PAYETTE BREWING CO. PRESENTS HOWLIN RAIN LIVE AT THE RECORD EXCHANGE MARCH 3 – FREE BEER!

10917269_10153063145404875_822613094648878245_nPayette Brewing Co. presents Howlin Rain live at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St.) at 5 p.m. Tuesday, March 3. We’ll be serving free Payette Brewing Co. beer for guests 21 and older with I.D. starting at 5! As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages. Howlin Rain is performing at Neurolux for Radio Boise Tuesday later that evening and we have tickets for sale at the store!

ABOUT HOWLIN’ RAIN

“I walked out of the back end of my major label run and the first 9 years in Howlin Rain with no band, no label, no foreseeable immediate move forward and a figurative suitcase full of songs, my talent, invigorated by having nothing else to lose, exhausted by the bullshit and grind of the music business, this musical life, and all its absolute bullshit and fucked tests, cynical but not bitter. I still wanted to make more records. I wanted to track the journey from nothingness back to creation in musical form in a set of three albums and rock bottom was the perfect place to start from. There’s nothing to fake down here! It’s a dark and beautiful and pure cave to create something truthful from. The first album in the trilogy is Mansion Songs.”

– Ethan Miller on the making of Mansion Songs

418456257317-500Redemption comes in a multitude of forms. For Ethan Miller, it has arrived amid catharsis and transformation. The Howlin Rain we thought we knew has evolved, on Miller’s newest, Mansion Songs, into something strange and true and beautiful, a sound made of cigarette ash and swollen moons, salt air and the eggshell light that comes just before the dawn.

“When I began this record, I most certainly hadn’t given up, but I was in a dark and trying place,” explains Miller, “I wanted the album to reflect a dignified despair. Often times that’s what art is; elegant sorrow, pushing through despair with some kind of dignity, in search of a reasonable justification of life.”

The result is an album that pines and yearns, lusts and wails. “Meet Me in the Wheat,” “Big Red Moon” and “Wild Bush” push the album into high gear, up-tempo jammers that form the yang to the mellow yin of the album’s deep feel ballads. Tracks like “Restless” and “Lucy Fairchild” ache like raw wounds or sway like lost, half-sunken ships. “New Age” is bright and clear-eyed and full of wary joy. “Coliseum” prowls, red-veined and hungry – claws out and teeth sharp.

But wait – before we go on, let’s get it all out of the way – the back story, the multi-threaded narrative that leads to the hear and now. Miller is one of those triple threat talents, an endlessly charismatic front man, prolific songwriter and powerhouse lead guitarist. His vocals, writing, and playing are executed with an impassioned fury which verges on religious ecstasy. His music has left a trail of fans in his wake – among them looming names like The Black Crowes, Queens of the Stone Age and iconic music producer Rick Rubin.

Miller first emerged amid the bright psych roar of NorCal’s beloved Comets on Fire, a band that blew fast and wild and left us awed in its wake. As Comets’ lead singer and guitarist, Miller defined himself among a new wave of pioneers who were grasping at the ragged roots of hard rock and tearing them out to hold up to a new sun.

It was in 2004, while still in the throes of Comets, that Miller began to first experiment with the sounds and players that would eventually evolve into Howlin Rain. “A very earthy rootsy thing for fun,” Miller remembers of the band’s nascent years, “there was a part of the nihilism and chaos and bombast of the music of Comets on Fire that wasn’t totally fulfilling the full spectrum of my desire to make and create different kinds of music. I was looking for something more melody and harmony based.”

That desire resulted in a first, self-titled album for Howlin Rain, released almost simultaneously with Miller’s third record with Comets on Fire. ”The sound and concept of the first album was sort of taking Grateful Dead’s American Beauty and flooding it with layers of heavy fuzz guitars,” he explains of Howlin Rain’s debut, “It was made fast and it’s loose, sloppy but fully confident, with a shambolic, lost, AM rock glory.”

It was during the recording of the band’s second album, Magnificent Fiend, that producer Rick Rubin first stepped into the picture. “Rick called me one day out of the blue, invited me down to his house in Malibu and there asked me if I’d consider signing to his label American Recordings.”

