Grateful Dead New Vinyl Thursday

It’s Grateful Dead New Vinyl Thursday at The Vinyl Underground at 7th Heaven. Check out this week’s list of new vinyl arrivals:

AC/DC- 74 Jailbreak

Acid Dad- Take It From The Dead

Aesop Rock- Appleseed

Andra Day- The United States Vs. Billie Holiday (Music From the Motion Picture)

Anita Baker- Rapture

Barbra Streisand- Release Me 2

Barenaked Ladies- Detour De Force

Bikini Kill- Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah

Black Keys- Rubber Factory

Black Sabbath- Black Sabbath

Bob Mould- Distortion: Live

Boygenius- Boygenius

Charles Mingus- Mingus At Carnegie Hall (Deluxe Edition)

Weekly Review:

Mingus at Carnegie Hall is not for amateurs. The shortest of the six songs in this set is more than 10 minutes long. Most performances hover around the 20-minute mark. But once listeners get a toe in the door of jazz bass player and bandleader Charles Mingus’ eccentric and confounding world, the expanded Carnegie collection offers many riches.

This deluxe reissue of the complete concert is a long-awaited upgrade over the original single-LP release, which just contained the two encores. Jon Faddis’ trumpet soars on the opening “Peggy’s Blue Skylight.” Pianist Don Pullen attacks his instrument like a drum during a solo on the 23-minute take of “Celia.”

While the performances are lengthy and highly improvised, they aren’t ragged by any means. Mingus’ ensemble is well-rehearsed and the bandleader keeps them tight from his perch behind the double bass. A 21-minute romp through “Fables of Faubus,” a blistering manifesto against Arkansas governor who defied desegregation orders 20 years earlier, in the 1950s, doesn’t lack any venom despite the absence of the vocals on the original version.

The final two numbers are previously released, but shine even brighter in this context. Mingus welcomes three alumni to the stage to jam on a pair of songs most closely associated with Duke Ellington. The three sax players – including Rashaan Roland Kirk – trade solos and musical punches and jokes while spurring each other farther and farther out.  

Mingus at Carnegie Hall is not background music, but it paints a fabulous portrait of the visionary bandleader in the twilight of his career, yet still at the peak of his powers.- Joel Francis

Christian McBride- Bringin’ It

Clairo- Sling

Weekly Review:

Claire Cotrill puts a twist on the sound of singer-songwriter with her unique, intimate voice. At the young age of just 13, she started releasing music on YouTube regularly. “Pretty Girl” took off with over 250 million streams on spotify, skyrocketing her career. Her tones and whimsical instrumental backings carve a path for futuristic sounds to protrude and inspire many to come. I’d like to say she falls under the indie pop genre, but she actually expands her reach by playing R&B, bedroom pop, and indie. Her new album, “Sling,” would fall more into the category of singer-songwriter and R&B. 

Track #3, “Partridge,” reminds me a lot of the artist Cavetown with her use of her higher octaves and beautiful double harmonies. This being her sophomore album, I think she’s really starting to find her sound. She started in bedroom pop, making her way to a cleaner, more rhythmic sound. Her voice has matured a lot throughout the years along with the ideas trickling in with the instruments. In this album, it sounds as if she has a much better understanding of how to experiment while not only keeping a clear sound, but her sound. In the song, “Zinnias,” her lyrics lay more intricate with a simple backing guitar, only to clear the way- just at the right time- for a melodic, whimsical guitar riff. This song, along with many others on this album, tell a story which I really like. She fills the space without overpowering it. 

Overall I really enjoy listening to this album. It ranges from mellow, to experimental, to soft and playful, giving it a beautiful variation. I’d recommend this album to anyone who likes: Temporex, The Marias, Her’s, and Billie Eilish. -Nova Stebbin

Daft Punk- Random Access Memories

Dan Melchior- Desperate Little Town

Def Leppard- X

Deftones- Diamond Eyes

Depeche Mode- Songs of Faith & Devotion

Depeche Mode- Ultra

Dexter Gordon Quartet- Something Different

Dinosaur Jr- Give A Glimpse Of What Yer Not

Dinosaur Jr.- Dinosaur Jr.

Drive-By Truckers- Plan 9 Records July 13, 2006

Weekly Review:

As Jason Isbell’s stature as a singer/songwriter continues to increase, his time in the Drive-By Truckers also grows in mythology. Recorded at Plan 9 Records in Richmond, Va., the former capital of the Confederacy, the greatest Southern rock band not named Lynyrd Skynyrd or the Allman Bros. Band tears through 25 songs in a little more than two hours.

