BRETT DENNEN SCAVENGER HUNT: FIRST PERSON TO VISIT STORE AND FIND THIS SIGNED LP GETS IT (AND A PAIR OF TIX)

The Record Exchange Brett Dennen Scavenger Hunt is underway!

In this photo is an autographed vinyl copy of the new Brett Dennen platter Loverboy. The first person to come to The Record Exchange today and “find” the LP gets to take it home. Inside the vinyl there’s also a pair of tickets to Dennen’s June 10 show at the Knitting Factory.

Note to winner: Please come to the counter (record store side) with the vinyl so we can get your name and take your picture. You know, for the cops.

Even if you don’t find the vinyl first, you can get Loverboy at The Record Exchange on CD for the low, low price of $12.99 and get a free ticket to the show (while supplies last).

THE RECORD EXCHANGE PRESENTS JENNY AND JOHNNY LIVE AT THE KNITTING FACTORY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1: FREE TICKET; NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

The Record Exchange proudly presents Jenny and Johnny at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 1, at the Knitting Factory, 416 S. 9th St., Boise. Tickets are $15 General Admission or $35 Platinum Skybox; purchase advance tickets at The Record Exchange, by calling 877-4-FLY-TIX (435-9849) or online at ticketfly.com or knittingfactory.com. Nik Freitas (nikfreitas.com) opens.

Jenny and Johnny (jennyandjohnnymusic.com) first started working together in Los Angeles in 2005 after being introduced by Conor Oberst of Bright Eyes. Rice had traveled to Nebraska to make his first record before moving to L.A., where Lewis was beginning work with Mike Mogis on her solo debut Rabbit Fur Coat.

They both ended up playing on each other’s recordings and struck up a lasting creative relationship. Rice joined Lewis’ band for the Rabbit Fur Coat world tour in 2006 and has played live with Lewis at every show of her solo career thus far. Jenny contributed both songwriting and singing to Johnathan’s Further North in 2007, and he was quick to return the favor as one of the producers of Lewis’ album Acid Tongue and again joining her on the road.

During the Acid Tongue sessions, the band cut the song “Carpetbaggers” with Elvis Costello. The legendary songwriter was so inspired with the collaboration that he enlisted Lewis, Rice, their Acid Tongue crew and the Imposters to help make one of his finest records of recent years, 2008’s Momofuku.

During hours of downtime on Lewis’ Acid Tongue world tour, she and Rice began writing a batch of songs different from anything they had previously created. The material was fast, ultra-melodic and often blended both of their voices into one, creating a completely new sound. When the tour wrapped in Japan in August of 2009, Jenny and Johnny were eager to record the new tunes. They enlisted Rilo Kiley’s Pierre De Reeder to engineer a nine-day October session at his Bright Street Recorders in North Hollywood with the intention of making demos.

Jenny and Johnny played as many instruments as possible, right down to the drums. Jason Boesel lent his considerable drumming talents to the songs that required something more. The four friends worked lightening fast, had a hell of a lot of fun and were so stoked on the results that Lewis and Rice decided to start a new band and finish the record. Jenny and Johnny packed up a station wagon in December 2009 and drove to Omaha, Nebraska, the place where they first hung out all those years ago, to work with their friend, Mike Mogis.

Jenny and Johnny locked out Mogis’ world-class ARC studios for five weeks of tracking, vocals and mixing during the worst Midwestern winter since the 1860s. The front door of their guest house actually froze shut, so they used an alternate route to get to the studio every day. Cut off from the outside world in a blizzard’s haze, the record’s personality began to emerge. Gone were the vintage, classic-rock textures of their previous two albums, and in came a brand new sound that was tougher around the edges. The exuberance of love songs like “Scissor Runner” mask some of the record’s darkness, with Lewis chronicling the economic demise of her beloved California in “Big Wave,” Rice’s haunting vocal on Animal, and both songwriters raising a middle-finger kiss off in the acerbic “My Pet Snakes.”

