Wednesday 27 March 2013

Vex Red - Can't Smile


The final entry in Vex Red day is this 7". Can't Smile was definitely my favourite Vex Red song back in the day, and I'm pretty it was their most popular song. The verses were particularly bare so the choruses seemed even more impressive and then, towards the end, the song drifts into this outro about smoking weed (or rather about not smoking) despite the song being about not smiling. Maybe there is a link but I don't know what it is.

I remember not being in any rush to buy this single, but at the end of a long day record shopping in Southampton I found it in the Virgin Megastore shrink wrapped way too tightly and mostly bought it because I wanted to flatten out the sleeve. Strange, I know, but I didn't like seeing it all warped out of shape. Nowadays it's perfectly flat and largely ignored in my box of 7"s. It's a shame to be so indifferent about a band I used to love so much, but I guess these things happen. Maybe one day I'll play it again and get more from it than just nice memories of being at college.


Format: 7"
Tracks: 2
Cost: £1.50 new
Bought: Virgin Megastore, Southampton
When: 10/04/02
Colour: Black
Etching: none
mp3s: no




Vex Red - Itch


So continuing with Vex Red day, here is their first 7" Itch. I remember not liking Itch as much as Can't Smile but still thinking it was a pretty good song. The heavy chorus/electronic verse/angst-y lyrics is pretty typical of their style. If you have no idea who this band are this is a good example of their music, but I probably wouldn't bother rushing to YouTube to give them a listen.

The non-album b-side Fast Cars begins (ironically) very slowly but builds up into the usual heavy/electronic combination they were going for. Nothing special really, but when this came out I absolutely adored it so it gets some points for nostalgia. 

Format: 7"
Tracks: 2
Cost: £2.50 new
Bought: Virgin Megastore, Southampton
When: 24/10/01
Colour: Black
Etching: none
mp3s: no




Vex Red - Start With a Strong and Persistent Desire


When I was 16 or 17 years old, I was a huge fan of Vex Red. The details of how I got into them escape me now, but I'm pretty sure they were played on the Radio One Rock Show one night and I must have been pretty impressed because I remember thinking they were the greatest thing ever. I think part of it was a desire to be a fan "from the start", although they'd clearly been going for a while before I heard them. Still, mega-fandom ensued and when it was announced they were playing the NME Upstarts Tour that year I got tickets straight away (my ticket is number 5 I think). The other bands on the tour were The Pattern and Crackout both of whom I enjoyed at the time, although Crackout are the only one I still listen to today (a post on their debut album This is Really Neat is to come in the future). As it happens, I still have my red Vex Red hoody I bought on that tour and wear it when I go running (as well as a drum stick that the drummer threw into the crowd after their set).

Anyway, I remember rushing out to buy Start With a Strong and Persistent Desire the week it came out and thinking it was excellent. I'd picked up the 7" of Itch a few months earlier and played it to death and I'm pretty Can't Smile had been all over the radio (with it's strange and seemingly unrelated outro about smoking). Listening to it eleven years later, it hasn't aged well at all. When you look at that artwork and song titles (Bully Me and Clone Jesus being the worst offenders) it's not at all surprising. I don't remember having an opinion either way on the artwork as a teenager, but it's really quite fucking terrible now. There's no doubt about the market they were aiming for; the whole thing is dripping in teenage angst, which now strikes me as strange - the band weren't (I assume) teenagers themselves so why write songs that only a teenager could love? But, of course, I was a teenager at the time so I lapped it up.

I'm not a fan of turning my back on bands I used to love as I get older; I've always been probably too loyal to the music I once loved. Records only enter my record collection, and I'd never get rid of any simply because I no longer get the enjoyment I used to out of. Whilst this isn't an album I enjoy playing any more, it still deserves a fair bit of credit for how much I loved it back in the day. I found this LP in Selectadisc in London a year and a half later for £3 and figured it would be nice to have in the collection. I think even by that point I'd gone off it a bit, but £3 for an album I used to love was a bargain.

I'd love to have written a review of it ten years ago, just to see what I would have said about it.

