Look what I found in a used record store |
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ClemofNazareth
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Researcher Joined: August 17 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4659 |
Posted: December 31 2011 at 20:37 |
I bought a copy of Golden Avatar's 'A Change Of Heart' at a record store in Wichita, Kansas this past summer. I'd never heard of them either but figured it had to be a prog album based solely on the covert art and list of instruments. It's not bad, more of a avant-jazz sort of thing. I'll be interested to read your review. |
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"Peace is the only battle worth waging."
Albert Camus |
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Mr James
Forum Newbie Joined: January 01 2012 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 15 |
Posted: January 01 2012 at 10:53 |
Golden Avatar is the most common used record next to Chris de Burgh- Spanish train & Phil Collins.
The cover has fooled many a prog collector.
You WILL be extremely disappointed.
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Abstrakt
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 18 2005 Location: Soundgarden Status: Offline Points: 18292 |
Posted: January 02 2012 at 06:47 |
Found Roxy Music "Country Life" and Moody Blues "On the Threshold of a Dream" for $3 in a thrift store a while back. Both originals in excellent condition!!!
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AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 02 2008 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 14258 |
Posted: January 02 2012 at 07:13 |
I was in another city a few months ago and was amazed to find vinyls of the following all under $5 each:
with full booklet! They had some other awesome albums but they were over $25 - lots of Uriah Heep, and old 80s metal. Great shop! |
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Abstrakt
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 18 2005 Location: Soundgarden Status: Offline Points: 18292 |
Posted: January 02 2012 at 07:17 |
Not a bad deal, there Though i spot the Peter Gabriel album for like $1 everywhere
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ClemofNazareth
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Researcher Joined: August 17 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4659 |
Posted: January 07 2012 at 21:22 |
I seem to be spending a lot of time in New York lately... Albany, New York this time and an evening trip to Last Vestige Music Shop in the hood. Sseriously, I don't recommend going there at night. I found this place using my iPhone's map app, but apparently Microsoft is working on a way to make sure that doesn't happen in the future. This may be the first record store I've ever visited with a 'prog' section, although the most interesting thing I found there was a stack of Byrds records (for anyone who may have thought otherwise). This store is jammed into a pretty small storefront so the stacks are more vertical than horizontal. You'll have to spend some time on your knees and on a stool if you want to check everything out. There's a wall of CDs and a few racks of 45s, but most of the stuff here is long-play vinyl ranging from the 50s to the 80s. These guys know what they're doing and have a mail-order business as well (no surprise there), but I did manage to find a few bargains. There's a bargain bin BTW with $3 albums but they aren't in plastic sleeves and most are either no-name rock bands or are scratched up. I'd recommend skipping that bin since there are enough good albums in the $3-$5 range anyway. Picked up six albums for a total of $31 USD, including tax. Not bad. No real treasures here but I did get a few interesting pieces: If - Waterfall. I believe this is mostly If's '4' album repackaged for the U.S. market, although there are a few new tracks. The most interesting thing about this album is that this is the first one with the late Cliff Davies on drums. Davies would go on to play for and produce Ted Nugent during Nugent's heyday as a solo act. Sandy Denny - Like an Old-Fashioned Waltz. I'm a big sucker for the late Ms. Denny's vocals. This is an interesting album as it was recorded during the period of time she had left Fairport Convention and after Fotheringay folded. She was trying to establish herself as sort of a pop artist. Didn't work out that well and she returned to record a couple more Fairport albums before she passed away. Flairck - Circus. I don't know a whole lot about this Dutch band even though I'm the one who added most of their records to the Archives. This was an original pressing though and for just $3 USD I couldn't resist. Also got an unopened copy of Blackgirl's first album 'Procedure' for only $3. Maybe these are the chicks the Violent Femmes dug... And the British country-rock band Unicorn's 'Blue Pine Trees'. They remind me a little bit of the Byrds. I tried to add them here to the Archives once but if the Byrds couldn't get in it doesn't surprise me these guys didn't either. All in all not a bad haul. |
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"Peace is the only battle worth waging."
