Pre-Order Thread

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New Variant of this preorder is up at New West.

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New Variant of this up on New West but not signed.

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The Blue Nile are finally reissuing High probably bite the bullet and order direct to avoid issues from the first round of reissues: The Blue Nile: High Reissues
i'm still sad I got screwed with "Hats" and "A Walk Across the Rooftops". Ordered direct from TBN, but then cancelled because BullMoose had them for much cheaper, but then TBN decided to not distribute to as many stores as expected and by that time it was sold out direct from the band. :(

I'm actually not familiar with "High" so I'll probably skip this one.
 
i'm still sad I got screwed with "Hats" and "A Walk Across the Rooftops". Ordered direct from TBN, but then cancelled because BullMoose had them for much cheaper, but then TBN decided to not distribute to as many stores as expected and by that time it was sold out direct from the band. :(

I'm actually not familiar with "High" so I'll probably skip this one.
High is better than Peace at Last imo, but still inferior to their first two.
 
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1. Pre-order only! Must order by May 1st. CLICK HERE TO PRE-ORDER
2. ALL copies will be signed by Drew and Ellie Holcomb.
3. These will not be available after the pre-order.
4. Orders will ship by September 15, 2020
5. Thank you for supporting our music and giving work to our band and crew and other creative friends who will work on this project!
6. At some point in the future, some of these songs will be released digitally, we just don’t know when and which songs.

Kitchen Covers, Volume One Tracklist

1. No Hard Feelings by The Avett Brothers*
2. Home by Johnnyswim
3. Wildflowers by Tom Petty*
4. I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For by U2
5. Rainbow by Kacey Musgraves*
6. Islands in the Stream by Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton*
7. This Land Is Your Land by Woody Guthrie*
8. Forever Like That by Ben Rector*
9. Sexual Healing by Marvin Gaye
10. Long Legged Guitar Pickin' Man by Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash*

* featuring Ellie Holcomb
 
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Black Sabbath

The End (3LP Limited Edition Blue Vinyl

Feb 2017: The End. After nearly 50 years, this was the final show of Black Sabbath’s Farewell Tour, back where it all began in Birmingham, England. It was the most appropriate place for the Godfathers of Heavy Metal to take their last bow. Geezer Butler, Tony Iommi and Ozzy Osbourne delivered a show that focused on their classic seventies’ albums that defined a genre and inspired future generations. 3-LP set pressed on 180-gram, blue vinyl in gatefold jacket packaging.



 
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Black Sabbath

The End (3LP Limited Edition Blue Vinyl

Feb 2017: The End. After nearly 50 years, this was the final show of Black Sabbath’s Farewell Tour, back where it all began in Birmingham, England. It was the most appropriate place for the Godfathers of Heavy Metal to take their last bow. Geezer Butler, Tony Iommi and Ozzy Osbourne delivered a show that focused on their classic seventies’ albums that defined a genre and inspired future generations. 3-LP set pressed on 180-gram, blue vinyl in gatefold jacket packaging.




Daaaamn. Had me until I saw the price. I'd buy it if it came with a Blu-Ray/DVD of the show. Still, Sabbath rules 🤘

God damn, imma go play Paranoid now
 
Temporary Residence Limited is doing a “pay-what-you-want” album of the day for every day on their bandcamp from now until the foreseeable future.

Give them a follow on bandcamp so you can get a daily email!


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Today's album of the day, a classic, Eluvium's Copia. One of my favorite albums of all time. Hightly, HIGHLY recommended. Also some Blue/Turquoise LPs left in stock.

 
Today's album of the day, a classic, Eluvium's Copia. One of my favorite albums of all time. Hightly, HIGHLY recommended. Also some Blue/Turquoise LPs left in stock.

I need to monitor this.
Beak>; William Basinski (one can only dream), Mogwai, The Books, Zammuto......
I'm ready to jump on these!
 
I'm amazed that the aquamarine is still available. It's been out for years now. I thought his fanbase ran deeper.
I was surprised by that too. There was 2000 available but I would have thought they’d go quickly. There may be some fans who have the full book set that came out in 2009 and maybe didn’t need them separately.
 
