Fat Possum Novedades
Standard[26,01 €]
Indie[26,68 €]
- A1: Burning House Of Love; Songwriter
- A2: Love Shack; Songwriter
- A3: My Soul Cries Your Name; Songwriter
- A4: My Goodness; Songwriter
- A5: Around My Heart; Songwriter
- B1: What's Wrong With Me...; Songwriter
- B2: All Or Nothing; Written-By – R. Lane*, S. Marriott*
- B3: Watch The Sun Go Down; Songwriter
- B4: I'll Stand Up For You; Songwriter
- B5: Little Honey; Written-By – Dave Alvin, John Doe (2)
- B6: Supercharged; Songwriter
- C Wild Thing
- D Devil Doll
[a] A1 Burning House Of Love; Songwriter [Songs Written By] – Exene Cervenka, John Doe (2)
[b] A2 Love Shack; Songwriter [Songs Written By] – Exene Cervenka, John Doe (2)
[c] A3 My Soul Cries Your Name; Songwriter [Songs Written By] – Exene Cervenka, John Doe (2)
[d] A4 My Goodness; Songwriter [Songs Written By] – Exene Cervenka, John Doe (2)
[e] A5 Around My Heart; Songwriter [Songs Written By] – Exene Cervenka, John Doe (2)
[f] B1 What's Wrong With Me...; Songwriter [Songs Written By] – Exene Cervenka, John Doe (2)
[h] B3 Watch The Sun Go Down; Songwriter [Songs Written By] – Exene Cervenka, John Doe (2)
[i] B4 I'll Stand Up For You; Songwriter [Songs Written By] – Exene Cervenka, John Doe (2)
[k] B6 Supercharged; Songwriter [Songs Written By] – Exene Cervenka, John Doe (2)
- Neighborhood Scene
- Speed Freak
- Football
- Gumshoe (Dracula From Arkansas)
- Seersucker
- Lucy Takes A Picture
- Perfect World
- My Beautiful Girl
- Canary
- Parking Lot
- Saturday Cowboy Matinee
- Home Movie (1989-1993)
Das neue Album Rarely Do I Dream wurzelt in Liebe und Kindheitserinnerungen und ist ein Triumph amerikanischer Gothic-Phantasie - wo sich die
Unschuld aus dem Märchenbuch in einer radioaktiven Welle aus jugendlichen Driftern, drogensüchtigen Strippenziehern und Folklore der alten Welt
auflöst.
Trevor Powers' einzigartige Stimme, die zwischen treibender Electronica und halluzinatorischen Rocksongs hin- und herpendelt, leuchtet stets wie ein
neonfarbenes Straßenschild, das nach Hause weist.
Trevor Powers kehrte 2023 mit der Veröffentlichung seines vierten Albums „Heaven Is a Junkyard“ zu Youth Lagoon zurück, das unter anderem von
Pitchfork als „Best New Music“ gelobt wurde. Mit "Rarely Do I Dream" erscheint im februar endlich der Nachfolger.
Black Vinyl[28,99 €]
Nach vier Jahren kehrtenThe Weather Station mit dem Nachfolger des Albums Ignorance zurück: Ihr neues Album „Humanhood“ erscheint im Januar
2025. Die erste Single "Neon Signs" ist eine erste Ankündigung daraus.
Ignorance war wohl das am besten rezensierte Album des Jahres 2021: Album des Jahres bei The New Yorker, UNCUT, The Globe and Mail, The
Observer und Top 10 bei der New York Times, The Guardian, PItchfork, Rolling Stone Germany, Stereogum, und vielen mehr.
Weather Station-Mastermind und Sängerin Tamara Lindeman hat Humanhood gemeinsam mit Marcus Paquin produziert.
Eco-mix Red Vinyl[29,62 €]
Nach vier Jahren kehrtenThe Weather Station mit dem Nachfolger des Albums Ignorance zurück: Ihr neues Album „Humanhood“ erscheint im Januar
2025. Die erste Single "Neon Signs" ist eine erste Ankündigung daraus.
Ignorance war wohl das am besten rezensierte Album des Jahres 2021: Album des Jahres bei The New Yorker, UNCUT, The Globe and Mail, The
Observer und Top 10 bei der New York Times, The Guardian, PItchfork, Rolling Stone Germany, Stereogum, und vielen mehr.