Albert Camus |
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ClemofNazareth
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Researcher Joined: August 17 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4659 |
Posted: March 03 2012 at 22:08 |
Back to Musical Energi in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania again. I like this shop because it's not too far from the town I live in now and they have a whole room full of vinyl stacked floor to ceiling in the back of the store. The front part of the place is full of CDs, DVDs, posters, tshirts and other crap like Beatles lunch boxes and Osbourne family refrigerator magnets. And I'm pretty sure they make most of their money off mail order sales and eBay, but they let me dig around in the back uninterrupted which suits me just fine. Anyway, a couple of slightly obscure albums and a prog staple this time, but one that for some reason I've never heard before. The Flying Burrito Brothers - Last of the Red Hot Burritos. Anyone who knows me knows I'm a big-time Gram Parsons fan. I'm sure there are a lot of people who don't consider what Parsons did with rock, folk, gospel and American country music to be progressive, but his influence on everything from the Rolling Stones to post-Byrds pop-psych to modern American country & western is undeniable. I would argue there would be no Eagles, Dixie Chicks, or even bands like Jason & the Scorchers, the Bodeans, or Beat Circus if it weren't for Parsons convincing Roger McGuinn, Chris Hillman and the other Byrds to record 'Sweetheart of the Rodeo' in 1968. This was supposed to be the final hurrah for the Flying Burrito Brothers, a band Parsons formed with Hillman after Parsons was basically thrown out of the Byrds. Interestingly enough he was also basically thrown out of the Flying Burrito Brothers a year before this live album was recorded. Bernie Leadon had also left by then and formed the Eagles, who released their debut album about the same time this one came out. Hillman was left to cobble together a touring group under the Burrito Brothers banner that included the troubled and now deceased former Byrds drummer Michael Clarke; 3-time national fiddle champion Byron Berline; dobro player Al Perkins who was in Stephen Stills' band Manassas at the time but has over the years played with everyone from Bob Dylan and James Taylor to Tori Amos and Cher; and a few other journeyman country musicians. Parsons does not appear on the album although there are several songs he co-wrote included. The track list consists of a mixture of Burrito Brothers songs and country standards including "Orange Blossom Special" (made famous by Johnny Cash in 1965 but actually written in the 1930s), and "Don't Let Your Deal Go Down", a Parsons favorite and a folk-country standard that dates back to the Depression era. The Burrito Brothers would end up releasing several more studio, live and compilation albums well into the 90s with various lineups, but Hillman wouldn't appear on any of them, nor of course would Parsons who died of a drug overdose in Joshua Tree, California in 1973 and whose corpse was stolen from the coroner by his friend Phil Kaufman and set ablaze in the Mojave Desert near where he died. This isn't a particularly memorable album but it is interesting to hear different versions of several traditional country tunes with blues-rock treatments as well as remakes of some Burrito Brothers originals. Of particular note is the version of "Hot Burrito #2" with what was rumored to be Bernie Leadon setting in on rhythm guitar. $6 USD. Routers - Superbird. The Routers were a Hollywood studio concoction from the mid-sixties who cranked out a few records of pop covers and peppy tunes, many of which survive today in the form of high school pep-squad cheers. This is a mildly funky record of mostly covers that the group released after inexplicably reforming briefly in 1973. To be honest I'd never heard of these guys before laying eyes on this record in the store and only bought it out of mild curiosity and the fact the guy on the left side of the front cover looks an awful lot like Pearls Before Swine's Tom Rapp. The band members are not listed anywhere on the album cover or liner notes but I've read the group consisted of guitarist Joe Saraceno (Marketts, Bobby Vee, the Beach Boys, Astronauts and others); Larry Duncan (the Temptations); and the late jazz guitarist Tommy Tedesco. Again, not a particularly memorable record and I was more entertained reading the Mercury Records advertising on the inner sleeve than listening to the album itself. The sleeve contains ads for 'new' music like Rod Stewart's 'Never a Dull Moment', Jade Warrior's 'Last Autumn's Dream', and Ken Hensley's (Uriah Heep, the Gods, Weed) first solo album 'Proud Words on a Dusty Shelf'. $3 USD. Todd Rundgren - Todd. I've never been a huge Rundgren or Utopia fan but I have to admit 'Ra' and 'A Wizard, A True Star' were both pretty solid albums. This one came out right after 'Wizard' and even though it is technically a double-album it contains barely an hour's worth of music and is wildly inconsistent. Overall I like the first half or so which has several tracks that demonstrate the eclectic and highly experimental tendency Rundgren has shown throughout his career, especially with his solo material. The heavier second half is unexceptional but for the most part at least mildly interesting. There is a lot of synthesizer on this record, something Rundgren would continue to experiment with on future solo and Utopia records, sometimes to excess. Here he manages to demonstrate a growing appreciation for the musical form without becoming too self-indulgent, but at the same time nothing on the album really stands out either except maybe the fact that 15-time Grammy winning jazz saxophonist Michael Brecker and his brother Randy both played on the album. Had this come out before 'Wizard' I think it might have been better received but after that record set the bar this one was an inevitable disappointment. $6 USD. |
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"Peace is the only battle worth waging."
