Saturday, August 9, 2008

Miles Davis - Kind of Blue: 50th Anniversary Collectors Edition Coming in September


MILES DAVIS - Kind of Blue: 50th Anniversary Collectors Edition 2-CD + DVD + LP + book + poster (Columbia/Legacy)

Originally released by Columbia Records on August 17, 1959, Kind of Blue heralded the arrival of a revolutionary new American music, a post-bebop modal jazz structured around simple scales and melodic improvisation. Trumpeter/band leader/composer Miles Davis assembled a sextet of legendary players -- Cannonball Adderley (alto sax), Paul Chambers (bass), Jimmy Cobb (drums), John Coltrane (tenor sax), Bill Evans (piano) (Wynton Kelly plays piano on “Freddie Freeloader") -- to create a sublime atmospheric masterpiece. Fifty years after its release, Kind of Blue continues to transport listeners to a realm all its own while inspiring musicians to create to new sounds -- from acoustic jazz to post-modern ambient -- in every genre imaginable.

Disc 1 of Kind of Blue: 50th Anniversary Collectors Edition will feature the original album in its entirety with the “Flamenco Sketches" alternate take, the rare “Freddie Freeloader" false start, and a selection of in-the-studio dialog from the Kind of Blue sessions. Disc 2 is a CD of rare musical material circa the Kind of Blue recordings including the very first session by the classic Miles Davis sextet (May 26, 1958 -- Davis's 32nd birthday -- with Adderley, Coltrane, Evans, Chambers and Cobb), more than a half hour's worth of studio material -- “On Green Dolphin Street," “Fran-Dance," “Stella By Starlight," “Love For Sale" -- previously available only on the two-time Grammy award winning Miles Davis & John Coltrane boxed set ("The Complete Columbia Recordings 1955-1961); and the first authorized release of two extended live performances: “So What" from the April 9, 1960 Den Haag Concert featuring Miles, Coltrane, Kelly, Chambers and Cobb; and “All Blues" from the April 8, 1960 Zurich Concert (featuring the same band). The final disc, Disc 3, is a DVD including an in-depth documentary illuminating the story behind Kind of Blue; and the historic April 2, 1959 television program “Robert Herridge Theater: The Sound of Miles Davis" starring Miles Davis and John Coltrane.

This deluxe Collector's Edition will also include a vinyl LP copy of Kind of Blue, a poster, and an LP-sized 60-page hardbound book.

Sub Pop Records’ 20th Anniversary

Happy Birthday, Sub Pop

Most of you are probably scratching your heads right about now and saying “Who?” “What?” “Huh?”

2008 is Sub Pop Records’ 20th anniversary, and if you’re one of those who believes good music isn’t sponsored by Ford Trucks or a by-product of the American Idol scrap heap, then you need to celebrate this one. They’re the guys who signed Mudhoney, Nirvana, and Soundgarden - and instead of becoming some shack-house relic to grunge, they’ve managed to profit from actually fostering bands the major labels wouldn’t event touch. Thus, enabling the rest of us to shoulder a feeling of superiority to have even heard of these groups years later. In other words, they’re always ahead of the curve.

Want proof? How about acts like The Shins, Sleater-Kinney, Afghan Whigs, L7, Band of Horses, Iron & Wine, The Postal Service…ah sweet Jesus, I could go on forever. Take a look at the following…and folks, this ain’t even their entire catalogue… Just a taste of the Sub Pop musicians:


