Archive for the ‘MUSIC’ Category

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It’s early it must be time to announce what’s going to be released on Record Store Day Black Friday, which is officially slated for November 28th, 2025. Over 170 vinyl releases have been slated for that most hallowed of days for collectors, so check your budget now.  there are special pressings of classic releases by Prince & The Revolution, Fleetwood Mac, Phil Collins, Led Zeppelin, Talking Heads, Bob Dylan, Alice Cooper and more.

I’ll list as many highlights as I can below, but if you want to see the full list immediately, go here, and scroll down to the “Web” and “PDF” options to see what’s what. Keep in mind that RSD releases are designated as follows: a) Exclusives: These titles are physically released only at indie record stores; b) RSD First: These titles are initially found at indie record stores only, but they might be released to other retailers at a later date at some point in the future (though not always); and c) Small Run/Regional Titles: These releases are either regionally based and sold at specific stores, or have press runs under 1,000 copies.

As many of you already know, the SRPs are never shared ahead of RSD, but they are usually fairly consistent across the board, and typically dependent on the size of the run and relative availability. If you miss getting what you want on RSD proper, prices tend to ratchet upward on eBay, Discogs, and elsewhere on the interwebs.

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The RSD PR team highlighted a few of the titles-to-come they deemed important and/or of note, Highlights of my own. For the Dylanologists of the world, RSD is celebrating the May 1963 LP “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan”, 62 years after its initial release by “re”-presenting the album as Dylan intended that is, and I quote, “before the suits at Columbia Records censored some of the tracks.

At any rate, “The Original Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan” LP comes via Legacy (RSD Exclusive; 13,000 copies), and it includes “Rocks and Gravel,” “Let Me Die in My Footsteps,” “Rambling, Gambling Willie,” and “Talkin’ John Birch Paranoid Blues.” (The latter song is the one that prompted Dylan to walk off the Ed Sullivan Show when Ed wouldn’t let him play it.) some of the “Freewheelin’ tracks also appear on Bob’s Dylan’s upcoming “The Bootleg Series Vol. 18: Through The Open Window, 1956-1963” 4LP box set.

RSD Black Friday also sees the release of a very special Bob Dylan “Masters of War” 7in single, recorded in Alan Lomax’s apartment in 1962. The B-side of this 7-incher will be a conversation Alan and Bob had after the recording . Additional/other RSD releases/announcements get added in right up until the date .

After decades of, er, hard work, Spinal Tap release the “RSD Scalpers Edition” of their “The End Continues” soundtrack album via Interscope (RSD Exclusive; 2,000 copies). In their official parlance, this RSD Black Friday release is, quote, “sure to please the flippers and hardcore fans who must own everything that Spinal Tap releases. ”The Scalpers Edition” includes three additional previously unheard tracks, a “unique” album cover, and a poster. Plus, and this is key, the vinyl itself is pressed on — of course! — 181g vinyl!

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For the more modern-music-seeking out there, RSD Black Friday’s “Billie Eilish Live” EP on Interscope is a special 10in edition featuring live recordings of “Skinny,” “Wildflower,” “Birds of a Feather,” and “L’Amour de Ma Vie,” all culled from Billie’s recent London Palladium show (RSD First; 20,000). Chappell Roan places her latest two songs back-to-back for the first time on her own RSD Black Friday 7in single via Island, “The Island” b/w “The Giver” (RSD Exclusive; 30,000 copies).

Meanwhile, 2025 Record Store Day Ambassador is Post Malone who continues to show his love for indie record stores by offering fans an LP titled “Long Bed” on Mercury/Republic, featuring nine tracks that were previously only available digitally (RSD Exclusive; 5,000 copies).

Sir Elton John — an inveterate record collector in his own right — and 2020 Record Store Day Ambassador Brandi Carlisle performed songs from their collaborative 2025 release “Who Believes in Angels?” (as well as songs from their own respective catalogue’s) for a televised live special, and some of those performances comprise the “Who Believes in Angels? Live at the London Palladium” 2LP set on Interscope (RSD Exclusive; 4,000 copies).

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Also on the master RSD Black Friday list are (again, in their words) “sure-to-be-coveted” vinyl from the likes of The Doors, Rhino will release “Live in Copenhagen, 1968“, featuring a previously unreleased concert in its entirety the legendary band recorded at Falokner Centret in Copenhagen, Denmark on September 17th, 1968. The 2 LP release on crystal-clear vinyl includes both the early and late sets, featuring electrifying performances of “Break On Through (To The Other Side),” “Light My Fire,” and “Hello, I Love You,” among others. Only 5,300 copies will be pressed globally.

An interesting set from Joni Mitchell when she was on Bob Dylan’s “The Rolling Thunder Tour These recordings of her sets from Bob Dylan’s legendary all-star tour were released for the first time last year as part of the boxed set “Joni Mitchell Archives, Vol. 4,” but this is the first stand-alone edition, and many of the tracks were not previously on vinyl.

Brendan Benson, The Rolling Stones, Talking Heads, the Grateful Dead, Prince & The Revolution, Miles Davis, George Harrison, The Flaming Lips, and Led Zeppelin, among many others. All of this vinyl goodness is accompanied by, as the RSD cognoscenti oh-so-aptly put it, “something special that music fans can get only at a record store.”

King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, “Live in 24” (1,500 copies) At last, some shaped vinyl — specifically, a paper airplane shaped EP. The four song collection was inspired by the band’s “Flight b741” album and incorporates songs from various live recordings as part of the band’s Bootlegger series.

Those RSD diggers going for deeper dives can seek out the Black Friday offerings from the likes of Jeff Tweedy/Wilco/Daniel Johnston, Bobby Womack, Deltron 3030, Nico, Tangerine Dream, Ramones, David Johansen and The Harry Smiths, 2 Chainz, La Luz, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Sugar, and Warren Zevon, with a live recording, “Epilogue: Live At The Edmonton Folk Music Festival” (2,200 copies)
Zevon’s final concert, recorded August 9th, 2002 at the Edmonton Folk Music Festival, now available for the first time for RSD. It’s on double black vinyl with an etched fourth side, with liner notes from longtime Zevon band member Matt Cartsonis, who accompanied him for the set no one knew would be his last.

along with holiday releases from Kesha and Devo.

Randy Newman, “Trouble In Paradise: Demos” (3,500 copies) Previously unissued demos from one of Newman’s most revered albums, the one that brought “I Love L.A.” — including some that didn’t make the final album, like “Big Fat Country Song.”

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Also a interesting release from Talking Heads, “Tentative Decisions: Demos & Live” (7,500 copies)
Recorded by the trio of David Byrne, Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz when they were students at Rhode Island School of Design and in a college band called the Artistics. In the spring semester of 1974, the band gathered in Frantz’s Benefit Street apartment to record a cassette demo tape, which included future classics “Warning Sign” and “Psycho Killer.” This collection includes this newly discovered material alongside an additional 11 demo and live tracks recorded by the original trio line-up of the band in 1975-76. Unreleased Talking Heads stuff is always some of the first stuff to disappear, as recent-era Record Store Days go, and while 7,500 copies once would have been considered a lot for an RSD exclusive, it no longer is, so pick this one up early .