Albert Camus |
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ClemofNazareth
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Researcher Joined: August 17 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4659 |
Posted: March 11 2012 at 20:37 |
This weekend included a trip to check out the Northeast Pennsylvania Record & CD Show in Scranton. 100,000 or so albums, CDs, cassettes, 45s and DVDs. The clientele included a mix of old hippies, stoners, college kids and Guidos who seemed to know nothing about music that I assume were looking for bargains to seed their own store inventories. There were a lot of great albums in the bins, but I found most of them to be overpriced, of poor quality, or both. After about three hours of digging through stacks I did manage to come away with six decent vinyl records. The best of those include - Fairport Convention – “Babbacombe” Lee (1971). This was the band’s seventh studio album, and along with ‘Angel Delight’ issued just a few months’ prior marked a pretty significant for the band away from progressive folk and toward a more tepid and less adventurous folk rock sound. A lot of the reason of course was the two-phased schism within the group that led to the departures of the iconic characters of Sandy Denny and Richard Thompson, as well as bassist Ashley Hutchings. This left Simon Nicol as the only original member in the group, although string player Dave Swarbrick and drummer Dave Mattacks had been around for a couple years and appeared on the band’s three best-known albums ‘What We Did on our Holidays’, ‘Unhalfbricking’ and ‘Liege & Lief’, all released in 1969. ‘Angel’ and ‘Babbacombe’ were also the first Fairport records not produced by the inimitable American Joe Boyd, who had returned to the United States after spending most of the 60s in London discovering and producing some of the biggest names in British post-Beat and folk rock from that period. The band turned instead to Boyd’s longtime engineer John Wood, best known to that point as the guy who managed to get Nick Drake focused long enough to record three studio albums of his own. ‘Babbacombe Lee’ is often pointed to as being the first folk-rock ‘opera’ and indeed it is a concept album that recounts the true story of the late 19th century Brit John ‘Babbacombe’ Lee, a drifter who was convicted in controversial fashion in 1885 of murdering a woman he had done odd jobs for off and on since childhood. Lee was sentenced to hang but infamously survived three consecutive malfunctions of the scaffolding’s trap door and ultimately had his sentence commuted to life in prison. The story begins with a reading of the trial verdict and then works its way back from there as the narrator and Fairport players recount Lee’s life and the events which led up to him sitting in the cell awaiting his fate. Musically this is a pretty decent album although a bit uneven at times. Nicols’ guitar work and Mattacks’ piano range from very good to inspired, and the story’s continuity is solid. Unfortunately for the band musical tastes were changing and the album, despite modest critical acclaim, did not garner the same level of attention as their prior work. Some of this was also probably due to the absence of both Thompson and Denny, both of whom would resurface with the band sporadically on some of their future albums. There was also a BBC broadcast of the Babbacombe Lee story a few years later that featured several songs from this album as the soundtrack, but with a different lineup since Nicol left following this release and Denny had by then abandoned her attempt at pop stardom and had returned to the band. As is stated on the back cover, Lee was released from prison in December, 1907 after serving nearly twenty-three years of his life sentence. His whereabouts after his release are sketchy, although there is some evidence he made a living for at least a few years traveling and making appearances recounting his life story. There’s also some controversy surrounding his death, which depending on who is telling the story either occurred as a result of a heart condition while at a work camp in 1941, or around 1945 after he relocated to the U.S. Either way the man appears to have managed to live a long and full life after escaping the gallows