10 Minute Warning, 5ive Style, A Frames, Afghan Whigs, The Album Leaf, All Night Radio, Band of Horses, The Baptist Generals, Beachwood Sparks, Steven Jesse Bernstein, Big Chief, The Black Halos, Blitzen Trapper, The Blue Rags, Broken Girl, The Brunettes, Sera Cahoone, The Catheters, Chappaquiddick Skyline, Billy Childish, Chixdiggit, Chris and Carla, Codeine, Combustible Edison, Comets on Fire, Constantines, Cosmic Psychos, David Cross, CSS, Damon and Naomi Davis, Dead Moon, Death Vessel, Dntel, Julie Doiron, Heather Duby, Dwarves, Earth, The Elected, Elevator Through, Elevator to Hell, Jeremy Enigk, Eric’s Trip, The Evil Tambourines, Fastbacks, Steve Fisk, Fleet Foxes, Flight of The Conchords, Fluid Fruit Bats, Gardener, Gluecifer, Go! Team, The Go, godheadSilo, Grand Archives, Green Magnet School, Green River, The Grifters, The Gutter Twins, Handsome Furs, The Helio Sequence, The Hellacopters, Holopaw, Hot Hot Heat, Mike Ireland, Iron and Wine, Jale, The Jesus and Mary Chain, Damien Jurado, Mark Lanegan, Les Thugs, Jason Loewenstein, Loney, Dear Looper, Love as Laughter, Love Battery, Nebula, Nirvana, No Age, Patton Oswalt, Oxford Collapse, Pernice Brothers, Pigeonhed, The Postal Service, Radio Birdman, The Rapture, Red House Painters, Red Red Meat, Rein Sanction, The Reverend Horton Heat, Rogue Wave, The Ruby Suns, Sebadoh, The Shins, Six Finger Satellite, Sleater-Kinney, Soundgarden, The Spinanes, Rosie Thomas, The Vaselines, The Walkabouts, Wipers, Wolf Parade, The Yo-Yo’s, Michael Yonkers, Zen Guerrilla, Zumpano

Source: http://mixtapetherapy.wordpress.com/

Most of Wolfmother Quits Band

If you have ever had the chance to see Wolfmother, then you will be saddened by this news. But, I have a feeling that Andrew Stockdale will be able to land on his feet, he is a true marvel.

Aug 08, 2008
Wolfmother is getting a major facelift.

The Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath worhsipping classic rockers endured a lineup meltdown, which saw bassist Chris Ross and drummer Myles Heskett throw in the towel, leaving singer/guitarist Andrew Stockdale to mind the shop alone. He plans to regroup with a new lineup and continue under the Wolfmother name.

Vinyl records are getting back in the spin

by Brian Anthony Hernandez


Vinyl records are like fruits and vegetables, insists Saul Moss. "When they're in season, you've got to have it, and when they're not, you get rid of them," said Moss, owner of Cleveland's Downtown Records & Tapes, which sells new records of current and oldies styles.

Seduced by compact discs and byte-sized digital formats, music fans found the 1980s and '90s the ripe time to abandon the classic audio format. Moss saw his store's vinyl inventory dwindle from 95 percent of all its merchandise when it opened in 1950 to 5 percent earlier this decade.

But recently, the season for vinyl records has returned, bringing with it reborn vinyl fanatics and a new generation of addicts, say Moss and other sellers throughout Northeast Ohio.

"We saw an increase in sales starting about five years ago," said Rob Pryor, general manager of Cleveland Heights' Record Revolution, which has been in business since 1968. The store sells used records.

"We definitely get more and more people coming in for vinyl," Pryor said.

The most recent sales report from the Recording Industry Association of America shows the U.S. music industry sold 36.6 percent more extended-play and long-play records in 2007 than it did in 2006. That upswing increased vinyl-record sales revenue by 46.2 percent, taking a toll on CD sales revenue, which decreased 20.5 percent during the same period.
Collectors seek vinyl for the album art. DJs get them to scratch. But many people turn to the format for its audio quality.

"The analog sound of vinyl is where it's at, because the digital sound is just a reproduced sound. Analog might have a couple of crackles and pops, but on a good system, it sounds like the band is right in the room for you," Pryor said.

Other signs point to the revival of the classic format that emerged in the 1930s, when RCA launched the first commercially available long-playing record.

When Radiohead's album "In Rainbows" came out in October, Music Saves in Cleveland sold more of it on vinyl than on CD.

Coffeehouses and lounges in cities such as Portland, Ore., are featuring vinyl-record listening sessions. Stores like Urban Outfitters are selling portable record players.

Last fall, Amazon.com started a vinyl-only section. Vinyl-record pressing plants are ramping up production, and some musicians, such as Hell's Information from Akron and other indie-rock bands, are selling albums primarily on vinyl.

Events such as Record Store Day in April and Vinyl Record Day this Tuesday celebrate the vinyl culture.

"One main reason for the vinyl resurgence among the younger people is [that] labels offer free digital downloads with the purchase of their records," said Kevin Neudecker, co-owner of Music Saves, which carries 10 times more new and used vinyl than it did when it opened in 2004.

"That crowd gets disappointed and mad now if they can't get the coupon for the free download."

