BILL FAY - From The Bottom Of An Old Grandfather Clock

An idea of a demos album might scare people--well, monsters should scare people. This makes me so happy that my joyous feelings could slay any monster. Happy Halloween.
Soundscapes will be closing permanently on September 30th, 2021.
Open every day between Spetember 22nd-30th
We'd like to thank all of our loyal customers over the years, you have made it all worthwhile! The last 20 years have seen a golden age in access to the world's recorded music history both in physical media and online. We were happy to be a part of sharing our knowledge of some of that great music with you. We hope you enjoyed most of what we sold & recommended to you over the years and hope you will continue to seek out the music that matters.
In the meantime we'll be selling our remaining inventory, including thousands of play copies, many of which are rare and/or out-of-print, never to be seen again. Over the next few weeks the discounts will increase and the price of play copies will decrease. Here are the details:
New CDs, LPs, DVDs, Blu-ray, Books 60% off 15% off
Rare & out-of-print new CDs 60% off 50% off
Rare/Premium/Out-of-print play copies $4.99 $14.99
Other play copies $2.99 $8.99
Magazine back issues $1 $2/each or 10 for $5 $15
We will be resuming our closing sale beginning Friday, June 11. Our hours will be as follows:
Wednesday-Saturday 12pm-7pm
Sunday 11am-6pm
Open every day between September 22nd-30th
We will no longer be providing ticket refunds for tickets purchased from the shop, however, you will be able to obtain refunds directly from the promoters of the shows. Please refer to the top of your ticket to determine the promoter. Here is the contact info for the promoters:
Collective Concerts/Horseshoe Tavern Presents/Lee's Palace Presents: shows@collectiveconcerts.com
Embrace Presents: info@embracepresents.com
MRG Concerts: ticketing@themrggroup.com
Live Nation: infotoronto@livenation.com
Venus Fest: venusfesttoronto@gmail.com
We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause. Thank you for your understanding.
1. TAME IMPALA - The Slow Rush
2. SARAH HARMER - Are We Gone
3. YOLA - Walk Through Fire
4. DESTROYER - Have We Met
5. DRIVE BY TRUCKERS - Unravelling
Click here for full list.
An idea of a demos album might scare people--well, monsters should scare people. This makes me so happy that my joyous feelings could slay any monster. Happy Halloween.
Matt Pike is pretty much a latter-day stoner rock legend; his seminal band Sleep's Jerusalem is a hallowed, single 52-minute monolith of sludgy riffage. But his work in High On Fire has consistently been more and more aggressive with each new release, trading the molasses haze of dope for an athletic adrenaline. Death Is This Communion is yet another example of his exceptional skill at wrenching primal ferocity from the guitar, and his vicious bandmates never miss a chance to help him pummel a point home. Er, and by that I mean, it tears the flesh clean off your bones. You dig Mastodon? You'll love this.
How you view Neil Young's latest depends on a few things, not the least of which being whether or not an 18-minute song like "Ordinary People" is your idea of transcendence or self-indulgence. Despite having two tunes over 14 minutes, Chrome Dreams II is not the relentless guitar jam session you might expect. Whether the rockabilly-lite of "The Believer", the gospel-tinged "Shining Light", or the scuzzy "Dirty Old Man", this album shimmys from style to style. As for its place in Young's history, well, when you're up against some of the greatest albums ever made, it's hard to fault Dreams for being merely good.
Understatement has never been Robert Plant's strong suit. In Led Zeppelin's heyday, that was a good thing. As he's grown older, however, his lack of restraint has been a real Achilles' heel. So, hearing him sing with such gentle touch on Raising Sand is quite mesmerizing. No doubt matching voices with the exceptional Krauss forced him to keep things in check, and the spooky guidance of T-Bone Burnett was likely a huge factor. Still, this record's bloody gorgeous. Saying that Raising Sand is Plant's best work since John Bonham was alive could be taken as faint praise; it's meant as anything but.
This Toronto quartet have been successfully experimenting with the possibilities of live electronic music for a few years now, but with LP, they've happened upon the secret to bringing their party off the stage and onto record. Fashioned on the road, these tunes vibrate with tangible energy and locomotive intensity, but the secret is the dollop of sugar thrown into the mix. Instrumental pop hooks give these songs the added buoyancy that was lacking on their self-titled debut. What's more, their madcap ability to keep their bleeps and bloops fluid rather than rigid allows for a looseness missing from most electro-dance music.
Following singer Wayne Petti's tender solo album earlier this year, Cuff The Duke return with a third record that rests somewhere between the earnest straight-and-narrow of Blue Rodeo and Wilco's detours. If these references aren't exactly original, the songs are of strong quality--minus a couple slight lyrical missteps, this record is full of solid tunes and Petti's voice delivers them perfectly. "Remember The Good Times" should by all rights be a hit radio single (if those things existed anymore) and the band plays with a trained ear for loving detail.
Ween has built a fanatical reputation on industrious absurdity. Whether it's their unpredictable three-hour shows, writing songs that use "spinal meningitis got me down" as the main hook, or being able to conjure up Nashville country, euro-techno or cheesy metal with equal aplomb, Dean and Gene are pretty much unlike any other act in music. In other words, either you get (and love it) or you don't, and La Cucaracha ain't about to change that fact. Another platter of genre-hopping madness.
