NEW RELEASE FRIDAY: CHARLES BRADLEY, EXPLOSIONS IN THE SKY, ANDREW BIRD, ALLMAN BROTHERS, WEEZER, YEASAYER, LAST SHADOW PUPPETS, BLACK MOUNTAIN & MORE!

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

CD

Charles Bradley – Changes

Explosions in the Sky – Wilderness

Andrew Bird – Are You Serious (deluxe edition also available)

The Allman Brothers Band – Live From A&R Studios, New York 1971

Weezer – The White Album

Yeasayer – Amen and Goodbye

The Last Shadow Puppets – Everything You’ve Come to Expect (deluxe edition also available)

Cheap Trick – Bang Zoom Crazy Hello

Black Mountain – IV

Bombino – Azel

The Heavy – Hurt and the Merciless

Black Stone Cherry – Kentucky

Miles Davis – Miles Ahead Soundtrack

Kaada/Patton – Bacteria Cult

Mike and the Melvins – Three Men and a Baby

Pet Shop Boys – Super

Autolux – Pussy’s Dead

Sasha – Late Night Tales Presents Scene Delete

Tacocat – Lost Time

Robbie Fulks – Upland Stories

Lucas Graham – Lucas Graham

Elephant Revival – Petals

Hammock – Everything and Nothing

Purple – Bodacious

Teddy Thompson and Kelly Jones – Little Windows

Child Bite – Negative Noise

Anoushka Shankar – Land of Gold

Hiromi – Spark

Laura Gibson – Empire Builder

John Congleton and the Nighty Nite – Until the Horror Goes

Buzzcocks – British Live Performance Series

Ten Years After – British Live Performance Series

Bibio – Mineral Love

Teen Suicide – It’s the Big Joyous Celebration, Let’s Stir the Honeypot

Tancred – Out of the Garden

Unwritten Law – Acoustic

Ensiferum – Two Decades of Greatest Sword Hits

Graves at Sea – The Curse That Is

Moonsorrow – Jumalten Aika

Devour the Day – S.O.A.R.

Entheos – The Infinite Nothing

Tombs – All Empires Fall

Pears – Green Star

VINYL

Explosions in the Sky – Wilderness

Andrew Bird – Are You Serious (deluxe vinyl edition with bonus 7-inch also available)

Sufjan Stevens – Illinois: Special 10th Anniversary Blue Marvel Edition

Black Mountain – IV

Weezer – The White Album

Tacocat – Lost Time

Panic at the Disco – Death of a Bachelor

The Last Shadow Puppets – Everything You’ve Come to Expect (indie-exclusive deluxe vinyl edition with bonus 7-inch also available)

Mike and the Melvins – Three Men and a Baby

Amy Winehouse – Amy Soundtrack

Grimes – Halfaxa

Yeasayer – Amen and Goodbye

Chelsea Wolfe – Hypnos/Flame

Witchcraft – Legend

The Heavy – Hurt and the Merciless (deluxe vinyl edition with bonus 7-inch also available)

Battles – Mirrored

Battles – Gloss Drop

Battles EP C/B

Com Truise – Silicon Tare

Bleached – Welcome the Worms

James Brown and the Famous Flames – The Roots of Revolution: Classic Federal Recordings 1956-60

Mavis Staples – Living on a High Note

Autolux – Pussy’s Dead

Exodus – Tempo of the Damned

Triptykon – Eparistera Daimones

Bibio – Mineral Love

Sia – Colour the Small One

James – The Girl at the End of the World

Teddy Thompson and Kelly Jones – Little Windows

Elephant Revival – Petals

Lefty Frizzell – Time Out for the Blues

Rascal Flatts – Rewind

Umphrey’s McGee – Safety in Numbers

CASSETTES

Mike and the Melvins – Three Men and a Baby

Tacocat – Lost Time

DVD/BLU-RAY

Pentatonix – On My Way Home DVD

DANNY NEWCOMB & THE SUGARMAKERS LIVE AT THE RECORD EXCHANGE APRIL 1

2014.05.16: Acoustic Medley @ Showbox at the Market, Seattle, WADanny Newcomb and the Sugarmakers will perform live at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St., Boise) at 6pm Friday, April 1 – their only show in town! As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages.

ABOUT DANNY NEWCOMB AND THE SUGARMAKERS

DannyNewcomb_Masterwish_Cover-page-001For years, Danny Newcomb has played a quiet but essential role in some of Seattle’s more noteworthy bands (Goodness, The Rockfords, Shadow), letting his guitar playing and songwriting do the talking. With the release of Masterwish, the guy who inadvertently pushed Pearl Jam’s Mike McCready to become a better guitar player in their teenaged band has stepped into the limelight for the first time.