A few more MM RSD bulletpoints now, zeroing in on some of our fave RSD Releasers, You can always count on Rhino to cover a myriad of requisite RSD bases, and this year they’re serving up 35 exclusive albums from their diverse artists roster. Highlights include LPs from Phil Collins, The Doors, Matchbox Twenty, Joni Mitchell, Son Volt, an archival live set for Van Halen (this time from 1995), in addition to a Rhino Reserve title from Curtis Mayfield (“Curtis“; RSD Exclusive; 2,700 copies), a Devo picture disc, and 12in releases from a-ha, Ol’ Dirty Bastard, and The Flaming Lips, along with box sets from Dwight Yoakam and a special release from Arthur Lee’s band Love “The Album Collection”.

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This year’s RSD selection from archival giants Craft Recordings features first-ever vinyl editions, rare live recordings, vibrant colour pressings, and imaginative new packages that span funk, rock, punk, psych, salsa, soundtracks, holiday jazz, and more.

Creed — “Live in San Antonio” on 2 LP metallic silver vinyl, limited to 4,800 copies globally. Captured November 14th, 1999, at San Antonio’s Freeman Coliseum, “Live in San Antonio” drops you right into the roar of a sold-out Texas crowd as Creed storms through the “Human Clay” era. Newly remastered for vinyl, the set bottles the band’s late-’99 ferocity—Scott Stapp’s baritone cutting through Mark Tremonti’s towering riffs, underpinned by Brian Marshall and Scott Phillips in lockstep. The 13-song sprint balances fist-pumping anthems (“Are You Ready?,” “What If,” “My Own Prison”) with breakout hits (“Higher,” “With Arms Wide Open”) and fan-favourite deeper cuts.

Jazz Dispensary’s latest cinematic caper, “Green Bullets“, a fuel-injected compilation that imagines a lost ’70s heist flick.

Other Craft RSD Black Friday exclusives include Jonathan Richman’s tender “You Must Ask the Heart” finally making it onto vinyl; “Flowers in the Afternoon: Late-1960s Sunshine”, the third entry in Craft’s psych/garage RSD series; the first-time-on-vinyl “Punk Goes Acoustic“, an all-analog cut of Ray Barretto’s salsa landmark “Together“; and two score-lover must-gets: Alan Silvestri’s “The Back to the Future Trilogy” .

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A pair of Warner Records limited-edition first-time pressings of albums by Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers and Benson Boone deserve extra attention. Boone’s 2023 “Pulse” EP emerges on electric yellow and bright blue splatter vinyl, and it also includes a 12x24in poster (RSD Exclusive; 6,000 copies).

Meanwhile, Tom Petty &The Heartbreakers’ “The Live Anthology – From The Vaults Vol. 1” 2LP set boasts a foil-stamped number cover, and it appears on turquoise blue vinyl. As you may recall, in November 2009, Petty and Co. released “The Live Anthology”, a massive 7LP box set of live material that encompassed the band’s career up to that point, with a track-list curated by Petty himself. A separate, very limited-edition version of “The Live Anthology” was also released that included a bonus CD with 14 tracks of additional Petty classics, rarities, and covers. These 14 tracks are now being released on vinyl for the first time—and I’m all-in for this one, beyond a shadow of a doubt (RSD First – 7,500 copies for the U.S. market; 11,000 copies total worldwide).

Rhino will release “Fleetwood Mac: Live 1975″, which captures the incredible electricity of the band’s first tour with the legendary line-up of Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham joining Mick Fleetwood, John McVie, and Christine McVie. Recorded 50 years ago at the Capitol Theatre in Passaic, NJ on October 17th, 1975, and Jorgensen Auditorium at the University of Connecticut in Storrs, CT on October 25th, 1975, the album features the band’s at-the-time recent hits “Rhiannon” and “Landslide,” along with some early Fleetwood Mac favourites, including “Hypnotized” and “Oh Well.” Pressed on vinyl for the very first time and limited to 5,000 copies globally.

Led Zeppelin’s classic single “Trampled Under Foot” is being reissued as a reproduction of the original UK 7-inch. The release features “Black Country Woman” on the B-side.

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This year’s RSD Black Friday offerings from Sony Legacy include live performances, soundtracks, and unreleased rarities. Besides the earlier-noted Dylan title and LPs from Cage the Elephant, Danny Elfman, Wilco/Jeff Tweedy/Daniel Johnston, and the intriguingly self-explanatory Lou Reed/Various collaborative offering the “Metal Machine Music: Power to Consume, Vol. 1”,  limited to 2,100 copies. Inspired by Lou Reed’s groundbreaking 1975 noise opus “Metal Machine Music“, this collection assembles a formidable line-up of sonic provocateurs—Aaron Dilloway, Drew McDowall, Thurston Moore, Pharmakon, The Rita, and Mark Solotroff—to explore the outer edges of distortion, feedback, and raw electronic texture. Each artist channels the spirit of Reed’s original manifesto of anti-music, pushing their own boundaries through modular synthesis, tape manipulation, harsh noise, and industrial decay. The result is a visceral, immersive experience that celebrates chaos, confronts structure, and redefines what music can be.

Grateful Dead, “The Warfield, San Francisco, CA — Oct 4 & 6, 1980” (6,000 copies on vinyl, unknown quantity on CD) Two acoustic sets from the Warfield shows in October 1980, celebrating the Grateful Dead’s 15th Anniversary. On 2-LP, 180-Gram Vinyl with Stoughton tip-on jacket. Also available on 2CD. Produced for release by David Lemieux.

Legacy will release Wilco/Jeff Tweedy/Daniel Johnston’s “dBpm 15” on a single red LP, limited to 3,400 copies. Twelve rarities and unreleased tracks highlighting fifteen years of music on dBpm Records. Most available for the first time on vinyl, the set includes a previously unavailable version of “Casper The Friendly Ghost” by Daniel Johnston and Jeff Tweedy, and Wilco’s cover of The Beatles’ “Don’t Let Me Down.”

we also get Billy Joel’s “Live From Long Island” 3LP set with an awful cover that makes it look like one of those Music For Pleasure releases, which highlights his Nylon Curtain tour homecoming concert at Nassau Coliseum on December 29th, 1982,

The Piano Man’s classic Nylon Curtain Tour homecoming concert at Nassau Coliseum newly mixed from the original master tapes and produced by Billy’s longtime live sound engineer Brian Ruggles. Only 1,500 copies will be pressed globally.

Beside those releases, Prince & The Revolution’s “Around the World in a Day: The Singles” is on RSD tap, which celebrates the 40th anniversary of the titular album that was originally released in April 1985. The audio is newly remastered by original mastering engineer Bernie Grundman, with additional mastering by Chris James, and this vibrant 7-incher box set features all four singles from the album (“Raspberry Beret,” “Paisley Park,” “Pop Life,” and the extended version of “America”), plus a brand new exclusive 7in single of the 1985 track “4 the Tears in Your Eyes,” which Prince originally contributed to that year’s “We Are The World” charity album. Each 45 is presented in a unique vinyl coloured vinyl and are presented in their original 7in sleeves in a clamshell box, all featuring elements of the titular LP sleeve that was originally designed by Doug Henders (RSD Exclusive; in a quite-apropos run of 1,985 copies).