A Montreal live fixture for years, the first on Secret City for P&A takes the form of a surprisingly substantial four-song, 25-minute EP. With/Avec is the kind of release that could achieve what bands always hope for with an EP--an appetite whetter that never fully satisfies, bringing anticipation to fever pitch for their 2008 full-length. The ingredients are certainly there: Plants and Animals play highly malleable music, a tender blend of whispered-folk and high melancholic drama. A closing cover of Nina Simone showstopper "Sinnerman" is a bit of a tougher sell for three white guys, but hey, they almost pull it off.
After an onslaught of buzz for this group's debut, You Can't Break The Strings In Our Olympic Hearts, The Diableros were one of 2006's happier breakouts; so unflinchingly exuberant was that record that it seemed to register through sheer force of will. Aren't Ready For The Country reaffirms all there was to love about the band. Pete Carmichael's vocals are charismatically unschooled, relying on passion and honest conviction to read from his bursting heart. Under a dense muck of reverbed guitars, organ and drums, lays the band's simple secret: in the Diableros' world, guts win out over finesse every time.
Gold is the kind of bursting-at-the-seams pop record that bandleader Luca Maoloni was born to write. Far less indebted to The Beach Boys' classic pop than their debut, Gold also benefits from greater focus and even better tunes than in the past. Sonic omnivores, the Old Soul use every tone available; this record is punch drunk with gurgling synths, flowing strings and tons of unexpected flourishes, not the least of which is the giddy steel drum hook on "Let's Neck". For all the chaos, Maoloni's spirited vocals keep your ears on the song; the man's got melodies like your high school janitor had keys.
McCombs has all of the gifts to be a major indie star: an effortless way with melody, a lack of shyness with hooks, and a soaring, rich voice. The only thing barring his ascendency--and you get the sense he likes it this way--are the left-of-centre ticks that he nestles into his tunes. Slightly off-kilter lyrics, stabs of basement production, and somtimes over-reaching vocals constantly keep these otherwise immediate pop songs straining to keep their balance. It's a great reminder that a love of pop tunes and an ear for abstraction need not be mutually exclusive things; often, they're what keep each other honest.
The long-awaited second volume in Kent's Artistry In Soul series is finally here! Considering the first volume, Eddie & Ernie's Lost Friends was one of the greatest soul compilations ever, expectations are high. The Larry Banks' Soul Family Album exceeds them all with its mix of deep soul (Kenny Carter's "I Can't Stop Laughing") and uptempo scorchers (Geminis' "Come On Act Right"). This release stakes a strong claim for Larry Banks, who wrote 23 of the 24 songs on this comp, as one of the most unsung composers of his genre.
The debt that Band Of Horses owe to Built To Spill and My Morning Jacket is clear. But credit this group with the good sense to take the most immediate moments of each--their brisk pop tunes and searching, yearning ballads--and remove all the jammy indulgence. This distillation leaves behind pure indie rock delight, which is exactly what these trusted steeds deliver for a second time with Cease To Begin. Ben Bridwell's voice is perfectly suited to these songs; always on the right side of breaking, it's an arrow straight to the heart. A lovely record that pleasingly aspires to be nothing more than just that.
The sheer amount of ideas in "The Philadelphia Grand Jury" alone, the opener from Widow City, would be enough to keep most bands healthy for an entire album. That this seven-minute epic is only the first of sixteen songs on The Fiery Furnaces' sixth release is a telling sign. Anyone hoping for this brother-sister duo to settle down and write tunes as focused and catchy as EP's "Tropical-Iceland" are outta luck. Melodies, hooks, riffs, segues, and left turns rush out of this disc like a busted fire hydrant; it's up to you to either run from the flood or roll up your pants and dance in the spray. Inspired insanity.
The thing that I love about PJ Harvey is the specificity with which she makes records. With every new album, she challenges herself, and her audience, to abandon familiar comforts and adapt to new approaches. The piano-driven White Chalk is possibly the most challenging record she has presented since Is This Desire? or even her sophomore milestone Rid Of Me. To interpret it as a callous and self indulgent attempt to alienate listeners is to have never known what made Harvey tick in the first place. Austere and distant on first meeting, it quivers with new feelings upon every listen.
Soft vocals and moody songs surrounded by creative arrangements that sometimes feel like they are on the verge of collapse. Stretched out and contracted rhythms with simple but often obscure sounding harmonies highlight "Stair Keeper". The song "Friend of Mine" shares an uncomfortable but playful bass melody with a subtle and acutely ranged vocal line. A nice touch over its distant and reluctant piano waltz. Also, listen in the album for effective accompanying roles for an extremely exhausted organ and a creaking floor.
As Polmo Polpo, Perri was the voiceless creator of beautifully submerged, amorphous music. So it's somewhat shocking to see just how nuanced a singer and songwriter he actually is. Hints of the great potential for Tiny Mirrors have been littered across CD-R releases and 2006's strong Sandro Perri Plays Polmo Polpo, not to mention his always excellent supporting cast of players. But that voice! Bringing to mind such singers as Arthur Russell and Talk Talk's Mark Hollis, Perri's voice is simply a revelation and Tiny Mirrors marks its strongest step into the world yet. Makes you wonder what other tricks he's hiding.