And so it began. There were shows with Queens of the Stone Age, The Black Crowes, Mudhoney and Roky Erikson. There was the long road to the band’s third album, The Russian Wilds. And although Miller is now no longer working with Rubin, he doesn’t repent time spent. “Rick impressed upon me the idea and the execution of being a prolific songwriter and that was hugely beneficial to the technique and outcome of Mansion Songs.”

Miller began Mansion Songs by seeking the unfamiliar, facing down ghosts and demons with a new sound, strange and foggy music, music full of lament and deep and primal desire. Recorded in San Francisco, in musical cohort Eric Bauer’s studio (known as “Bauer Mansion,” where Ty Segall, Thee Oh Sees and Mikal Cronin have also recorded), this new Howlin Rain record somehow feels both familiar and bracingly fresh.

Miller is exploring in unknown lands here, but at the same time, returning back to himself, back to his heart…and to his home. “I wanted to make an album that was very San Francisco (where I often work and play) and very Oakland (where I live and love). A removed, slightly mossy, mutant thing brewed up in a basement studio where Chinatown, North Beach and the Financial District meet at a street corner in SF far from the concerns of album sales and marketing. I wanted to make a record that junkies in the Tenderloin could feel at home wandering through, a place where broken hearts could wander around…and smolder out.”

And that is exactly what Miller’s done. Mansion Songs is a living, breathing, and thrillingly imperfect thing. It sweats, it bleeds, its skin is rough and calloused. Bringing in a revolving cast of collaborators, musicians he had known and worked with, as well some he had never met, Miller and producer Bauer left it loose and raw, keeping many of the shambling, ragged-at-the-edges, first or second takes. “I wanted something that showed raw nerves in the end, something that painted the elegance of hard-won fatigue and showed off-color bruises.”

Mansion Songs is Miller and Howlin Rain pushing away the stone and stepping out into the sunlight. It marks next chapters and fresh starts and new roads (and a new label, LA-based Easy Sound Recording Company). In the end Mansion Songs is one of those rare albums made by running with eyes closed and smile wild – straight into uncharted territory.

“Sometimes we regain control over ourselves and our lives by allowing our psyche to give in and accept chaos and let it blow us to the place it must for us to begin to have clear emotional sight again,” says Miller of making the record, ”These songs are the sound of despair in various forms, the giving up hope, the darkness, the shock and sadness of isolation, the romance of despair, the ecstatic light and dark energy of despair, irony and humor in the face of despair and ultimately – redemption and rejuvenation on the other end.”

NEW RELEASE TUESDAY: LED ZEPPELIN, DAN DEACON, KID ROCK AND MORE, PLUS VINYL TUESDAY SAVINGS ALL DAY!

vinyl tuesday poster reduced 475It’s New Release Tuesday, and it’s also Vinyl Tuesday — customers receive up to $5 in used vinyl* with every $25 in new vinyl purchased all day long every Tuesday!

* Must be redeemed at time of purchase. Offer valid during regular business hours (10am-9pm) on Tuesdays only. The Record Exchange will not issue store credit for any unused portion of the Vinyl Tuesday used vinyl bonus.

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

CD

Led Zeppelin – Physical Graffiti (deluxe edition also available)

Dan Deacon – Gliss Riffer

Kid Rock – First Kiss

James McMurtry – Complicated Game

Falling in Reverse – Just Like You

The Airborne Toxic Event – Dope Machines

All That Remains – The Order of Things

Gang of Four – What Happens Next

Torche – Restarter

Iron & Wine – Archive Series Vol. 1

JJ Grey and Mofro – Ol Glory

Rob Zombie – Spookshow International Live (three versions available)

Mat Kearney – Just Kids

Chris Brown and Tyga – Fan of a Fan: The Album (deluxe edition also available)

Seasons After – Calamity Scars and Memoirs

The Agonist – The Eye of Providence

Of Mice and Men – Restoring Force: Full Circle

Mahalia Barnes and the Soul Mates feat. Joe Bonamassa – Ooh Yea: The Betty Davis Songbook

Misterwives – Our Own House

Big Sean – Dark Sky Paradise (deluxe edition also available)