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Additionally, Sony Legacy serves up Miles Davis’ “Live at The Plugged Nickel: December 23, 1965 – Set Two“, which is culled from what has long been considered to be one of the most legendary engagements in jazz history. That night saw trumpeter Miles, saxophonist Wayne Shorter, keyboardist Herbie Hancock, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Tony Williams deliver a masterclass in what’s been described as “controlled volatility, dismantling tradition and reshaping their language night after night.” I’ve also been told that Legacy will reissue the box set containing all seven performed sets of “The Complete Plugged Nickel Sessions” in January 2026 as their first salvo in a year-long Miles Davis Centennial celebration — but first we get this 2LP Black Friday/black vinyl primer that contains over an hour of familiar songs turned inside out, including standards such as “All of You” and “My Funny Valentine” and Miles originals like “So What” and “Agitation” (RSD Exclusive; 5,900 copies).

A strange one is Robbie Robertson, “Filmworks: Insomnia” (1,800 copies) A compilation of Robertson’s music and scores from the films “The Last Waltz,” “Carny” and “Raging Bull,” including a previously unissued track from “Carny.” Jon Burlingame wrote the liner notes. It’s being released in conjunction with Robertson’s posthumously published memoir “Insomnia,” also due this autumn.

Phil Collins will see “12″ers” on vinyl, limited to 3,500 globally as an RSD Exclusive via Rhino. As part of a whole host of celebrations to mark 40 years of Phil Collins’ spectacular third studio album “No Jacket Required, 12″ers” is reissued as a special limited edition six-track EP of extended mixes, with a track list previously only released on CD and one track making its debut on vinyl. The 12-inch remixes are an immersive sonic experience, providing a refreshed and extended look at some of Phil Collins’ most loved solo work.

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B.B. King, “Broadcasting the Blues: Live from Germany & Sweden” (2,500 copies) Two European concerts from 1968 and 1973, featuring Sonny Freeman and the Kingpins, and a full horn section for the Stockholm, all never before released. Derek Trucks is among those contributing to the copious liner notes. 

Award-winning producer Zev Feldman, the “Jazz Detective” himself, is back for Record Store Day Black Friday with four historic, never-before-released albums spanning punk, jazz, and blues from Bad Brains, Bill Evans, Yusef Lateef, and B.B. King. Each title has been restored and mastered from archival recordings, and they are said to offer fresh insight into landmark moments across music history — from Bad Brains’ earliest live shows to unheard Bill Evans trio sessions (RSD Exclusive; 4,000 copies), Yusef Lateef’s spiritual experiments, and B.B. King’s powerful 1968 and 1973 European concerts. These RSD releases underscore Feldman’s curatorial mission to bring lost performances to light and celebrate genre-defining legacies.

The Flaming Lips, “Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots – “Live at the Zoo Amphitheatre, Oklahoma City, August 30, 2024” (4,000 copies) The band performed the album “Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots” live in its entirety at the Oklahoma City Zoo Amphitheatre on August 30th, 2024. The hometown show will be released in a 2-LP, 45rpm colour vinyl format with new artwork by Wayne Coyne.

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Finally, Mack Avenue comes to the RSD Black Friday party with a legendary album from the Strata-East catalogue The Descendants of Mike and Phoebe’s “A Spirit Speaks” on 180g vinyl with audio cut directly from the original master tapes. (Three other classic Strata-East titles from Charles Tolliver & Stanley Cowell, The Heath Brothers, and Cecil McBee will follow on December .)

One of many projects on Strata-East spearheaded by bassist, composer, and arranger Bill Lee (father of legendary director Spike Lee), The Descendants of Mike and Phoebe’s only album, 1974’s “A Spirit Speaks”, enlisted Bill Lee’s brother and sisters — Clif Lee, A. Grace Lee Mims, and Consuela Lee Moorehead — to form a group named in tribute to their enslaved ancestors. Combining elements of jazz, gospel, soul, and blues, among other influences, “A Spirit Speaks” has become one of the most sought-after albums from the Strata-East catalogue — and rightly so (RSD First; 1,500 copies).

Music fans will also be able to purchase Icona Pop and Charli XCX‘s ‘I Love It’ LP, Young Fathers‘ ‘White Men Are Black Men Too (10th Anniversary Edition)’, a 12″ of Faithless‘ hit ’90s single ‘Insomnia’

The full list of releases for Record Store Day Black Friday 2025 has been revealed. Credit: Press

And, with that — happy RSD list compiling, and happy hunting come Friday November 28th!

Celebrate 50 years of Patti Smith’s debut studio album with the release of “Horses” (50th Anniversary). The 2-set features the iconic album remastered direct from the original master tapes and previously unreleased outtakes and rarities – including Patti Smith’s 1975 RCA audition tape. The Punk poet’s landmark debut celebrates half a century with an expanded anniversary edition produced by bassist Tony Shanahan.

Originally released in 1975, “Horses” was the introductory statement from Patti Smith, her debut album recorded at Electric Lady Studios and produced by John Cale of The Velvet Underground.

Five decades later, it remains a music and cultural linchpin, a release that made her an icon among the New York City punk community and eventually led to her induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2007.

On October 10th, “Horses” will be revisited by Legacy Recordings, the catalogue division of Sony Music Entertainment, for a 50th anniversary reissue packed with bonus material.

On February 3rd, 1975, ex-Animals singer Eric Burdon headlined two shows at the Main Point, a 250-seater coffeehouse in Bryn Mawr, a Philadelphia suburb. The opening act was singer-poet Patti Smith, making her first hometown appearance (she partly grew up in the city) after a year of New York nights with guitarist Lenny Kaye and pianist Richard Sohl and a 45 of primal blues and incantation, “Hey Joe/Piss Factory”, released at the end of ’74. Smith was also showing off a combo with more groove and boom; bassist Ivan Kral joined four days earlier. I was there as the Main Point’s PR guy and keen to see what I had wrought after urging my boss to book Smith for the gig.

On February 6th, Smith was headed for her own transcendence, her debut LP, “Horses”, recording demos at RCA’s 6th Avenue studios with Kaye, Sohl and Kral, an event so newsworthy in the early ferment of New York punk that John Rockwell of the New York Times mentioned it in his column the next day. RCA barely got a chance to pass on Smith. Rockwell soon reported that Arista’s Clive Davis had swooped in and signed her. There was another demo session with the quartet – then, in June, a drummer, Jay Dee Daugherty. Over five, sometimes contentious weeks with producer John Cale that fall, the quintet made “Horses” eight tracks of electric medicine dance, Brill Building yearning and frenzied, improvised levitation – at Jimi Hendrix’s 8th Street sanctuary, Electric Lady, where Smith cut “Hey Joe“.

On the final day of mixing, as “dawn broke over lower Manhattan,” Kaye wrote in his memoir, Lightning Striking, “we walked up the stairs, out of the studio, into the future.”

