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Gooder'n Bad Vinyl

The Best Vinyl I've Got . . . Well, mostly vinyl, and mostly good ;-)

Posts tagged with "power pop"

Gladhands - La Di Da (1997) [CD]

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Great Power Pop!


01 - Kill' Em With Kindness
02 - Smallsville
03 - La Di Da
04 - Gore Girls (Gimme More)
05 - House Of Mirrors
06 - Rebound
07 - Forget All About It (YES! The Nazz song!!)
08 - Kat
09 - Half The Battle
10 - Dissatisfaction
11 - Must Mean Love
12 - Albatross

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Formed in Omaha, NE, in 1992 (but since relocating to Chapel Hill, NC) by multi-instrumentalists/songwriters Jeff Carlson and Doug Edmunds, Gladhands has seen a slow rise to national prominence. They debuted with a self-released cassette, Brilliant Charade, which attracted the attention of various indie labels. The band settled on Big Deal, to which they signed toward the end of 1994. Over the next few years, Gladhands released two well-received CDs, From Here to Obscurity (1995) and La Di Da (1997), both of which garnered strong reviews. (The Association for Independent Music nominated the latter for Best Alternative Rock Album.) Gladhands spent most of the second half of 1997 and beginning of 1998 touring in support of La Di Da, including an opening spot for fellow Chapel Hillers, Ben Folds Five) and gained additional exposure via widespread airplay on college radio and alternative stations. In early 1999, with bassist Pat McGraw added to the band, Gladhands released their third CD for Big Deal, Wow and Flutter. ~ Stanton Swihart, All Music Guide
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Ben Folds Five bass player Robert Sledge performs on six of the songs (vocals and bass)
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A stellar though overlooked 1997 album from the Chapel Hill, N.C. guys that goes for the powerpop jugular. Very tuneful originals, catchy melodies, smart lyrics and solid production. Fuzzy guitars, keyboards, bass and drums with all three guys singing harmony rich sounds that pay homage to icons of pop/rock: the Beatles, the Beach Boys, XTC, Todd Rundgren of the Nazz, yet retaining their own originality. Very Highly Recommended pure pop bands of the decade.

Encoded from CD @ 320kbps (Out of print)

http://rapidshare.com/files/79895449/Gladhands_-_La_Di_Da__1997_.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/79895787/Gladhands_-_La_Di_Da__1997_.part2.rar
PW: bassoprofundo

The Cretones - Snap! Snap! (1981) [Vinyl]

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Bet you thought I'd given up? Not quite - just been busy with other stuff.

This post comes you you courtesy of my new found friend and frequent visitor, AJ.
Vist AJ HERE at his new blog! I expect to hear good thing from him!

He thought I might like to hear The Cretones after seeing how much I like power pop music (The Producers, etc.). I had to admit I was not familiar with them at all although I do remember the record being in the store back "in the day". I must say I wish I'd heard of them sooner! Every song is just great!

Read more here.






01 Empty Heart
02 Hanging on to No One
03 Swinging Divorcee
04 Lonely Street
05 I Can't Get Over You
06 One Kiss
07 Love is Turning
08 Girls! Girls! Girls!
09 Snap! Snap!
10 Mood Vertigo




Ripped from a pristine vinyl copy.

http://rapidshare.com/files/44659922/cretones_snap_snap.zip.html

Encoded at 320K

No password!

THANKS AJ!!

Robin Lane and The Chartbusters (1980) [Vinyl]

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When Things Go Wrong
It'll Only Hurt a Little While
Don't Cry
Without You
Why Do You Tell Lies
I Don't Want to Know
Many Years Ago
Waitin' in Line
Be Mine Tonite
Kathy Lee
Don't Wait Till Tomorrow




Encoded at 320K from original vinyl promo album. Includes artwork, reviews and tracklisting

http://rapidshare(dot)com/files/7263264/rl_chrtbst.rar


Password: bassoprofundo


(By Richie Unterberger)
Even if Robin Lane & the Chartbusters' self-titled 1980 debut album didn't quite meet the expectations of the band and their rabid Boston following, it did capture their blend of new wave pop with dynamic folk-rockish guitar lines for the first time on a widely distributed national release. At the fore were singer-songwriter Lane's own husky vocals, delivering songs that for all their melodic hooks were tinged with far greater darkness and ambivalence than most pop-rock of the time, new wave or otherwise.

