Leftover College Radio Station Indie Rock Records I Haven't Listened To (And That Nobody Will Buy)

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the Magnolias are local powerpop/punk legends, they still play, great band

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9oK9oH7HLJc

Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 9 November 2017 18:39 (eight years ago)

coffin break

Unremarkable but I got a kick out of their Freebird cover when I was a kid.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6LzeX22sHwo

how's life, Thursday, 9 November 2017 18:40 (eight years ago)

agitpop are decent minutement-influenced indie rock from minnesota

actually upstate NY but were on Twin Town

coffin break did good covers

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kjh97hVmJVc

Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 9 November 2017 18:41 (eight years ago)

the Cucumbers were cute

i def saw Coffin Break and Boiled in Lead live

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 9 November 2017 18:42 (eight years ago)

Saw boiled in lead live once as well - they played the reading festival in 89 iirc?

plp will eat itself (NickB), Thursday, 9 November 2017 18:46 (eight years ago)

lois is a twee legend, iirc

brimstead, Thursday, 9 November 2017 18:47 (eight years ago)

That dharma bums album had some bangers on it. Post REM jangle but with the raucousness of early soul asylum. John peel used to play this track:

https://youtu.be/d2fAiSev10Q

plp will eat itself (NickB), Thursday, 9 November 2017 18:48 (eight years ago)

oyster band : peel fave cos they did a cracking cover version of a new order track (love vigilantes), but in an upbeat roots/celtic style.
saw them live at reading'90 while the pixies were on the main stage, and had a brilliant time.

mark e, Thursday, 9 November 2017 18:49 (eight years ago)

i'm going to call it and say that 1986 was the nadir for non-rap/dance music production in the u.s.

unless 1987 was.

scott seward, Thursday, 9 November 2017 18:51 (eight years ago)

one dollar production makes jangle-indie sound more charming.

otm

fact checking cuz, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:01 (eight years ago)

lois is a twee legend, iirc

she later became courtney love. the band, not the person.

fact checking cuz, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:01 (eight years ago)

/pedant/ that pre-dated the Lois albums

sleeve, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:04 (eight years ago)

Courtney Love singles are great, I still have two of the three

sleeve, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:05 (eight years ago)

(xp) ah, thank you. fact checking cuz very much appreciates fact checking, obvi.

fact checking cuz, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:06 (eight years ago)

June Tabor is in Oyster Band!!!!

brimstead, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:06 (eight years ago)

crazyhead - third best of the grebo bands iirc

'bad news travels fast' was their big crowd pleaser i think.
one of the better grebo bands, but no idea what i would think if i heard them now!

mark e, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:07 (eight years ago)

or maybe that was just for one album? did they back her up? is that a totally different oyster band?

brimstead, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:07 (eight years ago)

xp

brimstead, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:07 (eight years ago)

Oysterband are the only band on here so far to have had a number one single in the UK - they did Day Trip To Bangor under the name Fiddlers Dram

plp will eat itself (NickB), Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:08 (eight years ago)

i only included oyster band because of the new order cover. they were obviously looking for some of that Clannad crossover money.

scott seward, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:09 (eight years ago)

i feel like i've been staring at that syd straw album in dollar bins for as long as i've been staring at cindy lee berryhill's debut in dollar bins or that marti jones debut in dollar bins. all three should tour together.

scott seward, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:13 (eight years ago)

i'm going to call it and say that 1986 was the nadir for non-rap/dance music production in the u.s.

unless 1987 was.

― scott seward, Thursday, November 9, 2017 1:51 PM (nineteen minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Bands that didn't have access to professional studios in the early '80s knew that one guy across town with a 4-track reel-to-reel, plus that other guy who we could totally borrow a mixer and some mics from. The goal of such recordings was just that everything could be heard; there was no way to approximate big production.

Then these bands came back from tour with a little money, and maybe a label willing to put out a record and pay for time in a pro studio. Studio time! I didn't think we could do that! Now it can sound "professional"!

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:15 (eight years ago)

oh god, so otm

sleeve, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:22 (eight years ago)

"Cyclops Nuclear Submarine Captain" by Dogbowl is great. His other albums don't deviate much from it but aren't as good. Haven't heard any that stuff in years though.