Format: 12", picture sleeve
Tracks: 11
Cost: £3 new
Bought: Selectadisc, London
When: 19/09/03
Colour: Black
Etching: none
mp3s: no




Wednesday 20 March 2013

Two Gallants - The Bloom and the Blight


Two Gallants are a band I don't own enough records by. I found their third, self titled album in a second hand shop in Soho just after I'd moved to London having been recommended them by someone I knew in Cardiff (but my memory of who it was has escaped me). I liked it a lot (especially Despite What You've Been Told) and managed to catch them in Hoxton Bar and Grill a couple of years later. Despite enjoying them both live and on record, I never quite got round to buying their other albums, although that might be just because you rarely stumble across them in record shops. Sure, I could've tried harder to find them, but I just never got round to it.

Anyway, last autumn I saw they were playing London again and shortly afterwards found their new album in Banquet. I had no idea they had a new album coming out and I had a fully-stamped Banquet loyalty card in my wallet wanting to be spent, so picked it up along with the new Godspeed record. Ollie was on the till that day and said he'd bought it too, but hadn't liked it as much as the other albums. I think it's great, but maybe our difference of opinions comes from the fact it's notably heavier than their last records, something which always appeals to me. The opener Halcyon Days is a huge start to the album, and My Love Won't Wait and Winter's Youth are great too. Basically, if you like your folk-rock a little more ballsy and heavy, they're worth a listen (as a side note, I always thought that the singer looks like a not-too-distant relative of James Hetfield, so maybe they're the Metallica of folk!?) Also, Wikipedia reckons it was produced by John Congleton, which is something I'm always keen on (even though there's no mention of this anywhere in the sleeve).

A particularly nice touch here is the bonus 7" included with the record (it's nice to be treated to extras when buying vinyl, rather than seeing bonus songs tacked on the end of the cd release). The 7" features a cover of Abner Jay's I'm So Depressed on one side, and an etching by the drummer on the b-side. I've tried to photograph it below, but I'm no photographer and figuring out how to capture an etching is beyond me at the moment. Just so you know, even with the record in my hand I'm not sure what the picture is of; I'm tempted to describe it as the top-half of a man vomiting from his eyes, whose bottom half is a birds head. Strange, I know. Still, the cover is nice and surprisingly upbeat for a song with such a title.


Format: 12" and 7", picture sleeve, insert
Tracks: 11
Cost: £8 new
Bought: gig
When: 11/10/12
Colour: Black
Etching: Etching on b-side of 7"
mp3s: Download code





Tuesday 19 March 2013

At the Drive-In - In/Casino/Out


This record is my bargain of the year so far, and probably will be for the next nine months too. Banquet Records had a sale on in January featuring a whole bunch of albums for a fiver, and half of the money from the sale went to a local charity to support carers in the Kingston area, a noble cause indeed. Because Banquet is awesome, the sale wasn't the usual shit you see in the January sales and there were some decent albums in there, the most incredible of which was last year's reissue of In/Casino/Out on clear vinyl. Needless to say, I jumped at the chance to get this for a fiver; I'd nearly paid £17 for it a few months earlier but they'd run out of stock and waiting for some more to come in. I bought it using the "collect in shop" option and picked it up when I was in town a few days later. I almost felt bad; clearly this record cost them more than £5 given how much it was before the sale, and Banquet were then giving half of that to charity. It felt like I was taking advantage in a way - their desire for floor space and good deed was costing them loads whilst I was getting a classic album for not much more than a pint of beer (or a can of beer, if you're drinking in the wrong venues).

But guilt aside, this album is awesome. I first bought In/Casino/Out on cd in (the excellently-named and sadly-closed) Rounder Records in Brighton (along with Give Up by The Postal Service on double vinyl). I'd got Relationship of Command for Christmas and was keen to hear more At the Drive-In (much more on that here). I'd heard about the song Napoleon Solo so I figured In/Casino/Out was a good place to start. My first impressions were: it was a way crazier album than Relationship of Command; Napoleon Solo was one of the best ATD-I songs I'd heard; I didn't like it as much as Relationship (don't get me wrong, I like it, but I'm comparing to one of my all-time favourite albums). Eight years later, my feelings about it are much the same. There are some great songs here but, Napoleon Solo aside, none I like as much as the songs on Relationship. I'd still count this as my second favourite ADT-I album, but maybe that's only because Vaya is just an EP.

