing Was the Same, Drake
7. The Worse Things Get, Neko Case
8. From Here to Now to You, Jack Johnson
9. Wise Up Ghost, Elvis Costello and the Roots
10. MGMT, MGMT
11. Diving Board, Elton John
12. Dream Theater, Dream Theater
13. Say That to Say This, Trombone Shorty
14. Dream River, Bill Callahan
15. Negativity, Deer Tick
16. AM, Arctic Monkeys
17. Feels Like Home, Sheryl Crow
18. Seasons of Your Day, Mazzy Star
19. In Utero 20th Anniversary, Nirvana
20. Perigaea Antahkarana, Wolvserpent

FRIGHTENED RABBIT IN-STORE SEPT. 27; BUY THE ALBUM, GET A FREE TICKET!

frightened-rabbitFrightened Rabbit will perform live at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St., Downtown Boise) at 7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 27. The band is performing at Knitting Factory later that evening and we have tickets for sale here at the store! As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages!

Be one of the first 25 people to purchase Frightened Rabbit’s new album Pedestrian Verse and get a free ticket to the Knit show!

ABOUT FRIGHTENED RABBIT

frrbtFor Scott Hutchison, the songwriting inspiration can come from anywhere.

From a Scottish sitcom about a larky soldier who’s served in Iraq. A break-up, his own usually – a recurring theme, it seems, judging by the incisive, compelling accounts of heartache sprinkled through Frightened Rabbit’s three previous albums, Sing The Greys (2006), The Midnight Organ Fight (2008) and The Winter Of Mixed Drinks (2010). A shit family Christmas that only got worse come Boxing Day. Or from a roomful of American fans mainlining a long-lost Celtic connection while also hoovering up a powerful British indie-rock band with a folk heart and a soulful love of their heritage. Frightened Rabbit are proudly Scottish, and adored on native soil, but their songs also seem to take on greater resonance and power the further from home they travel.

Ideas might have come on any one of the ten or so US tours undertaken by the band, each bigger, noisier, rowdier, more special than the last – there aren’t many British bands who can match Frightened Rabbit, formed by this thoughtful former art student nine years ago, for the level and intensity of their American success. Or they can come via a hero peer on the Scottish music scene, in this case onetime Arab Strap dipso-poet Aidan Moffat.

Or Hutchison will take inspiration from the shortcomings he himself sees in the songs he wrote for his band’s last album.

“With ‘The Winter Of Mixed Drinks’ and what I tried to do there…” begins Frightened Rabbit’s founding member and singer, “…and the things about that I didn’t like that I wanted to make better this time… The last record was purposefully open and vague in its imagery. But I wanted to write dense poetic songs again. And that was a kick off into State Hospital.”

In early 2012, the five-piece was ready to make their fourth album. But their producer of choice wasn’t available, and Hutchison was kicking his heels. And that, too, fed into a song. “Home From War” was partly catalysed by the original pilot for ‘Gary Tank Commander,’ a Scottish comedy that has gone on to become a cult show north of the border.

“He’s a guy back from Iraq and he’s just bouncing about, he’s got nothing to do, doesn’t know what to do with his life any more. ’Cause he’s been structured and regimented for that amount of time. It’s really funny but I found it quite interesting and sad.”

Suitably inspired, and rather than sit on their hands, the band hired a house in Kingussie in the Scottish Highlands and trucked a load of instruments and studio gear up from Glasgow. They then spent three weeks writing and playing and recording and writing and playing some more.

Three songs were immediate keepers: “Home From War,” inspired by that aimless squaddie, a Pixies-meets-Coldplay giant that’s sure to become a live favourite; “Off,” an intimate, chorally atmospheric tune written in one quick afternoon; and “Wedding Gloves,” a yarn about a couple who try to rekindle love by digging out and putting on their matrimonial garb. It’s narrated by Moffat, to whom Hutchison entrusted the writing of the verses.

“He totally got what I wanted,” beams Hutchison, who finagled the ex-Arab Strap man’s involvement via a drunken, late-night email. “He said to me, ‘Right, you want me to be a sexual Yoda?’ I was like, ‘Aye, if you like!’”

Come May 2012, Frightened Rabbit’s producer was finally available. Leo Abrahams was Brian Eno’s assistant for 11 years, so on top of being a great guitar player, he’s a man well-versed in free-thinking. “He was definitely up for shaking things up, and he has plenty of soul and understanding” – all perfect qualities for the band’s new songs and fresh perspective.

A month in Monnow Valley studio in Wales did the job. The EP’s opening two songs, “State Hospital” and “Boxing Day” – the latter a mordant yet defiant account of that Yule hell – have been pulled from those sessions.

Only “State Hospital” appears on Pedestrian Verse. The bulk of the other songs “have a different atmosphere” from the remaining new songs on the EP. “I don’t know how to describe it… I mean, we did consider them all for the album, but they just didn’t work. But I was really fond of what we got out of those three weeks of creative freedom.”

DVD/BLU-RAY: NIRVANA 'LIVE & LOUD'

new music videoPREVIEW/BUY THE DVD HERE

Live And Loud showcases the final touring lineup of Cobain, Novoselic, Grohl, and Pat Smear and features their complete ‘Live and Loud’ show from Seattle’s Pier 48 on December 13, 1993 plus never-before-released bonus material.

Tracklist:
1. Radio Friendly Unit Shifter (DVD)
2. Drain You (DVD)
3. Breed (DVD)
4. Serve The Servants (DVD)
5. Rape Me (DVD)
6. Sliver (DVD)
7. Pennyroyal Tea (DVD)
8. Scentless Apprentice (DVD)
9. All Apologies (DVD)
10. Heart-Shaped Box (DVD)
11. Blew (DVD)
12. The Man Who Sold The World (DVD)
13. School (DVD)
14. Come As You Are (DVD)
15. Lithium (DVD)
16. About a Girl (DVD)
17. Endless, Nameless (DVD)
18. Very Ape (Live & Loud Rehearsal)(DVD Extras)
19. Radio Friendly Unit Shifter (Live & Loud Rehearsal)(DVD Extras)
20. Rape Me (Live & Loud Rehearsal)(DVD Extras)
21. Pennyroyal Tea (Live & Loud Rehearsal)(DVD Extras)
22. Heart-Shaped Box (Original Music Video + Director’s Cut)(DVD Extras)
23. Rape Me (Live on ‘Nulle Part Ailleurs’ Paris, France)(DVD Extras)
24. Pennyroyal Tea (Live on ‘Nulle Part Ailleurs’ Paris, France)(DVD Extras)
25. Drain You (Live on ‘Nulle Part Ailleurs’ Paris, France)(DVD Extras)
26. Serve The Servants (Live on ‘Tunnel’ Rome, Italy)(DVD Extras)
27. Radio Friendly Unit Shifter (Live in Munich, Germany)(DVD Extras)
28. My Best Friend’s Girl (Live in Munich, Germany)(DVD Extras)
29. Drain You (Live in Munich, Germany)(DVD Extras)

CLICK HERE FOR OTHER NEW DVD/BLU-RAY RELEASES!