On The Turntable

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    Terry Stamp

    Terry Stamp :: Blue Redondo

    At some point during the recent hype cycle surrounding the Hard Quartet’s debut LP, Matt Sweeney popped up on our feed singing the praises of Terry Stamp’s Blue Redondo. Stamp, formerly of the English hard rock group Third World War, recorded Blue Redondo after he relocated to El Segundo, CA, in the late 1970s. Each of its 12 tracks are rough gems, hard-bitten but sweetly rendered loner folk bolstered by Stamp’s blues-soaked guitar and vocals, not to mention the occasionally eccentric production touch.

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    Styrofoam Winos

    Styrofoam Winos :: Real Time

    Styrofoam Winos—the Nashville-based trio of Lou Turner, Trevor Nikrant, and Joe Kenkel—follow up their 2021 self-titled debut with Real Time, an endearing and invigorating collection of shaggy southern rock and dusty, woolen folk. With a lo-fi, ambling ease, they cruise through road-weary choogles; swampy, faded funkers; harmonica swept confessionals; and meditative, noodling jaunts through the passage of time.

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    Kings of Convenience

    Kings of Convenience :: Quiet Is The New Loud

    Some albums are best saved for certain times of year. Case in point, the Norwegian duo Kings of Convenience’s largely acoustic debut, Quiet Is The New Loud. Effortless as a cardigan, Erlend Øye and Eirik Glambek Bøe craft an autumnal soundscape over the LP’s twelve tracks.

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    Jeff Parker ETA IVtet

    Jeff Parker ETA IVtet :: The Way Out of Easy

    “With the ETA band, there were all these other experiences dealing with music that people were composing. So, when we would improvise, all of that other stuff was informed in what we were doing.” Visionary guitarist Jeff Parker joins us to discuss The Way Out of Easy, recorded live at his residency at ETA.

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    Chu Kosaka

    Chu Kosaka :: Arigato

    Chu Kosaka’s Arigato is wide-open pastoral bliss. The natural extension of Happy End with a bit more of a singer-songwriter orientation, Kosaka pieces together what could be the finest example of American country rock through the lens of a Japanese perfectionism. Don’t let that fool you. The tunes are loose.

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    The Cure

    The Cure :: Songs of A Lost World

    Robert Smith never aimed to create the definitive soundtrack for our current dystopian moment, but he may have done it anyway. The argument against? He wrote some of these songs more than a decade ago and has been playing them off and on at shows for nearly as long. But despite the temporal disjunction, if you’re looking for some way through early November 2024, bleak, magisterial Songs of a Lost World makes an ideal companion. It is wise, spiritually charged and not at all bent on insisting that “we’ll get through this” or “things will get better.”

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    Nap Eyes

    Nap Eyes :: The Neon Gate

    Arriving after a four-year gap, the latest album from the acerbic Canadian indie rock band reveals a group in a state of graceful turmoil and artistic ferment. A work of stoned eschatology involving Yeats, Pushkin and a jet-ski-racing game for the N64, The Neon Gate finds Nap Eyes scattered but not disenchanted, committed to finding new ways to sound exactly like themselves.

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    Various Artists

    Various Artists :: Jamaica to Toronto: Soul, Funk & Reggae 1967-1974

    Light in the Attic is set to reissue their stellar 2008 compilation of Caribbean-influenced music from the late 60s and early 70s Toronto music scene as selected and annotated by Kevin “Sipreano” Howes. This new, deluxe pressing comes with a 20-page booklet featuring detailed bios, essays, and archival photos that further reveal the backstage of this extremely fecund scene of soul, funk, disco, R&B, and reggae.

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Sentridoh :: Really Insane – A Lou Barlow Compendium

Of all of Lou Barlow’s many projects, Sentridoh is the most misunderstood. The new compilation, Really Insane – A Lou Barlow Compendium, invites us to return to (or discover) Sentridoh with fresh ears – not as an alternative to hardcore but a continuation of it. With Sentridoh, Barlow built his own, solipsistic world, colored by persistent tape hiss, thumping guitar downstrokes, and the psychosexual hassles of an extended adolescence.