Somehow I never managed to get into this album as well as Relationship either. I often find that's the way with albums where there is one song that stands out so much more than the others; when I think of In/Casino/Out, I mostly think of Napoleon Solo but that's because it's such an incredible song - heartfelt and brutal and everything I wanted "emo/post-hardcore" to be. "Our alphabet is missing letters" is a fantastic lyric. That said, it does have other songs, and they have their moments. Chanbara is certainly a song worth getting excited over and I love the whispers in Shaking Hand Incision.


Format: 12", insert
Tracks: 11
Cost: £5 new
Bought: Banquet Records
When: 04/01/13
Colour: Clear
Etching: none
mp3s: no




Monday 18 March 2013

The Bouncing Souls - Live at Generation Records


Two things happen this week: I'm going to see The Bouncing Souls again, and the list of Record Store Day 2013 releases gets announced, so it only seemed fitting to write about The Bouncing Souls' RSD2011 record. To make all this even more inter-related, this is a recording of The Bouncing Souls acoustic set in Generation Records on Record Store Day 2009, the very shop where a year and one week before I'd heard about Record Store Day for the very first time (I'd been in New York on the way to Boulder and ended up spending RSD in Bart's CD Cellar and Albums on the Hill). I've been a fan of RSD since I first heard about it; a lot of people have varied opinions about it, but I love standing outside Banquet at 6 in the morning each April and buying loads of great music (even if some of the records are a bit over-priced!).

Anyway, RSD2011 I'd bought the Deftones and Piebald records I was after, but they hadn't got in the Explosions in the Sky LP I wanted so I had a little cash to spare. Banquet are pretty good at getting in some of the cool US-only releases (like the Piebald one) and I think this was one of those so I picked it up on a whim. Part of it was definitely because I liked Generation Records so much, and it seemed like a nice RSD release. Because the album is acoustic, it's quite different to a regular Bouncing Souls album but most of the songs work brilliantly (Ghosts on the Boardwalk particularly; Here We Go less so). I ended up seeing The Bouncing Souls play an acoustic set in Banquet later that year, which was very cool too (furthering the list of RSD/BS/Banquet connections). None of my previously-favourite Souls songs appear here, but Gasoline has become one and it's a fun record despite that. It certainly captures the event nicely.

For a while I was thinking more record shops should put out records of the in-stores they have - everyone wins because the band gets a low-cost mini-live-album to put out, the record shop gets loads of exposure and you can pretty much guarantee that everyone in the audience at least will want a copy (it's probably not a huge number, but I reckon a lot of Bouncing Souls fans had never heard of Generation Records before this came out). Banquet Records has countless in-stores and I was chatting to JT about the idea a few weeks back, but he explained that mostly the bands (or, more likely, the record labels) don't want to license out the recordings so freely, so it just can't happen. It seems a shame, because I've seen some incredible shows in that shop and would happily pay for a record of some of them. Sometimes they're just nice memories, but some shows are genuinely incredible and would make great records in their own right (the recent Chuck Ragan in-store comes to mind).

Anyway, very excited about The Bouncing Souls and Cheap Girls in Kingston on Saturday!

Format: 12", picture sleeve
Tracks: 11
Cost: £16 new
Bought: Banquet Records
When: 16/04/11
Colour: Black
Etching: none
mp3s: no




Sunday 17 March 2013

The Nation of Ulysses - 13-Point Program to Destroy America


I have no idea how I first came to hear about The Nation of Ulysses, but I think it may have just been a product of clicking links on Wikipedia; I was probably reading about a band, then ended up on the Dischord Records page and found them from there. In my mind, it was because of the book Our Band Could Be Your Life, but the dates don't work out - the band doesn't get mentioned until the Beat Happening chapter, which I read in Colorado, but I bought this in New York two weeks before that. But I also remember Ian Svenonius interviewing some bands on ATP TV the first time I went to the festival and his name sounding familiar. Maybe someone just recommended them to me. I'm annoyed I can't remember, but maybe it'll come back to me.