Released on November 10th, 1975, “Horses” is the punk-rock landmark that keeps on giving, a raging, renewing magic and dreaming made with rock’s fundamental bones by an insurgent bard who found her voice and mission at the crossroads of Leader Of The Pack, Like A Rolling Stone and Howl. Smith’s infamous refusal of easy salvation at the front of Van Morrison’s “Gloria” the nine-minute passage through grief to escape in the wah-wah mourning and doo-wop scatting of Birdland; the combined invocation of Smith’s pole star, the French poet Arthur Rimbaud, and Wilson Pickett in “Land“, the band reading her vocal moods and soaring with empathic stampede

This release will feature the iconic original album remastered direct from the original 1/4” master tapes, as well as previously unreleased outtakes and rarities, including Patti Smith’s 1975 RCA audition tape. Among the bonus material are eight previously never-before-released songs. One of those, “Snowball,” is available to preview the reissue:

Half a century after rewriting the rules of rock, Patti Smith is giving “Horses” the deluxe treatment it deserves. Out October 10th, the 50th anniversary reissue comes with demos, outtakes, and four unreleased tracks, including the newly surfaced “Snowball.” The record’s been remastered from the original tapes, which means John Cale’s production should hit even harder. On top of that, Smith is plotting a fall tour across the US and Europe and dropping a new memoir, Bread of Angels, in November. Punk may not have had a blueprint, but “Horses” came pretty close, and it’s wild that it still feels urgent in 2025

Hello, everyone. This is Patti. When we recorded “Horses” I hoped to communicate with like minds, the misfits, disenfranchised, those scraping away off the beaten track. I am quite moved that the community I hoped to find, found us as well and those that survived are still at work. In October Sony will release a 50th anniversary edition of “Horses”. There are 6,500 vinyls, including a double album compiled of unearthed recordings, live pieces from CBGB, youthful efforts scavenged from half a century ago. I am grateful to all who helped form it and the people who have supported it for five decades.

Irish-born, Australian-based multi-instrumentalist Bonnie Stewart releases her second album of indie-rock-inspired song writing, “music that is both mellow and hazy and driven and edgy, traversing art-folk, psychedelia, dream-pop and grunge.”

With heavy thrums of detuned guitars entwined with layers of angelic airy vocals, the forthcoming new album “Strangest Feeling” shows Bonniesongs’ masterful ability to balance sound and silence, reminding us that music, at its core, is simple vibration moving through air. Bonniesongs makes music that is both mellow and hazy and driven and edgy, traversing art-folk, psychedelia, dream-pop and grunge. She could also be compared to art-rock and alternative artists such as PJ Harvey, Feist and Grouper for her music’s raw, hypnotic qualities, although Bonniesongs’ style sits more in a ‘ethereal grunge’ category of its own, one she’s been carving out since her 2019’s debut album “Energetic Mind” (Small Pond/Art As Catharsis). Once described by artist Fink, who championed Bonniesongs heavily on his KCRW radio show and toured Australia with her early this year as having “a deceptively hard edged soft-core.”

“Strangest Feeling” is a collection of songs written amongst the limbo of the lockdowns and the transition back to life. A flavour of autumn runs through the album, intwined with themes of spells, the ocean and Halloween. The punky riffs and driving drums of new single ‘Olive Oil’ and the album’s second single ‘Bittersweet’ are reminders of fun and joy, with ‘Bittersweet’ offering a slice of unadulterated punky grunge in the playful ode to finding fun in chaos, inspired by Bonnie’s stay in New Zealand during the pandemic.

from the Bonniesongs upcoming album Strangest Feeling

PEEL DREAM MAGAZINE – ” Taurus “

Posted: October 5, 2025 in MUSIC
Peel Dream Magazine Taurus

One year on from the release of acclaimed album “Rose Main Reading Room”, Peel Dream Magazine return with new mini album “Taurus“. Spanning eight previously unavailable tracks that were originally recorded for their lush and inviting 2024 full length release, “Taurus” offers a wider glimpse into songwriter Joseph Stevens’ process and creative output from those sessions.

The band, whose name nods to the BBC Radio 1 legend John Peel — arbiter of all things underground, quality, and (it must be said) “cool” — has since its inception been a genre-hopping experiment, jumping from motorik krautrock to shoegaze and space age pop.

On “Taurus”, Peel Dream Magazine remain explorative, drifting effortlessly continuing to twirl that lush kaleidoscope of indie rock they inhabit. From the warm breathiness of the Belle & Sebastian–like vocals on opener “Venus in Nadir” to the glimmering kosmische groove reminiscent of Stereolab on “Seek and Destroy,” Peel Dream Magazine know indie rock reaches its full potential when stacked vocal harmonies and guitars make room for every reverberation of a vibraphone, hum of a clarinet, and light tap of a cymbal—especially when they all combine for a standout track like “Believer.”

Although unbound by genre, Peel Dream Magazine still inhabit the sonic milieu of warm woodland tones and droning repetition. In the entrancing standout “Believer,” they evoke “Rose Main Reading Room’s” atmosphere through vocalist Olivia Babuka Black’s mantric melodies and Philip Glass-like woodwinds and mallets, bringing “Taurus” into focus as a welcoming companion piece to its predecessor.

released October 1st, 2025

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There is a moment on the ninth track of Jasmine Cruikshank’s debut album, “You Are The Morning“, where you can hear the indie rock singer-songwriter gently dissolve into tears. The song is called “New Shoes”, and, along with the rest of the album, it was produced by Phoebe BridgersLucy Dacus, and Julien Baker—the three members of queer supergroup boygenius.

Cruikshank, framed on Zoom by a curtain of vibrant hair—one half hot pink, the other half electric blue—reveals that when she broke down towards the tail-end of recording the track, “Everyone came in and held me, and we left the audio in. It perfectly represented that atmosphere of mutual care.” At the time, going through a painful divorce, her marriage having ended after coming out to her then-spouse as a trans woman, Cruikshank and her music were luckily in safe hands.

Under the stage name jasmine.4.t, Cruikshank was the first artist from the United Kingdom to be signed to indie folk powerhouse Phoebe Bridgers’ Saddest Factory Records, which is also home to such names as indie pop three-piece Muna and chamber pop-rock band Sloppy Jane.

When asked to describe the experience of working so closely with the Grammy Award-winning artists, she says, laughing incredulously, “Wild. I still can’t believe that that happened. It’s so disconnected from anything I’ve ever done before.” She paints a picture of the recording process. “We were recording in Sound City, which is where Phoebe recorded her last album, “Punisher.”

It is also where legends such as Johnny CashFleetwood Mac, and Neil Young, among countless others, have recorded – big boots to fill. “So we were using the same vocal tuning that she used. She really knew her way around. She was very keen on trying to get the perfect song, the perfect sound before hitting record.” It seems that Bridgers, Dacus, and Baker all brought different talents to the studio. “Phoebe just has an incredible ear for harmonies. She was doing a lot of the direction on vocal harmonies throughout the record,” Cruikshank explains.

“And Lucy and I go way back, so she had a lot more confidence to edit me, I think. Cutting a word from a line here and there to make the meaning more concise. Lucy has a really good knack for that. Julien has this incredible brain for guitar tones, which I think is one of the things that really holds the record together. It was amazing to have an authority on that.”