Frontman Patterson Hood has gone on record stating this show is the best recording of the Isbell era. In the liner notes, he recalls “Our pay was a case of PBR and two bottles of whiskey. There wasn’t a drop left by the end of the encore.”

This abandon comes through in the performance. Isbell’s was close to (amicably) leaving the group to become a solo artist and his marriage to Truckers’ bass player Shonna Tucker was close to divorce. Pedal steel player John Neff left the band (for the third time) not long after this show. All of this contributes to a sound Hood calls “loose and raggedy at times, yet somehow also tighter than shit.”

The set contains loads of Truckers’ staples – “Marry Me,” “18 Wheels of Love,” “Decoration Day” – but many moments that remind you how powerful the band as both songwriters and performers. One of my favorite sequences starts with “Shut Up and Get on the Plane” and peaks with “Zip City.” Hood and Mike Cooley trade songs (and lead vocals) with a glorious cover of the Rolling Stones “Moonlight Mile” in the center of the five-song stretch. The soaring guitars and intermingling vocals never fail to produce goosebumps. This is rock and roll as it is meant to be.- Joel Francis

Drive-By Truckers- The Dirty South

Durand Jones and The Indications – Private Space
If fellow neo-soul pioneer Leon Bridges’ latest album took a giant leap towards the modern pop world, then the new album by Durand Jones & The Indications takes more of a half Hustle crossed with a touch of The Bump and maybe even a little bit of the Bus Stop.
Private Space,  the latest album by DJ&I pulls off an 80’s disco vibe with more sparkle than a Studio 54 guest list.
Out of the gate track one, Love Will Work It Out, proposes a hopeful, mid tempo healing groove:
“Folks overtaken by disease
All the people lost made me fall right onto my knee
All I could do is cry and shout
I knew I had to trust the faith that love would work it out”
Things heat up on track two with the disco jam, Wichoo, complete with a call and response section and shimmering keyboard part. You can just feel the mirror ball turning on this one.
For the title track Jones passes the singing baton to the capable hands of  drummer Aaron Frazer, who’s excellent debut solo album was released earlier this year. Frazer’s soulful falsetto is the perfect vehicle for this dreamy “fall in love across a crowded dance floor” number.
Jones picks it up with with the very Marvin Gaye, “What’s Going On” period tune: More Than Ever, complete with dramatic strings and super melodic bass parts compliments of MVP Indication : Michael Isvara Montgomery.
This is one of those records that has plenty of candy for the ears but works equally well to get the party started. It took a little while for this record to grow on me but now that I’m there I’m all in with Private Space.
Even though it appears the Delta variant has postponed my next house shindig for a little while, when it finally does happen this record is gonna be on the top of my invite list. On swirling pink vinyl this record is a party on a platter! – Major Matt

El Michels Affair Meets Liam Bailey- Ekundayo Inversions

Frankie & Witch Fingers- Sidewalk

George Harrison- All Things Must Pass

Weekly Review:

When the “quiet Beatle” had the opportunity to step out from the shadows of the much celebrated and beloved other songwriters in the Fab Four, he made the most of the opportunity. The triple-album All Things Must Pass is an embarrassment of riches. A way to clean the cupboards of all the songs that didn’t make it on late-period Beatles albums and prove that Harrison was both a musician and songwriter par excellence. 

Belated reissued in commemoration of the 1970 album’s 50th anniversary, this new edition offers scores of surprises that will delight even the most dedicated fans. To start with, the original album has been remastered and remixed. Handled with the same care and spirit as last year’s John Lennon ultimate remixes, the result here reduces the effects applied by original album producer Phil Spector and recasts the performances in a broader way than was possible in the early 1970s. Put simply, the new focus is more straightforward and casts Harrison in a more flattering light.

Then there is the bonus material. The more you pay, the more content you receive. The eight-album collection comes with sets called Day 1 and Day 2 demos. The Day 1 double-LP set captures Harrison teaching the band these new songs. Day 2, a single LP, is mostly acoustic performances of Harrison showcasing the songs for Spector. Both sets are sequenced as an alternate version of the album and provide an insightful look at how the material took off.

All Things’ third album, a collection of jams, has always been more problematic than the first two, song-oriented platters. Fans who dig Harrison’s unscripted improvisations with the band that would become Derek and the Dominos will find a lot to love in the two LPs of jam outtakes. 

Whether you spring for the fully loaded deluxe edition, stay with the traditional release or wind up somewhere in between, the 50th anniversary of All Things Must Pass offers revelations and interest for all who experience it.- Joel Francis

H.E.R.- H.E.R.