Terry Micawber (Tom D.), Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:29 (eight years ago)

in 1985 the sound got so mushy here! like, just terribly weak and that infernal echo and everything got gauzy and indistinct. just abysmal drum sounds. things actually improved when people started recording for CD. i never thought i would type that sentence. but at least you could hear the music again.

maybe the don gehman cougar mellencampisms of lifes rich pageant made people tighten their sound up too. this is merely conjecture. 1985 was ground zero for "atmospherics". but there was no budget mike hedges to make your crappy enigma record death rock sound like hyaena.

scott seward, Thursday, 9 November 2017 19:43 (eight years ago)

This is upthread a ways now, but aren't Samiam pretty well-known in certain 90s punk/emo circles? I'd be surprised if you couldn't find a buyer for one of their early records.

its like the difference between the studio sound of 1980-1983 u.s. hardcore and 1984 and beyond u.s. hardcore. did all the studios get new equipment in 1984? that big horrible echo-y sound.

― scott seward, Thursday, November 9, 2017 12:36 PM (fifty-eight minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I've wondered about this too! It went hand-in-hand with stylistic shifts in hardcore that I also mostly hate.

JRN, Thursday, 9 November 2017 20:18 (eight years ago)

Started back in '83
Started seeing things differently
And hardcore wasn't doing it for me
No More
Started smoking pot
Thought things sounded better slow
Much slower and heavier
Black magic melody to sink this poser's soul

sleeve, Thursday, 9 November 2017 20:19 (eight years ago)

(I also vastly prefer pre-84 USHC)

sleeve, Thursday, 9 November 2017 20:19 (eight years ago)

I heard Greater Than One on college radio just a couple days ago:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8nRjmS_qAQc

crüt, Thursday, 9 November 2017 21:34 (eight years ago)

The Windbreakers and Winter Hours are both fantastic bands. I love them both.

kornrulez6969, Thursday, 9 November 2017 22:10 (eight years ago)

Ah darn - someone already claimed The Slugs record

BlackIronPrison, Thursday, 9 November 2017 22:16 (eight years ago)

this old neon judgement song is cool.. totally harsh awesome coldwavey thing
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-1WjgkIbX0

brimstead, Thursday, 9 November 2017 22:22 (eight years ago)

yeah, good band

sleeve, Thursday, 9 November 2017 22:22 (eight years ago)

I love old Neon Judgement. Don't know that album though

Colonel Poo, Thursday, 9 November 2017 23:12 (eight years ago)

re neon judgement : thought so.
tis very alien sex fiend vs LS6.
if only my local charity shops had such excellence.

mark e, Thursday, 9 November 2017 23:20 (eight years ago)

here's some vertigo - pretty similar in style to tar amongst all the amrep noisemongers:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JkiW8T3pjMI

plp will eat itself (NickB), Thursday, 9 November 2017 23:26 (eight years ago)

Did you get that stuff from WMUA?

Stuff I own and still love:
Syd Straw - "Surprise", a great album and a singular voice. Michael Stipe guests on one track. Also, she was a Golden Palomino!
Low Pop Suicide is a hidden gem, Dave Allen of Gang Of Four was their bassist.
Winter Hours - friggin' LOVE these guys, sort of alt-country-folk, tremendous lyrics and emotions in their music. The lead singer came to a tragic end.
Close Lobsters - c'mon, way too good for this trash heap list. The Wedding Present covered one of their songs on their Hit Parade singles!
Bleach - great noisy shoegazers, their singles all bettered their one album.
The Creepers - this is Marc Riley's band! Great Fall-esque stuff as you'd expect. Also covered by The Wedding Present.
Lois - as in Lois Maffeo, K Records wunderkind, gorgeous voice and guitar stuff.
Someone mentioned the Judybats and I still love their debut.

Bands I once owned but no longer:
Oyster Band has their moments but never made me love them.
Neon Judgement had a great track "Voodoo Nipplefield".
Shiva Burlesque - I used to own their albums, Grant Lee Phillips was a member.
Cavedogs were a big Boston band, I liked their radio hit.
Hex - I think there are multple bands with this name. Steve Kilbey was in one that I had but they weren't very memorable.
Clay Idols - related to The Black Watch, J'anna Jacoby and Steve Schayer. Not as good as I hoped.