Fashawn – Ecology

Diamond Rugs – Cosmetics

Camper Van Beethoven – New Roman Times Deluxe Edition

Muck – Your Joyous Future

Weedeater – God Luck and Good Speed

Weedeater – Jason the Dragon

Ensiferum – One Man Army

Screaming Females – Rose Mountain

Emile Haynie – We Fall

Elvis Perkins – I Aubade

Revolution Saints – Revolution Saints (deluxe edition also available)

Uriah Heep – Live at Koko

Chicago – Live in 75

Steve Gunn and the Black Twig Pickers – Seasonal Hire

Girls Guns and Glory – A Tribute to Hank Williams Live

Various Artists – Sons of Anarchy Season 4 Soundtrack

Verbs – And Now

Verbs – Cover Story

Saxon – Heavy Metal Thunder

Inquisition – Invoking the Majestic Throne of Satan

Keep of Kalessin – Epistemology

Various Artists – The Rough Guide to African Rare Grooves

Demrick and Cali Cleve – Losing Focus

Drkwav – The Purge

Ewert and the Two Dragons – Circles

Avi Avital – Vivaldi

The Animals – Twain Shall Meet

The Animals – The Winds of Change

Dr. Feelgood – I’m a Man: The Best of the Wilko Johnson Years

Carach Angren – This is No Fairy Tale

Alien Ant Farm – Always and Forever

VINYL

Dave Matthews Band – Under the Table and Dreaming

Iggy Azalea – Reclassified

David Bowie – Young Americans 40th Anniversary Edition

Torche – Restarter (indie store mint-green vinyl version also available)

Dan Deacon – Glass Riffer

The Velvet Underground – The Velvet Underground 45th Anniversary Edition

Iron and Wine – Archive Series Vol. 1

Ice Cube – Death Certificate

James McMurtry – Complicated Game

Gang of Four – What Happens Next

All That Remains – The Order of Things

Rush – Caress of Steel

Fleetwood Mac – Various Reissues

Eagles – Various Reissues

Camper Van Beethoven – New Roman Times

JJ Grey and Mofro – Ol Glory

Bathory – Bathory

Punch Brothers – Phosphorescent Blues

The Airborne Toxic Event – Dope Machines

Blues Traveler – Various Reissues

Weedeater – God Luck and Good Speed

Weedeater – Jason the Dragon

Redman – Dare Iz a Darkside

Dengue Fever – Deepest Lake

The Animals – Twain Shall Meet

The Animals – Winds of Change

Sonny Rollins – Newk’s Time

Thelonious Monk – The Genius of Modern Music 2

Bo Diddley – Have Guitar Will Travel

Don Cherry – Complete Communion

DVD/BLU-RAY

Saxon – Saxon Chronicles DVD

J. Geils – House Party: Live in Germany DVD

RECORD EXCHANGE TOP 10 SELLERS (WEEK ENDING FEBRUARY 22, 2015)

20141217041653!Smoke_and_Mirrors_album_cover1. Smoke + Mirrors, Imagine Dragons
2. Shadows in the Night, Bob Dylan
3. Happy Prisoner: The Bluegrass Sessions, Robert Earl Keen
4. Terraplane, Steve Earle and the Dukes
5. Terminal Current, The Ravenna Colt
6. Hozier, Hozier
7. Onward & Sideways, Joshua Radin
8. Lost in the Dream, The War on Drugs
9. I Love You, Honeybear, Father John Misty
10. Wallflower, Diana Krall

PAYETTE BREWING CO. PRESENTS THE RAVENNA COLT ALBUM RELEASE PARTY PREVIEW IN-STORE FEB. 19 – FREE BEER!

Payette Brewing Co. presents The Ravenna Colt (ex-My Morning Jacket) album release party preview in-store at 6 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 19, at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St.). We’ll be serving free Payette Brewing Co. beer for guests 21 and older with I.D. starting at 5! As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages. The Ravenna Colt’s official album release party for Terminal Current is Friday, Feb. 20, at Neurolux and we have tickets for sale at the store!