Hazel English- Just Give In / Never Going Home

Hiss Golden Messenger – Quietly Blowing It
Hiss Golden Messenger is an American folk rock band from Durham, North Carolina. The band is led by Mike (MC) Taylor.
HGM was nominated for best Americana album of 2019 for their record Terms of Surrender. Quietly Blowing It, their latest on Merge records, more or less picks up where Teems left off… with an extra layer of post pandemic world weary reflection.
Taylor hits all the right notes with fans of the real good stuff. There are tannins of later period Bob Dylan and Neil Young. His relaxed deliver reminds me quite a bit of Tom Petty, which is a good thing!
The opening track Way Back In the Way Back comes on like a slow sunrise after a long night of hard living. The lazy horn section that enters for the last quarter of the song is nothing short of revelatory and a testament to Taylor’s skills, who self produced the record.
Track two, The Great Mystifier is a toe tapping country rock song complete with lonely harmonica and Eaglesesque harmonized guitar solo.
The back beat, head bobber, Mighty Dollar, was where this album really cut through to me, initially. He really channels Petty on this one, taking a near gospel exuberance while belting out:
“It never fixed a broken heart
It never made a dumb man smarter
Hey, but I made it tryIt’s hard to see with the sun in your eyes
I don’t want it all, I just want a little
Oh, that mighty dollar
Ground beneath that mighty dollar
Oh, that mighty dollar
How I love itI wanna holler
Oh, that mighty dollar
Can’t get enough of that mighty dollar”
I love a good a good break up song but the title track ingeniously takes the breakup metaphor and uses it to reflect our present times as we slowly come to terms with race relations, sexism and the environment, sadly most of us have been Quietly Blowing It:
“Well, the shape of things
Don’t look so good
On the TV
There’s a riot going on
There’s a big pink sun over Hollywood
No new stars burning“
The rest of this record is full of bitter sweet hope and redemptive lost dreams. These songs slide nicely into the American songbook like a comfortable pair of work boots. I look forward to unburying more of its treasures. The limited edition metallic blue vinyl and newsprint fold out poster is pretty cool too! – Major Matt

Holly Golightly- Down Gina’s at 3

Holly Golightly- Nobody Will Be There

J. Cole- 2014 Forest Hills Drive

Jackie Brown- Jackie Brown: Music From The Miramax Motion Picture

Jackson Browne- Downhill From Everywhere

Jimi Hendrix- Are You Experienced

Jimmy Smith- Root Down

Joao Donato- Jazz is Dead 007

Weekly Review:

Back in the spring of 2020, producer Adrian Younge and former A Tribe Called Quest turntablist Ali Shaheed Muhammad released an album called Jazz is Dead. Each of its eight tracks featured a different guest. Over the subsequent months, full-length albums came out bearing the same title, but different numbers. Volumes seven and eight complete the cycle of guests that appeared on the first release.

Joao Donato brings the bossa nova rhythm he’s credited with creating to his partnership with Younge and Shaheed Muhammad. Vocalist Loren Oden sings on six of the songs, bringing an otherworldly vibe – especially on “Aquarius (Bring Her Back Home).” Overall, Donato’s pleasant set simmers and stirs without boiling over, making it a pleasant listen either in the background or foreground.

Pianist Brian Jackson is best known for his decade of work with poet Gil Scott Heron, in the 1970s. His playing here is so expressive and free, you wouldn’t guess this is just Jackson’s second album in 20 years. Jackson hops from various synthesizers to a Fender Rhodes and even plays flute across these eight songs. Opening cut “Under the Bridge” sounds like the soundtrack to a lost Blaxplotation film. “Mars Walk” and “Young Muhammad” are deeply funky tracks, thanks in no small part to Malachi Morehead’s drumming. “Nancy Wilson” is a tribute to the late jazz vocalist that finds Jackson on flute. Closer “Ethiopian Sunshower” adds Latin jazz and Afro-Cuban rhythms to the mix.    

If these are indeed the final volumes in the Jazz is Dead series, Younge and Shaheed Muhammad have picked strong collects to end with (not that there are any bad volumes in the series). Hopefully, more collaborations are forthcoming.- Joel Francis

John Hiatt- Leftover Feelings

Juice Wrld- Legends Never Die

Julia Jacklin- Crushing

Jungle- Loving In Stereo

Kanye West- 808S & Heartbreak

Kanye West- College Dropout

Kuni Kawachi- Kirikyogen

Less than Jake- B Is For B-sides

Los Lobos- Native Sons

Mac Miller- Swimming

McCoy Tyner- Expansions

Weekly Review:

The Blue Note Records masterful Tone Poets reissue series continues with a pair of albums from underrated jazz pianists.