Anyway, I'm reasonably sure I hadn't actually heard them when I bought this LP. I quite enjoy buying records by bands I've not listened to, and record labels sticking to certain types of bands makes that an often safe bet. I'm pretty sure I knew Nation of Ulysses had a trumpet player, and a combination of my love of Black Eyes (who also enjoyed some brass instruments) and Dischord Records probably convinced me to chance £5.50 on them (what a bargain. Buying records in the US can be dangerously cheap). This is the 2008 repress on orange vinyl, which Discogs tells me was limited to 1000 copies.

If you've not listened to The Nation of Ulysses but like your punk a little different, I strongly recommend them. Musically they drift into jazz, but in a less aggressive way than Black Eyes and it works well. I later got the second album Plays Pretty for Baby (on cd), which I think I enjoy more, but I've also probably played it more often. This one still has it's highlights though, and Spectra Sonic SoundA Kid Who Tells on Another Kid is a Dead Kid and Love is a Bull Market are all excellent and well worth a spin.


Format: 12", picture sleeve
Tracks: 13
Cost: £5.42 new
Bought: Generation Records, New York
When: 11/04/08
Colour: Orange
Etching: none
mp3s: no




Saturday 16 March 2013

Rage Against the Machine - Evil Empire


I suppose this was Rage Against the Machine's "difficult second album"; I certainly remember it being considered so back in the day. It was the start of 2000 when I properly got into Rage and by that point the three main albums had been released, with the covers album Renegades to appear a year later. We'd heard the self-titled album and everything we read told us that Evil Empire hadn't been so good but The Battle of Los Angeles was brilliant. Playing those albums now, I'd (controversially) say they're all as good as each other. Sure, RATM and LA have more of the big songs, but Evil Empire still packs a punch. I can see how people's viewpoints were different in 1996 and 1999, but here in 2013 Evil Empire is quite an incredible follow-up (despite taking four years to come out).

Evil Empire was the first RATM album I bought. I'd taped Hugh's copy of the debut album shortly after he bought it, but it was a year before I found the cd of Evil Empire in the MVC sale for £7 (I had way less disposable cash back then). A few months later I bought the other two albums too. It's funny how other people's opinions of music can affect yours - I remember thinking less of this album simply because I'd heard that other people didn't like it as much. It's a pretty irrational thing to do, but it happens all the time. I try not to read reviews of albums I'm excited about for that very reason, but sometimes it's the easiest thing to do. The other week I thought to myself that I should ask around to see if the Atoms for Peace album is actually any good before remembering that it's 2013 and I can probably find most of the songs on the internet and form an opinion of my own. Of course I haven't got round to doing that yet, but I can't afford to buy the album at the moment anyway, so it doesn't matter either way. 

Anyway, I bought this LP on a huge record buying binge in Selectadisc in Nottingham on a trip to the city to see The Paper Chase for the first time (I was living in Lancaster and Nottingham was the nearest Paper Chase show to me; my sister lived in Derby so I dragged her along and disguised the whole thing (badly) as a visit to see her). I bought a lot of vinyl that day including this one for £7, yet again. Like I said in the post about the self-titled album, I don't play Rage very often these days because I played them so much back in the day. It's been great fun spinning this album today though. I wonder if there'll after be a time when Rage doesn't getting my moving in my seat and rapping along. People of the Sun and Bulls on Parade were always the big hits on Evil Empire (and Down Rodeo had some of Rage's smartest lyrics), but Revolver and Without a Face are equally huge songs too.

Format: 12", picture sleeve
Tracks: 11
Cost: £7 new
Bought: Selectadisc, Nottingham
When: 15/03/04
Colour: Black
Etching: none
mp3s: no




Friday 15 March 2013

Various Artists - Short Music For Short People


This is hands down the most ridiculous record I own. For those unfamiliar with it, Short Music for Short People is a Fat Wreck Chords compilation (a variation on the Fat Music for Fat People series) containing 101 songs by 101 bands each about 30-seconds long and crammed into 50 minutes. Pretty much every US punk band who had made a name for themselves in the late-90's (and plenty who hadn't, plus some non-US bands) appeared either with an album track, or a specially recorded song. They're all here, and I'll leave it to you to check the pictures below or the Wikipedia page to confirm that.