Weather Station-Mastermind und Sängerin Tamara Lindeman hat Humanhood gemeinsam mit Marcus Paquin produziert.
- A1: World Is Dog
- A2: Cctv (Feat Creature)
- A3: Yottabyte
- A4: Bad Pollen (Feat Billy Woods)
- A5: Slum Of A Disregard
- A6: Rfid
- A7: Instant Transfer (Feat Billy Woods)
- A8: Ikebana
- B1: In The Shadow Of If
- B2: Skp
- B3: Hushpuppies
- B4: 14 4 (Feat. Skech185)
- B5: Voice 2 Skull
- B6: Xolo
- B7: Zigzagzig
Black Vinyl[35,08 €]
We’re teaming up with ELUCID and Fat Possum for a limited edition of 300 copies of a Rush Hour black ice coloured edition.
E L U C I D, one half of the illustrious duo Armand Hammer, is here with the full-length follow-up to 'I Told Bessie'. Further experiments in the sonic, expanding on the 'live' side of music paired with the embracing of chaos. Something you haven't heard, or not so for a very long time. E L U C I D is here to reveal the bleakness of reality.
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''There is never time in the future in which we will work out our salvation. The challenge is in the moment; the time is always now.''
James Baldwin
A raw, crackling urgency runs through rapper-producer ELUCID’s new album REVELATOR like an underground power line. There is no space here for sepia-toned reminiscences or indulgent self-mythologizing. Intellectual rabbit holes have been filled in with concrete and rebar ; there is nowhere to hide and no off ramp from the audio Autobahn that ELUCID has fashioned—a renegade Robert Moses with gold fronts, bulldozing the homes of the powerful and the complicit. REVELATOR brims with the energy of now, with a refusal to look away. Carpe diem in a murder one mask.
Born in Jamaica, Queens, ELUCID has been on the cutting edge of New York’s underground scene since the mid-2000s. From the beginning, he has defied both convention and expectation. He ran with Okayplayer darlings Tanya Morgan, but his own music eschewed their throwback charm for glitchy noise experiments and bass-swamped culture jamming. His 2016 debut studio project Save Yourself (re-released in a deluxe edition last year) announced him in earnest. But in recent years, his Armand Hammer releases with partner-in-crime billy woods have received significant attention and acclaim. Serving as a followup to his last solo album—2022’s comparatively balmy I Told Bessie—ELUCID hoped to “re-distinguish” himself with REVELATOR, setting himself apart amidst the increasing attention around the music he and his friends are making together.
For ELUCID, this meant setting bold new challenges for himself. One of these was diving further into live instrumentation than ever before—”getting my Quincy Jones on,” as he puts it. The testing ground for this approach was Armand Hammer’s most recent project, 2023’s We Buy Diabetic Test Strips’ Möbius strip soundscapes, warmed with instrumental flourishes and skin-shedding beat progressions. With REVELATOR, though, ELUCID strove to create an atmosphere of chaos, embracing experimental electronics and atonal sample bursts. He worked on much of the album with co-producer Jon Nellen, who comes from a background in avant-garde and Indian classical music. “I wanted to get as freaky as I could at this moment. I wanted people to hear things, maybe for the first time, or in a way they haven’t for a long while,” the rapper explains.
ELUCID arrived at the studio with a collection of noise sources: non-referential samples, glitches and noises. Together he, Nellen, and others created forms out of them and, as ELUCID recalls, “just started playing drums with it.” Their fried, distorted sound was directly inspired by Miles Davis at his most uncompromising—specifically, the tone-clustering funk track “Rated X” from his 1974 double LP Get Up With It. At times, the pairing of rap with avant-fusion sounds also brings Emergency! from The Tony Williams Lifetime to mind, perhaps in an alternate timeline where the late drummer was listening to Ice Cube’s AmeriKKKa’s Most Wanted.
“The World is Dog,” REVELATOR’s lead single, functions as the album’s aesthetic thesis statement. Like the Davis track, the textures are punishing, the tonality is in free-fall, and the driving breakbeat of a groove cuts in and out unceremoniously. Avant-jazz bassist Luke Stewart, who appears throughout the record, holds the whole thing together just long enough for ELUCID to tightwalk over the beat. This tension is exactly where REVELATOR sets itself apart; in a time of drumless loops, and safe soul samples, this is a high-wire act with no safety net. Similarly, the song announces the themes of the album within just a few phrases, evoking the way societies accept and adjust to new levels of debasement and brutality while suffocating under the weight of history: “Can’t clock the kill, all a mystery/Forced past will eating everyone eventually/The world is dog.”