“Rain Dogs”, the eighth album by singer songwriter Tom Waits was released September 30th, in 1985. .

“A guy goes to the bathroom on the tire of a car, then a $70,000 car pulls up alongside and a woman with $150 stocking and a $700 shoe steps in a pool of blood, piss, and beer left by a guy who died a half hour before and is now lying cold somewhere on a slab.” Life in New York City according to Tom Waits.

Tom Waits had moved to New York from sunny California early in 1984, after releasing the album “swordfishtrombones”, a record that marked a drastic shift in his musical direction. Of the relocation to the Big Apple Waits said: “We moved here for the peace and quiet, you know. Somehow I was misinformed.” Perhaps not a tranquil city, but New York gave Tom Waits plenty of opportunities to observe the human condition, with a keen eye for people who live outside the mainstream. With his self-confessed tendency to ’gravitate towards abnormal behavior when I’m out on the street’, his songwriting after arriving in the city was a portrait of the down and outs, losers, out of luck drunkards and outcasts of society. The result was the milestone album “Rain Dogs”, a collection of songs with a loose thematic about life in the streets, or in particular, the gutters.

As a New York Times article from October 1985 observed, “Rain Dogs” is a haunting album, because it reminds us of the existence we would rather squeeze out of our vision. But given catastrophic bad luck, almost anybody could wind up there.”

The mood of the album settles upon you even before the needle drops on the record. The front cover, shot by Swedish photographer Anders Petersen, came from a collection of photos he took at the Café Lehmitz in Hamburg. The establishment was frequented by cab drivers, prostitutes and sailors who patronized it on shore leave. Petersen said about his photographs: “The people at the Café Lehmitz had a presence and a sincerity that I myself lacked. It was OK to be desperate, to be tender, to sit all alone or share the company of others. There was a great warmth and tolerance in this destitute setting.” Waits described the photograph as “Me and Liza Minnelli right after she got out of the Betty Ford Center.”

Waits unleashed his dark humour about the city of New York many times in interviews he gave in the mid-1980s. These are funny reads, but they give a glimpse into how he builds character stories by observing the world around him: “There is something interesting about Manhattan. Someone could stand out in the middle of Fourteenth Street stark naked, playing a trumpet with a dead pigeon on their head and no one would flinch. In fact, tomorrow there will probably be two guys like that. They’d be lease-letting, trying to get more subscribers.”

New York proved to be a fertile environment for Tom Waits, increasing his songwriting output. “Rain Dogs” contains 19 songs, many of them written in parallel to the songs that he planned for “Frank’s Wild Years” theatre show that premiered in 1986. Waits talked about how the city inspired him to write: “You can get in a taxi and just have him drive and start writing down words you see, information that is in your normal view: dry cleaners, custom tailors, alterations, electrical installations, Dunlop safety centre, lease, broker, sale…just start making a list of words that you see. And then you just kind of give yourself an assignment. You say, ‘I’m going to write a song and I’m going to use all these words in that song.’”

Another reason driving this outpour of songs had to do with a more earthly motive: royalties. After firing his manager Herb Cohen, he now owned his songs: “Maybe that’s why I write so many songs now, the songs I write now belong to me, not someone in the Bronx.”

Looking for a spot in New York to write and rehearse, Waits found a place on Washington Street which he described as ‘a little basement boiler room, a place where I can go at night and work and dream’. Sharing the space were non others than the Lounge Lizards, led by actor and sax player John Lurie.

That acquaintance led to future musical and acting collaborations between the two. Even more critical to the “Rain Dogs” album was Tom Waits reconnecting with Marc Ribot, a new recruit to the Lounge Lizards. Ribot, a guitar player with a knack for unusual sounds, first met Waits a few years earlier when the singer stayed in New York and Ribot was playing with Brenda and the Realtones. Waits quickly realized the potential of his unique guitar style and asked him to play on “Rain Dogs”. His contributions to the album were profound. Tom Waits on how Marc Ribot gets his sound: “He’s big on the devices. Appliances, guitar appliances. He has this whole apparatus made out of tinfoil and transistors that he kinda sticks on the guitar. Or he wraps the strings with gum, all kinds of things, just to get it to sound real industrial. It’s like he would take a blender, part of a blender, take the whole thing out and put it on the side of his guitar and it looks like a medical show.”

The album was recorded at the historic RCA studios, where 30 years earlier Elvis Presley recorded his first hit songs Hound Dog, Don’t Be Cruel and Blue Suede Shoes. Marc Ribot remembers the experience: “That was recorded in a big, old studio that doesn’t exist anymore – the old RCA Studio A on 6th Avenue in New York, Midtown. We just set up in the middle of this huge room and played like a garage band.”

One of “Rain Dogs’ most lasting achievements is its sonic experimentation. Tom Waits surrounded himself with like-minded musicians from the underground, avant-garde music scene in New York. They were after creating music that fell within the conventions of rock/pop music, but sounded nothing like typical rock/pop songs. Waits talked about that aspect of the album: “If I want a sound, I usually feel better if I’ve chased it and killed it, skinned it and cooked it. Most things you can get with a button nowadays. So if I was trying for a certain drum sound, my engineer would say: ‘Oh, for Christ’s sake, why are we wasting our time? Let’s just hit this little cup with a stick here, sample something, take a drum sound from another record and make it bigger in the mix, don’t worry about it.’ I’d say, ‘No, I would rather go in the bathroom and hit the door with a piece of two-by-four very hard.’”

Drummer Stephen Hodges, who plays on about half the songs on the album, recalls how Tom Waits asked him to play the drum set in a non-traditional way, avoiding cymbals and going for the tribal rhythms on the tom toms: “I can count on one hand and have a couple of fingers left over the number of single notes like ding, ding, ding I played on a cymbal with Tom Waits. He not only did not want a jazz trio, he did not want to hear a drum playing in that sibilance. He let marimba take over the 8th notes which was a really cool move.” Percussionist Michael Blair also mentioned the intentional lack of using cymbals on the album: “I am always very deliberate with my own use of cymbals, as the frequencies often distract from or obstruct the best parts of the guitar and voice sounds. So, I tend to stay out of the way. Stephen did, too.”

Lets get to the music, shall we? The album opens with the song “Singapore”. Tom Waits described a technique he used to come up with the idea of that song: “Sometimes I close my eyes real hard and I see a picture of what I want.” What materialized in his active mind was “Richard Burton with a bottle of festival brandy preparing to go on board a ship. I tried to make my voice like his.”

Waits recalled in an interview one of the lines in the song: “’In the kingdom of the blind the one-eyed man is king’ – I took that from Orwell I think.” He narrowly missed the mark by 400 years. The quote was coined by Dutch philosopher Desiderius Erasmus in the 16th century.

The new sonic adventures that Tom Waits took on this album hit you all at once from the first moment of that song. Most recognizable are his raspy voice and the jagged guitar lines by Ribot. Waits said about the guitarist that he “can sound like a mental institution and a car accident too”.