When I was 16 my friends Tom and Nick both had a copy of this on cd, and I remember thinking it was a pretty ridiculous but amusing idea at the time. On cd the format just about works - cds are limited to 99 tracks so the last three ran together as one track. Most importantly, if there's a song you like, you can easily check what number you're on and figure out who you're listening to. That's not an option on vinyl. The songs are so tightly crammed onto the two sides that there's no space for even one gap in the grooves, let alone 50 per side.

Both one of the best and worst things about this album was the huge number of bands it exposed us to. On one hand, we heard songs by bands like Black Flag and The Descendants but, on the other, they were only 30-seconds long so hardly the best example of their music. In fact, I think it's safe to say that none of the bands here really have the opportunity to show off their best side (except maybe Spazz, to whom 30-seconds is a long song) so I ended up ignoring a lot of these bands for a while for being "Short Music for Short People bands", rather than exploring properly. Twelve years later, I know a lot of these bands much better and it seems like shame that Like a Fish in Water had to be my introduction to The Bouncing Souls, for example.

Anyway, shortly before returning to Canberra for my second semester there, I found this LP in JB-Hifi in Sydney. I remembered how ridiculous it was, but also the good times we had listening to it at Tom's house and thought it would be a nice album to have on vinyl, so decided to pick it up (they also had a Supersuckers record on glow-in-the-dark vinyl that I still regret not buying). The excellent exchange rate meant it was only £6.90 and I had a nice chat with the sales guy about the album (he hadn't heard it, but wanted a copy himself). The cd booklet is included in a slightly larger 8"x8" size, which is a nice touch (and pretty much the only way to keep up with the songs). Each band gets a quarter of a page for whatever info they want to include.

I don't play this album a great deal, but it's format doesn't really lend itself to regular plays, especially not as an adult. There are highlights though, and my personal favourites are You Don't Know Shit by Youth Brigade, Fishfuck by Gwar (although mostly for comedy value) and Blatty (Human Egg) by Sick of it All.


Format: 12", 8"x8" booklet
Tracks: 101
Cost: £6.90 new
Bought: JB-Hifi, Sydney
When: 09/02/06
Colour: Black
Etching: none
mp3s: no






Wednesday 13 March 2013

Modest Mouse - Float On


Although this record was my first Modest Mouse purchase, it wasn't my introduction to the band. In my first year of university an American exchange student (who we only knew as "American Andy") burned a bunch of albums he thought I'd like onto an mp3 cd for me and one of them was The Moon and Antartica (which I did enjoy, particularly the song Dark Center of the Universe. Incidently, this was the same guy who introduced me to Hum). A short while later this 7" appeared just before the release of Good New for People Who Love Bad News and I picked it up in HMV in Winchester. I'm not sure I'd heard the a-side at this point, but I was deep in my The-Paper-Chase-are-the-best-band-ever phase and seeing John Congleton's name on the remix on the b-side probably convinced me.

Float On is of course one of the most upbeat songs ever written and is basically sunny-day good-times and everyone loves it for that. It's certainly graced my turntable a huge number of times in the eight years I've owned it. The b-side however, is as dark as I've come to expect from John Congleton. Maybe it's because I've played it more often, I think I prefer this version to the original; it somehow makes the song seem like more of an event. My problem with Modest Mouse is that, whilst they have lots of really great songs, they also have a huge number of completely average songs that I can really take or leave (both live and on record they have too many songs that I'm just not that bothered by). Bukowski is one of those album tracks that doesn't really stand out, but this version strips it back a bit and we're left with something worth getting excited about.


Format: 7"
Tracks: 2
Cost: £1.50 new
Bought: HMV Winchester
When: 12/07/04
Colour: Black
Etching: none
mp3s: no




Monday 11 March 2013

The Smashing Pumpkins - Adore


Rather shockingly, I think I may have never actually played this record until now. I bought it shortly before going to Australia and I'd owned the cd for years, so there's a good chance it's never graced my turntable until now. One of my reasons for writing this blog was so that I wouldn't neglect my vinyl, and it's safe to say that's working here.