Released nationally through Think Indie after an initial 7” by McCready’s HockeyTalkter Records, Masterwish has already received impressive support in Seattle. Word of mouth raves from McCready, noted author and journalist Charles Cross and Easy Street Records’ owner Matt Vaughan — not to mention substantial airplay from tastemaker radio station KEXP — have meant that Newcomb is finally getting his day in the spotlight.

It’s also the first time that listeners are getting to hear Newcomb sing his own songs — a surprising but natural evolution that took place as the songs were being written.

“I had always written for other voices — never sang my own songs,” says Newcomb.  “I had never performed as a singer before writing this record. I had been writing since the last record I made with the Rockfords, but found that I had written a record that I liked my voice on. For me, it’s the missing link as far as writing. Being able to write for my own voice lets me complete the circle myself — lets me write from the heart. Singing gave me that perspective to write from that narrative, and now that I have it, I want to run with it and see where it goes!”

Produced by John Goodmanson (Sleater-Kinney, Brandi Carlile) and featuring guest appearances from McCready and fellow Vashon Island resident Ian Moore, Masterwish is chock-full of classic, catchy, sometimes rootsy guitar-pop. Cross predicted that it would make many a Top 10 Seattle records list this year; now that the album is being released nationally and internationally, that list of Top 10 lists is likely to expand exponentially.

“Danny Newcomb is a musician with a rich and lengthy Seattle pedigree, and his new album is full of folky hooks and poppy riffs that will win your heart. But Newcomb’s strongest suit with ‘Masterwish’ is his commitment to well-crafted songs — that standard makes this album soar. It’s only September, but ‘Masterwish’ most certainly will belong on a list of the Top Ten Seattle Records of 2015.” — Charles R. Cross, Author

NEW ALBUM FROM LAST SHADOW PUPPETS (ARCTIC MONKEYS, THE RASCALS, SIMIAN MOBILE DISCO)!

tlsp_468x60418457246058The Last Shadow Puppets’ new album Everything You’ve Come to Expect (Domino) is out now, and The Record Exchange has it on CD, deluxe CD and vinyl!

Everything You’ve Come To Expect finds Alex Turner and Miles Kane reunited with James Ford (production and drums) and Owen Pallett (string arrangements) and joined by Zachary Dawes (Mini Mansions) on bass, recording the follow up to 2008’s The Age Of The Understatement at Shangri-La Studio in Malibu. Everything You’ve Come To Expect is a more open and expansive work than its predecessor, wearing its influences less obviously on its sleeve – by turns the album is soaring, snarling and breathlessly seductive.

SUNDAY SECRET IN-STORE REVEALED: INTO IT. OVER IT. AT 3:30PM – SIGNING AND MEET & GREET AFTERWARD!

12507434_10153861901144402_3062503561077520356_nToday’s Record Exchange Secret Treefort In-store is …

Into It. Over It.!

Into It. Over It. will perform at 3:30 p.m. TODAY at The Record Exchange, 1105 W. Idaho St. in Downtown Boise. An album signing/meet and greet will follow.

As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages — and you don’t need a Treefort pass to attend (but you should get one anyway).

ABOUT INTO IT. OVER IT.

418457281087I.

To say that the Internet killed the “regional” band is to make a perfectly reasonable assertion. We know this not so much as a hard and fast rule, but as a general observation that mostly works. In the years before AOL inundated our mailboxes with software installation discs, we frequently used an artist’s locale as our most reliable signifier; the name of your city or state or small town was shorthand for your style. Most of our favorite artists introduced themselves at shows by saying things like, “We are a band called Fugazi from Washington, D.C.,” and they told us that because in the off-chance that we didn’t know who was actually on stage, we all knew what it meant to be from Washington D.C. That information alone gave us a sense of what they stood for, who they revered, and if not what they would sound like, then certainly what they wouldn’t sound like. The same could be said for bands from New York or Louisville or Seattle or Minneapolis or Detroit. There were always outliers, of course. But in this era before hyper-connectivity, different regions were allowed to take time in developing their own disconnected styles of playing music long before the rest of the world could hear it. Each region invented its own fashion sense, its own cultural heroes, and in the case of punk, even its own unique style of slamdancing — and they were able to do that in relative isolation because there was no fear of people in Paris watching the video on YouTube later that week.

Which is why, if you look for it, you’ll notice that as soon as our musical experience became firmly entrenched online — at some point in the early millennium — our signifiers changed. Fewer artists introduced themselves as representatives of their cities anymore. Global communication demanded a more universal lexicon, and with that, we chose to herald the shaky planks of “genre” as solid ground.

II.

Evan Weiss has spent much of the last eight years preoccupied with place. Recording under the name Into It. Over It., Weiss has already dedicated an entire album to the American city (Twelve Towns), in addition to writing countless songs named after geographical positions both general (“A New North-Side Air,” “Connecticut Steps”) and painstakingly specific (“Midnight: Carroll Street,” the entirety of a split LP with Koji named after five small Chicago neighborhoods). In fact, if you were to quickly run through the track listings for his entire discography, you’d be hard-pressed to find a single release that fails to make this connection explicit in some way. Even a cassette-only covers EP manages to include The One AM Radio’s “Ghost on the East Coast.” And that’s just the song titles.