The overall result is genuine and original pop music for Right Now. This is not a Rilo Kiley record, a Jenny Lewis record or a Johnathan Rice record. This is Jenny and Johnny. They’re having fun now, and they want you to, too.

IN THE RECORD EXCHANGE GIFT SHOP: GRADUATION GIFTS THAT ROCK!

Graduation is here, and you can count on the grad in your life getting a bunch of practical (i.e. boring), “inspirational” and sentimental crap they don’t want.

Don’t be that way.

Instead, get your grad a gift that rocks. Here at The Record Exchange, we got a couple — as in, a couple thousand.

For the music lover, of course, we have Idaho’s largest selection of new and used CDs and vinyl records, plus posters, shirts, DVDs, turntables, accessories and much more.

In The Record Exchange Gift Shop, we have greeting cards, jewelry, apparel, dorm-ready (i.e. practical and cool) home wares and much more.

Wanna go the gift card route? The RX has you covered there, too.

Need more ideas? Look for our special graduation eblast next week!

THE DEVIL MAKES THREE MAY 9 SHOW MOVED TO VISUAL ARTS COLLECTIVE!

The Devil Makes Three‘s Boise show on Monday, May 9, has been moved from The Bouquet to Visual Arts Collective, 3638 Osage St., Garden City. Everything else is the same: 7 p.m. doors, 8 p.m., show, $10 advance tickets/$12 at the door. Advance tickets are available at The Record Exchange (that’s us!), Egyptian Theatre box office and egyptiantheatre.net. 21 and older; beer and wine. Hillfolk Noir opens. If you already bought tickets or you’re planning on buying tickets, don’t freak out when you notice the tickets say “The Bouquet” on them — just bring ’em to the VaC and they’ll let you in no problem.

The Devil Makes Three quite possibly is the best band that you have never heard of. They have been constantly on tour, selling out dates across the country and in their neck of the woods on the West Coast, drawing nearly capacity crowds nightly. This is all word of mouth. For the past seven years, the Devil Makes Three has garnered fans the old school way, playing a city, making friends, conquering fans and moving on. When they hit the next town, venues are packed with folks that heard from a friend in a city that they’d been before.

Laced with elements of ragtime, country, folk and rockabilly, the critically praised, drummer-less trio — consisting of guitarist/frontman Pete Bernhard, stand-up bassist Lucia Turino and guitarist Cooper McBean — brings forth a genuine approach to acoustic music that is deeply steeped in rhythm and alive with three-part harmonies, which is pleasingly dissimilar to most other bands in modern music.

The Devil Makes Three had the goal of being “an acoustic band but to play our shows like a rock show,” and in the process changed notions of what acoustic music could be. Mixing styles from the ragtime and country music of the ’20s and ’30s to the rock ‘n’ roll and punk music of their adolescence, The Devil Makes Three pushes the boundaries of acoustic music. Citing influences as varied as Steve Earle, the Reverend Gary Davis, Memphis Jug Band and Django Reinhardt, the band combines tight vocal harmonies with idiot-savant finger-style guitar to create an exciting and original sound. The end result is genuine blues music that thrives as much in a live setting as it does on record.

Fronted by singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Travis Ward, Hillfolk Noir (petometz.com) has been described as a dark, country-tinged, swampy-swingin’, hillbilly-delta-blues-ragtime word machine. The band calls it Junkerdash, but no matter the descriptor, you’ll find Hillfolk Noir’s psychedelic swamp-shack rags equally spooky and toe-tapping. Hillfolk Noir released a pair of critically-acclaimed albums, Live at the Old Idaho Penitentiary and Skinny Mammy’s Revenge, in 2010.

MEDESKI, MARTIN AND WOOD EXCLUSIVE $15 RECORD EXCHANGE TICKET PRICE!

RX concertgoers, do we have a deal for you: Our friends at the Knitting Factory are letting us sell tickets to Medeski, Martin and Wood‘s Monday (March 7) show for a special price of $15!

That price is only available here in the store and amounts to a savings of $7 off the standard ticket price! Fifteen bucks for the funky, jazzy sounds of MMW? We’re sold.