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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Wed Oct 20, 2010 11:41 pm 
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Radcliffe Wrote:
Pleasantly surprised by this:

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http://www.megaupload.com/?d=7RM4WFQ0


me too. that girl has a GREAT voice. never heard of her before this.


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Wed Oct 20, 2010 11:45 pm 
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TEH MACHINE
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100 pages, 2476 posts, 41815 views

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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Wed Oct 20, 2010 11:47 pm 
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DumpJack Wrote:
100 pages, 2476 posts, 41815 views


haha, fucking crazy, right?

telling of the board.


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 12:26 am 
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telling of the times


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 1:01 am 
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Thee Incident Wrote:
Saw Two Cow Garage for the first time last night (thanks for being assholes, Strokes!) and was properly floored. All the best parts of Lucero, Deer Tick and The Hold Steady fused together. Got the new album, bought a shirt. I'm a convert.

Music: yes!


this album would be better if the guy who sounds like ben nichols sang all the time.

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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 8:57 am 
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Dalen Wrote:
DumpJack Wrote:
100 pages, 2476 posts, 41815 views


haha, fucking crazy, right?

telling of the board.


What exactly does it tell?

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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 9:09 am 
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bort Wrote:
Dalen Wrote:
DumpJack Wrote:
100 pages, 2476 posts, 41815 views


haha, fucking crazy, right?

telling of the board.


What exactly does it tell?


Well I realize that math is not everyone's strong suit, I think it suggests that more people view the thread than post in it.

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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 9:50 am 
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Yeah but you can say that about every thread on the board.

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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 11:03 am 
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i like to think that we are but a handful of players on a stage being observed by a silent and invisible audience of millions

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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 11:04 am 
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hi mom

:wave:

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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 12:23 pm 
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bort Wrote:
Dalen Wrote:
DumpJack Wrote:
100 pages, 2476 posts, 41815 views


haha, fucking crazy, right?

telling of the board.


What exactly does it tell?



bort Wrote:
Yeah but you can say that about every thread on the board.


LOOK AT THE BIG BRAIN ON BORT!

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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 12:28 pm 
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i am so smrt

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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 1:17 pm 
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Mike Watt/Nels Cline/Yuka Honda/Dougie Bowne – Floored by Four

Image

Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?i4yo2o7z9311pm1


Anyone that can find Watt's 3rd opera "Hyphenated Man" for me, I will love you. It was released as Japan-only for whatever reason. Also, I could use a refresh on his 2nd, "Secondman's Middle Stand", please.


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 11:05 pm 
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The synthesizer that opens "Armed For Peace," the first song on Suuns' debut album Zeroes QC is sloppy and unsettling. It's dirty and ugly. And before the other instruments kick in, it kind of sounds like a post-punk band attempting to cover Dead Prez's "Hip Hop." It's also, however, temporary. Within 90 seconds, the band's guitars fire up, drums explode and bass bowl over that introductory sound of malfunctioning gears and electronics, quashing its messy crawl. But the song doesn't exactly get any brighter. Haunted, chilling atmosphere is Suuns' specialty, and broken robot keyboards only play a supporting role.

Recorded with Besnard Lakes' Jace Lasek engineering and co-producing, Suuns' Zeroes QC is a heavy and ominous kind of indie rock record. That names like Suicide and Joy Division are often mentioned in write-ups of the band is some indication of their creepy post-punk approach. Yet beneath the jagged guitars and ghostly atmosphere are melodies, and quite good ones at that, revealing a versatile and accessible, if eerie, kind of animal.

The dual aspects of "Armed For Peace" reveal Suuns' duality splendidly. Where the band sometimes serves to provoke or disturb, at heart they're monster tunesmiths, and Zeroes QC is littered with them. "Gaze" is a reasonably straightforward Interpol-style nu-gazer track, and one that rocks. But "Arena" offers something different entirely, kicking off with pulsing 303 club beats before transitioning into a melancholy mid-tempo rocker. There's a throbbing punk rock freakout on "Marauder," a steady motorik buildup on the lengthy "Sweet Nothing," and a hand-clapping singalong boogie on "PVC." And single "Up Past the Nursery" plays out with a minimal throb, which sounds delightfully reminiscent of anything from Clinic's first two records.