A sonic thread that goes through most of the songs on the album is the unique use of drums and percussion, the reason why Tom Waits described the instrumentation on his mid-1980s albums as a ‘junkyard orchestra’. Anything you can bang on was fair game on the album, and on “Singapore” the victim was a chest of drawers. Waits recalls: “On the last bar of the song the whole piece of furniture collapsed and there was nothing left of it. That’s what I think of when I hear the song. I see the pile of wood.” Michael Blair concurs: “One could say we showed a flagrant disrespect for home furnishings on that track.”

Blair came to work with Tom Waits through a recommendation from the album’s sound engineer Robert Musso. He talks about how his background appealed to the singer: “I was a trained percussionist with experience in avant-garde music and composers including Harry Partch, John Cage, and others. This combined with my ‘Ringo-esque’ drumming could be a good fit for the new songs.”

In 1983, after the release of “swordfishtrombones”, Tom Waits described the use of percussion instruments on his albums: “I’ve always been afraid of percussion for some reason. I was afraid of things sounding like a train wreck, like Buddy Rich having a seizure. I’ve made some strides; the bass marimbas, the boobams, metal long longs, African talking drums and so on.” Taking it to the next step, he could chose no better musician than Michael Blair, who came to the studio with a cavalry of percussion instruments in tow, and then some: “I brought in cases and cases of instruments to choose from. Tack drums from China, temple bowls from Japan, wood blocks from Thailand, 40 cymbals (many broken). Car parts, kitchen appliances. Zillions of shakers, tambourines, bells and gongs from all over the world. Three proper drum kits.”

You also heard a marimba on “Singapore”, and speaking of that wonderful instrument, listen to the next song where it takes a front seat. The combination of gongs, drums and the interlocking marimba rhythms on “Clap Hands” is fantastic. Interestingly the marimba parts were recorded on two separate recording sessions, first by Bobby Previte and then overdubbed by Michael Blair.

The lyrics of the song use the same rhyming rhythm used in The Clapping Song, a hit by Shirley Ellis in 1965.

Tom Waits’ family members get a mention in the next song, “Cemetery Polka“. Recalling snippets from family reunions, Waits recites the peculiarities of uncles Vernon, Biltmore, Violet Bill and Phil, and lest we forget auntie Maime.

In an interview Waits expressed regret over the name dropping of family members on that song: “Cemetery Polka” is a family album, a lot of my relatives are farmers, they’re eccentric, aren’t everyone’s relatives? Maybe it was stupid to put them on the album because now I get irate calls saying, Tom how can you talk about your Aunt Maime and your Uncle Biltmore like that?”

Here is a live version of the song from 1985, an opportunity to witness that magnificent junkyard orchestra. Transported 60 years back in time, this footage would have looked quite natural in a sweaty Berlin night club in the 1920s.

The next song was released as the first single from the album and is one of my favourites on it. “Jockey Full of Bourbon” has great imagery ala Damon Runyon’s classic short stories of the 1930s:

Shortly after his move to New York Waits met Jim Jarmusch at a party filled to the brim with celebrities. The grey-haired director recalls: “I’m kind of shy, and Tom seemed to be sort of in a corner also. He was sort of shy and guarded, yet he had an incredible sense of humour.” The two became good friends and Jarmusch invited Waits to play a role in his next film, a story of three down and out convicts who escape from a New Orleans jailhouse. The role had so much of Waits’ persona in it he hardly had to act.

We are talking, of course, about the classic independent cult movie “Down by Law”. It features one of the best opening sequences I know in cinema history, featuring the song “Jockey Full of Bourbon”. Starting with a shot of a stationary hearse in a cemetery, the camera travels thorough run-down urban and rural scenery, the song a perfect match to the visual.

The next song, “Tango Till They’re Sore“, is unique on this album for featuring Tom Waits playing a piano. This is an odd statement to make, given the singer’s stellar performances in the 1970s, usually in a piano trio setting. Waits talked about how the sound of a piano did not fit in with most of the songs on “Rain Dogs”: “I had a good band. I didn’t really feel compelled to sit down at the piano at all. The piano always brings me indoors, ya know? I was trying to explore some different ideas and some different places in the music and so the piano always feels like you know where you are. You can’t imagine a piano out in the yard unless it’s got some plastic over it, ya know?”

Excellent trombone part here by Bob Funk, member of Uptown Horns, a horn section group that toured with the Rolling Stones (“Steel Wheels”) and Robert Plant (“Honeydrippers”), and later played on The B52s’ hit Love Shack.

Speaking of the Rolling Stones, the next song features none other than Keith Richards, not a frequent guest musician on other artists’ albums. Waits on how they met: “We’re relatives, I didn’t realize it. We met in a women’s lingerie shop, we were buying brassieres for our wives.” Ok, scratch that, this is Tom Waits being Tom Waits. Seriously, asking the rock n’ roll legend to play on the album started as a joke: “Somebody said, ‘Who do you want to play on the record?’ And I said, ‘Ah, Keith Richards …’ They said, ‘Call him right now.’ I was like, ‘Jesus, please don’t do that, I was just kiddin’ around.’” But the man of a thousand guitar licks was amiable and sent back a note “Let’s get the dance started.”

Richards plays on three songs on the album, one of them “Big Black Mariah”, where he expertly applies his trademark guitar style. Keith appeared on three tracks: Big Black Mariah”, “Union Square” and “Blind Love” Waits tells this anecdote about how he got Richards to find the right part for the song: “I was trying to explain “Big Black Mariah” and finally I started to move in a certain way and he said, ‘Oh, why didn’t you do that to begin with? Now I know what you’re talking about.’”

Side one of the album ends with the song “Time“, in the best tradition of Tom Waits’ beautiful ballads you find in each of his albums. The imagery is again fantastic here, and you sometimes wonder what inspires him to come up with lines like these:

Well things are pretty lousy for a calendar girl, The boys just dive right off the cars and splash into the street. And when they’re on a roll she pulls a razor from her boot And a thousand pigeons fall around her feet.

Time to introduce another excellent musician who plays on most of the tracks on the album, bassist Larry Taylor. The veteran musician, best known as a member of the band Canned Heat with whom he performed at the Monterey International Pop Festival and Woodstock, met Tom Waits back in LA and played on his two previous albums “Heartattack and Vine” and “Swordfishtrombones”.  Waits came to rely on Larry Taylor as the first musician to introduce a new song to: “Larry often served as the bed and the rock and the scout of a song’s destination. We fought. I can’t tell you how many times he threw the bass down in disgust, proclaiming, ‘I am not feeling it. I can’t play this shit,’ only to be coaxed back into the song and not only playing it, but helping to define it.”

The song took a whole new meaning when the dust settled after the 9/11 attacks in 2001. A week later the David Letterman Show resumed after the forced break, and featured a performance of the song by Tori Amos. The mood of the song and its lyrics had a memorable, healing effect on listeners.

The song features an accordion, a favourite instrument of Tom Waits at the time. It gets a featured solo spot at the opening of the next song, the title track that opens the second side of the album. Another great instrumentalist on the album is accordionist Bill Schimmel, a musician who helped putting the instrument back on the map and played it on the famous tango scene in the movie Scent of a Woman. Schimmel said of Tom Waits’ quest for new sounds: “Tom told me he wanted to use instruments nobody liked anymore. Somebody once said that every high-tech era is followed by a high-touch era, and nothing was more high-touch than the accordion. Tom was a proud Luddite.”