Chatuye :: Ahmuti

Chatuye is a group composed of musicians from Dangriga, Belize, who only got together in Los Angeles in 1981. There, they quickly became major exponents of the newly-formed afrobeat scene, garnering attention from world music enthusiasts that were emerging in the US in the 1980s. As such, it was one of the first— though certainly not the last—bands to be described as “afrobeat” without being from Africa.

Dylan Tupper Rupert & Jessica Hopper on Groupies :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

It opens with an abduction—and only gets crazier from there. Groupies is the latest series from KCRW’s Lost Notes music podcast. Written and hosted by Dylan Tupper Rupert and producer Jessica Hopper, the show’s eight episodes span the end of the ’60s, the birth of the ’70s Sunset Strip culture, and the dawn of punk rock, illuminating the lives of women often written out of the story or viewed as mere accessories to their rock star companions.

The Things :: Coloured Heaven

Prior to this fortieth anniversary reissue, you likely never saw The Things or 1984 debut record Coloured Heaven included on canonical Paisley Underground lists. Wearing its influences on its sleeve, the album is emblematic of their Los Angeles roots from Love to their Paisley peers in Rain Parade. Similar to Emergency Third Rail Power Trip, it’s a relic of woozy, melodic neo-psychedelia that stands out across any era or movement.

Quartet :: Live at Gold Diggers (2024)

I first caught wind of Robert Walter around 1998 at a late night show at the Maple Leaf in New Orleans during jazz fest. Now fast forward 26 years. Two months ago Walter joined forces with Dave Harrington, Spencer Zahn and Kosta Galanopoulos for a heady Tuesday night of free improv space jazz/funk at Gold Diggers in East Hollywood, Los Angeles. Spread over the course of two sets, shit got real as the audience played witness to something new, something primal. Thankfully there was a taper in the house.

Sam Blasucci :: Real Life Thing

When he’s not singing high harmonies and playing sun-baked folk as one half of the excellent SoCal duo Mapache, Sam Blasucci moonlights on his solo records as a polished purveyor of AM gold. Picking up where last summer’s brilliant Off My Stars left off, Blasucci’s new album Real Life Thing mines a vein of early 70s soft rock to craft a perfect collection of sophisticated bubblegum.

Kristen Roos :: Universal Synthesizer Interface, Volumes I, II, III

In 2019, Vancouver composer and sound designer Kristen Roos acquired a floppy disc of pioneering computer musician Laurie Spiegel’s 1986 algorithmic composition program Music Mouse for a few bucks on eBay. The purchase sent him tumbling down a rabbit hole of vintage music software interfaces. Over the three volumes of Universal Synthesizer Interface, Roos has captured the fruits of his research and experimentation. Composed of pulses and patches, primitive drum machines and bass squelches, Universal Synthesizer Interface emerges as one of the most slyly delightful, engaging and weirdly beautiful musical projects going.

Transmissions :: Phosphorescent

We’ve reached the end of the road for this season—season 9 concludes with this episode, a conversation with Matthew Houck, the leader of the avant-country band Phosphorescent. In April, Phosphorescent released Revelator, the band’s ninth album. It’s their debut for Verve Records, after a string of well-received albums on Dead Oceans. Joined by collaborators like Jim White of the Dirty Three—who you heard earlier this season—Jack Lawrence of The Raconteurs, and his wife and songwriting partner Jo Schornikow, it finds Houck examining—what else?—the end of the world. 

Bridget St. John :: Paris, 1970

Via French television, check out this terrific 13 minutes of Bridget St. John performing three songs solo in Paris, the songwriter’s crystalline guitar and singular vocals captured perfectly. Do we talk about St. John enough? Sure, she’s had plenty of boosters over the years (John Peel was a huge fan), but in our mind she deserves to be mentioned alongside Nick Drake, Sandy Denny, John Martyn and others as one of the great English songwriters of the late 60s/early 70s. I’m also going to put her up there among the very best heads of hair of the 1970s — a competitive area, to be sure.

Bert Jansch & Finn Kalvik :: Norwegian Television (May 7, 1973)

It’s officially Bert Jansch season. Recorded live in the spring of 1973 for Norwegian television, the following twenty-eight minute session finds the Scottish troubadour in the company of Norwegian folkie Finn Kalvik. The set kicks off with the pair collaborating on Jansch’s own “Running From Home” (via his 1965 s/t LP) before sliding into an alternating guitar pull between the two musicians. Koselig!