Adore was the last of the proper Pumpkins albums that I bought on cd (I finally picked up Pisces Iscariot a short while afterwards) and the last that I bought on vinyl too (on a very successful record shopping trip to Brighton). I like it, but it gets a bad rep and it's hard not to think about that, or compare it to the other albums. It may not be the Pumpkins's finest work, but it's not a bad album by any stretch, it just stands out against all the other albums so much. Tear was always my favourite song, but the singles Ava Adore and Perfect were pretty good too. I miss the traditional Pumpkins sound from the songs though. Like most people in their twenties who loved the Pumpkins as a teenager, if I need my fix of Pumpkins (they're a hard band to go cold-turkey from) I usually opt for Siamese Dream, even though I was more of a Mellon Collie fan before. I suppose none of the things I really love about the Pumpkins are here. Playing it now, the lengthy For Martha stands out better than it used to. I'm a big fan of that song today.

One of the coolest things about the vinyl version of Adore is that the cover contains about twice as much of the picture as the cd does; whereas before it looked like a woman in a dress against a strange background (in black and white), you see that it's in fact a huge red flower and her dress forms some of the petals. Studying the two, you can see that they're actually different pictures from, presumably, the same shoot (note the different position of the arms). I have no idea why they decided on the smaller one for the cd because this one looks great.

The worst thing about the vinyl version of Adore, however, is that it's a monaural record and basically sounds shit. It's amazing how little I notice how good stereo sounds, but this record makes me realise it. Maybe it sounds better with a mono needle/turntable (another reason I haven't played it more is that I was worried my stereo needle would damage the vinyl). It seems like a strange choice, given that this is the Pumpkins at their most experimental and with a sound that would probably benefit from stereo. Also missing is the final track on the cd 17 (along with the poem that accompanied it) which I always thought was a nice way to finish the album, despite being just 17 seconds of piano. The fourth side is blank, but with the markings of some concentric circles on the disc, but not actually etched in; one-sided records are often completely free of any markings so I'm not sure why these are here. Despite what I hoped, they're not 17 in any hidden format.

So a nice record for any Pumpkins fan, but one that's more for looking at rather than playing.


Format: double 12", gatefold sleeve
Tracks: 15
Cost: £10 new
Bought: Borderline, Brighton
When: 11/01/06
Colour: Black
Etching: none
mp3s: no




Sunday 10 March 2013

Nine Inch Nails - Pretty Hate Machine


The other week Trent Reznor announced that he was bringing Nine Inch Nails back to life and I for one was very pleased. I've been a fan of NIN for nearly half my life now and I was pretty saddened when he called it quits a few years back. I'd had the good luck to see NIN nails a few times in the years in between and I loved seeing them play live. I went to Southside Festival in Germany in 2009 almost solely because NIN and Faith No More were playing - it was to be the last-ever NIN tour and was also the first of the FNM reunion shows and I wasn't going to miss either (as it happened they both played Leeds Festival that year too, but my friends and I were working on the bar and I was worried our shifts might clash with the bands we wanted to see. As it was, I missed the Pumpkins and NIN but caught FNM. Some solid 1990's headliners there). I danced like a madman to NIN at Southside because ultimately that's the thing I love most about the Nine Inch Nails - they're such good songs to dance to. I know it might sound like an odd statement, but Trent Reznor knows how to write a pop song, and that combined with guitars and industrial noise turns out to be a winning combination.

I bought a second hand copy of The Downward Spiral when I was 15 despite having never actually heard Nine Inch Nails. I'd read endless things about them (they were all over Kerrang! back then because The Fragile had not long been released). It was different to almost all the other music I was listening to because of the electrical edge to it. At that age a keyboard was seen as a sign of weakness in a band (although for a brief period a DJ in the ranks became very cool!). However, I loved the album and 13 years later I still do. I gradually picked up the other albums but Pretty Hate Machine stayed out of my collection for a short while and was the last NIN album I picked up of the ones out at that time. Kerrang! had called it "largely electronic" which I think put me off for a while; I thought perhaps I wouldn't enjoy it at that age, and maybe I was right. Certainly not finding a cheap copy probably put me off for a bit. Three years later I bought this copy in a long-closed but not-forgotten record shop in Southampton called FM Music (along with RATM's People of the Sun EP and Siamese Dream on double orange vinyl. I was clearly feeling wealthy that day - I'd been eyeing up all three of those records for ages).

