2013 Albums

http://www.randomaccessmemories.com/

Daft Punk May 21st

New Daft Punk AND new Queens Of The Stone Age? What's next new DFA1979? Is the world ending this year actually?
QOTSA in june.


from the facebooks -  Ween's 'Live In Toronto, featuring the Shit Creek Boys', originally a limited edition CD and vinyl release, is now available as a digital download via iTunes worldwide!
DeathFromAbove1979 wrote:
http://www.randomaccessmemories.com/

Daft Punk May 21st

New Daft Punk AND new Queens Of The Stone Age? What's next new DFA1979? Is the world ending this year actually?


about time those robots got off their ass and put something out.
kosmo wrote:


Lady - Lady

Still completely blown away by this album


where can I listen to this?  Checked spotify, but can't find it.
Thank you!


June 4th

Listen to "My God Is The Sun": http://www.mygodisthesun.com/
that song is badass.
The new Queens logo is a cool homage to the Germs logo as well and the Germs flyer with the skull with the mohawk. Very old school.
K8teebug wrote:
that song is badass.

Just kept looping is yesterday. Looking forward to this album. Hard.
killsaly wrote:

http://mannequinrecords.bandcamp.com/album/mnq-037-the-cult-of-dom-keller-s-t-lp
the Cult of Dom Keller - S/T
out today


Reason #15 why I wish so much that I could attend the Austin Psych Fest.

Wish they would put this out on a CD. The latest trend of putting something out on every and anything but CD format is driving me batty. I want something physical but too many issues with storage and stuff with vinyl. And the last thing I want are those stupid cassettes everyone is putting out. I'd settle for vinyl (which is actually the best) over a cassette anyday!

This would be perfect over in the pot thread.  8)
yeah that new cassette thing seems like another hipster feeding frenzy for more limited edition products..   
Don't know how they are sounding today but I remember that before the advent of the CD, they almost always sounded like shit. A lot of the homemade cassettes people made for themselves from their albums sounded pretty good but it always seemed that a commerically recorded cassette was worse. Maybe it was just the ones I heard, I don't know. I've only ever bought a very few and usually in some very cheap cut out bin. I stuck with albums and recorded onto tape anything I wanted in that format until the CD came along.
These are the last physical products that I bought at a show.  These were all from Popfest.  They mostly had cassettes and vinyl.  One of the guys from Foul Swoops included a CDR of it, and the Crimson Wave one came with a digital download code.  I think they are fun.  Really low run… Who knows, maybe one day they will be worth something (even if its just nostalgia).  But the Golden Grrrls vinyl (signed!), came with no such cdr or download code, so until i get access to a turntable (mine is in storage with some other stuff for a little while longer) I cant listen to it.


CSS: "Planta"
June 11th
Keith Fullerton Whitman spends 10 years running pop songs through a meat grinder, puts the resultant 11.5 hour product on Soundcloud. https://soundcloud.com/kfw/sets/greatest-hits ;


Killsaly and Jaguar, I think you will enjoy.


? on the eve of my 30th birthday, I began rendering "automatic" "enhancements" of only the most salient points of the pop music of my youth ; a line, bar,
or fragment of a particular song (after being heard out in "the wild" in the present ; akin to running into an old friend on the street) was chosen based
on how much my nostalgic recollection of it differed from its contemporary reality. Each was played back at exactly half-speed, then run through a series
of time- and gain-based processes that slowly & meticulously chewed through the audio, revealing hidden layers of content, context, and temporal / spectral
production details ? shining a flashlight into the dark corners of each selection, revealing the ghosts lurking within.

I've worked on these on & off over the last 10 years, largely as a form of therapy (a way to combat insomnia ; a way to reconnect with my younger self)
? This year, as I approach 40, I've decided to make public the first 100, dovetailed into a single just-shy-of-12-hour block. Hopefully at least one of
these will trigger a fond memory for you (especially if you grew up in the shadows of New York City during the 1980's) ? My only request is that you listen
to these either on proper speakers or good headphones (due to the nature of the alteration-process there's a fair bit going on in the low-end ranges ;
all those crisp LinnDrumm kicks and chorused BassLines, when sent wholesale down an octave, simply will not be reproduced by your laptop speakers or cheap
earbuds) ?
Wow sounds great! But when will i have 12 hours to consume it?  Maybe my next work at home day would be a good start.
Jaguar wrote:
Don't know how they are sounding today but I remember that before the advent of the CD, they almost always sounded like shit. A lot of the homemade cassettes people made for themselves from their albums sounded pretty good but it always seemed that a commerically recorded cassette was worse. Maybe it was just the ones I heard, I don't know. I've only ever bought a very few and usually in some very cheap cut out bin. I stuck with albums and recorded onto tape anything I wanted in that format until the CD came along.


Tapes/cassettes didn't really start sounding good until CDs came out, and then you could record off of them onto high-quality chrome or metal tapes. They sounded MUCH better than the ones you'd buy commercially. I was a huge geek for making high-quality mix tapes. I had it down to a science.