Zeroes QC is a fractured album, a piece of art with very little linear connection throughout. Yet the pervasive sense of darkness and doom that looms large among these ten songs holds them together, creating an eerie sonic adhesive. Though the defiance of cohesiveness is, most likely intentionally, off-putting, the songs are strong enough on their own, contributing to a weirdly satisfying single-artist mixtape.


http://bit.ly/a0wtYS

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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Fri Oct 22, 2010 5:54 pm 
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Maybe number five is the charm? Not that JJ Grey and his ever evolving backing band Mofro care. But it's possible that Georgia Warhorse may be the record that pulls them from the glorified cult status they've enjoyed for a decade into the lights on the mainstream's fringes -- but don't count on it. Grey's music is far too real; too poetically, sonically, and atmospherically rooted in vintage Southern soul, rock and blues traditions to translate readily into radio fodder. Georgia Warhorse (named for a tenacious and resilient species of grasshopper) contains 11 new originals, recorded at Jim DeVito's Retrophonics Studio in St. Augustine -- as were all four previous albums. The music is steeped in funky, greasy, slippery Southern R&B, blues and rock. The music is steeped in funky, greasy, slippery Southern R&B, blues and rock. The backbone slipping slow-grind funk of "Diya Dayo" opens the set with a wailing harmonica, a chunky single string vamp and a Howlin' Wolf meets Stax chorused refrain. Grey changes it up immediately with two ballads, the first of which, the seven-minute "King Hummingbird," is one of the most beautiful things here. It drips with raw, laidback swamp soul. (Chris Robinson would give his eye teeth to have written, let alone sung, it.) "The Sweetest Thing" features the signature voice of Toots Hibbert, Grey's greatest influence after Otis Redding. With a Muscle Shoals-styled horn chart, the pair take a midtempo ballad and mold it into a sensual, simmering love song. The title track is a gritty blues eco-manifesto from the grasshopper's point of view. "Slow, Hot & Sweaty," introduced by a Rhodes piano, is representative of its title and scorches with its brazenly sexual heat. "The Hottest Spot in Hell," is the most uptempo thing here, an overtly bluesly rocker. But Grey's deep ringing baritone pulls from Memphis soul rather than Southern Rock. The B3 twsts in your gut and the snare breaks pop in your spine. The set closes with "Lullaby," featuring guest Derek Trucks. It commences slowly, a shimmering soul number; but it morphs into a crescendo of blues, trancelike drums, wide-open horns and chanted vocals that bring the album down around the listener. Georgia Warhorse, like each of its its predecessors, is another giant step forward in terms of its craft and quality. It will no doubt find the space in our culture that yet remains for music that's as authentic as the ground under your feet, because that's where it comes from -- just before it moves, simply and directly, through the body of the listener, into the human heart.


Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?n56psfz7aagw16h


Couldn't remember if I upped this already, and too lazy to sift through all these pages.


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Sun Oct 24, 2010 10:13 pm 
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Bedroom Demos
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toots Wrote:
i like to think that we are but a handful of players on a stage being observed by a silent and invisible audience of millions


I pipe up when I've got something to add, but you fuckers are way ahead of me on new music. Hence the reason I'm here.


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Sun Oct 24, 2010 10:19 pm 
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Bedroom Demos
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tentoze Wrote:
Image

