"I'd buy that for a dollar!" Great purchases for a buck or less

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Move LP was 1970, apparently.

xhuxk, Wednesday, 11 March 2009 04:00 (fifteen years ago) link

Bob Dylan, Planet Waves (original Asylum edition), 99¢ -- Wal Mart, 1979
Pigpen, Daylight, $1.00 -- Uncle Buck's, Oxford, 1997

WmC, Wednesday, 11 March 2009 04:05 (fifteen years ago) link

"Citywide Garage Sale," Austin, today:

Joan Armatrading How Cruel (A&M EP, 1979) free
Moe Bandy & Joe Stampley Just Good Old Boys (Columbia LP, 1979) $1
Johnny Bristol Feeling The Magic (MGM LP, 1975) $1
Cold Chisel Cold Chisel (Elektra LP, 1980) $1
Headpins Line Of Fire (SGR LP, 1983) $2
Jackson Highway Jackson Highway (Capitol LP, 1980) (Never heard of them, but they have tons of facial hair and at least one great song title: "Rock and Roll Man [Hung Up On A Disco Girl]".) $1
Kansas Bringing It Back (Design Ltd. Music LP, 1980) (Strange looking apparent comp that "may contain previously recorded material" on a questionable indie label I never heard of) $1
O.B. McClinton If You Loved Her That Way (Stax LP, 1974) $1
Ronnie Milsip Images (RCA LP, 1979) (Nice gatefold, and possible disco-country potential) $1
Aaron Tippin Greatest Hits...And Then Some (RCA/BMG CD, 1997) (Road-tested about half of this already. Sounded better and tougher than I'd remembered him.) $3

Goodwill Store, North Central Austin, today:

(Various Artists) The Beatnuts Collection 2 (Strictly Break double LP, 2004) (Questionably legal compilation of songs with hopefully nutty beats that the Beatnuts have allegedly sampled, from Enoch Light, Serge Gainsbourg, Roy Ayers, Lou Rawls, Tyrone Davis, Zulema, Ann Peebles, Harry Nilsson, Electric Prunes, Lou Donaldson, Five Stairsteps, etc.) $2
(Various Artists) The Original Toga Party (Adam VIII double LP, 1979 ("As seen on TV" comp of clearly awesome '50s and '60s frat-party hits by the Isley Brothers, Sam Cooke, Dovels, Regents, Orlons, Kingsmen, Bobby Lewis, Joey Dee and the Starlighters, Lee Dorsey, Chips, The Essex, Kingsmen, Tommy James and Shondells, etc.) $2

xhuxk, Sunday, 15 March 2009 01:57 (fifteen years ago) link

Oliver and Jasper's International Encyclopedia of Hard Rock and Heavy Metal on Jackson Highway: "This band plays a very commercial style of Southern boogie, but not hard enough to stand alongside other outfits of the genre. Most of Blackfoot guest on one track."

xhuxk, Sunday, 15 March 2009 02:01 (fifteen years ago) link

BFC (Carl Craig) - 'Elements 1989-1990' on cd for 250yen (£1.80)

sam500, Sunday, 15 March 2009 02:31 (fifteen years ago) link

Recently:

Truth Hurts feat. Rakim — "Addictive" 12" $1
Felix feat. Jomanda — "Don't You Want Me" 12" $.50

naus, Sunday, 15 March 2009 05:39 (fifteen years ago) link

$7.58 total (= $1 to $2 each + tax), some indepedent thrift store at Burnet and W. Koenig in Austin:

Dan Hartman Relight My Fire (Blue Sky LP, 1979)
Harlequins Four "Set It Off"/"Set It Off (With All That You Feel -- Instrumental)" (Jus Born 12-inch, 1985) (Competing cover of Strafe song, released pretty much simultaneously with the original version. This may or may not be my second copy of this; I still need to check)
Ohio Players Greatest Hits (Westbound, 1975) (Their earler, pre-huge-"Fire" crossover hits obv.)
Raze "Jack The Groove"/"Oh Song"/"Jump In Your Dance"/"Bonus" (Grove St. EP, no year listed) (Songwriting, production, mixing, recording studio credited to Vaughan Mason of "Rock Skate Roll Bounce" fame, with some help from one Ben E. Epps. Record label based in Orange, NJ. Pretty sure Raze were considered a sort of Jersey equivalent of house music, so this is probably mid '80s -- And yeah, the copies on line all say 1986, though most of those seem to be on British labels, which presumably means they came out at least slightly later than in the U.S.)
Gil Scott-Heron Moving Target (Arista LP, 1982) (West German pressing, which means this might have been owned by an American soldier stationed there the same time I was, who knows.)