in spectacular fashion as a young man. The copy I picked up is in pristine condition and doesn’t appear to have even been played. It is the U.S. promo version (A&M SP 4333) with a gatefold cover and an insert booklet with a lengthy version of the Babbacombe story apparently told by Lee himself. The most interesting thing about this promo is that the banding reflects the released version with three tracks on side A and two on side B. I’ve seen other promos of this album where the timing strips are cut for radio play and are closer to the 15-track version on the Island CD remaster. This was the most expensive album I bought this weekend but considering its condition I figure the $21 USD price was a pretty good deal. Tony Banks – A Curious Feeling (1979). I’ve never been much of a Genesis fan, as for the most part I find their earlier Gabriel albums to be too British for me to really connect with, and the Phil Collins pop-era stuff to be too bland and commercial to be in any way appealing. In fact ‘Wind and Wuthering’ remains to this day the most appealing for me, and one of only four Genesis albums in my collection. That said, I couldn’t pass up an excellent copy of Banks’ solo debut on vinyl. This is also a concept album of sorts, the story of an ordinary guy who is apparently going nuts and realizes it. Originally the album was supposed to be based on the Keyes’ sci-fi story ‘Flowers for Algernon’, but Banks decided to alter the theme after learning the musical ‘Charlie and Algernon’, also based on Keyes’ story, was already in the works. The musical’s score would eventually be nominated for a Tony Award so perhaps Banks made the right choice. In Banks' version the rather overt sexual tension in the Keyes tale are much more subdued, and the emphasis seems to be more on the internalized struggle of the man whose mental state is deteriorating. Musically this sounds like just what it is – a late 70s album written and performed by an artist whose musical roots are firmly planted in the late 60s and early 70s. There is a lot of synthesizer, crisp and tightly engineered vocal tracks, and a studio sheen that characterizes so much of the music that released around this time period. I can’t say as I found this to be an exceptional or noteworthy album based solely on its artistic qualities, but for the $8 USD price I figure it makes an economic addition to the collection. John Lodge – Natural Avenue (1977). Lodge is of course best known for his work as bassist and occasional lyricist/vocalist for the Moody Blues. This is his only solo album as far as I know, and I didn’t even know it existed until I saw it in a bin at the record fair. Apparently this was recorded sometime in 1976 (the liner notes don’t say exactly when) during the Moody’s long hiatus between ‘Seventh Sojourn’ and ‘Octave’. The music here doesn’t sound like either of those albums, having instead a much more up-tempo vibe than anything the Moodys did except maybe ‘Long Distance Voyager’. Any symphonic sounds come from a combination of a small orchestra conducted by Brian Rogers, a few synthesizers and some piano. Overall the presence of Lodge’s voice and the orchestra, though comparatively understated, at least musically connect these songs somewhat to the classic Moody Blues period. As with the Banks album though, this is an album released by a member of a legendary and established (though waning) 70s progressive rock band, at a time when what once seemed immutable musical constants in popular music were changing rapidly and many old-guard rockers were trying anything and everything to reinvent themselves in the burgeoning punk/new-Wave/disco/MTV era. It’s an okay album, but certainly not particularly innovative. Even the cover seems rather perfunctory, instantly recognizable as a Roger Dean original but not anywhere near as memorable or spectacular as his best work for Yes, Badger or even Osibisa. I got a near-mint copy of the U.S. gatefold release (London PS 683) for just $7 USD, which seems like a good price, so in all I can’t complain. I also got a copy of Clannad's second album but I haven't had a chance to check that one out yet so maybe I'll post more later... |
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"Peace is the only battle worth waging."