Quote:
Maybe number five is the charm? Not that JJ Grey and his ever evolving backing band Mofro care. But it's possible that Georgia Warhorse may be the record that pulls them from the glorified cult status they've enjoyed for a decade into the lights on the mainstream's fringes -- but don't count on it. Grey's music is far too real; too poetically, sonically, and atmospherically rooted in vintage Southern soul, rock and blues traditions to translate readily into radio fodder. Georgia Warhorse (named for a tenacious and resilient species of grasshopper) contains 11 new originals, recorded at Jim DeVito's Retrophonics Studio in St. Augustine -- as were all four previous albums. The music is steeped in funky, greasy, slippery Southern R&B, blues and rock. The music is steeped in funky, greasy, slippery Southern R&B, blues and rock. The backbone slipping slow-grind funk of "Diya Dayo" opens the set with a wailing harmonica, a chunky single string vamp and a Howlin' Wolf meets Stax chorused refrain. Grey changes it up immediately with two ballads, the first of which, the seven-minute "King Hummingbird," is one of the most beautiful things here. It drips with raw, laidback swamp soul. (Chris Robinson would give his eye teeth to have written, let alone sung, it.) "The Sweetest Thing" features the signature voice of Toots Hibbert, Grey's greatest influence after Otis Redding. With a Muscle Shoals-styled horn chart, the pair take a midtempo ballad and mold it into a sensual, simmering love song. The title track is a gritty blues eco-manifesto from the grasshopper's point of view. "Slow, Hot & Sweaty," introduced by a Rhodes piano, is representative of its title and scorches with its brazenly sexual heat. "The Hottest Spot in Hell," is the most uptempo thing here, an overtly bluesly rocker. But Grey's deep ringing baritone pulls from Memphis soul rather than Southern Rock. The B3 twsts in your gut and the snare breaks pop in your spine. The set closes with "Lullaby," featuring guest Derek Trucks. It commences slowly, a shimmering soul number; but it morphs into a crescendo of blues, trancelike drums, wide-open horns and chanted vocals that bring the album down around the listener. Georgia Warhorse, like each of its its predecessors, is another giant step forward in terms of its craft and quality. It will no doubt find the space in our culture that yet remains for music that's as authentic as the ground under your feet, because that's where it comes from -- just before it moves, simply and directly, through the body of the listener, into the human heart.


Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?n56psfz7aagw16h


Couldn't remember if I upped this already, and too lazy to sift through all these pages.


Good find Toze. I'm going to try and catch one of their shows at the Freebird around New Years. I think every album gets better than the one before.


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Mon Oct 25, 2010 10:38 am 
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Bedroom Demos
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tentoze Wrote:
Image


All is not lost after all. Thx for this.


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Mon Oct 25, 2010 12:32 pm 
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RolledMeat Wrote:
Good find Toze. I'm going to try and catch one of their shows at the Freebird around New Years. I think every album gets better than the one before.


I'd like to see them live, but I've only gone to Freebird's once, and swore I'd never go back. A shithole with terminally rude employees, IMO.


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Mon Oct 25, 2010 1:09 pm 
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jsh Wrote:
Mike Watt/Nels Cline/Yuka Honda/Dougie Bowne – Floored by Four

Image

Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?i4yo2o7z9311pm1


Anyone that can find Watt's 3rd opera "Hyphenated Man" for me, I will love you. It was released as Japan-only for whatever reason. Also, I could use a refresh on his 2nd, "Secondman's Middle Stand", please.


Thanks for this! Looking forward to dl'ing tonight...I can get you Secondman's Middle Stand then if nobody else has it readily available


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Mon Oct 25, 2010 1:44 pm 
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War on Drugs - Future Weather

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http://www.mediafire.com/?wq5qwo33q8zff1r


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Mon Oct 25, 2010 2:43 pm 
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Nice heads up Rads.


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Mon Oct 25, 2010 10:06 pm 
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Much of the ink thus far spilled on Nneka thoroughly covers her Nigerian-German ethnic split, with all the supposedly dispositive clichés that one attaches to the torn between two worlds. This biographic thumbnail seems more generically presumptive than culled from anything present in the music. In fact, Nneka seems like the poster child for the post-national play of interconnected pop culture. There are no more technological walls to prevent the Cincinnati Bengals from listening to the greatest hits written in Bengali. The barriers are now more the cumulative habits and desires of individual listeners. While trying to tread without meaning offense, the “African” elements of this record are no more geographically destined than the African elements of the Police or Sade. When you see writers bring up Fela Kuti or the word “African” in reference to Concrete Jungle, surely they must do so as form of colonial penance, because I won’t pretend to adjective 47 countries in order to find an artificial center for an artist that has clearly, like all of many of us, soaked up jazz, reggae, electronica, and hip-hop, genres so thoroughly cross cut in continental origin, that a lineal question that seems so quaint, has probably always been so. Africa seems like Nneka’s biographical backdrop for the earnest longing of a fabulist pop star, who sings in English about God and the human condition. Clearly the themes of oppression and salvation, repentance and authenticity, aren’t meant to be tethered too tightly to time and place.