Used vinyl records cost $1 to $12 at Music Saves, while new recordings there sell for $12 to $30, co-owner Melanie Hershberger said. Compared with prices for new CDs ($10-$24) and MP3s ($1 for a single on iTunes), new vinyl can be a little more expensive, but people are willing to shell out a few more dollars for the analog sound it produces, owners agreed.

Out West, an organization called the Vinyl Preservation Society of Idaho meets each month to promote the format's history and foster activity within the industry. At one meeting, members brought CDs, MP3s and records to see which sounded the best. They preferred the warmer audio from the turntables.

Cleveland's John Richmond, an avid jazz record collector for more than 50 years, agrees. "I could play you example after example of LPs that sound much better than the reissued CD versions of the same music," he said.

Richmond, 65, never lost faith in vinyl records. He's been a fan ever since his father first played him turntable tunes in 1948. The walls of his house in Cleveland are lined with album covers, and he's a member of the International Association of Jazz Record Collectors.

Last week, he stopped into Record Revolution and bought a few vinyl records, including ones from jazz artists Don Patterson and Jimmy Smith. He isn't quite sure where the vinyl-record industry is heading either.

"If more people give up vinyl, the more there will be for me to buy," he said jokingly. "On the other hand, when -- if -- I want to get rid of my collection, I want people out there who want to buy them."

Adam Gravatt, who is part of the newer generation of vinyl admirers and manager of the Record Exchange in Cleveland, which mainly sells used vinyl, has a different thought.

"I don't think vinyl records will ever go away," the 23-year-old said.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com

This Date In Music History- August 9

Birthdays:

Benjamin Orr, bassist with the Cars, was born in Cleveland in 1955. He also sang the lead vocal on one of their biggest hits, "Drive."

Golden Earring bassist and keyboardist Rinus Gerritsen was born in the Hague, Netherlands in 1946. The Dutch group's biggest hit was 1983's "Twilight Zone." (“Radar Love” peaked at #13 and was on the charts for 20 weeks while “Twilight Zone” peaked at #10 and charted for 27 weeks)

Happy birthday to Whitney Houston (born in 1963).

Barbara Mason ("Yes, I'm Ready") is 61.

History:

The Ramones split up in 1996.

In 1967, Jerry Lee Lewis' set at England's Sunberry Jazz and Blues Festival inspired such fervor in the audience that the organizers tell him to cut his set short. He does it again in 1968 when Jerry Lee kills ‘em at the England's National Jazz and Blues Festival. The audience is so revved up that the next act (The Herd) refused to go on.

In 1952, Kitty Wells became the first woman to top the country charts with "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels."

Bill Chase and three other members of the group Chase ("Get It On") died in a Jackson, Minnesota plane crash in 1974.

53 year old Jerry Garcia, leader of The Grateful Dead died on August 9, 1995 at a California rehabilitation centre. The official cause of death was a heart attack brought on by hardening of the arteries. He was reportedly buried in a red T-shirt and sweatpants.

Robert Zimmerman legally changed his name to Bob Dylan in 1962.

In 1958, Billboard Magazine changed the name of its weekly music chart from the Top 100 to the Hot 100, a name that will stick until 1996. Their first number one was "Poor Little Fool" by Ricky Nelson, his sixth hit record in the US.

In 1975, the Bee Gees had the first of several disco style hits in the US when "Jive Talkin" topped the Billboard Hot 100. The inspiration for the song came to Barry Gibb as his car passed over a Florida bridge on the way to a recording studio. His wife said "Hey, listen to that noise. It's the same every evening. It's our drive talking." The record made it to #5 in the UK.

The BBC's Rock & Roll television show Ready! Steady! Go! made its debut in 1963. The first episode featured The Searchers, Jet Harris, Pat Boone, Billy Fury and Brian Poole and The Tremeloes. The final show aired in December 1966 after 175 episodes.

Queen gave what would be their last ever live performance when they appeared at Knebworth Festival in 1986. It was their 658th and final concert performance.

In 2004, England`s Classic Rock magazine named AC/DC's Bon Scott the #1 frontman of all time. Scott, who died of a barbiturates and alcohol overdose in 1980, beat out Ozzy Osbourne, Freddie Mercury and Jim Morrison. Certainly up for debate, what about John Lennon?