Although Robin Lane & the Chartbusters was Lane's first album, she had actually been active as a singer-songwriter for about a decade. Back in 1969 she had sung backup vocals on "Round and Round" on Neil Young's classic Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere. In the 1970s she left California to move East, and only a little prior to hooking up with the Chartbusters, she'd been playing far mellower, folk-rock-aligned singer-songwriter material. Those were the kinds of songs she was doing when she got a deal with Private Stock, Blondie's first label.

Soon afterward, a newfound love for acts like Patti Smith, Television, the Clash, the Sex Pistols, Talking Heads, Tom Petty, Cheap Trick, and Dwight Twilley sent her own music into a much different path. Hanging out with Boston bands like the Real Kids and at the legendary local venue the Rat got her in touch with most of the musicians who would become the Chartbusters: guitarist-vocalists (and ex-Modern Lovers) Asa Brebner and Leroy Radcliffe, bassist-vocalist Scott Baerenwald, and drummer Tim Jackson. "I put this other band together and actually enticed them to be my bandmates, because I had this deal with Private Stock," remembers Lane. "And then about a month or two later, Private Stock folded. So I had my new band and new direction."

The new direction would come as a shock to many of her old fans. "Our first gig, we were opening for another of our manager's bands, NRBQ. I pretty much just didn't sing, I screamed!" she laughs. "NRBQ just hated us. A lot of people who had liked me before went, 'What have you done?' It really wasn't an about-face, because I always felt social issues and identified with the underdog. I just thought that this music was a better way to say it [and] put it in. The people that came to listen to me, [when I was] the mellow Robin, would just kind of sit there, and it would be all nice and peachy-keen. But it wasn't affecting them in the gut. It wasn't passionate. I suddenly realized, 'Here's some fertile soil I can plant some seeds in, and it'll be more meaningful to me.'"

She dropped her old repertoire and penned a new one virtually from scratch, though one of her old numbers would be reworked into her most famous song, "When Things Go Wrong" (the song from which it evolved, "Never Enough," was covered on the 1979 album of the same name by the Pousette-Dart Band). Although several record labels expressed interest, the band signed with Warner Brothers after Jerry Wexler saw a show and offered them a deal. A three-song EP (with an early version of "When Things Go Wrong") had already come out on the Deli Platters label and gotten some airplay in Boston before the Chartbusters went to Los Angeles to record their Warners debut.

In hindsight, Lane feels that the album didn't capture the band as well it could have: "Though some people really liked that album, it lost the guitar sound that we had. They had a really wonderful kind of mesh that was lost. I think I wasn't singing as well as I could have; I was trying to retain the force of the songs that we had live, and pushing too hard. After we came back to Boston, people couldn't believe it when they heard the album; they said, 'This is not you.'"

But the songs were definitely Lane's, though "Don't Wait Till Tomorrow" was written with Jackson and Radcliffe, and "Kathy Lee" and "When Things Go Wrong" had assistance from Joanne Cipolla (from the band Planet Street), who at one time lived upstairs from Robin. "When Things Go Wrong" was the single that made the charts, though just as impressive were cuts like the sullen and jaggedly rhythmic "It'll Only Hurt a Little While," and the Sid Vicious-inspired "I Don't Want to Know." Lane also likes "Many Years Ago" and "Don't Cry" ("a kind of staple for us: a cute little ditty, and it's pop").

"I gravitate towards minor keys," reflects Lane when asked what set her most apart from other acts bridging the new wave-pop gap at the time. "Actually with the Chartbusters I started writing in major keys more. But still, that minor key always calls me. And that, right away, kind of sets up the more brooding kind of feel." Some of her lyrics were not out of the radio airplay textbook either: "I remember I was playing 'you digest me with facts like a piece of cheese' [from 'Waitin' in Line']. My publisher goes, 'You can't say that!'"