We are deep into the article and the album, so it is time to explain the meaning of its title. The original plan was to call the album Evening Train Wrecks, before deciding on the more apt “Rain Dogs”. What are Rain Dogs? One explanation by Waits: “You can get ’em in Coney Island. They’re little; they come in a bun. It’s just water in a bun, that’s all. It’s a bun that’s been . . . it’s a bun without a hot dog in it. It’s just . . . it’s been left out in the rain and they’re called a rain dog and they’re less expensive than a standard hot dog.” Another one: “A rain dog is anybody who eh . . . people who sleep in doorways; people who don’t have credit cards; people who don’t go to church; people who don’t have, ya know, a mortgage, ya know? Who fly in this whole plane by the seat of their pants. People who are going down the road . . . ya know?” Have your pick. I like one more explanation, taking dog for what it is – a dog: “You know dogs in the rain lose their way back home. They even seem to look up at you and ask if you can help them get back home. ‘Cause after it rains every place they peed on has been washed out. It’s like Mission Impossible. They go to sleep thinking the world is one way and they wake up and somebody moved the furniture.”

Talking about “Rain Dogs”, what about their brides? The short instrumental “Bride of Rain Dog” gives an opportunity for another musician to shine, this time reed player Ralph Carney who plays saxophones and clarinet on five tunes on the album.

Carney, who first met Waits when he was asked to play on a couple of tracks the singer wrote for the soundtrack of the documentary Streetwise (an excellent doc about homeless teenagers in 1984 Seattle), is featured even more prominently on the tour that followed “Rain Dogs”. Interviewed before starting that tour in London, Tom Waits referenced Ralph Carney’s odd sense of fashion: “I’ve told the band to smarten up. I will have to talk to my sax player, Ralph Carney, about his white socks, the white socks and the navy uniform, I’m not sure about that.” When Carney passed away in 2017, Waits posted this eulogy about him: “Ralph came from the land of strange and whimsical. He could be exploding like popping corn or stretched out like taffy, capable of circular breathing and punctuating and drawing shapes that dangled from your ears.”

Tom Waits created a tradition on his albums, many of them featuring a spoken word piece, a stream of conscience monologue set to background music. “Shore Leave” from “Swordfishtrombines” is a fine example. On “Rain Dogs” that honour goes to the song “9th & Hennepin“, named after a real intersection in Minneapolis. Waits, in one of his usual interview answers where the line between real life and fiction quickly blurs: “I was on 9th and Hennepin years ago in the middle of a pimp war, and 9th and Hennepin always stuck in my mind. To this day I’m sure there continues to be trouble at 9th and Hennepin. At this donut shop. They were playing ‘Our Day Will Come’ by Dinah Washington when these three 12-year-old pumps came in chinchilla coats armed with knives and, uh, forks and spoons and ladies and they started throwing them out in the street. Which was answered by live ammunition over their heads into our booth.”

We reach the last song in this article and also the best-known track from the album. It became a big hit for Rod Stewart when he covered it four years later. “Downtown Train” is as close as Waits got to a pop song on this album, and for that he needed a group of musicians outside the New York art and avant-garde community. Into the studio rolled guitarist G.E. Smith (Saturday Night Live, Hall and Oates), bassist Tony Levin (Peter Gabriel, King Crimson), drummer Mickey Curry (Hall and Oates, Bryan Adams), amassing hundreds of album credits between them. Tom Waits: “They were all well paid. All real nice guys. I tried that song with the other band and then . . . it just didn’t make it. So you can’t get the guys to play like this on some of the stuff. I just couldn’t find the right guys.”

The song was also the feature of a promo video directed by Jean Baptiste Mondino, an excellent choice if your goal was to produce a great looking black and white video clip for a pop song. A year earlier he swept the MTV awards with his clip for Don Henley’s The Boys of Summer, and in 1985 he filmed Sting’s sunning clip for the song Russians.

The clip gave visual to Tom Waits’ inhabitants of his inner world, which he summarized in an interview: “I’m still drawn to the ugly, I don’t know if it’s a flaw in my personality or something that happened when I was a child.”

Time to finish this review. I covered about half of the songs on the album, apologies if I skipped one of your favorites. If you are not familiar with the album, these songs should give you a pretty good idea what you are getting yourself into should you chose to buy the album (which you should).

Celebrating 49 years of ‘Blues For Allah’ today. The Dead’s eighth studio album, and third release on Grateful Dead Records, was recorded over four months at Bobby’s home studio in Mill Valley, CA. Infused with progressive jazz and Middle Eastern themes, the album remains a call for peace, harmony, and collaboration. The whole idea was to get back to that band thing, where the band makes the main contribution to the evolution of the material. – Jerry Garcia

BLUES FOR ALLAH” is the Dead’s unique vision, a deeply humane parable that framed their own artistic renewal in the most inclusive, expansive terms. Fifty years later, it remains one of their most musically successful and resolutely experimental albums. – Nicholas G. Meriwether, Executive Director of the Grateful Dead Studies Association, “Blues For Allah” (50TH Anniversary Deluxe Edition) Liner Note Writer

When the Grateful Dead took a self-imposed hiatus in 1974 after their farewell run at Winterland, they left the road with no clear sense of when—or if—they’d return. A year later, the band surprised everyone when they reemerged with “Blues For Allah”, one of the most forward-thinking, sonically adventurous albums of their career.

The “Blues For Allah” (50TH ANNIVERSARY DELUXE EDITION) features a newly remastered version of the original album by GRAMMY® Award-winning engineer David Glasser, sourced from the original analogue tapes with speed correction and tape restoration by Plangent Processes. 

The set also features almost two hours of unreleased recordings. Among the highlights are rehearsals from the band’s August 12th, 1975, soundcheck at San Francisco’s Great American Music Hall, including the album tracks “Sage & Spirit,” “Help On The Way,” “Slipknot!,” and “Franklin’s Tower.” The collection continues with performances from the June 21st, 1976, show at the Tower Theatre in Pennsylvania, spotlighting five “Blues For Allah” songs alongside favourites like “Eyes Of The World.” Rounding out the set are selections from Bill Graham’s SNACK (Students Need Athletics, Culture, and Kicks) Benefit at Kezar Stadium on March 23rd, 1975. Previously only available on the 2004 Beyond Description box set’s Bonus Disc, the recordings include one of only three known performances of “King Solomon’s Marbles.”

“Blues For Allah” saw the Grateful Dead attempt something they never had before—and never would again. They would make the record almost entirely without pre-written material. 

Working at Bobby Weir’s home studio—just big enough to hold the band and their gear—the sessions took on an intimate, exploratory feel. Robert Hunter was back in the thick of it, writing lyrics on the spot as the songs took shape. Keith Godchaux’s keys gave the album its spacious texture, while Donna Jean’s harmony vocals elevated songs like “The Music Never Stopped.” “Crazy Fingers” became, in Phil Lesh’s words, “a marvelous essay in smoky ambiguity.” The mostly instrumental title suite pushed even further out, with Bill Kreutzmann saying it “bordered on acid-jazz composition.” Mickey Hart’s role was central, weaving percussion—and slowed-down field recordings of crickets—into a rich, immersive tapestry of sound.

one of the best three piece intros to an album of all time. I can’t listen to Help/Slip/Franklin’s individually without thinking somethings missing, The Great American Music Hall in San Francisco. The show they came out of retirement with this album.