ABOUT THE RAVENNA COLT AND ‘TERMINAL CURRENT’

“It shimmers like summer heat waves off a rural blacktop road.” – Twang Nation

“It sounds like he’s got some more of that early MMJ sound he was a part of in him.” – Will Ford, Louisville.com

“Breezy sweet country.” – Post to Wire

“Well constructed folk-pop.” – Never Nervous

the ravenna colt terminal current coverThe Ravenna Colt is the alias of Kentucky-born musician Johnny Quaid. The Ravenna Colt creates dreamlike Americana sounds that range from folk to rock while maintaining a cosmic connection. With a collective-like structure, Quaid is joined by musicians and artists who help create his vision of stories and soundscapes as told from the eyes and ears of a carpenter and troubadour.

In 1998, Quaid joined Jim James on a project that would change their lives – My Morning Jacket. The group worked feverishly touring and recording and has not slowed down since. Quaid lends his guitar licks and engineering style to the first three albums, The Tennessee Fire, At Dawn and It Still Moves, as well as a barrage of EPs and singles.

Quaid departed from the group amicably at the start of 2004. He left his native Kentucky, headed west to California and worked as a carpenter while keeping a writer’s pen at hand. After moving back east to Tennessee, Quaid released The Ravenna Colt’s debut album Slight Spell in 2010.

Quaid has since relocated to Boise, Idaho, where he pulled talent from the city’s fervent indie/roots music scene to assemble the latest incarnation of The Ravenna Colt. Terminal Current was recorded in Boise and Louisville, Ky., at Above the Cadillac and La La Land studios.

NEW RELEASE TUESDAY: IMAGINE DRAGONS, STEVE EARLE AND JOSE GONZALEZ, PLUS VINYL TUESDAY!

vinyl tuesday poster reduced 475It’s New Release Tuesday, and it’s also Vinyl Tuesday — customers receive up to $5 in used vinyl* with every $25 in new vinyl purchased all day long every Tuesday!

* Must be redeemed at time of purchase. Offer valid during regular business hours (10am-9pm) on Tuesdays only. The Record Exchange will not issue store credit for any unused portion of the Vinyl Tuesday used vinyl bonus.

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

CD

Imagine Dragons – Smoke and Mirrors

Steve Earle and the Dukes – Terraplane (deluxe edition also available)

The Mavericks – Mono

Jorma Kaukonen – Ain’t In No Hurry

Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band – Don’t Lose This

Jose Gonzalez – Vestiges and Claws

Pops Staples – Don’t Lose This

Glen Campbell – I’ll Be Me Soundtrack

Bob Marley and the Wailers – Easy Skanking in Boston 78 (three versions available)

Dave Alvin – Live in Long Beach 1997

Sumac – The Deal

Cliff Martinez – Film Fest Gent

Sonny and the Sunsets – Talent Night at the Ashram

Elle King – Love Stuff

Dee-1 – 3’s Up

36 Crazyfists – Time and Trauma

Carl Barat and the Jackals – Let It Reign

Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band – Commodore Ballroom, Vancouver 1973

A Place to Bury Strangers – Transfixiation

Adventures – Supersonic Home

Amazing – Picture You

Danny Elfman – 50 Shades of Grey Score

Texas – Texas 25 (deluxe edition also available)

U-God – Keynote Speaker

Letts – Hold Fast

The Monks – Monk Jam: Live at Cavestomp

Various Artists – Imaginational Anthem 7

Genesis – Various Reissues

Fairport Convention – Live at My Father’s Place

Raheem DeVaughn – Love Sex Passion

VINYL

Imagine Dragons – Smoke and Mirrors

Steve Earle and the Dukes – Terraplane

Phosphorescent – Live at Music Hall

Sigur Ros – Agaetis Byrjun

Jose Gonzalez – Vestiges and Claws (limited-edition clear vinyl version also available)

S. Carey – Supermoon

Six Organs of Admittance – Hexadic

Sonny and the Sunsets – Talent Night at the Ashram

A Place to Bury Strangers – Transfixiation

Pops Staples – Don’t Lose This

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds – Let Love In

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds – Tender Prey

Adventures – Supersonic Home

Darkthrone – The Cult is Alive

BC Gilbert and G. Lewis – Ends With the Sea

D.R.I. – Greatest Hits

Sir Richard Bishop – The Tangier Sessions