The God thing: at this point you need to let go of it. By that, of course I mean, I had to let go of it because nearly every single song makes explicitly religious pleas from an avowedly spiritual worldview. Normally, I would elide something like this entirely because everyone comes to the world with a certain value system and its inevitable that predominant spiritualities will wend their way into metaphor, into analogy, into the inspirational core of an artist’s sound. But Nneka has a soft-touched missionary’s zeal, directly addressing people who don’t believe in God, praising God, thanking God, quoting the Bible, pretty much proseltyzing like a Jehovah’s Witness at your door, but with the kind of soundtrack that would compel you to let them in. Honestly, it’s hard to find offense with someone that generously reaches for common ground even if the language is freighted with exclusion. Nneka’s representation of God is fungible and easy to project through, like hearing “Jah” in a reggae song without necessarily bothering to ponder the divinity of Haile Selassie.

Nneka evokes lots of American touchstones, reference points that both overshoot and under illuminate. Frequent comparisons to Lauren Hill and Erykah Badu capture incomplete tangents of her sound. Unlike Hill, Nneka seems publicly liberated by her sincerity. She also reveals few regrets about using pop as the idiom of her activist bent and spiritual leanings whereas Hill seemed, especially on MTV Unplugged 2.0, to have placed pop and depth in false opposition. Badu makes some sense, but frankly, her aim is narrowly, deeply niched and more intellectual. Both share a love of the polyrhythmic breakdown, though Badu seems to be carving out a path with increasingly dense Curtis Mayfield foliage, sublimating her vocals to the level of the finishing signature. Nneka, despite DJ Farhot’s intricate aural canvases beneath her, vocally stands in front of of every single track. While it’s fun to trace the seams in each genre patchworked track, her singing has the greatest gravitational pull. Nneka’s voice has bracingly unique qualities of contrast: the breadth between beeseching and bruising on “Walking” absolutely kills. Her cadence also traverses several incarnations from the breezing ease of “Uncomfortable Truth” to the pinched ratatat chant on “Suffri”. The dirt in the the ethereality compels the listeners to return again and again to hear a new pitch, break, or effortless extension of her flex. The reason Erykah Badu and Lauren Hill come up as much as they do probably comes from the desire to connect her style to pop figures that pack power and enchantment into their chops.

At this point in the pop culture wars, I’m completely jaded by my own cynicism. What’s remarkable about Nneka’s record is its capacity to unravel the Uniceffed Bono damage to the world of good causes. In part, that works because her artistry is infused with her beliefs and she’s not simply accessorizing celebrity with tragedy. The panted plea of “Heartbeat”‘s chorus with an almost panicked crash of drums tumbling beneath it, has a breathless emotional puncture in its chorus. Nneka can sound wrenching and uplifted in a single note held with exhausted strength. While she might not yet share their musical stature, Nneka clearly views pop art as a mechanism for transformation and vision, in the way that John Lennon and Bob Marley used both in a dizzying concoction of myth and talent.

Although it’s not necessary to understanding an album, I was particularly enrapt by the homespun, grainy feel of Nneka’s videos. It’s worth noting that both the videos for “Heartbeat” and “Uncomfortable Truth” deepen her aesthetic with a visual palate that emphasizes the intimate over the excessively material and a bold sense of humanity that’s deeply moving because it’s so deeply out of sync with the tropes we’ve become accustomed to: the elevated “cool”, the celebration of gluttony, the intellectually ironic, and even the retreat into pure surface and form.