So yeah, not much Rock this time. None, really. Though Dan Hartman does include a version of "Free Ride" with G.E Smith on lead guitar.

Passed up a couple c.-1986 Trax label house 12-inches that looked pretty scratched up, including "The House Music Anthem" by Marshall Jefferson. Also a very indie looking early (1979) Ricky Skaggs album on (bluegrass not rap) Sugar Hill. And a 3-LP live set of Christian rock on Myrrh from 1977 by Phil Keaggy, The Band Called David, and the 2nd Chapter of Acts. I would have bought that one but they wanted to charge me $4 for it, and I'm a cheapskate. Plus I probably never would get around to listening to the whole thing. Feel free to tell me if I was a dumbbell to pass any of those up.

xhuxk, Saturday, 28 March 2009 23:30 (fifteen years ago) link

even though phil keaggy is my lord and saviour (in his role as frontman for Glass Harp) and i do own a 2nd chapter of acts album that isn't half bad, you can live without the myrrh sampler.

i love raze, by the way!

scott seward, Sunday, 29 March 2009 00:51 (fifteen years ago) link

$45-or-so total (including $5 entrance fee), Austin Record Convention (which apparently happens twice annually), N. Lamar in Austin morning. (Most old LPs there looked way overpriced -- total sucker-bait. The trick was to stick to $1 and $1.50 bins underneath the tables. Still spent way more money than I should have -- getting to the point where I need to break the habit again. But life is short.):