Many of the songs on REVELATOR grapple obliquely with dissolution and disenfranchisement in America and across the world—the grim realities of our domestic sociopolitical climate and our involvement in foreign conflicts. “Much of my artistic and political sensibility comes from the Black arts movement here in New York,” ELUCID explains. “Recognizing the interconnected global struggles against oppression, artists and thinkers created works and actions in solidarity with freedom movements in South Africa and Palestine.” ELUCID cites intellectuals like Amiri Baraka, Kwame Nkrumah, Audre Lorde, Sonia Sanchez, and Nikki Giovanni among his heroes. (One track on the album is specifically inspired by Lorde’s work, “SKP,” citing the scholar’s paper “Uses of the Erotic: The Erotic As Power.”) Songs like REVELATOR’s insistent closer “ZIGZAGZIG,” find ELUCID applying up-to-the-minute messaging, making explicit reference to the conflict in Gaza: “Feed a war machine…from river to sea, in lieu of peace.”
Despite ELUCID’s preference for cacophonous system overload here, the rapper also provides moments of respite. Recorded at The Alchemist’s Los Angeles studio, the laid-back, wheezing “INSTANT TRANSFER” is a collaboration with billy woods, which crystallizes their shared sense of creative determination. “With much momentum behind us and even more on the horizon, I knew a purpose, and that every step was ordered to that purpose,” ELUCID said of the experience. Meanwhile, the jittery “HUSHPUPPIES” is a playful anomaly on the track list, providing a snapshot of ELUCID watching his grandparents in the kitchen while preparing for Friday night fish fry dinners.
“Love still rules over on this side,” ELUCID says. ”I’m raising a family. We are making meaning and finding joy in the midst of all the fucked up-ness of everything around us because the alternative is cowardice and slow death. We remain rooted. We celebrate our people and our wins. Struggle is necessary.”
“IKEBANA” is one of ELUCID’s strongest statements of purpose on the record, blending the record’s heaviest themes with its most hopeful sentiments. supported by a shoutalong refrain and an urgent prog-funk groove. Breaking away from images of dissolution and crumbling societal systems that populate REVELATOR, ELUCID notes that the only way to navigate life’s bleakest landscapes is to cling to love and believe in those around you—to look forward toward something better that may or may not be possible. For the rapper, one of the album’s most trenchant lines comes during a centerpiece of a beat drop: “Being alive/I must look up.”
“The lyric ‘being alive I must look up’ is important especially in the context of this album. Much of the album imagery is harsh and reflects the actual doom some of us experience. But still I/we exist,” ELUCID explains.
Every artist is, in one way or another, the product of their time, bound by life’s leaden gravity to operate within the space of that which is already known. But there are some who are able to shake free of these ties, to shape the culture as it unfolds, to make the present their own.
Revelation, as a concept, points to the scales falling from people’s eyes—something that has been hiding in plain sight becoming clear. “The revelator relates to things that have been talked about, things that have been forecasted,” ELUCID adds. “And now they’re really here, and everyone sees it. And there’s no escaping.” REVELATOR plays out with the unmitigated power of those storms, laying waste to any genre conventions in pursuit of a certain physicality. Here, ELUCID develops a wholly distinctive musical language to explore our fractured modernity.
REVELATOR's packaging was designed by longtime Armand Hammer / Backwoodz art director, Alexander Richter.
Black Ice Vinyl[35,25 €]
Das zweite Album von Honeyglaze, Real Deal, und das erste für Tastemaker-Label Fat Possum, fühlt sich an wie der Moment, in dem sie erwachsen
werden. Die Band hat das Fundament, das sie auf ihrem von der Kritik gefeierten Debüt (über Dan Careys Speedy Wunderground) gelegt hat, zu
einem Mammutalbum verdichtet.
Produziert von Claudius Mittendorfer (Parquet Courts, Interpol, Sorry), ist Real Deal ein Album über die Rückkehr ins normale Leben, Akzeptanz,
Selbstvertrauen, die Suche nach Verbundenheit und das Finden von Trost im Chaos.