That the emergence of Into It. Over It. and its subsequent fixation with “spatial exploration” — the name of a song on Intersections, if you’re keeping count — seems to neatly coincide with Evan’s move to Chicago in 2008 is more conspicuous than coincidental. We tend to think more about place when we’re feeling displaced.

III.

Chicago is a central city, in more ways than one. Historically, the music community there has always taken advantage of its own cultural, political, and social in-betweenness in a manner so distinct that its regionality subsumed otherwise arbitrary classifications. Chicago Blues, Chicago House, Chicago Jazz. These aren’t offshoots as much as innovations.

At its core, the “sound” of Chicago’s music community has always capitalized on its physical and ideological distance from the East and West Coast wings of industry; its creative tendencies lean more towards freedom than formula, more towards hybridity than homogeny. It’s the reason why Marshall Jefferson and Steve Albini could each discover Roland drum machines in the 1980s and wind up with records as disparate as “Move Your Body (The House Music Anthem)” and Songs About Fucking, and why many locals didn’t feel a need to choose one over the other.

IV.

Standards is the third “official” Into It. Over It. album. It’s an album that was written in a cabin in Vermont and recorded in San Francisco, on opposite ends of the country, and yet it’s also somehow a record so thoroughly Chicago that — in the way most great Chicago records do — it exposes a breach in genre classification. From the onset, Standards delivers a newfound openness that yields the kind of hybridity most associated with Weiss’s adopted city. It’s a position where skittish post-punk evolves from a Rhodes electric piano; where ambient post-rock drifts alongside a low-slung jazz groove; where Fahey-styled fingerpicking gives way to sharp and angular distortion. “We went into this record intentionally unprepared, and I have never done that before,” Weiss recalls, and this is probably the point. Cohesion happens in the process, not the product.

None of this, Weiss says, could have been possible were it not for the creative culture fostered by John Vanderslice (Spoon, Mountain Goats, Death Cab for Cutie), who ultimately produced the album at Tiny Telephone Studios and later called Evan “one the most challenging and surprising songwriters I’ve ever worked with.”

That’s the other thing: By allowing his music to become more playful and improvisational, Weiss has also become a more honest songwriter. He sounds free.

V.

Standards is the first Into It. Over It. album to feature a track listing devoid of any explicit references to a geographical location. A song called “Who You Are ≠ Where You Are,” however, comes ironically close.

TENDER LOVING EMPIRE TREEFORT SHOWCASE SATURDAY, MARCH 26: 7 LIVE SETS & FREE PAYETTE BEER!

TLE_TreefortShowcase_R3.3Join Portland’s Tender Loving Empire, Payette Brewing Co. and The Record Exchange for a TLE-curated Treefort Music Fest Showcase from noon-4:30pm Saturday, March 26, at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St., Boise). As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages — no Treefort pass required, but you should get one (available at the RX) so you don’t miss out on any of the #treefort2016 action!

There will be door prizes, free beer provided by Payette Brewing Co. (21+ with valid I.D.) and most importantly, there will be incredible tunes by some of Tender Loving Empire’s favorite artists. Stay updated here for set times and other fun surprises!

TENDER LOVING EMPIRE X TREEFORT SHOWCASE LINEUP

Y La Bamba
Willis Earl Beal
bed.
Esmé Patterson
Jackson Boone & The Ocean Ghosts
Sunbathe
Cat Hoch

ABOUT TENDER LOVING EMPIRE

Tender Loving Empire is a record label and marketplace for handmade goods that supports the work of independent artists as well as a thriving community of fans, patrons and friends. Tender Loving Empire is a lot of things. Mostly it’s a big idea. The idea is that art is not a competition: that a strong and deeply connected community of creative people begets an even stronger community-at-large. Our aim is and has always been to facilitate a web of visual artists, designers, musicians, craftspeople, and every creator in-between—and then connect them to new friends, fans, listeners…

Read the complete Tender Loving Empire history here.

RECORD EXCHANGE TREEFORT IN-STORE SCHEDULE

Domino Treefort Showcase with Alex G and Your Friend Wednesday, March 23 4:30pm RSVP
Secret In-store Thursday, March 24 5pm RSVP
Aan Second Chance Treefort In-store Friday, March 25 2pm RSVP
Secret In-store Friday, March 25 5pm RSVP
Tender Loving Empire x Treefort Showcase Saturday, March 26 noon-4pm RSVP
Secret In-store Sunday, March 27 3:30pm RSVP

FULL TREEFORT SCHEDULE

treefortmusicfest.com/schedule

All Record Exchange in-store events are free and all ages, and a Treefort pass is not required to attend (but you really should get one because you don’t want to miss out on the #treefort2016 action).

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