Recorded in 1968, McCoy Tyner’s Expansions lives up to its title. Tyner pushes his all-star band hard, bringing in bass player Ron Carter to play cello and moving tenor saxophone player Wayne Shorter to clarinet for one track. (Both Carter and Shorter were in Miles Davis’ band at the time.) The result is an album that pushes the jazz sound without venturing into the avant-garde. It is a challenging listen that remains accessible, for the most part. -Joel Francis

Michael Jackson- Off The Wall

Miles Davis- A Tribute To Jack Johnson

Madvillian (Madlib & MF DOOM)
Madvillany was the debut album by the hip hop duo Madvillan consisting of producer/MC’s Madlib and Daniel Dumile aka MF DOOM.
Both of these artists have reached legendary status in the hip hop community.  Madlib has worked with a list of notable artists including J Dilla, Freddie Gibbs, Erykah Badu and De La Soul.
News of Dumile’s recent mysterious passing in 2020 caused a wave of fans, new and old, to further explore the importance of the artist’s catalog.
In 2002 the two started working together after Madlib caught wind of the first MF Doom album:
Operation Doomsday which became an immediate underground classic. Nathan Rabin of The A.V. Club, claims the record “has attained mythic status; its legend has grown in proportion to its relative unavailability”.
Madvillany was created over the course of two years but it has been said that Madlib produced the majority of the music for the record in a Brazilian hotel room while there for a speaking engagement using little more than a Boss SP-303 sampler, a turntable, and a tape deck.
Agreed upon  by many to be MF Doom’s magnum opus. Much in the way Alan Moore’s Watchmen deconstructs the classic superhero psyche, Madvilliany is an exploratory mission through the psyche of the classic hip hop hero/ underdog/ outcast  ie. “The Villan.”
The album, with its raw, cut and paste production,  introspective viewpoint and lack of chorus’s would become the blue print for the modern day, underground, confessional rap album.
The track Accordion sets the stage:
“It’s like the end to the means
Fucked type of message that sends to the fiends
That’s why he bring his own needles
And get more cheese than Doritos, Cheetos or Fritos
Slip like Freudian
Your first and last step to playing yourself like accordion”
Madlib breaks all the rules on this album sampling everything from obscure jazz to old school radio programs.
America’s most blunted attacks the subject of marijuana from all angles:
“Wild guess? You could say he stay sedated
Some say buddha-ed, some say faded
Someday pray that he will grow a farm barn full
Recent research show it’s not so darn harmful (True)
Sometimes you might need to detox
It can help you with your rhyme flow and your beat-box”
The sense of humor and layers of samples and multiple alias’s used on this album make the sonic gift that keeps on giving! – Major Matt

Mudhoney- Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge (30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition)

Mumford & Sons- Babel

Mumford & Sons- Sigh No More

My Chemical Romance- Three Cheers For Sweet Revenge

Weekly Review:

If I had to choose one band to summarize the “emo” genre, it would be My Chemical Romance by a long shot. They released their debut album after being a band for just 3 months, and two years later they had their break with their sophomore album, “Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge,” released in 2004. 

Before they emerged in the scene, grunge music was the “emo” sound for the 90’s with bands like Nirvana, older Foo Fighters, Queens of the Stone age, and more. When MCR debuted in 2002, they brought a new sound with them. They put an emphasis on emotion with a mix of post-hardcore, grunge, and rock making for new, explosive emo tracks. To only say they convey emotion wouldn’t do their music justice. Track #5, “I’m Not Okay (I Promise),” is the prime example of what they do best. This song is about a man deeply in love with a girl he’s been messing around with knowing she has a boyfriend. He desperately longs for her but she keeps him on a string, when he finally decides to part would be for the best. He’s completely heartbroken, or in other words, “not okay” as he so violently shouts throughout the song. The track following, “The Ghost of You,” executes pure sadness beautifully by using dissonant guitar chords, and a mix of soft and gritty vocals to convey how he felt about losing someone he loved dearly.

Throughout the entire album, they incorporate deep, relatable stories with intricate instrumentals to create an emotion evoking masterpiece. Something I think they did really well with this album was their fearless attempts to be unique. Each track uses similar elements with enough variation to stray from being repetitive, telling a different story to relate to, cry to, or simply jam to. I personally find solace in this album because the stories they tell are personal and topics that not many other artists talk about. It’s not just sad though, they draw out a wide scope of emotions in strong ways: loud vocals, crashing drums, powerful guitar riffs, and various breakdowns. Sure they have a few slower songs, but they balance them out with post-hardcore/rock songs to unleash wonderfully tamed chaos.  