The James Gang embarked on their first tour in 35 years in 2006. All three members of the group's definitive lineup are present: singer-guitarist Joe Walsh of Eagles fame, drummer Jimmy Fox and bassist Dale Peters. The first stop was in Morrison, CO.

Johnny Horton cut "North To Alaska" at his last recording session in 1960.

Muddy Waters performs for President Jimmy Carter at the White House in 1978.

In 1969, Jethro Tull scored their only UK No.1 album with their second release 'Stand Up'.

Paul McCartney recorded ‘Mother Natures Son’ at Abbey Road Studio’s London in 1968. No other Beatles were featured on the track, which was included on the ‘White Album.’

Promoter Don Kirshner held the first Rock Music Award Show in Santa Monica, California in 1975. Big winners included the Eagles, Bad Company, and Stevie Wonder.

Friday, August 8, 2008

Elvis Presley, Inside Love Me Tender -NEW Book Release



Elvis Unlimited Productions

2008-08-08 - Elvis Unlimited Productions has just released Inside Love Me Tender. A complete box set with a full color book, a DVD, vinyl record and many extras. Author Megan Murphy documents Elvis Presley's first film, Love Me Tender in this limited edition box set.

Elvis Unlimited's latest box set from the "Inside" series has now been released. This is their fifth release in the "Inside" Series.

"Inside Love Me Tender" is a deluxe box set that contains a high quality book, dvd, postcard, vinyl single and a certificate from the limited edition printing of 2000 copies.

The book is a 152 page full color book featuring many unknown stories about Elvis' first movie, many rare and unpublished pictures of Elvis during the filming, at the photo sessions, in the recording studio, and at various meetings that were held during the filming.

The "Inside Love Me Tender" book also contains a lot of beautiful memorabilia from all over the world. The very informative book has been written by Megan Murphy. And the foreword is written by Ger Rijff.

The DVD contains some super rare footage from the movie set and of course the original movie trailer. The special 45 RPM vinyl single is a replica of the original, The Truth About Me single which was recorded on the Love Me Tender set.

Other "Inside" releases from Elvis Unlimited and Megan Murphy include Inside G I Blues, Inside Roustabout, Elvis Is Back!, and Inside Graceland. For more information on these releases, please visit their web site at www.elvisunlimited.com


Author:
Megan Murphy
Web: www.elvisunlimited.com
Phone: 458-642-9696

Guns N' Roses reissue

Universal Music will re-release Guns N' Roses' classic debut album "Appetite For Destruction" on vinyl. The LP is due on Tuesday, September 9, 2008 and the cover features the controversial original artwork by Robert Williams.

Already a legend in its own meagre lifetime, this startling debut shrouded itself in controversy, from its original Robert Williams artwork to Axl Rose's unblinking accounts of L.A.'s underbelly. This mawkish storytelling, combined with a brattish collective swagger and a surprisingly mature approach to their songs, guaranteed Guns N' Roses a speedy notoriety that was to serve their legend brilliantly. From the laconic "Paradise City" to the achingly beautiful "Sweet Child O' Mine", or the furious "Welcome To The Jungle", the record brims with a brutal integrity. An album they could never surpass even if they had stayed together.

120-gram vinyl LP pressing of their genre-defining debut full-length album, originally released in 1987. The LP cover features the controversial original artwork.

Top 5 Vinyl Record Sales at eBay

Week Ending 07/26

1) 45 rpm - John English III & Heathers Sabra - $4,999.00
2) 12" - U2 "Three" - $3,500.00
3) LP - Jutta Hipp Zoot Sims Blue Note 1350 - $2,727.00
4) 45 rpm - Nivana "Love Buzz" = $2,551.00
5) 45 rpm- Sex Pistols "God Save The Queen" South Africa - $2,247.22


Week Ending 08/02

1) LP - Tool Aenima 2LP Promo Test Pressing - $7,500.00
2) LP - Chet Atkins & Marcel Dadi "And Then Came Chet" - $4,050.00
3) 45 rpm - The Bacardis "This Time" - $3,627.77
4) LP - Hank Mobley self titled Blue Note - $3,000.00
5) 78 rpm- Winnie-The-Pooh RCA Victor Record Set - $2,706.99

SOURCE: http://ccdiscoveries.blogspot.com/

Elvis demoted in new Billboard historic chart

By Dean Goodman

Thu Aug 7, 4:00 PM ET


LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Poor Elvis. Random sightings of the King of Rock 'n' Roll have tapered off in recent years, and now he has mysteriously disappeared from the upper echelons of a new list that ranks the artists with the most No. 1 hits on the U.S. pop singles chart.