Ambrosia Life Beyond L.A. (Warner Bros., 1978) (w/ "How Much I Feel." Their highest charting album. Never bought an Ambrosia LP before -- I'm not much of a yachtsman -- and passed up a moldy looking copy of their debut, possibly a fatal mistake.)
American Tears Tear Gas (Columbia, 1975) (W/ a sheet of six band stickers inside. Plus they're wearing shag haircuts and gas masks. Drummer named "Tommy Gunn." Called "plod pomp" in Jasper & Oliver book.)
Carla Bley Sextet (Watt, 1987)
Bus Boys American Worker (Arista, 1982) (Said to be their hard-rock/AOR move, I believe)
Glen Campbell Southern Nights (Capitol, 1977)
Chicken Shack 100 Ton Chicken (Blue Horizon, 1969) (Did not expect them to look so Rennaissance-Fairy.)
Ry Cooder Paradise and Lunch (Warner Bros., 1974) (5-star album in first Rolling Stone Record Guide book, fwiw; I recognized the cool cover, though I bet the music sounds stodgier)
Daddy Cool Eagle Rock (Wizard EP, 1982) (Weren't they supposed to be Australia's answer to Sha Na Na or something? Feel like they were decently reviewed in Creem once, but maybe not)
Derringer Derringer (Blue Sky, 1976)
Esperanto Dance Macabre (A&M, 1974) (Apparently prog, though looks decadent in an early Eurodisco kind of way. Zero stars for all three albums in first RS guide!)
John Fred and his Playboy Band Love My Soul (Uni, 1970) (Xgau gave this a B-.)
Golden Earring The Hole (21 Records, 1986)
Head East Head East (A&M, 1978) (w/ "Since You Been Gone")
Head East Get Yourself Up (A&M, 1976) (Funny album cover -- a jeep hauling what looks like a giant load of weed, in the shape of of an Afro)
The Inmates Shot In The Dark (Polydor, 1980) (their second album, w/ their cover of the Music Machine's "Talk Talk," which lots of new wave bands covered, I just realized)
The Invisible Man's Band The Invisible Man's Band (Mango, 1980) (Chris Blackwell-produced disco by former Five Stairsteps, apparently)
Ironhorse Ironhorse (Scotti Brothers, 1979) (feat. Randy Bachman on guitar and vocals. Got some AOR play in Detroit at the time, but I don't think I've heard it since. Passed up a later LP by them.)
Chas Jankel Chas Jankel (A&M, 1981) (Ian Dury's lead Blockhead. W/ "Ai No Corrida," later that year a hit for Quincy Jones)
Ronald Shannon Jackson and the Decoding Society Mandance (Antilles, 1982)
Shannon Jackson When Colors Play (Caravan of Dreams, 1987) (Same guy; not sure why he dropped the Ronald from his name. This actually made my Pazz & Jop Top 10 the year it came out, strangely enough.)
Tonio K Life In the Foodchain (Full Moon, 1978) (w/ his quasi-hit "Funky Western Civilization")
Tonio K Amerika (Arista, 1980)
Tonio K La Bomba (Capitol EP, 1982)(No real explanation for why I went Tonio Krazy, though I did pass on two later albums by him.)
Malcolm X "No Sell Out" (Tommy Boy 12-inch, 1983) (Music by Keith Leblanc. First time I've owned this in decades; first time I've ever owned it with the Macolm X picture sleeve on it. Looks like a later pressing than the one I had before.)
The Motors Tenement Steps (Virgin, 1980) (In that weird Traffic-like trapezoidal die-cut sleeve)
Juice Newton Dirty Looks (Capitol, 1983) (Sealed, though I won't keep it that way. LP cover looks extremely new wave.)
Nutz Hard Nutz (A&M, 1977) (George is a fan of these guys, I believe. "The proverbial support band and always guaranteed to keep the punters happy," say Jasper and Oliver, who claim "Wallbanger" -- included here -- is their best song. Popoff gives the album a 7/6.)
The Olympics The Officical Record Album Of The Olympics (Rhino, 1984) (Reissue from wannabee Coasters, who apparently had a pile of smallish hits)
Ossian Acelsziv (Artisjus, 1988) (Totally guessing about the record label. Very goofy looking Hungarian metal with unpronounceable song titles)
Sharks First Water (MCA, 1973) (Featuring Andy Fraser from Free on bass, plus a very pre-punk Chris Spedding on guitar!)
Spitballs Spitballs (Bersekley, 1978) (Apparently very short covers of 15 then-forgotten '60s oldies, from uncredited musicians partly produced by Kenny Laguna. Used to see this in cutout bins a lot; had no idea what it was.)
Michael Stanley Band Heartland (EMI, 1980) (w/ "He Can't Love You")
Isaac Payton Sweat Cotton Eyed Joe/Schottische, Jole Blon and Other Bandstand Favorites (Bellaire, year unknown) (One dealer had about 40 sealed copies of this -- weird, since I swear I just googled Isaac Payton Sweat for the first time few days ago. Maybe they used to sell this in country dance halls or something, and nobody bought it. Label is based in Texas; looks extremely cut-rate.)
Talas Sink Your Teeth Into That (Relativity, 1982) (Vaguely remember somebody comparing this power trio to Blue Cheer in a Creem Rock-a-rama or somewhere once. Probably bullshit, but I'm still curious. Popoff gives it a "5," but I don't think he liked Blue Cheer much in the first place. Also I just noticed they have Billy Sheehan on bass.)
Teka Ensemble Golya, Golya, Glice: Hungarian Folk Games And Dances (Hungarian Records, 1980) (Looks cute and authentic at the same time, though the label is based in Teaneck, NJ.)
World Saxophone Quartet Plays Duke Ellington (Nonesuch Digital, 1986) (The "digital" trend for pre-CD vinyl didn't last very long, did it?)
Zuider Zee Zuider Zee (Columbia, 1975) ("Wooden and uninteresting 1975 album from a group with an Abbey Road-era Beatles fixation," RS record guide says. Appropriately given their end-of-alphabetness, they do a song called "Zeebra." Also one called "The Last Song Of Its Kind," but it doesn't say what kind it is.)

xhuxk, Sunday, 5 April 2009 19:36 (fifteen years ago) link

all the musicians are identified in my copy of spitballs. you know, jonathan richman, greg kihn, members of earth quake, etc. in fact i think it even has a group picture of everyone who played on the album.

scott seward, Sunday, 5 April 2009 19:54 (fifteen years ago) link

i go nuts playing life in the foodchain really REALLY loud about twice a year. one of my fave albums of all time.