Many of the rest I heard at the time, maybe even checked out some of the bands, but they belong in the trash.

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Thursday, 9 November 2017 23:45 (eight years ago)

The first Close Lobster album is terrific, beats all C-86 fluff to dust

brimstead, Thursday, 9 November 2017 23:58 (eight years ago)

LobsterS

brimstead, Thursday, 9 November 2017 23:58 (eight years ago)

Did not know Gang of Four's Pete Allen was in Low Pop Suicide, will check them out! Also want to go back to Death of Samantha, Das Damen (think I've got them on SST, one of the few labels I used to collect, other than ESP-DISK), and I've heard a number of other bands here, but the one I remember best is the Donner Party, who seemed like a crisp, juicy plot twist of the times; xgau got it:
The Donner Party [Cryptovision, 1987]
R.E.M. as punks. Feelies as folkies. Horseflies without horseshit. "John Wilkes Booth." "When You Die Your Eyes Pop Out." "Jeez Louise." B+
Donner Party [Pitch-a-Tent, 1988]
Like Camper Van Beethoven, who started the label in their DIY days, they're sardonic ethnic/folk-rock postpunks, just as Kaleidoscope and the Cleanliness and Godliness Skiffle Band were sardonic e./f.-r. hippies two decades ago. I don't know why northern California does this to its bohemians, but rootlessness must contribute; rootlessness fertilizes popular culture, forces it to reach out. As in their fabulous folk-punk name, these postteenagers are fascinated by mortality--their most striking songs are about infancy, ingestion, illness, fucking yourself up, and various commonplace-to-horrible vicissitudes. They're posteenage psychologically as well as chronologically because they don't romanticize death--just joke about it a lot. A-

Wikipedia: The band consisted of Melanie Clarin on drums and accordion, Sam Coomes on guitar, violin, and banjo, and Reinhold Johnson on bass....Clarin also played drums in another San Francisco folk-rock band, The Cat Heads, and also Harm Farm.[1] Coomes would later play in Heatmiser, and then form Motorgoat and Quasi with his ex-wife, Janet Weiss. Hey, Harm Farm's on Scott's lists too!

dow, Friday, 10 November 2017 00:31 (eight years ago)

donner party

went on to form Pop Will Eat Itself iirc

glumdalclitch, Friday, 10 November 2017 00:44 (eight years ago)

I saw quite a few of these bands as perennial West Coast opening acts...

sleeve, Friday, 10 November 2017 00:45 (eight years ago)

i liked Shelleyan Orphan back in the day, the lead singer died very recently. i also used to love that The High album but i know it would sound dated today. i might have heard like two or three other bands on here and that is it.

Bee OK, Friday, 10 November 2017 00:46 (eight years ago)

i wonder how many of these bands had members who went on to be part of medium-big but not-especially-cool alt-rock bands a few years later. it would not surprise me at all to learn that Sponge or Collective Soul or Seven Mary Three were primarily composed of shuffled-around members from some of the younger bands here.

Doctor Casino, Friday, 10 November 2017 00:53 (eight years ago)

I remember loving the Doughboys & would buy an album.

Coffin Break are a sentimental fave - they would play a gig ANYWHERE. Really nice guys, too.

bumbling my way toward the light or wahtever (hardcore dilettante), Friday, 10 November 2017 01:16 (eight years ago)

TWAS had a nice write-up of that Primitons record: http://www.furia.com/page.cgi?type=twas&id=twas0008
I'm a huge fan.

campreverb, Friday, 10 November 2017 01:20 (eight years ago)

that first katydids record works for me. the one produced by nick lowe. brit bangles?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qXYPwsCYZz0

Thus Sang Freud, Friday, 10 November 2017 02:06 (eight years ago)

Snap Crackle Pop Art is a great, great record. (I wrote the liner notes for the Pop Art retrospective!)

glenn mcdonald, Friday, 10 November 2017 02:10 (eight years ago)

Winter Hours, The Cavedogs and the Primitons are all classics, too.

glenn mcdonald, Friday, 10 November 2017 02:12 (eight years ago)

donner party

went on to form Pop Will Eat Itself iirc

you dnrc

Colonel Poo, Friday, 10 November 2017 02:16 (eight years ago)


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