"I think her history gave her a distinct advantage over a lot of what were considered 'new wave' acts of the time," adds Asa Brebner. "The whole 'new wave' thing was kind of stuck on us because of Leroy Radcliffe['s] and my background with Jonathan Richman and so forth, and that colored how they proceeded to produce and market us. I think we were naive and happy to be signed to a major label, and although we liked [producer] Joe Wissert very much, we just went along with whatever they had planned for us. I think now we could have done a much better job producing ourselves. I still cringe at that album cover, which I think largely sunk us as a candy-ass major label contrivance to those uninitiated to our music. The music itself was watered down enough so it could not overcome that basically cosmetic impression that the casual record store [browser] would garner on seeing it in the bins. It didn't represent us, and I felt cheated."

The album did not widely break the Chartbusters beyond their regional base, and after another live EP and a second album (1981's Imitation Life), they were dropped from Warner Brothers. Although Lane's only sporadically released music since then (most recently on 1995's Catbird Seat), she and the Chartbusters have recently reunited, with all of the original members save Radcliffe. A new album is in the works that will mix newly written songs with others that the group performed live in their original incarnation, but never recorded. Lane is also working on a book about her "kooky crazy peripatetic life in the music world and other planets" that, given a career that has spanned many styles and intersected with many musicians of both star and cult renown, should prove to be quite a ride.

The Producers - You Make The Heat (1982) [Vinyl]

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01 - Back To Basics
02 - She Sheila
03 - Operation
04 - Dear John
05 - Breakaway
06 - You Make The Heat
07 - Merry-Go-Round
08 - Chinatown
09 - Domino





Ripped from vinyl LP @ 320 kbps Includes tracklisting, reviews and album artwork NOT suitable for CD cases (sorry I lost my original post and had to re-up. And I did not have time to tag these - BUT i still sounds great!!).

http://rapidshare.com/files/47631158/prdcrs_umkht.rar

Password: bassoprofundo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Producers were a new wave and power pop band from Atlanta, Georgia in the 1980s. Original members included Van Temple on guitar and vocals, former Whiteface member Kyle Henderson on bass and vocals, former Billy Joe Royal sideman Wayne Famous on keyboards, and Brian Holmes on Drums. Originally formed as a Beatles cover band named Cartoon, they changed musical directions and began performing their own material in nightclubs around the Atlanta area. The response to their music was so good that they were quickly signed to CBS subsidiary Portrait Records by Cheap Trick, REO Speedwagon and Mother's Finest producer Tom Werman. They released two albums for the Portrait label, The Producers (1981) and You Make the Heat (1982). The Producers quickly became a regional favorite in the southeastern United States, propelling "What She Does to Me" onto the national Billboard Magazine singles charts. They toured extensively opening for Cheap Trick, and The Motels. "She Sheila" from their second album was a popular MTV video. They headlined MTV's New Year's Rockin Eve in 1982.

Despite this success, Portrait Records dropped the band after only two albums. Kyle Henderson became a born-again Christian and left the band shortly after they were dropped to record a solo album for Kerry Livgren's Christian rock label, Kerygma Records and was replaced by future Jellyfish and Umajets bassist Tim Smith. The next Producers album, Run For Your Life, was released in 1985 on a small Atlanta-based independent label. That album featured a collaboration between The Producers and Kansas, "Can't Cry Anymore," a song which appeared on both Run For Your Life and the 1986 Kansas album Power. The Producers regained a major label contract in the late 1980s with MCA Records and recorded what was to be their fourth album, Coelacanth, but the band was one of several dropped in a 1989 label purge at MCA before the album could be released. Coelacanth was finally released in 2001. The band "retired" as a going concern in 1989 but still plays reunion shows around the Atlanta area from time to time.

See the video of The Producers performing their hit "She Sheila".
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbDP62YRZjU

Another video from their first album. The Producers performing "What's He Got".
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLlT_aanSQg

Get the album here:
http://my.opera.com/walknthabass/blog/show.dml/288901

OK - One more video: The Producers performing "Certain Kind Of Girl" from their 1st album.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=drAFiftJpc0
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