scott seward, Sunday, 5 April 2009 19:54 (fifteen years ago) link

Yay! As for Spitballs, really? Because I don't see musician names anywhere, though the baseball team on the back does have faces glued on. Inner sleeve is an original Bersekley yellow one too -- weird!

xhuxk, Sunday, 5 April 2009 19:56 (fifteen years ago) link

Keith Cross and Pete Ross - Bored Civilians
British folk-Rock from 1972 (sorta - touches of the Fairports/ Fotheringay but also a little bit jazz and a little bit rock)
1 euro
Great record

and a bunch of other stuff, not so good, mostly.

sonofstan, Sunday, 5 April 2009 21:26 (fifteen years ago) link

oh, yeah, like i said on the vinyl thread, me and the kids went to a book sale and we got two bags of books and videos and 5 records for a buck. great videos too. star wars trilogy boxed-set on vhs! all kinds of stuff. just cuz i'm so generous i gave the people two bucks. these were the records i got. (and they will be going in my ebay pile, probably. everything except the laibach sells for real money):

laibach - s/t (with insert)

current 93 - looney runes (with poster)

current 93 - swastikas for noddy

death in june - nada!

death in june/current 93 - split lp

scott seward, Sunday, 5 April 2009 21:51 (fifteen years ago) link

A couple others I came real close to buying and passed on, fwiw, were the first Yipes! LP from 1979 (Milwaukee hard powerpop new wave band, and judging from the reviews I'm looking at, I should have paid the $2 they wanted for it) and the Brecker Brothers' Heavy Metal Bebop from 1978 (very intriguing title and goofy LP cover, and I think I didn't hate "Some Skunk Funk" once, but I'm a fusion skeptic. Probably should've shelled out $1 for it anyway.)

Judging from the 50-cent EP I bought, Daddy Cool's 50s schtick is as close to the Flamin' Groovies (maybe even Brownsville Station?) as to Sha Na Na. Still not sure I like these particular songs, though.

xhuxk, Monday, 6 April 2009 00:39 (fifteen years ago) link

So what was the deal with Ambrosia, anyway? First side of the album I bought starts like medium-hard late '70s Styx pomp-rock; second side starts like quasi-Steely Dan (including a song called "Angola" that sounds like Steely Dan doing minstrel reggae with fake accents bordering on the offensive); the huge hit "How Much I Feel" is blue-eyed ballad schlock that I basically confused with Air Supply at the time. What were thinking? Who was their audience? And how typical is this record?

xhuxk, Wednesday, 8 April 2009 16:20 (fifteen years ago) link

...blue-eyed soul ballad schlock, I mean -- As much Hall and Oates as Air Supply, in retrospect.

xhuxk, Wednesday, 8 April 2009 16:22 (fifteen years ago) link

all the musicians are identified in my copy of spitballs. you know, jonathan richman, greg kihn, members of earth quake, etc. in fact i think it even has a group picture of everyone who played on the album.

― scott seward, Sunday, 5 April 2009 19:54 (3 days ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

Yup, mine too. It's the UK edition.

Mark G, Wednesday, 8 April 2009 16:29 (fifteen years ago) link

Maybe that Superpitcher album in the Zavvi (now called HEAD wtf) sale on lunch - I will know once I've listened to it

National Lampoon's Minimal House (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 8 April 2009 16:29 (fifteen years ago) link

you made me pull out my Spitballs mine has no info, it is Dutch. I paid 99 cents for it in 1991. I forgot to remove the inner price tag.

I must have known what it was from reading Trouser Press Record Guide or something. Nope, just looked it was in the Rolling Stone blue guide.

james k polk, Thursday, 9 April 2009 22:34 (fifteen years ago) link

$1 each, Half-Price Books, Lamar at Airport, Austin, today:

Aaron Copland Appalachian Spring (EAV Music Appreciation Series LP, 1968) (The "Study Version" on the first side is "desigined to be played with the filmstrip," and includes "electronic signals superimposed on the music to indicate when filmstrip frames are to be changed." Filmstrip not included, of course, so that means I only have to listen to the "Listening Version." Sounds easy!)
The Farm Spartacus (Sire/Reprise CD, 1991) (Post-Manchester/pre-big beat U.K. rock-techno, or something like that. I believe "Groovy Train" was some sort of hit in England. I'll probably hate this, but thought I'd try it anyway.)
Wilson Pickett The Wicked Pickett (Atlantic LP, 1966) (Scratchy, but it looks like he does a lot of great songs)
Southside Johnny And The Asbury Jukes The Jukes (Mercury LP, 1979) (Was kinda disappointed by This Time It's For Real which I paid a buck for last year, but by the looks of things this was probably their new wave record, if they had one)
Widow Rockit (CBS Associated, 1985) (Never heard of them, but looks promising -- L.A. corporate mid '80s fake new wave rock with a girl singer. They actually had two different cheesy-looking 1985 LPs at the store; went with that one because it's got two possible Holly Knight songwriting credits plus a cover of Joni Mitchell's "This Flight Tonight," which Nazareth did an awesome version of once. If I like this one, I'll go back and spend a buck on Gone Too Soon or whatever it's called, which has a tombstone on the cover. If I don't, I won't.)

xhuxk, Saturday, 11 April 2009 23:41 (fifteen years ago) link

The Farm Spartacus... I'll probably hate this

Too bleh to bother to hate, actually. "Groovy Train" clearly the most tolerable song, and still not so hot. But then I never got Happy Mondays, either.

Southside Johnny And The Asbury Jukes ...probably their new wave record, if they had one

They apparently didn't, despite Johnny's skinny tie on the cover and the 1979 copyright. Though "I'm So Anxious" might the closest they ever came. I should have been over it decades ago, but I still never fail to be astonished by how mediocre these guys always seem to sound, in a genre (white bar-band r&b-rock) I basically like. They're never that funky, never that rocking, never that soulful, never that catchy, and their songwriting was nothing special. Seems they just did all that stuff enough to get by. Guess they were really lucky Bruce was their buddy.

More duds:

Glen Campbell Southern Nights (Capitol, 1977)
Gil Scott-Heron Moving Target (Arista LP, 1982)

Probably Daddy Cool, too -- amazed to learn "Eagle Rock," which is really no great shakes, was a gigantic hit in 1971 in Australia, where it somehow topped the charts for ten weeks. Maybe I'll force-feed it to myself a couple more times, but I doubt it'll hit. (Copyright on my 12-inch single says '82, so I guess it's possible this is a re-recording.)

xhuxk, Sunday, 12 April 2009 01:14 (fifteen years ago) link

on the local weekly market there are one or two bookstands that also have a couple of rugged looking boxes holding slightly less rugged vinyl. checked these out yesterday

JJ Cale - Naturally (Ariola, 1971)
Tom Lehrer - Revisited (Lehrer Records, 1960)
Franz Schubert - String Quartet No. 13 by the Janáček Quartet (Supraphon, 1962)
Walter Carlos - The Well-Tempered Synthesizer (CBS, 1969)

willem, Sunday, 12 April 2009 20:14 (fifteen years ago) link

The Motors Tenement Steps (Virgin, 1980)

Weird record. The band had basically broken up, but the two guys who had once upon a time been in Ducks Deluxe stayed together as a duo, and got Jimmy Iovine to produce, and wound up moving away from the pub hard rock of their earlier records toward an almost showtune-rock kind of archness and ornateness. Everybody seemed to notice back then how much "Love and Loneliness" sounds like Stephen Stills' "Love The One You're With," but I'm not sure if anybody noticed how much "Tenement Steps" sound like "MacArthur Park." Those are the two side openers, both almost five minutes long, and they're the two songs I used to hear on college radio in the '80s. Not til halfway through Side Two -- with "Nightmare Zero" and then "Modern Man" (because every fake new wave band back then had to do a song called "Modern Man" that tried to sound like Devo) -- do they speed up and let the new wave rock in.

Turns out Daddy Cool's "Eagle Rock" does have some kind of archival riff and primal structure to it, best overheard loud from the next room over after a couple beers (which is how it was probably often heard in Australia at the time, I bet.) So not as great a pub-boogie single as say "Teenage Head" or "Smokin' In the Boys Room," but still not bad. (And the lyrics to their B-side "Daddy Rocks Off" basically go something like "boogie woogie woogie woogie woogie woogie woogie woogie woogie boogie.")