Until April, Elvis Presley and Mariah Carey tied at No. 2 on Billboard's list of the top acts of the rock era with 17 No. 1 tunes each, behind the Beatles with 20.

But then Carey took sole possession of the silver medal when her single "Touch My Body" hit the top spot. That should still make Presley No. 3, but not according to Billboard which has demoted him to No. 14 with seven No. 1 hits, a ranking he now shares with Phil Collins.

The music publication, which has a news distribution arrangement with Reuters, is rolling out a series of charts to mark the 50th anniversary of its Hot 100 singles chart. The problem for Presley fans is that 10 of his chart-toppers predated the August 4, 1958, birth of the Hot 100.

From November 12, 1955, it was known as the Top 100, the first all-encompassing chart determined by radio play, retail sales and juke box usage.

In those 141 weeks before Billboard debuted the Hot 100 name to differentiate it from copycats, Presley ruled the chart for 57 weeks, according to Billboard. He never regained his commercial or creative momentum after he was inducted into the U.S. Army in March, 1958, according to some fans.

Billboard's director of charts, Geoff Mayfield, defended the chart as still relevant despite the fact it ignores the heyday of the first real rock 'n' roll star.

"We are not pretending that the observation of the chart's 50th anniversary is anything more than a look at those 50 specific years," he wrote in an email.

"We take great care to couch comparisons of younger artists' Hot 100 feats to those of Elvis, by informing readers that his chart feats predated the Hot 100's launch."

Upcoming specialty Billboard rankings will include the biggest one-hit wonders ever and the No. 1 songs of every year since 1958. The series culminates on September 10 with what it bills as the first ranking of the Hot 100 songs of all time.

Just don't expect to see "Heartbreak Hotel" or "Hound Dog" on the list.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Top 5 Ebay Vinyl Record Sales

Week Ending 07/12

1) 45 rpm - The Savoys "Work It Out" / "I'd Rather Love You" Orlyn - $5,126.00
2) LP - Charlie Parker "The Bird Blows The Blues" Dial LP-1 - $3,350.00
3) LP - Tyburn Tall self titled Lutz Kern - $3,350.00
4) LP - Hank Mobley self titled Blue Note - $3,340.00
5) LP - Hank Mobley self titled Blue Note - $3,049.00


Week Ending 07/19

1) 45 rpm - Jackie Beavers "I Need My Baby" Revilot - $3,053.99
2) 45 rpm - Ty Karim "You Don't Know" - $2,716.00
3) 45 rpm- Nirvana "Love Buzz" 7in - $2,225.00
4) 45 rpm- Second Ressurection - "You Done Let Daylight Catch You" - $2,225.00
5) 10" - Zoot Sims Henri Renaud self titled Ducrett-Thompson - $2,204.00

SOURCE: http://ccdiscoveries.blogspot.com/

August Vinyl Record Releases:

Here's a list of upcoming vinyl LP releases in the U.S. Please note release dates and item details are subject to change without notice. What is listed is the most up-to-date details, as of the date of this post, based on information provided by the labels listed below, or their exclusive distributor.

SOURCE: http://dj-spyder.blogspot.com/

8/12/08 RELEASE DATE

Beck - Odelay (10th Anniversary) [4 LP] (VERY LIMITED - 180 Gram Vinyl in quad-gatefold numbered jacket with 12-page booklet) ( Original Recordings Group - 10021 / 892001002103 ) $99.98

Janelle Monáe - Metropolis: The Chase Suite (Special Edition) [LP] (Includes CD and first 500 are Autographed) ( Bad Boy - 511234-1 / 075678982422 ) $13.98

Johnny Winter - Live Bootleg Series Volume 1 [2 LP] (180 Gram Vinyl) ( Friday Music - FRM9002 / 829421900221 ) $24.98

Lil Wayne - Tha Carter III Volume II [2 LP] (blue cover) ( Universal Records / Cash Money - B001167201 / 602517798045 ) $15.98