When I'm Called ist das bisher umfangreichste Werk von Jake Xerxes Fussell, dem aus Georgia stammenden Sänger und Gitarristen, Schüler der Piedmont-Blues-Legende Precious Bryant und Sideman von Rev. John Wilkins.
Das Album ist eine Platte mit warmen Instrumentaltexturen, die seine glühende Gitarre und seinen wettergegerbten Bariton unterstützen.
When I'm Called wurde von James Elkington produziert, von Tucker Martine gemischt und enthält Beiträge von Elkington (Gitarre, Klavier, Dobro, Synthesizer, Orgel, Pedal Steel, Mandola, Mundharmonika, Arrangements), Blake Mills (Gitarre), Joan Shelley (Gesang), Ben Whiteley (Bass), Joe Westerlund (Schlagzeug, Perkussion), Robin Holcomb (Gesang), Anna Jacobson (Bläser), Jean Cook (Streicher) und Hunter Diamond (Holzbläser).
Das neue und letzte Album der Punklegenden X:
Großartig zu sein ist eine Sache, aber lange Zeit großartig zu bleiben eine andere. X waren siebenundvierzig Jahre lang großartig und haben mit sieben Alben zwischen 1980 und 1993 ihre Legende als eine der originellsten Punkbands Amerikas aufgebaut. In diesem Sommer wird ihr letztes Album Smoke & Fiction veröffentlicht. Wie Alphabetland (2020) hat Smoke & Fiction die Wut und den Spaß, den man von X erwartet. Es ist eine Abschiedsrunde mit Tracks wie "Big Black X", die ihre Reise reflektieren.
- Harmony 1 (Mellotron)
- Sweet Talk
- Death Take Your Fiddle
- I Gotta Fire
- Soul On Fire
- Harmony 2 (Piano)
- Sitting On Fire
- Yeah Yeah
- You Lie You Cheat
- Harmony 3 (Voice)
- Baby I'm Just A Fool
- Don't Hold Me Close
- Harmony 4 (The Old Man...)
- The Waves Crash In
- Harmony 5 (Accordion)
- Borrowed Your Gun
- Harmony 6 (Glockenspiel)
- Goodnight Goodnight
Das Album "Songs in A&E" erscheint in Neuauflage. Die britischen Space-Rocker Spiritualized, die aus der Band Spaceman 3 hervorgingen, veröffentlichten es ursprünglich 2008, woraufhin es auf Platz 15 der UK-Albumcharts einstieg.
Songs in A&E ist ein wunderschönes, beängstigendes Album, und es war beinahe das letzte, was J Spaceman jemals veröffentlichen würde. Im Jahr 2005, als die Schreib- und Aufnahmearbeiten bereits in vollem Gange waren, wurde Spaceman mit einer doppelten ungenentzündung ins Royal London Infirmary eingeliefert. Das Cover dieser
iederveröffentlichung zeigt ein Foto, das aufgenommen wurde, als er auf dem Sterbebett lag, wie seine engen Freunde und seine Familie zu diesem Zeitpunkt befürchteten. "Wir dachten, er sei tot", erinnerte sich sein Bandkollege John Coxon an diese Zeit.
Das Album ist eine Sammlung anmutiger, Country-beeinflusster Songs, die vertraute Themen wie Liebe, Tod, Hoffnung und Hoffnungslosigkeit aufgreifen. Das Country-Element wurde durch eine kleine schwarze 1928er Gibson Akustikgitarre geprägt, die er in Cincinnati gekauft hatte, als die Band auf Tournee für das Album Amazing Grace war. Spaceman nannte sie "The Devil".
Der bezaubernde Gitarrist und Sänger Jake Xerxes Fussell lässt seinem gefeierten, selbstbetitelten Debüt (produziert von William Tyler) ein
bewegendes neues Album mit "Natural Questions" in Form von umgedeuteten Folk/Bluestücken folgen. Dieses Mal sind diese alten Melodien um
einige Nuancen dunkler, während sie ihren absurden Humor verstärken und unsere Probleme beleuchten. Mit Artwork des berühmten Malers Roger
Brown.
Auf seinem Debütalbum, das von William Tyler produziert wurde, verwandelt der aus Georgia stammende Sänger und Gitarrist Jake Xerxes Fussell -
Schüler der Piedmont-Blues-Legende Precious Bryant und Sideman von Rev. John Wilkins - zehn obskure Folk/Blues-Stücke in vibrierende kosmische
Lamenti und vertrackte Streifzüge. Die Nashville-Session-Veteranen Chris Scruggs (Bonnie "Prince" Billy, Marty Stuart), Brian Kotzur (Silver Jews) und
Hoot Hester (Bill Monroe, Ray Charles) bilden die Besatzung des Schubboots.