After several mini-albums, the group exploded in popularity among the London underground, leading to a deal with 4AD, a label the group worshipped and took immense influence from (the band named themselves after a line a Siouxsie & The Banshees song). To kickstart the group’s notoriety stateside and in Japan, the label cobbled together all the mini-albums into one compilation.

In an interview with Melody Maker during their come-up, Lush‘s guitarist and vocalist Emma Anderson said, “I remember when I couldn’t play, I wasn’t in a band, didn’t know anyone else who could play, and now we’ve got a record out on 4AD. I sometimes find it impossible to come to terms with what’s happening.” This statement sums up the naivety and pure energy of Lush‘s first major release, “Gala”.

Lush’s greatest strength lies in the intermingling harmonies of lead singer Miki Berenyi and Anderson, which both complement and crash over one another like ocean waves. The Cocteau Twins influence is heavy here, with all the vocals becoming barely discernible in the mix, swallowed up by the colossal guitars and fat ’80s drum beats. The influence grew with their follow-up “Spooky”, produced by Cocteau’s Robin Guthrie, which divided fans. With more production power behind it, the band shines; however, Guthrie’s touch is heavy, getting scarily close to the Twins’ sound. For the original, untouched listen, start with “Gala”. 

Lush’s “Gala” was the band’s debut compilation album, comprising their earliest releases “Scar” (1989), “Mad Love” (1990), and “Sweetness and Light” (1990) in reverse chronological order, plus two additional tracks (a cover version of ABBA’s “Hey Hey Helen” and the extended Robin Guthrie mix of The Scar track “Scarlet”). It is considered one of the foundational works in the early shoegazing movement. The band’s line-up at the time was Miki Berenyi, Emma Anderson, Chris Acland, and Steve Rippon. Lush broke up in 1996, in part because of Acland’s suicide. They briefly reunited in 2015 and 2016 to tour and release the new EP, “Blind Spot“, before splitting again.

Originally released in 1990 as the band’s introduction to the US and Japanese markets, the compilation’s 35th anniversary is being celebrated with a 2025 reissue. Back in print for the first time since 1990, both the standard and deluxe editions are rounded out with 2025 Kevin Vanbergen remasters of the original tracklisting, deluxe edition artwork designed by Chris Bigg featuring original artwork by v23 (Vaughan Oliver and Chris Bigg), and a new biography written by Jenny Hval.

The “Gala” 35th Anniversary Edition follows the 2023 remasters of Lush’s three studio albums “Spooky”, “Split”, and “Lovelife”. Last year, Lush also partnered with the Criterion Channel on the release of A Far From Home Movie, a short film created by bassist Phil King and shared in memory of Chris Acland, which compiles candid Super8 footage taken by King during Lush’s tours from 1992-1996.

The reissue will be available as a deluxe box set, The box set will feature three coloured 12-inches and one 7-inch.as well as via regular vinyl, CD, and cassette reissues. All versions come out November 14th via 4AD Records.  4AD is also releasing some new limited edition Lush merchandise—including two T-shirts, pin badges, and posters—to go with the reissue.

LAEL NEALE – ” Some Bright Morning “

Posted: September 28, 2025 in MUSIC

Lael Neale The minimalist singer/songwriter released a new album, “Altogether Stranger”, in April via Sub Pop. This week she released a brand new single, “Some Bright Morning,” It’s the latest in a long line of great singles and Songs from Neale.

Neale co-directed the video with regular collaborator Guy Blakeslee. She had this to say about it in a press release: “My dad is a farmer, and as I watch him working, day in and day out, I realize being an artist is very similar. Both are tending to work that is never done, in service of a broader life-long vision. There’s always more to do, new approaches to take, and leaps to make in the midst of mundane everyday tasks. You have to be motivated by a belief in what you are doing without attachment to the results. There’s a quiet satisfaction in the daily steps.”

The song is described as an outtake from “Altogether Stranger”.

Lael Neale has summoned the likes of Cate Le Bon and Margo Guryan on her newest single, “Some Bright Morning,” a charming folk-pop track that chases a glimmer of optimism. A quick turnaround after her latest album, “Altogether Stranger”, which came out in May, Neale’s new song carries on many of the merits of her past work, particularly her effervescent production. As a sweeping snare and tambourine establish the pace of the song, a bright synthesizer floats to the surface, and a tinny guitar wails in a solo that pans from left to right. Neale questions in the verses whether the dawn she dreams of will ever come, and if it does, “Will I ever see the light?” But she’s steadfast in her resolution to “get it right some bright morning,” and her hope is galvanizing. She brushes off her woes with a series of “doo doo doo”s as the song rounds out, and if you listen carefully, you may just hear the twinkle of the sun rising.

HANNAH FRANCES – ” Life’s Work “

Posted: September 28, 2025 in MUSIC

The first four seconds of “Life’s Work” feel like you’ve stumbled into the wrong movie theatre, a horror score leaking through the walls, before the finger-picked guitar seamlessly transforms into a delicate, twangy backdrop to Hannah Frances’ melodic gymnastics. Everything tilts, and tilts again: polyrhythms skitter, brass flares, and that central mantra—“learning to trust in spite of it is life’s work”—tightens like wire around the song’s spine. The melody slips sideways, the arrangement keeps layering more claws and teeth, until the whole thing feels like grief dressed up in vaudeville clothes: brutal, theatrical, a little absurd, melancholic in spite of itself. 

You can hear Grizzly Bear’s Daniel Rossen’s collaboration in the architecture—careful, tensile layers rather than ornament—yet nothing blunts Frances’ voice, which cuts clear as glass through the din. There’s a mischief twining through the song, the melody unpredictable and cheeky, the words sitting light on her tongue, but no matter where the track turns, it can’t outrun the melancholy that seeps in—which is, of course, the point. Resilience isn’t stoicism; it’s motion, breath, re-entry. “Life’s Work” turns trust into labour, ritual, a spidery lattice, a grin stretching tight even as it trembles.

‘Life’s Work’ is a wonderful distillation of existential possibility. It is a riot of colour, trombone, acoustic and electric guitar, bass, cello, piano, and Hannah Frances’s remarkably expressive voice. When talking about the latest single to be taken from her forthcoming album, “Nested in Triangles” due out October the intuitive composer, vocalist, guitarist, and poet says:

“‘Life’s Work’ is a haywire and whimsical exploration of familial rupture and the impacts of growing up in a dysfunctional home. Featuring arrangements by Daniel Rossen of Grizzly Bear) and trombone by Andy Clausen, there’s a touch of theatrical gallows humour to this song as a musical juxtaposition to the interiority of pain that I am narrating. Learning to trust in spite of everything is our life’s work.”

‘Life’s Work’ is virtuosic. It is varied. It is vital. It is the sound of an artist both ahead and on top of their game. “Nested in Triangles” due out October 10th via Fire Talk