Albert Camus |
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rushfan4
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: May 22 2007 Location: Michigan, U.S. Status: Offline Points: 66252 |
Posted: March 11 2012 at 21:54 |
My latest visit netted me this album: I also picked up a number of Todd Rundgren CDs for 3.50 USD each, including the Todd that you listed above, Runt, Initiation, and Faithful. I was also quite happy to find Kate Bush's Hounds of Love on CD for $3.50 too.
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ClemofNazareth
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Researcher Joined: August 17 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4659 |
Posted: March 11 2012 at 22:02 |
Love that album! Bought it on vinyl when it first came out. I'd never heard of here before then but after listening to that one I bought 'The Dreaming' (also on vinyl) which blew me away and I've picked up almost everything she's done since! |
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"Peace is the only battle worth waging."
Albert Camus |
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Slartibartfast
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam Joined: April 29 2006 Location: Atlantais Status: Offline Points: 29630 |
Posted: March 12 2012 at 05:44 |
It's kind of interesting that around town I've seen a few stores that specialized in used CDs come and go but stores that specialize in used vinyl since I was collecting are still getting by. Ah the good old days of $2 single and $3 double LPs. I built up quite a collection on a limited budget as a teen.
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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ClemofNazareth
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Researcher Joined: August 17 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4659 |
Posted: April 26 2012 at 00:04 |
Visited Zia Record Exchange in Tempe, Arizona this time around. Hot as hell in Arizona this week but it was worth the trip as I picked up six vinyl albums for a whopping total of $18 USD. Most of the store is filled with CDs, DVDs and paraphenalia, but the back wall is lined with vinyl racks and there were a fair number of albums you won't see all that often these days, including Zappa's 'The Ark';'Jamming With Edward' featuring Mick Jagger, Charlie Watts, Ry Cooder, Nicky Hopkins and Bill Wyman; and a surprising number of Celtic bands I've never heard of. I didn't buy any of those but did get a few interesting pieces:
Moving Hearts - The Storm (1985). The Prog Folk team finally added Moving Hearts after a fair amount of discussion, but after hearing this one it seems obvious they should have been here all along. There are no vocals on this record, unlike their Platinum Collection which is the only other thing I have. Great instrumentation on this one though, with lots of pipes and whistles and brass, and synths blending the whole thing together. I don't know if any of their other albums sound like this one but it was a great deal for only $2.
Gordon Bok - A Tune for November (1970). Bok is a traditional American folk singer of Dutch descent who lives in Maine. I've seen him mentioned a few times in various folk books but never heard his music before. It's pretty much all acoustic, mostly just his baritone vocals and guitar (6- and 12-string). Not surprising since he's from Maine, but many of his songs have nautical themes including seaborne mythology and even English and Native American traditional tunes. This one includes a sanguine version of Ewan MacColl's "Travelling People" as well as a rendition of "Lowlands" (Annie Briggs did it better but this one is pretty decent too). Bok is apparently something of an American blueblood, as his family tree is littered with Nobel Prize winners and esteemed authors, publishers and artists. Apparently his grandfather coined the term "living room" (you gotta' love obscure trivia).
Blood Sweat & Tears - Child is Father to the Man (1968). This is a pretty common album but for $2 I couldn't resist. The Columbia sleeve includes ads for Jim Nabors, Andy Williams, Barba Streisand, Robert Goulet, Jerry Vale, Percy Faith, O.C. Smith ("God didn't make the little green apples, and it don't rain in Indianapolis in the summertime...."), and Ray Conniff as well as soundtracks for the Graduate and Funny Girl. Clearly Columbia had no idea how to promote BS&T.
Also got a Jerry Read Smith album of dulcimer music, another Clannad album (not sure why we haven't added these guys yet - need to look into that), and a record from the Austrian band Edelweiss which I didn't realize was an electronica/pop piece of crap - that one was a disappointment.