Widow Rockit (CBS Associated, 1985)

Sound like Scandal, and do it well -- bright sun-shiney hand-clapping hard pop. Maybe a little Quarterflash thrown in there, too (though no saxophones.) Cover of "This Flight Tonight" does sound based on the Nazareth version, to me ears.

xhuxk, Monday, 13 April 2009 16:06 (fifteen years ago) link

"Esperanto Dance Macabre (A&M, 1974) (Apparently prog, though looks decadent in an early Eurodisco kind of way. Zero stars for all three albums in first RS guide!)"

I bought this when I was in high school and loved it for about two months. Never looked into the later two. More Roxy Music prog than Yes prog, features a violin prominently. Haven't played it in years, in fact I may have gotten rid of it because I can't remember seeing it since I played it last. Still have a soft spot for it, though.

And the first Ambrosia is worth getting. "Nice, Nice, Very Nice" was the hit from that one, which had some kind of Kurt Vonnegut connection, I think.

nickn, Tuesday, 14 April 2009 06:33 (fifteen years ago) link

Dollar CDs from the KTRU Outdoor Show:

Volcano Suns-The Bright Orange Years (expanded reissue)
Carbon/Silicon-Last Post
Mark Olson & Gary Louris-Ready For The Flood

The Wild Shirtless Lyrics of Mark Farner (C. Grisso/McCain), Tuesday, 14 April 2009 15:40 (fifteen years ago) link

xp Not hearing any Roxy Music I can identify on that Esperanto LP, unfortunately; not much Yes, either, though. Really wish there was more rock (as in guitars) in their prog, and more singing too. First side ("The Journey"/"The Castle"/"The Duel," woaagh) is mostly instrumental, at least 'til the sub-Focus operatic hocus-pocus in the final track; second side the high male singer stays sparse and gets lost among the Belgian/Italaian/Brit octet shuffle, who don't really crank their changes silly and over-the-top until the two-minute concluding title track. So though I really want to like the record (the cover illo of leotarded lesbians battling with bull-whips in mid-air is pretty sick), I'm actually bored by most of it. (One website on line compares them to Curved Air, who I've barely ever listened to; was under the impression they were jazzier and folkier, though. Also, Esperanto sadly lack a lady singer, not to mention anybody who wound up in The Police.)

xhuxk, Wednesday, 15 April 2009 00:13 (fifteen years ago) link

One Amazon reviewer's dissenting opinion, fwiw:

Side One (of the LP) is very much an orchestral ELP, with a touch of orchestral Caravan thrown in for the few vocal tracks. Side Two, in retrospect, is much more interesting, because it contains many of the elements that the Alan Parsons Project would use a year later in their debut album, TALES OF MYSTERY AND IMAGINATION: highly visual orchestrations, rhythmic bass-lines, John Miles-like vocal. I'm not aware that they have credited the influence of Esperanto, but it's hard to believe that Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson had not heard DANSE MACABRE before composing their first album.

xhuxk, Wednesday, 15 April 2009 00:16 (fifteen years ago) link

It turns out I have the Last Tango LP (their third) and not Danse Macabre. They do a cover of Eleanor Rigby on it. This one seems to have more vocals than DM, and I kind of remember a female vocalist doing some of the singing (but it may have just been backup).

nickn, Wednesday, 15 April 2009 03:01 (fifteen years ago) link

So Widow actually turn out to be more Motels/Scandal than Quarterflash/Scandal, and like I said not bad, but the only cut that really sticks with me when the album ends is their "This Flight Tonight" cover (which is absolutely schooled in Nazareth's rumble.) Nothing else gets anywhere near that level of kick, and this kind of pop doesn't mean much without hits. So I think I'll pass on picking up their other album.

xhuxk, Thursday, 16 April 2009 01:54 (fifteen years ago) link

Motels/Scandal than Quarterflash/Scandal

that is an incredibly fine distinction. More moody than you originally thought?

james k polk, Thursday, 16 April 2009 01:59 (fifteen years ago) link

Nah, just thinner. And less jazzy. (Quarterflash totally had that Fleetwood Mac/Steely Dan thing going on, especially on the debut. Check out "Williams Avenue" if you don't believe me. Not to mention "Valerie," where sax-playing Rindy Ross sings about a lesbian fling in art school. One of my favorite albums ever, no shit.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 16 April 2009 02:05 (fifteen years ago) link

Turns out Daddy Cool's "Eagle Rock" does have some kind of archival riff and primal structure to it, best overheard loud from the next room over after a couple beers (which is how it was probably often heard in Australia at the time, I bet.