By the time I heard Pretty Hate Machine I already knew other versions of half of the songs from the live album And All That Could Have Been and the absolutely incredible version of Something I Can Never Have on the accompanying Still cd (if you haven't heard it, I can't recommend it enough. That version consists of just Trent and a piano in a room with this beautiful echo). However, I knew the originals were going to be quite different, and I was glad I hadn't bought it much sooner because I'm not at all sure I would've got it. As it was, I enjoyed it, although still not as much as Broken or The Downward Spiral (my favourite NIN record varies regularly, but it's either one of those two or With Teeth). The singles and Terrible Lie are still brilliant songs and pretty much every time I hear them I think about throwing myself around to them at the front of the NIN shows I saw. Head Like a Hole is one of those truly great openers (I've never made a list of top Side One Track One songs like in High Fidelity, but Head Like a Hole is a contender).

Pretty Hate Machine went out of print and for a while finding a copy wasn't an entirely trivial task for a few years. It's since been reissued twice, but at the time I was pretty glad to find this copy. I don't have a huge amount of NIN vinyl but I certainly plan to flesh out my collection at some point. Decent copies of the older albums tend to be a bit pricey, but I'd be pretty happy if the other albums were sat on my shelf next to this one.

Format: 12", insert
Tracks: 10
Cost: £11 new
Bought: FM Music, Southampton
When: 03/05/03
Colour: Black
Etching: none
mp3s: no



Saturday 9 March 2013

Manic Street Preachers + The Fatima Mansions - Theme from M.A.S.H. (Suicide is Painless) / Everything I Do (I Do it For You)


Whilst it was the Motorcycle Emptiness single that I feel made me the record collector I am today, it was the search for this record that led me to find Motorcycle Emptiness, so it's a pretty significant record in that respect.

I read a few books on the Manics when I was becoming a huge fan and had read about this charity single featuring the Manics and another band, The Fatima Mansions, playing covers. Despite having never seen M.A.S.H., nor heard the theme song, I wanted to hear the Manics version. I think at that point the only song I'd heard the Manics cover was Damn Dog on Generation Terrorists, so I guess it was partly my desire to hear them take on other people's songs that made me want to hear it. On top of that, it was an early Manics song, and that time in their career was undeniably cool. 

Two years after buying the Motorcycle Emptiness 7" I found this 12" on an otherwise not-particularly-noteworthy record shopping trip to Bournemouth. I remember being ecstatic to see it on the wall, and in such good condition given its age. Unfortunately as I was getting off the bus home from the train station I dropped the bag it was in, slightly denting the top right corner; I was mad at myself for days because of that. I was pleased however that it was 12" rather than the 7" I'd originally been after because of the inclusion of Sleeping with the N.M.E., which is a fascinating piece of history - more on that shortly.

Suicide is Painless is an incredible song and the Manics take it on brilliantly. In fact it's probably one of my favourite examples of James Dean Bradfield's vocals. Naturally, it's noticeably different to the style of Generation Terrorists but they still make it their own; the final chorus after the brief solo pairs the thrashing guitars and piano fantastically. 

The Fatima Mansions (who are a band I know nothing about, nor have much desire to find out more) play a very strange 90's dub cover of Bryan Adams' Everything I Do (I Do it For You), which works if that's your kind of thing. It doesn't do an awful lot for me (the original version was the very first piece of music I ever bought at the age of 6 after having seen Robin Hood Prince of Thieves (which was also the first film I ever saw at the cinema). I was one of the many people who kept that song at number 1 in the UK charts for 16 weeks).

The second song on the b-side is called Sleeping with the N.M.E. and documents the conversations in the N.M.E. offices the morning after the famous "4 real" incident (in which Richey carved the words "4 real" into his arm after an interview with Steve Lamacq). After a quick summary, the debate turns to whether they can print the picture (of course, hearing this now twenty years after the event, we know that they did). The picture is pretty gruesome (particularly when you notice how wide the cut is at the top of the "4") and everyone (including a young Mary-Anne Hobbs) has varying opinions. It's not something I listen to often, but it's a fascinating glimpse into the havoc that one event caused.