Anyway, this is a pretty decent record store with very reasonable prices and a fairly decent selection of prog and folk, worth checking out if you ever find yourself in the Phoenix area.
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"Peace is the only battle worth waging."
Albert Camus |
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ClemofNazareth
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Researcher Joined: August 17 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4659 |
Posted: July 12 2012 at 17:05 |
This latest business trip took me to Atlanta Georgia, where I found a genuine old-school used record shop called Records Galore in the mostly Asian neighborhood of Clarkston. Nothing fancy for sure, just a few thousand vinyl records along with some cassettes and CDs housed in a dilapidated little shop run by an old man who looked as ancient and run-down as the building. Great prices for the most part and the majority of records were in pretty good shape and housed in vinyl sleeves, stacked inside a bunch of old Sound Warehouse apple crates. For those old enough to remember, Sound Warehouse was one of the largest record store chains in the U.S. back in the 70s and early 80s. I bought my first R.E.M., Marillion and ELP albums at Sound Warehouses back in the day.
A few worthwhile pieces this trip. I picked up five albums for $18 USD, with none of them costing more than $6. John Renbourn – The Lady and the Unicorn (1970). This is the Reprise U.S. release (1971), which consists of a bunch of mostly traditional British folk tunes played with reverence on acoustic instruments. Renbourn is accompanied by fellow Pentangle members Terry Cox and Dave Swarbrick as well as Soft Machine’s Ray Warleigh and a couple old jazz musicians. I believe the cover is an adaptation of an old 15th century titled ‘The Maiden and the Unicorn’.As an aside, unicorns have a long history in
English and Scottish folklore, dating at least to the 14th century. A lot of people believe myths of unicorns
date to Biblical times, but I read a history book a while back that claims
these animals were not related to the unicorns so popular in British and Norse
culture in medieval times. The writer of
that book claims the prevalence of unicorn stories were a result of Viking explorers
who had migrated to Greenland and the New World (Vinland) in the 12th and 13th centuries,
and who began to transport narwhale horns back to Denmark and later Scotland to
trade for lumber and finished goods needed in their New World settlements. The Vikings were able to command top prices
for these horns by claiming they had been harvested from Vinland unicorns, and
that the powder from the horns would cure disease. Not sure if that story is true but it is
amusing to think what are today considered longstanding European folk tales may
have actually had their genesis in New World Norse capitalism dating at least
three hundred years before Columbus supposedly discovered America. In any case this is a well-loved album by
Renbourn fans and a great find at just $5.
Be Bop Deluxe – Live! In the Air Age (1977) I don’t know much about Be Bop Deluxe but for only $4 this seemed like a good deal. This is the Canadian EMI/Harvest version and it includes a 12” EP with three tracks including “Shine” which takes up the entire front side of the EP. The concert recordings feature the last lineup of the band and would become their first (and only) Top-10 album in the UK.Friends (1970) An A&M loss-leader promo album. There were a series of these released in the early 70s, I believe only available through mail-order from music magazines or inner sleeves of A&M and Warner albums. They were the brainchild of label executive Stan Cornyn. The most interesting thing about this one is the lineup, which includes The Move, Fairport Convention, Blodwyn Pig, Fotheringay, Spooky Tooth, Free, Humble Pie and Quincy Jones singing a sappy version of “Bridge Over Troubled Water”. Seriously, I only bought it because this is the only Various Artists record you’ll ever see featuring both Sandy Denny and Quincy Jones. Enjoy.I also picked up a couple of Roger McGuinn (Byrds) solo albums. If you ever find yourself in the Atlanta area, hunt this place down. Not a lot of progressive stuff but there are a few worth checking out. Be prepared to spend a little time though as the guy's filing system doesn't make a lot of sense. I think maybe the records were in alphabetic order at one time, but there's not rhyme or reason to them anymore so you have to dig a bit.
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"Peace is the only battle worth waging."
