Discogs: Virtual Vinyl Meeting Place

Discogs: Virtual Vinyl Meeting Place
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Over the past decade or so, varying degrees of music collectors worldwide have seemingly begun to defect from large online retailers like eBay and Amazon in favor of “smaller,” more intimate online stores. The most popular, and quite possibly the fastest-growing, is Discogs. … read more

The New Nest: Albatross Recordings & Ephemera

The New Nest: Albatross Recordings & Ephemera
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In only a few short years, Hatziathanasiou has earned a local reputation (such as “Best Eccentric Nostalgia” by City Weekly) for his assemblage of offbeat recordings and strange but alluring pieces of art. … read more

Scott H. Biram: Going It Alone

Scott H. Biram: Going It Alone
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Scott H. Biram is simply unstoppable. If I believed in a god, I would wholeheartedly believe that he put Scott H. Biram on this earth to be the dirty-ol’ one-man band that he is and to be playing the disorderly blues and country music that he creates so well. … read more

Take the Brown Acid: An Interview with Daniel Hall & Lance Barresi

Take the Brown Acid: An Interview with Daniel Hall &...
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Barresi and Hall are both Los Angeles–based DJs and record shop owners who’ve been big fans of psychedelic rock throughout the course of their friendship. However, the idea to start the Brown Acid series came from a shared interest in discovering rare vinyl. … read more

Goldmine: Collector’s Curse

Goldmine: Collector’s Curse
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Bad news: Your grandma’s dead. Good news: You’ve inherited box after box of her dusty old LPs! Score! You’ve seen the vinyl displays at the front of Urban Outfitters and Barnes & Noble, so you know that vinyl is a hot commodity—Fleetwood Mac and Led Zeppelin reissues are big business. … read more

Leæther Strip: Addressing The Human Elements

Leæther Strip: Addressing The Human Elements
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On April 2, Claus Larsen and The Zoth Ommog tour will be making a stop at Metro in Salt Lake City, and we could not be more grateful to have him visiting our city. Larsen has been a part of the industrial and underground music community for almost three decades, and is always on the move. … read more

DZ Deathrays: Return to the U.S.

DZ Deathrays: Return to the U.S.
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After three years, DZ Deathrays have returned to the United States. For the last eight years, the Australian duo of Shane Parsons and Simon Ridley have showcased their dance-punk anthems around the world. Their shows have a wild and loud reputation, and their music attracts all kinds of listeners from hardcore enthusiasts to EDM artists. … read more

Mostly Harmless: David Bello of The World is a Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid to Die

Mostly Harmless: David Bello of The World is a Beautiful...
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Harmlessness, the second full-length album from emo band The World is a Beautiful Place & I am No Longer Afraid to Die, has elevated the band’s status in the indie community. … read more

Worlds Inside Worlds: Say No! To Architecture and Composite Songcraft

Worlds Inside Worlds: Say No! To Architecture and Composite Songcraft
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Don DeLillo once wrote, “There is a world inside the world.” For Allen Roizman’s musical output, this couldn’t be more true. Say No! To Architecture has been crafting lived-in soundscapes of unidentifiable sources and layers upon layers of sampled noises from Plainview, New York, for close to 10 years now. … read more

A Radically Relevant Declaration:  Chatting with The Pop Group’s Mark Stewart

A Radically Relevant Declaration: Chatting with The Pop Group’s Mark...
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On Feb.19, the Pop Group rereleased their phenomenal 1980 album, For How Long Do We Tolerate Mass Murder?, and the 1979 single, We are Prostitutes on their own Y Label, distributed through Rough Trade. These releases boast some of the best of The Pop Group’s signature expression of antagonistic post-punk that is influenced by funk, jazz and dub. … read more