Has great rhythm thump and guitar turnarounds without being heavy. Song used in the opening sequence of "Wolf Creek", Australia's "Texas Chainsaw Massacre," mostly for its bonhommie in the car with three students, one guys/two girls, on their way for a tour after a night of excessive drinking and barfing with friends.

Gorge, Thursday, 16 April 2009 02:59 (fifteen years ago) link

some recent LP finds for 50 cents

robbie basho - rainbow thunder
robbie basho - art of the acoustic steel string guitar 6 & 12
fleetwood mac - rumours
django reinhardt - djangology

6335, Thursday, 16 April 2009 03:20 (fifteen years ago) link

That Southside Johnny LP I bought and complained about above turns out to have a pretty decent rock-disco crossover track at the end -- "Vertigo," somehow a paralell to when Phil Lynott and David Johansen made similar moves around that time. And maybe even more than Lynott and Johansen, these guys really come naturally to it, basically being a soul band and all. Also don't mind the E-Streety soul horn arrangements on most of Side Two, and the two semi-new-wave rockers at the album's start ("All I Want Is Everything," "I'm So Anxious") are pretty catchy. So like most of the early LPs I've heard by these guys, this one gets a pass, but just barely.

xhuxk, Saturday, 18 April 2009 01:56 (fourteen years ago) link

$1, Top Drawer Thrift, on Burnett in Austin today:

Afro-Cuban Band Rhythm Of Life (Arista 1978) (Latinish disco from Michael Zager)
Mac McNally Cuttin' Corners (RCA 1980)
UTFO Doin' It! (Select 1989)

Passed up these; any reason I shouldn't have?: Lane Caudell Midnight Hunter (1979 apparent disco from an actor I think); June Millington Running (early '80s lesbian folk from ex Fanny member I think); The Pattons Homesteading (1975 Christian hippie folk duo looks like); Maureen Steele Nature Of The Beast (sleazy looking white woman singer on Motown in 1975).

xhuxk, Saturday, 25 April 2009 22:09 (fourteen years ago) link

About a year back, I found a copy of the classic ROIR compilation New York Thrash -- featuring seismic tracks by Bad Brains, Kraut, Adrenalin O.D., Beastie Boys -- on compact disc for a dollar. I hadn't heard it since someone swiped my cassette of it in college. Major score.

Alex in NYC, Saturday, 25 April 2009 23:44 (fourteen years ago) link

john coltrane - kulu se mama
jackie mclean - it's time
herbie hancock - maiden voyage
melvin van peebles - br'er soul
canned heat - living the blues
al green - gets next to you
al green - is love
thelonious monk - alone in san francisco
nitty gritty dirt band - uncle charlie and his dog teddy
john mayall - blues in laurel canyon
john mayall - crusade
james brown - black caesar

"Together we could rape the universe" (omar little), Friday, 1 May 2009 06:31 (fourteen years ago) link

I picked up the Screaming Trees SST Anthology (21 songs!!!) for $1 the other night.

I just wish he hadn't adopted the "ilxor" moniker (ilxor), Friday, 1 May 2009 13:48 (fourteen years ago) link

$1, Top Drawer Thrift, on Burnett in Austin today:

xhuxk, since when are you in Austin?

I just wish he hadn't adopted the "ilxor" moniker (ilxor), Friday, 1 May 2009 13:48 (fourteen years ago) link

Since the end of March...

Anyway, bought this CD for 50 cents at a garage sale here today:

Emerson Lake & Palmer Lucky Man And Other Hits (Flashback/Rhino, 1997) (Looks really cut-rate, like something that'd get sold in truck stops or at the drug store counter. Songlist goes: Lucky Man, C'Est La Vie, Paper Blood, Still...You Turn Me On, Karn Evil No. 9 -- 1st Impression Parts 1 & 2, Fanfare For The Common Man)

...and these three LPs at a Goodwill at 183 and Burnett, $5 total:

Richard "Dimples" Fields Tellin' It Like It Is (Columbia, 1987) (Actually, though I'll file it with the other two LPs I have under his whole name, he is just called "Dimples" on the cover and on the label; had no idea he would up doing that)
New England New England (Infinity, 1979) (Includes a song called "Punk {Puny Undernourished Kid}," ha ha)
The Sylvers Something Special (Capitol, 1976)