Albert Camus |
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Slartibartfast
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam Joined: April 29 2006 Location: Atlantais Status: Offline Points: 29630 |
Posted: July 12 2012 at 17:28 |
I haven't been there in many years, but I live a short few of miles away. If you were LP hunting there are more than a few good shops still around in Atlanta. The last time a browsed there was a long long time ago. I don't know the owner by name.
Edited by Slartibartfast - July 12 2012 at 17:31 |
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Online Points: 11566 |
Posted: July 16 2012 at 12:18 |
I'm usually quite lucky, and have found countless gems extremely cheap over the years. Used stuff I quite recently bought on vinyl for 3 € (ca. 3.50
$ ) or less. All first issues:
6 € or less |
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The Jester
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 13 2012 Location: Athens Greece Status: Offline Points: 698 |
Posted: August 15 2012 at 10:40 |
Exotic Birds and Fruits is a rather unknown album from Procol Harum.
I am a big Procol fan (but not a great one), so I can't be totally objective. But I suggest to give the album a second chance. It contains some songs that are very nice melodies in my opinion... Check more carefully if you want these songs: Beyond the pale, As strong as Samson, The Idol, New lamps for old... Of course is always a matter of each person's likings... |
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Eria Tarka
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 17 2011 Location: BC, Canada Status: Offline Points: 5856 |
Posted: August 15 2012 at 23:55 |
I go to this local music store once in a while and they sell old records in the basement. So I took a look down there and this is what I bought... Emerson Lake & Palmer - Self Titled Anthony Phillips - Wise After the Event Gentle Giant - Three Friends Gentle Giant - Free Hand Genesis - Invisible Touch Genesis - Genesis Genesis - Duke Camel - Raindances Pink Floyd - The Wall Alan Parsons Project - I Robot Mike Rutherford - Smallcreep's Day Jethro Tull - A Passion Play Rick Wakeman - King Arthur Rick Wakeman - No Earthly Connection Van Der Graaf Generator - Vital I managed to score all of these for around 5 bucks each. Also there is just about every single Renaissance album there, too bad I'm not into them.
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ClemofNazareth
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Researcher Joined: August 17 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4659 |
Posted: December 01 2012 at 22:18 |
Back on the road this weekend for a hastily planned trip to Ithaca, New York and a chance to visit Angry Mom Records, one of my favorite used record stores in the Northeast. It's in the basement of a used bookstore where I also picked up a copy of Blood Sport, a quirky little novel by the sci-fi author Robert F. Jones.
Anyway, managed to score three decent records for a total of $14 USD which made the trip interesting. Spirit - Spirit of 76. Despite the title, this album was actually released in 1975. I have a CD copy of this but for $5 I figured I should own the vinyl as well. I wrote a review of this album a few years ago, you can read it here if you're interested. This wasn't really a planned record for the band. They hadn't been doing much through much of the 70s after the original group splintered, with mostly only Randy California and his step-father drummer Ed Cassidy remaining and showing up here and there at various festivals and small tours. They were supposed to be opening for Ten Years After at a show in Tampa Florida the summer of 1975, but TYA canceled their appearance. Left in southern Florida with not much else to do, California and Cassidy put on a concert anyway and then used the proceeds to book some time at Studio 70 and just started recording stuff. A lot of the tracks on this 2-disc set are covers, hippy anthems and spaced-out versions of patriotic songs. None of that would have been considered unusual or out-of-place in 1975. The real gem is California's completely tripped-out nine minute version of "Like a Rolling Stone", and to a lesser degree a smoking rendition of "Hey Joe" to boot. One of the record sleeves also has a page-long rant about how illegal taping is ruining the music industry, a sentiment that is kind of amusing today but was pretty serious stuff at the time. Intergalactic Touring Band (1977). Not a real band, and most prog music fans know the basic story of these orchestral conductors who got the weird idea to crank out a sci-fi fantasy concept album featuring a handful of musicians performing under aliases conceived as something like a mix of Ziggy Stardust, Klaatu and Jeff Wayne's 'War of the Worlds'. The whole thing doesn't age particularly well but it is likely the only time you'll hear members of Status Quo, Bruce Springsteen's E-Street Band, Dave Cousins of the Strawbs, Annie Haslam and scores of other prog, rock, folk and classical musicians all on one record. I bought it only because it is an original copy and included the insert booklet that tells the story behind the record. Paul Brett - Interlife (1978). I added Paul Brett to ProgArchives a while back, mostly for his three Paul Brett Sage albums which are mildly folksy in nature. Later on he really got experimental, releasing instrumental albums leaning toward jazz, classical and even a sort of New Age-ish bent at times. This is one of the jazzy records. I haven't listened to it yet since I'm on the road and don't carry my turntable with me, but I bought it because it hasn't been reissued on CD so the $4 pricetag seemed like a sweet deal. |
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"Peace is the only battle worth waging."