Following two standout albums, 2020's Flower of Devotion, and 2022's Blue Skies, each furthering Dehd's reputation as one of the best Rock bands of the day, Dehd return with biggest statement yet. New album, Poetry, is their best yet. Singles, "Mood Ring", "Dog Days", "Alien", and "Light On" are each, in their own right, the most exciting Dehd songs to date.
Nach zwei herausragenden Alben, "Flower of Devotion" (2020) und "Blue Skies" (2022), die beide den Ruf von Dehd als eine der besten Rockbands der Gegenwart untermauerten, kehren Dehd mit ihrem bisher größten Statement zurück: Das neue Album "Poetry".
Die Singles "Mood Ring", "Dog Days", "Alien" und "Light On" sind, jeder für sich, die aufregendsten Dehd-Songs bis heute.
Nach zwei herausragenden Alben, "Flower of Devotion" (2020) und "Blue Skies" (2022), die beide den Ruf von Dehd als eine der besten Rockbands der Gegenwart untermauerten, kehren Dehd mit ihrem bisher größten Statement zurück: Das neue Album "Poetry".
Die Singles "Mood Ring", "Dog Days", "Alien" und "Light On" sind, jeder für sich, die aufregendsten Dehd-Songs bis heute.
Die Band feiert ihr 20-jähriges Album Jubiläum.
Spiritualized und Fat Possum Records kündigen die Wiederveröffentlichung von Amazing Grace an, als Teil der zweiten Ausgabe des The Spaceman
Reissue Program: Kuratiert von J Spaceman. Die 180-Gramm-Vinyl-Album Version wurde in London von Ton-Ingenieur Matt Colton für Vinyl neu
gemastert und wird in einem von Mark Farrow gestalteten Gatefold Cover präsentiert.
Zusätzlich zur Wiederveröffentlichung werden Spiritualized im November eine US-Ostküsten-Tournee anführe, bevor sie im Dezember im
Vorprogramm von Queens of the Stone Age auftreten.
Buffalo Nichols sophomore album, The Fatalist, is in stores September 15. Milwaukee, WI-based Buffalo Nichols today announced his anticipated new album The Fatalist will be released on September 15th, 2023 via Fat Possum, and shared its lead single: a dusky take on Blind Willie Johnson’s original "You're Gonna Need Somebody On Your Bond." The follow-up to his 2021 self-titled debut LP for Fat Possum–a critically acclaimed record that earned him his network television debut on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, various major festival performances, and rave coverage via NPR Music (All Songs Considered, Tiny Desk (Home) Concert), Rolling Stone, Guitar World, Texas Monthly, and more–The Fatalist sounds unlike any blues record you’re likely to hear in 2023. The lead single’s video, directed by Samer Ghani, captures songwriter, guitarist, and vocalist Carl Nichols singing of salvation and relief in his soundscape that teems with the joyous claustrophobia of classic gospel. Sampled triggers of Charley Patton’s version connect the earliest blues recordings to the present, both singers’ voices urgent in their message. Nichols explains: “A traditional song made modern. Which aspects of ‘the Blues’ are essential? Is it a melody? A certain vocabulary? Delivery? Instrumentation? Is this still a blues song? And most importantly: who gets to decide? I tried to reimagine the blues with this song as if it were allowed to grow and progress uninterrupted, uncolonized and ungentrified.”
After an 8 year hiatus, Youth Lagoon return with their 4th album, 'Heaven Is a Junkyard'
Al Green Explores Your Mind is the eighth album by soul singer Al Green. Unlike previous Al Green albums, this album featured the U.S. #7 hit "Sha-La-La (Make Me Happy)", and contains the original version of "Take Me to the River", a song which went to #26 on the Billboard chart when covered by Talking Heads in 1978. In 2004, the song "Take Me to the River" was ranked number 117 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest songs of all time. The album was his fifth consecutive album to claim #1 on the Soul Albums chart, and peaked at #15 on the Pop Albums chart.








