The joy of having a compilation introduction like this comes from the unbelievable strength of most of the material. “Focus” has so many elements and genre shards (Gregorian chants, power ballad guitar, and orchestral swells) that it’s hard to believe that that it hangs together so forcefully, particularly in her clipped rip on the inauthenticities of our age. What makes this a truly great album in the vein of Miseducation comes from the way that surface simplicities yield to rich repetition. I played Lauren Hill’s debut enough to scuff several copies, back in the days before music left this mortal coil. While most obvious lead single, “Heartbeat”‘s chorus initially grabs with its ferocious melodrama, on repeat its the violin note that holds for an unbearalbe length that strikes a chord of awe. And while I may have previously glossed avoid the African connection of her work to emphasize the pop globalism, it’d be malpractice to overlook the intense rhythmic clutches of songs like “Walking” and “Suffri”.

There are soft spots that wisely mirror the old Ann Richards quote of that once you know someone’s long suit, you know their short suit. Indeed, the ascendant mood and the populist uplift, wear thinnest where they are thinly worn. “God of Mercy”, with its watered down Massive Attack bleat and dull plod of piano chords, sounds like Alicia Key’s scraps. Referencing the footprints poem, in any context, brings to mind plaques on bathrooms walls and a sentiment that isn’t theologically deep. She does much better with Christian cliché in the more subtle grafting of Psalm 23:4 (shadowed valleys of death and all that) on “Kangpe”. It’s only when the sentiment feels forced and the frames weak that Nneka overreaches with awkward amalgam. Quite honestly, one could pretty easily make salty cuts against the grain of much of Nneka says lyrically, but it feels like the wrong critical apparatus to meet her in good faith on her terms. Imagine “All You Need Is Love” or imagine “Imagine” deconstructed in today’s doubly ironic, savagely detached inter-world and you can see how easy it is to muster the default sarcasm to chop off any hand that’s trying to reach out to you artistically.

Even though this is a compilation of previous releases, the most exciting part about Concrete Jungle comes from hearing such a fresh voice working with such open-pathed material. Nneka has a cunning eclecticism that could furrow deeper into electronic, jazz, and African sounds or simply keep arranging the parts into consecutively complex wholes. Unsurprisingly, some of the best Nneka repurposing has come from the J. Period remixes of “Walking” and “Changes”, which have Nneka providing anthemic bookending to tight, lyrical flow from the likes of rappers like Jay Electronica. There are so many pristine components here; each of them the building blocks of an amazing performer with a concentric gift of a future. With my defenses down, hands down, Concrete Jungle is one of the most impressive releases of the year.


http://bit.ly/dAzWSu

riyl: lauren hill, erykah badu

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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Mon Oct 25, 2010 10:42 pm 
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Posts: 6384
Location: red wing
Gordo Wrote:
jsh Wrote:
Mike Watt/Nels Cline/Yuka Honda/Dougie Browne – Floored by Four

Image

Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?i4yo2o7z9311pm1


Anyone that can find Watt's 3rd opera "Hyphenated Man" for me, I will love you. It was released as Japan-only for whatever reason. Also, I could use a refresh on his 2nd, "Secondman's Middle Stand", please.


Thanks for this! Looking forward to dl'ing tonight...I can get you Secondman's Middle Stand then if nobody else has it readily available


Nice, yeah, I would take you up on that. Can't seem to find it anywhere, and I miss that album. Dying to hear Hyphenated Man.


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 Post subject: Re: TWENTYTEN
PostPosted: Mon Oct 25, 2010 11:19 pm 
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Garage Band
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Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2004 3:51 pm
Posts: 702
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jsh Wrote:
Gordo Wrote:
jsh Wrote:
Mike Watt/Nels Cline/Yuka Honda/Dougie Browne – Floored by Four

Image

Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?i4yo2o7z9311pm1


Anyone that can find Watt's 3rd opera "Hyphenated Man" for me, I will love you. It was released as Japan-only for whatever reason. Also, I could use a refresh on his 2nd, "Secondman's Middle Stand", please.


Thanks for this! Looking forward to dl'ing tonight...I can get you Secondman's Middle Stand then if nobody else has it readily available


Nice, yeah, I would take you up on that. Can't seem to find it anywhere, and I miss that album. Dying to hear Hyphenated Man.


this should work for Secondman's Middle Stand:

https://www.yousendit.com/download/ZGJl ... NjgwTVE9PQ


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