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Matthew Sweet & Susanna Hoffs - Under The Covers Vol. 2 2x12"
  • A1: Sugar Magnolia (Grateful Dead)
  • A2: Go All The Way (Raspberries)
  • A3: Second Hand News (Fleetwood Mac)
  • A4: All The Young Dudes (Mott The Hoople)
  • A5: You Can Close Your Eyes (James Taylor)
  • A6: Marquee Moon (Television)
  • B1: Here Comes My Girl (Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers)
  • B2: I’ve Seen All Good People (Yes)
  • B3: Hello It’s Me (Todd Rundgren)
  • B4: Willin’ (Little Feat)
  • B5: Back Of A Car (Big Star)
  • B6: Couldn’t I Just Tell You (Todd Rundgren)
  • C1: Gimme Some Truth (John Lennon)
  • C2: Maggie May (Rod Stewart)
  • C3: Beware Of Darkness (George Harrison)
  • C4: Dreaming (Blondie)
  • C5: Bell Bottom Blues (Derek & The Dominos)
  • C6: You’re So Vain (Carly Simon)
  • D1: I Wanna Be Sedated (Ramones)
  • D2: Baby Blue (Badfinger)
  • D3: You Say You Don’t Love Me (Buzzcocks)
  • D4: (What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love And Understanding (Brinsley Schwarz)
  • D5: Everything I Own (Bread)
  • D6: Melissa (Allman Brothers Band)
  • D7: Killer Queen (Queen)
  • D8: A Song For You (Gram Parsons)

The second collaborative album between alternative rock artist Matthew Sweet and Bangles singer/guitarist Susanna Hoffs. First released in 2009, on Under The Covers Vol. 2 the duo cover 26 of their favourite tracks from the 1970s. For this edition in the series, Sweet and Hoffs invited guests into the studio including Lindsey Buckingham on ‘Second Hand News’, Dhani Harrison on a cover of his father’s ‘Beware Of Darkness and Steve Howe reprising his guitar parts on a version of the Yes track ‘I’ve Seen All Good People’ Pressed on two heavyweight 180g green vinyl.

pre-order now27.03.2020

expected to be published on 27.03.2020

23,24
Charles Lloyd - Love-In

Charles Lloyd

Love-In

12inchPPANSD11481
Pure Pleasure Records
30.10.2018

Re-mastering by: Ray Staff at Air Mastering, Lyndhurst Hall, London

Four-and-a-half decades after the event, saxophonist Charles Lloyd's Love-In, recorded live at San Francisco's Fillmore Auditorium in 1967, the counterculture's West Coast music hub, endures as much as an archaeological artifact as a musical document. From sleeve designer Stanislaw Zagorski's treatment of Rolling Stone photographer Jim Marshall's cover shot, through the album title and some of the track titles ("Tribal Dance," "Temple Bells"), and the inclusion of John Lennon and Paul McCartney's "Here There and Everywhere," Love-In's semiology reeks of the acid-drenched zeitgeist of the mid 1960s, a time when creative music flourished, and rock fans were prepared to embrace jazz, provided the musicians did not come on like their parents: juicers dressed in sharp suits exuding cynicism.




It is likely that more joints were rolled on Love-In's cover than that of any other jazz LP of the era, with the possible exception of saxophonists John Coltrane's A Love Supreme (Impulse!, 1965) and Pharoah Sanders's Tauhid (Impulse!, 1967). Chet Helms, a key mover and shaker in the West Coast counterculture, spoke for many when he hailed the Lloyd quartet as "the first psychedelic jazz group."




It is to Lloyd's credit that, at least in the early stages of his adoption by the counterculture, he resisted dumbing down his music. The adoption stemmed from Lloyd's espoused attitude to society, his media savvy, his sartorial style and his sheer nerve in playing jazz in the temples of rock culture. He took the quartet into the Fillmore West three years before trumpeter Miles Davis took his into the Fillmore East—as documented on Live at the Fillmore East, March 6 1970: It's About That Time (Columbia)—by which time his pianist, Keith Jarrett, and drummer, Jack DeJohnette, were members of Davis' band (although Jarrett didn't appear at the 1970 gig).

pre-order now30.10.2018

expected to be published on 30.10.2018

39,29
Beatles - This Is... The Savage Young Beatles

Riding the wave of the German beat craze of the early sixties, British singer Tony Sheridan became a regular on the Hamburg club circuit, recruiting an ever-changing roster of back-up musicians that included, in 1961, The Beatles featuring John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Pete Best. Although still very much on the scene, bassist Stu Sutcliffe did not appear on these sessions. While most of the songs here are covers sung by Sheridan, Lennon and Harrison did write the instrumental "Cry For A Shadow". Hamburg is also where the Beatles first picked up the mop-top. Picture disc LP.

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21,81

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