Nine Inch Nails - The Slip [LP] (180 Gram Vinyl in Gatefold and a 24 page booklet) ( The Null Corporation - HALO27V / 766929934719 ) $24.98

Soundtrack - Dark Knight (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) [2 LP] (180 Gram Vinyl in Gatefold Jacket) ( Warner Bros - 511101 / 093624985976 ) $34.98

Soundtrack - The Elephant Man: Music From The Motion Picture [2 LP] (180 Gram Vinyl) (composed by John Morris) ( Milan Records - M36388 / 731383638800 ) $24.98


8/19/08 RELEASE DATE


31Knots - Worried Well ( Polyvinyl Records - PVL 001551 / 644110015518 ) $13.98

Afrika Bambaataa - Planet Rock: The Album (180 Gram Vinyl) ( 4 Men With Beards - 901 / 646315190113 ) $18.98

Amy Macdonald - This Is The Life [LP] ( Decca - B001165701 / 602517766242 ) $17.98

Ancestors - Neptune With Fire ( North Atlantic Sound - NAS 721011 / 615187210113 ) $15.98

Anne Briggs - Anne Briggs (180 Gram Vinyl) ( 4 Men With Beards - FMN164 / 646315116410 ) $18.98

Anne Briggs - The Time Has Come (180 Gram Vinyl) ( 4 Men With Beards - FMN165 / 646315116519 ) $18.98

Bauhaus - Burning From The Inside (180 Gram Vinyl) ( 4 Men With Beards - FMN512 / 646315151213 ) $18.98

Bauhaus - The Sky's Gone Out (180 Gram Vinyl) ( 4 Men With Beards - FMN511 / 646315151114 ) $18.98

Blue Mountain - Midnight in Mississippi & Omnibus [2 LP] ( Broadmoor Records - 22279441 / 718122279449 ) $18.98

Brian Wilson - That Lucky Old Sun [LP] (180 Gram Vinyl in Gatefold Jacket) [VERY LIMITED] ( Capitol Records - CAT34142 / 5099923414211 ) $22.98

Cluster - Sowiesoso (180 Gram Vinyl) ( 4 Men With Beards - 162 / 646315116212 ) $18.98

Dandy Warhols - Earth to the Dandy Warhols [2 LP] ( Beat The World Records - 805551060110 / 805551060110 ) $19.98

Davie Allen & The Arrows - Cycle Breed [LP] [High Definition Vinyl] ( Sundazed - 5204 / 090771520418 ) $19.98

De La Soul - De La Soul Is Dead (180 Gram Vinyl) ( 4 Men With Beards - 902 / 646315190212 ) $18.98

Donavon Frankenreiter - Pass It Around [LP] ( Lost Highway - B001158901 / 602517780545 ) $19.98

Eno / Moebius / Roedelius - After The Heat (180 Gram Vinyl) ( 4 Men With Beards - 163 / 646315116311 ) $18.98

Funkadelic - Funkadelic (180 Gram Vinyl) ( 4 Men With Beards - 160 / 646315116014 ) $18.98

Funkadelic - Maggot Brain (180 Gram Vinyl) ( 4 Men With Beards - 161 / 646315116113 ) $18.98

Gary Usher - Barefoot Adventure: The 4 Star Sessions [High-Definition Vinyl] [2 LP] ( Sundazed - 5244 / 090771116727 ) $30.98

Grascals - Keep On Walkin [LP] ( Rounder - 1166106081 / 011661060814 ) $19.98

Jerry Cole & His Spacemen - Surf Age [High Definition Vinyl] [LP] ( Sundazed - 5261 / 090771526113 ) $19.98

Kenny Larkin - Keys Strings and Tamourines [2 LP] ( Planet E - 65303-1 / PLE65303-1 ) $18.98

Lil Wayne - The Leak EP [LP] ( Universal Records / Cash Money - B001167301 / 602517798076 ) $12.98

Link Wray - White Lightning : Lost Cadence Sessions 58 [LP] [High Definition Vinyl] ( Sundazed - 5254 / 090771525413 ) $19.98

Mike Gordon (of Phish) - Green Sparrow [LP] ( Rounder - 1166190831 / 011661908314 ) $19.98

Mr. Bungle - Disco Volante (180 Gram Vinyl) ( Plain - 137 / 646315513714 ) $18.98