Albert Camus |
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ClemofNazareth
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Researcher Joined: August 17 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4659 |
Posted: February 03 2013 at 15:11 |
Have trips planned to Atlanta, Tampa, Ithaca New York and Romania in the coming weeks and hope to discover some used record stores I haven't been to before, but this weekend it was back to Vinyl Vault in upstate New York. A weird collection this week. I didn't have as much time to browse as I would have liked, and two of the three vinyls ended up being more novelty than anything else. Also picked up a couple CDs but since this is supposed to be a "record" thread I'll skip those. Procol Harum - Broken Barricades (1971). The last Robin Trower album unless you count the 90s reunion. I picked up the A&M SP4294 which is listed as a Canadian release, but the inside binding and back cover both say it was printed in the U.S. This is sort of darker like 'Home', although I don't suppose anyone ever considered Procol Harum to be a cheery band. Trower is clearly not on the same page as the rest of the band, his playing more elaborated and experimental than Brooker's blues-rooted style. I actually haven't heard this album in probably twenty years or so and one thing that surprised me was how intricate and almost classical "Luskus Delph" sounds, especially since it is a Brooker tune while I would have expected that more from Trower. Not an exceptional album but not terrible either. The $8 USD price was probably more than I should have paid but not too bad. Elton John - Empty Sky (1969). Sir John's first studio release. This one is a U.S. reissue released in 1975 with a gatefold cover after 'Goodbye Yellow Brick Road' and 'Captain Fantastic...' had made him a megastar here. It sounds like an early release, much more folksy and restrained than where he would head as the decade wore on. But the indications are there, especially when listening to these songs today after experiencing the phenom that was Elton John over these many years. There are a couple surprises including the funky guitar solo on "Sails", the Leonard Cohenesque "The Scaffold", and the uncharacteristic extended instrumentals on the title track, but mostly it's the man, his piano, and his emerging flamboyance. Bryan Ferry - These Foolish Things (1973). I don't know Ferry's history well enough to know if he meant this to be a serious album, but it's hard to imagine he did. Then again, lots of weird things happened in the early 70s. This was his first solo album, released while he was still with Roxy Music. It's made up of a bunch of cover tunes from Dylan's "A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall" to the Stones "Sympathy for the Devil", but for the most part these are 60s soul tunes from the likes of the Four Tops and Erma Franklin, along with old Brill Building standards. Nothing to see here folks, as Ferry delivers most of the tracks with almost deadpan seriousness and often thick cheese, particularly the lounge-act version of 'Sympathy'. This one belongs in the same category as the William Shatner albums of the same period, or maybe alongside a Keith Carradine or John Travolta pop record. Interesting from a trivia standpoint but that's about all. The biggest surprises for me are 1) that the thing charted, and 2) how many times it has been reissued over the years. If anyone knows of any good record stores in Cluj Romania please let me know! |
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"Peace is the only battle worth waging."
Albert Camus |
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HolyMoly
Special Collaborator Retired Admin Joined: April 01 2009 Location: Atlanta Status: Offline Points: 26138 |
Posted: February 03 2013 at 15:23 |
Edited by HolyMoly - February 03 2013 at 15:24 |
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My other avatar is a Porsche
It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle if it is lightly greased. -Kehlog Albran |
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