Would have definitely bought a few more if they'd been selling for $1 instead of $2, and may yet go back to get one or two in a moment of weekness: Robbie Dupree LP with "Steal Away" and "Hot Rod Hearts"; Shirley Murdock self-titled Roger Troutman-produced '87 LP with "As We Lay"; Duke Jupiter LP from 1984 on Motown (not sure if they were ever any good); Bob James Touchdown; Don Williams Cafe Carolina; self-released-looking LP by some Canadian jazz guy who covered a Frank Zappa song.

xhuxk, Sunday, 3 May 2009 03:48 (fourteen years ago) link

The Canadian jazz-guy LP was from 1976, fwiw (which made it seem more interesting, since self-released LPs weren't as common back then, jazz or otherwise.)

Also, the Maureen Steele Motown album I mentioned that I didn't buy a week ago was from '85, not '75.

And oh yeah, that Goodwill also had something like 20 different Keith Jarrett LPs from the '70s and '80s for $2 each; apparently some former Keith fan had dumped their whole collection.

xhuxk, Sunday, 3 May 2009 03:52 (fourteen years ago) link

25 cents each, garage sale, North Central Austin today:

Bill Doggett Honky Tonk Organ (Harmony LP, c. late '50s or early '60s I assume)
Fats Domino Fats Domino (United Artists Legendary Masters Series double-LP, 1971 -- this is the cool-looking set that got five stars in early editions of the Rolling Stone Record Guide)
S-Ban Hour Best Hit Parade (Hit Songs) (some Japanese label LP, probably mid '60s, beautiful translucent lime-green vinyl -- Maybe "S-Ban Hour," or "S-Ban Haur" as the label inside says, is the group? Three mod-looking non-Asian gals on the cover; songs include "Diana," "Calendar Girl, "One Way Ticket," "The Three Bells" "Day-O," "Sinno'Me Moro," "Mama Guitar," "The Rose Tattoo," "Uska Dara," etc., many of which I never heard of before.)

xhuxk, Saturday, 16 May 2009 17:55 (fourteen years ago) link

xpost to xhuxk re: Lane Caudell.

He was in a kinda interesting glam-pop group called Skyband in the 70's, along with Pete Beckett (later of Player) and Steve Kipner (I think you'll know his history? From Bee Gees to Natasha Bedinfield...) I have no idea if his solo album is any good, but it might be interesting depending on who was involved in the songwriting/production. FWIW, the Skyband album looks like it's disco if you judge by the cover, but doesn't sound disco at all. Granted Lane was probably the least musical of the three, but I'd be at least slightly interested, especially for less than a buck.

dlp9001, Saturday, 16 May 2009 18:34 (fourteen years ago) link

Hmmm, it looks like one of Caudell's songs was covered by The Cats (another one of those European groups like Gasolin' who were apparently huge at one time...somewhere?)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cats

dlp9001, Saturday, 16 May 2009 18:44 (fourteen years ago) link

Thanks, dlp -- That does sound kinda promising. Maybe I'll pick it up next time I'm at that store.

And fwiw, S-Ban Hour are apparently not a group. Guess those mod gals are just for decoration. The LP turns out mostly to be a fairly musically pointless compilation of actual hits by the(uncredited) original artists (Anka, Sedaka, Belafonte, etc.) But it sure does look pretty, and weird.

xhuxk, Saturday, 16 May 2009 18:45 (fourteen years ago) link

i have a cats album on rare earth that sucks. they were dutch, right?

scott seward, Saturday, 16 May 2009 19:24 (fourteen years ago) link

"they were key figures of what came to be called the Palingsound (eel-sound), an umbrella for artists residing in Volendam (the country's top seafood city)."

meow!

scott seward, Saturday, 16 May 2009 19:25 (fourteen years ago) link

The Cats seem easier to find on youtube. Bee Gees alert! Based on this song, I'm suddenly slightly interested:

dlp9001, Sunday, 17 May 2009 01:57 (fourteen years ago) link

Trying that again:

dlp9001, Sunday, 17 May 2009 01:57 (fourteen years ago) link


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