Plushgun - Plushgun EP (includes free download) ( Tommy Boy - TB-1688-1 / 661868168815 ) $9.98

Shwayze - Shwayze [LP] ( Geffen - B001156401 / 602517775183 ) $12.98

Stick To Your Guns - Comes From The Heart [Lmtd Ed Yellow Vinyl] ( Century Media - D11z-184851 / 727701848518 ) $16.98

Suicide Silence - The Cleansing [Lmtd Ed. Clear vinyl] ( Century Media - D11Z-183881 / 27701838816 ) $16.98

Winds of Plague - Decimate The Weak [Lmtd Ed. Yellow Vinyl] - Decimate The Weak [Lmtd Ed. White Vinyl] ( Century Media - D11z-184071 / 727701840710 ) $16.98

8/26/08 RELEASE DATE

Boz Scaggs - Boz Scaggs (1969 Self-Titled) [LP] (180 Gram Vinyl and 1/2-Speed Mastered) ( Friday Music - FRM9003 / 829421900320 ) $22.98

Dream Theater - Systematic Chaos [2 LP] (180 Gram Vinyl in Gatefold Jacket) ( Roadrunner Records - RRR 179921 / 016861799212 ) $29.98

Game - LAX [2 LP] ( Geffen - B001146501 / 602517756007 ) $15.98

Led Zeppelin - Mothership [4 LP] (180 Gram Vinyl Box Set) ( Rhino Records - 344700 / 081227995133 ) $59.98

Machine Head - The Blackening [2 LP] (in Gatefold Jacket) ( Road Runner Records - 180161 / 16861801618 ) $24.98

Motorhead - Motorizer [2 LP] ( Steamhammer - STH91631 / 693723916316 ) $24.98

Prisonshake - Dirty Moons [2LP] ( Scat - SCAT66LP / 753417006614 ) $31.98

Slipknot - Vol 3. The Subliminal Verses [2 LP] (in Gatefold Jacket) ( Roadrunner Records - RRR 183881 / 016861838812 ) $24.98

Verve - Forth {LP] (Includes CD AND DVD in Gatefold Jacket) ( MRI - VER01LP / 020286125211 ) $39.98

-----------------------------------------------

Elvis' peacock jumpsuit sells for $300K

NEW YORK - Elvis Presley's favorite performance costume, the peacock jumpsuit, has sold for $300,000, making it the most expensive piece of Elvis memorabilia sold at auction. The online sale by auctioneer Gotta Have It! ended at 3 a.m. Thursday. The pre-sale estimate was $275,000 to $325,000.
The white outfit with a plunging V-neck and high collar features a blue-and-gold peacock design hand-embroidered on the front and back and along the pant legs.

The previous record for an Elvis collectible is $295,000 for one of his classic cars. The most ever paid previously for one of his stage costumes, a bejeweled cape, was $105,250. Both were sold at a 1999 auction at Graceland in Memphis, Tennessee, run by Guernsey's.

This Date In Music History- August 7

Birthdays:

B.J. Thomas ("Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head") turns 66.

Stan Freberg (parody versions of "Heartbreak Hotel", "Banana Boat Song" and others) is 82.

Herb Reed of the Platters ("Smoke Gets In Your Eyes") is 77.

Iron Maiden singer Bruce Dickinson was born in Worksop, England in 1958.
Born on this day in 1952, Andy Fraser, bass player with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers and he joined Free at age 16. Ted Nugent, Robert Palmer and Joe Cocker have all covered songs written by Fraser.

History:

In 1957, The Quarry Men, minus Paul McCartney who was away at camp, made their first appearance at Liverpool's Cavern Club. The club's owner, Alan Sytner tells them not to play any Rock music.

"Little" Esther Phillips ("Release Me") died of liver and kidney failure in 1984.

Today in 1954, the song "Sh-Boom" by the Crew-Cuts topped the charts and stayed there for 9 weeks.

Paul Anka made his TV debut on ABC's "American Bandstand" in 1957.

The movie "Beach Party", with Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello, opened in 1963. Dick Dale & the Del Tones provided the music.

In 1991, Paul Simon gave a free concert in Central Park, New York, in front of three quarters of a million people. The performance was released later in the year as "Paul Simon's Concert in the Park".

Tonight on TV in 1955, Ed Sullivan played host to Bill Haley & the Comets, bringing rock 'n' roll to the masses with their "Rock Around the Clock."