Temporary Residence Limited is doing a “pay-what-you-want” album of the day for every day on their bandcamp from now until the foreseeable future.

Give them a follow on bandcamp so you can get a daily email!


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maybe it's because i'm EU based but I don't see the promotion you're referring here.
I've tried to put Eluvium in my cart for a price lower than the 25USD minimum (I wanted to check the shipment costs) and got bounced by an error.
I cannot see anywhere (I went to their website also) the message you have copied...

mysteries.....
 
maybe it's because i'm EU based but I don't see the promotion you're referring here.
I've tried to put Eluvium in my cart for a price lower than the 25USD minimum (I wanted to check the shipment costs) and got bounced by an error.
I cannot see anywhere (I went to their website also) the message you have copied...

mysteries.....
it's digital only...
 
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From the very start of “Runaway,” the opening track on Varsity’s third album Fine Forever, it’s clear that the Chicago quintet has morphed into something new. While still working in indie-pop tradition that recalls groups like Fleetwood Mac, Rilo Kiley, and Alvvays, the band has taken the recognizable pieces of their sound and reached across sonic boundaries to reframe the genre in their own image.

Varsity have built an impressive catalog in a relatively short period of time, and with their 2015 self-titled debut, 2018’s Parallel Person, and a run of singles collected on 2019’s The Basement Takes all under their belt, the band sought a new approach for their third full-length. To record Fine Forever, vocalist/keyboardist Stef Smith, guitarists Dylan Weschler and Patrick Stanton, bassist Paul Stolz, and drummer Jake Stolz, put their trust in producer Ben Lumsdaine
as if he were the band's sixth member. “Ben really helped free our minds and let us focus on playing music,” says bassist Paul Stolz, and the proof is in the final product. Between Lumsdaine’s encouragement and their own willingness to leave behind their music comfort zones, Varsity sound just as confident on the album’s crisp guitar pop (the rousing title track or shimmering jangle of “Shaking Hands”) as they do on its more exploratory cuts (the sprawling “Memphis Group” or the instrumental interlude “Surfin’ Milwaukee”). “Going into it, we just knew ourselves so much better as a band and as a working, collaborative unit than we ever have before. We played these songs so much, they were just in our veins,” says Weschler, who notes that they’d spent nearly three years working on album closer “Sicko World” until it felt totally right. It’s that collective effort that allows Fine Forever to feel deeply considered while still remaining totally and unpredictably human.

That humanity extends to Fine Forever‘s lyrics, where Smith built a series of vignettes that read like a short story collection about the modern world. “I used to be a documentary filmmaker, so narrative nonfiction is sort-of my view of the world,” says Smith. “These songs are all different stories, and I relate to those stories, but I’m not the protagonist.” Throughout Fine Forever, Varsity digs deep into what it means to be a person, without shying away from the ugliness that comes along with it. It’s never prescriptive, but rather textural and evocative, with the band's music and Smith’s lyrics often leaning on one another. “Memphis Group” sees Smith exploring the Italian design group’s rise and fall, while the dynamic arrangement mirrors the shifting story. “Steph is really good at listening to the nuances of the song and writing to that, understanding the song deeply enough to make the lyrics fit with the emotional arc of the music,” says Stolz. It’s something that Smith is conscious of, allowing the band to rehearse the songs to the point where the music brings the lyrics right out of her. The delicate strut in “Reason To Run” is a prime example, the song describes someone trying to muster the courage to leave a negative situation, and Smith notes that its music already told the narrative before she even put pen to paper.

From the title on down, Fine Forever is a pointed declaration of intent. It sees Varsity unified around their vision and achieving a sound they’d always been searching for. It’s a record that defies simple categorizations, taking full advantage of the wide range of sounds and styles that can fall under the umbrella of “indie pop,” all while managing to maintain a welcoming accessibility. “I love when people say they don’t know what genre we are,” says Smith, and the deeper you get into Fine Forever, it’s easy to see why.

 
Please @ me when the new Nik West drops on wax!


For those unfamiliar.. she's a female singer/bass player who will bring you vibes of MJ, Bruno, Lizzo, Bootsy while playing and slappin' and funking on her electric bass!
Okay, I'm really excited about this one.
 
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