So, as far as I'm concerned, the a-side of this single has always been (and still is) worth every penny of the £12 I spent on it alone, and the b-sides are what they are. I'm very glad to have this record in the collection.

Format: 12"
Tracks: 3
Cost: £12 second hand
Bought: Bournemouth
When: 30/05/02
Colour: Black
Etching: none
mp3s: no




Friday 8 March 2013

Therapy? - Babyteeth


Running with the theme (British bands I got into when I was at school), here is Therapy?'s first mini-album/EP. The second gig I ever went to was Therapy? in Southampton University in February of 2000 (the first, for those interested, was Feeder in the same venue four months earlier and the third was Pitchshifter, relating back to yesterday's post again). Hugh suggested going to see them having, I assume, read about them in Kerrang! magazine (which was pretty much the only way we discovered bands back then). I think just the two of us went, having borrowed two of their albums from the library so that we at least knew some songs. We had The Yo-Yo's and Clutch supporting and I remember Clutch being particularly good (and the drummer going through a snare on a solo). Somewhere I still have my Suicide Pact, Your First Therapy? t-shirt, although time hasn't been it's friend.

Over the years that followed I picked up a handful of Therapy? albums with varying levels of success as far as my enjoyment went. For £3 I picked up the cassette of Nurse in a second hand shop in Boscombe which I still play now (on the rare occasion I'm near a tape deck) and still enjoy (especially Teethgrinder). A few years later I found this album in one of the second hand shops in Soho (along with a Dub War EP and on the same trip as the Blood Brothers album I wrote about the other week).

There may only be seven songs here, but they're all classic Therapy? noise-rock. Like Pitchshifter, they were doing something different with their music and not just playing straight-up metal, but where Pitchshifter embraced it, Therapy? let it slip and, in my opinion at least, let that edginess go. The plus-side however is that if you pick up an early Therapy? album there's always going to be something exciting going on. Highlights here are Meat Abstract (it would be years before I'd see Blade Runner and recognise the sample at the start), Animal Bones and Loser Cop. I think I might go and dig out that Nurse cassette now too...

Format: 12"
Tracks: 7
Cost: £3 second hand
Bought: Soho
When: 09/04/03
Colour: Black
Etching: Side A: "Ooops wrong planet" Side B: "Scare the hippies"
mp3s: no 




Thursday 7 March 2013

Pitch Shifter - Desensitized


Pitchshifter were a huge band for me and my friends for quite a number of years (something I've written about in much more detail here) but digging out their back-catalogue took quite some effort. We got into them when Deviant came out so it was quite easy to find that album and "dot com" in the shops. The first mini-album Industrial had been re-issued on cd and was fairly easy to come by too. Of course after hearing Deviant and "dot com" we were all quite knocked back by Industrial. I remember having read on the internet that Pitchshifter started as an industrial band (with a space in their name) and that the sampling and drum'n'bass came much later, however at 16 my knowledge of industrial music only really consisted of a couple of Nine Inch Nails albums so I was quite shocked by what met my ears. Still, I enjoyed it despite it almost being a different band to the one we had come to love.

Over the next few years I set about trying to find the other early Pitch Shifter albums, which was a task eBay helped considerably with. There were a few years when I spent hundreds on eBay, sending cheques to people across the country for records I'd won (these were the pre-PayPal days, and they were sloooow). During that time I picked up all the Pitch Shifter albums I was after either on cd or vinyl. I was lucky in finding this copy of Desensitized in reasonable condition for a mere £7, complete with insert.

Musically, Desensitized and Infotainment feeling like the jigsaw pieces that connect Industrial and "dot com"; the samples are there and they're starting to experiment but this album still fits perfectly on Earache Records - the guitars are cutting and vocals are still mean as shit. It's a pretty bleak album too, but that's one of the things I love about it. Diable and Triad are two of the best early Pitch Shifter songs for me (and I think the only two I ever saw them play live), but the whole album is enjoyable.


Format: 12", insert
Tracks: 12
Cost: £7 second hand
Bought: eBay
When: 18/06/03
Colour: Black
Etching: Side A:"Immitate your friends" (spelt with two m's) Side B: "Death to Pitch Shifter"
mp3s: no