In 1964, the nation's weeklies reviewed the Beatles' A Hard Day's Night. "Avoid this film at all costs!" declared Time. " Some Marx Brothers surrealism!" noted Life. "Amusing and engaging!" decided The Los Angeles Herald Examiner.

In 1970, Fleetwood Mac welcomed new member Christine McVie, the wife of bass player John McVie and a former vocalist with Chicken Shack.

After having half-a-dozen Top 20 hits in the US, The Bee Gees finally scored their first number one hit in 1971 with "How Can You Mend A Broken Heart.” Barry and Robin Gibb had written the song for crooner Andy Williams, but he turned it down.

In 1987, a Los Angeles judge threw out a lawsuit against Ozzy Osbourne. The lawsuit had been filed by the parents of a teenager who had committed suicide while listening to Ozzy's song, "Suicide Solution."

In 2000, the family of Jimi Hendrix won a case at an international panel to evict the holder of the Internet address www.jimihendrix.com.

Although it failed to chart at all in the UK, Herman's Hermits reached number one in the US in 1965, with a silly little song called "I'm Henry VIII, I Am.” The tune was actually written in 1911 and had been popularized by Cockney comedian Harry Champion.

James Blunt was at No.1 on the UK singles chart in 2005 with ‘You're Beautiful’, Mariah Carey was at No.1 on the US charts with ‘We Belong Together’ and Axel F had ‘Crazy Frog’ at No.1 on the Australian singles charts.

With Flo and Eddie on board, Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention recorded "Just Another Band From L.A." at U.C.L.A. in 1971.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Beatles Recording Worth Its Weight in Pounds

By Natalie Finn

Los Angeles (E! Online) - More than 30 years later, the Beatles' records are still golden.

A recently unearthed reel-to-reel tape of what is believed to be a Fab Four recording session from 1964 was auctioned online Tuesday for 9,300 pounds, or $23,44(including tax and handling fees), according to Cameo Auctioneers in the Berkshire village of Midgham.

On the 30-minute tape, one can hear the banter taking place between Paul McCartney and John Lennon as the group tries to get through a take of "I'll Follow the Sun," which is on the album Beatles for Sale (Beatles '65 in the U.S.), without collapsing into giggles.

"It's just going to get funnier and funnier as the evening goes on," Lennon says.

"I'll Follow the Sun," which continues on to side two after beginning toward the end of side one, is preceded by renditions of "Don't Put Me Down Like This," "I Feel Fine," "She's a Woman," "Everybody's Trying to Be My Baby" and "Honey Don't."

The side-two tracks include "I'm a Loser," Chuck Berry's "Too Much Monkey Business," the Hollies' "Nitty Gritty" and "Something's Got a Hold on Me" and the gospel tune "I Shall Not Be Moved."

The auction house told BBC News the buyer wished to remain anonymous and would only confirm that a man, whose dad once worked in the music biz, discovered the tape in his father's attic in northern England.

Rolling Stone Reader's List: Best Final Album

This week, Rolling Stone asked their readers to pick the best final albums in an artists career. This, of course, severely narrowed the field as the only eligible recordings would be from groups that have broken up or solo artists that had passed on and it even left the Rolling Stone editors needing to disqualify a few named albums. Both the Velvet Underground's Loaded and the Doors' L.A. Woman were removed as they technically were not final albums.

The winner, though, by a large margin, was the Beatles' Abbey Road. This alone could confuse some as the last Beatles studio album was Let It Be, but Abbey Road was the last album the group recorded together. Let it Be was just released last as the group had been unhappy with the sessions and didn't allow it to hit the streets until some retooling by Phil Spector.

The list:

1) Abbey Road - Beatles
2) Electric Ladyland - Jimi Hendrix Experience
3) In Utero - Nirvana
4) Sublime - Sublime
5) Pink Moon - Nick Drake
6) Closer - Joy Division
7) Down on the Upside - Soundgarden
8) Synchronicity - Police
9) Anodyne - Uncle Tupelo
10) Reinventing the Steel - Pantera
11) The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory - Tupac Shakur
12) Uprising - Bob Marley and the Wailers
13) Strangeways Here We Come - Smiths
14) Grace - Jeff Buckley
15) Bridge Over Troubled Water - Simon & Garfunkel