Anyone listening to My Chemical Romance might also know or enjoy: Pierce The Veil, Sleeping With Sirens, Falling in Reverse, and Mayday Parade. – Nova Stebbin

N.W.A.- Straight Outta Compton

Nas- King’s Disease

Neil Young- Homegrown

Pearl Jam- No Code

Playboi Carti- Whole Lotta Red

Prince- Welcome 2 America

Sun Ra – Lanquidity (Boxed Set)

Son Volt- Electro Melodier

Sonny Clark- My Conception

Weekly Review:

Sonny Clark’s 1959 session with sax player Hank Mobley (one of five albums the two made together), trumpeter Donald Byrd, bass player Paul Chambers and drummer Art Blakey was shelved for two decades. Listening to the album now, it’s hard to see why. The six Clark originals are prime cuts of hard bop. Byrd and Mobley play masterfully off each other and Blakey keeps the songs swinging hard in his forceful style. Although Clark is the bandleader, he gives each member of the ensemble plenty of room to improvise and play off each other. 

As with previous Tone Poets releases, both the music and packaging has been remastered. The album photos pop off the page with startling clarity, while the music is at audiophile quality at reasonable pricing. Whether you have a state-of-the-art setup or a more modest system, dropping the needle on a Tone Poet album will take you straight to Birdland.- Joel Francis

Sponge- Lavatorium

Stanley Turrentine- Look Out: Rudy Van Gelder Recordings

Stanley Turrentine- Up at Minton’s

Stanley Turrentine- Up at Mintons 2

Steve Reid Ensemble- Spirit Walk

The Anniversary- Designing A Nervous Breakdown

The Awakening- Mirage

The Brian Jonestown Massacre- Bravery Repetition & Noise

The Brian Jonestown Massacre- Take It from the Man

The Clash- London Calling

The Cure- Seventeen Seconds

The Grateful Dead- Grateful Dead (Skull & Roses)

The Grateful Dead- Workingman’ Dead

The Kinks- Something Else By the Kinks

The Neighb’rhood Childr’n- Neighb’rhood Childr’n

The Rolling Stones- Exile on Main Street

The Traveling Wilburys- The Traveling Wilburys, Vol. 1

Tommy Turrentine- Tommy Turrentine

Tori Amos- Under The Pink

Velvet Underground & Nico- The Velvet Underground & Nico

Weezer- Ok Human

Weezer- Weezer

Yes – Songs From Tsongas – 35th Anniversary Concert (Anniversary Edition)

 

FLASH SALE!

50% OFF YOUR CHOICE– ONE RSD ITEM OR CLEARANCE ITEM– Thursday, August 12th ONLY!

UPCOMING EVENTS:

Come to 7th Heaven August 20th to see MIDWESTERN at 7PM. Free Show!! Click HERE for more information.

Come to 7th Heaven August 14th to see the KC Chaos Returns show at 5PM, doors at 4PM. It’s $5 a ticket or bring food / clothing as a donation! Click HERE to let us know you’re coming!

Come to 7th Heaven to see Almost Enemies, August 21st. Click HERE to RSVP.

Come to 7th Heaven September 17th to see The Problem Kid Tour. Click HERE to RSVP.

Come to 7th Heaven October 19th to see Enforced. Click HERE to RSVP.

We hope to see you there.

Turntables! We got ’em. From starter tables to audiophile, and everything in between, we have you covered. We are honored to once again be carrying a full line up of the award winning, top of their class, made in America, U-turn Orbits! We have all the colors- including the high performance walnut and maple. Get here fast for best selection. Get yours today!

We have official Vinyl Underground at 7th Heaven shirts in all sizes again- small to 3XL! Come in today and pick one up.

Please follow our very active Facebook and Instagram accounts to stay up on all the vinyl news.

Thanks for reading this week’s New Vinyl Thursday post! Mention that you did before you check out and we will take 20% off of ANY one item in the store! Offer good through 8/18/21.

Enjoy the music and we will see you soon. Your loving Vinyl Underground at 7th Heaven staff:

Sherman, Gordon, Cat, Matt, Dylan, Doyle, Heather, Dave and Max

#TheVinylUndergroundKC #WeAreLocal #YourNeighborhoodMusicStore #NewVinylThursday