Recommended by us on 20th January 2012
...according to our Brian on Thu 19 Jan, 2012.
Well, we'd like to review the 7” that comes with this wonderful book/magazine but it seems to be stapled to the back of the sleeve making removal and reattachment a bit of a tricky business. All you need to know is that it features a Grouper exclusive, a cover of a song by Dead Moon, a cult psychedelic rock,/punk/blues/country/Americana outfit that she recorded recently, two unreleased Fred McDowall songs from the Alan Lomax archives and a Duane Eddy cover by The Tiki Men. If that wasn't alarmingly tempting enough then the book itself (now an 8” square tablet of esoteric information and blinding B&W art/photography) is worth the price alone. With articles on the Tiki Men and especially a wonderful one relating to the New York hardcore movements practice spaces plus a piece on late 50's era Panola and Tate counties in the Mississippi that carries lovely photographs by Alan Lomax.
YETI refits: now an 8" by 8" bound book, with a 7"!! not a CD a 7"... details below, but this will blow the roof off: ON THE HARD-VINYL 7" EP, Four archival, never before heard songs: MISSISSIPPI FRED McDOWELL (two amazing 1959 Lomax recordings). THE TIKI MEN's stellar take on Duane Eddy's "First Love, First Tears," recorded around 1994. Plus a new cover by Portland's own dreampop slayer GROUPER of Dead Moon's "Demona," recorded just the other week! INSIDE THE 8" BY 8" BOOK: Lovely cover image of a big red giant walking over a little town on fire, by Portland's favorite illustrator CARSON ELLIS. A portfolio of rare and never-before-seen photographs from the ALAN LOMAX ARCHIVES ca. his fabled 1959 'Southern Journey.' Translator and poet Margarita Shalina delivers a personal, well-researched look at NEW YORK'S 1980s HARDCORE punk scene (she was there, man). Beyond-rare artifacts from gentle genius Kim Spurlock's deep trove of NEAL CASSADY ephemera. Musician/ music historian NED SUBLETTE's chat with esteemed music critic/ editor Daphne Carr is a roller-coaster ride into the eye of the post-Katrina diaspora, touching on many musical histories with concise and not wanky politico-historical context. JAMAICAN GOSPEL 7" label scans, which is a lot more interesting than it sounds. Eye-bleedingly awesome drawings by Tim Miller, James Trotter and Jana Cleveland. Very killer photographs by Nina Dudoladova of LONG-ABANDONED FORTS in Kalingarad, Russia which were once part of the German empire's effort to secure the border. A monumental, enthused and super-lengthy look at the work of Sacramento, CA's forgotten '90s surf band THE TIKI MEN by Aaron Gilbreath. Interviews with translator and author SUSAN BERNOFSKY (best-known for her lucid and playful work with Robert Walser's writing) and LARS FINBERG of Seattle's Intelligence and A-Frames. THE BREAKFAST SHIFT, which will become one of your favorite short stories that you didn't have to read for school, by Mimi Lipson. Plus as if all that weren't enough, there's a very image-heavy interview by Chris Kirkley (Sahel Sounds + 'Saharan Cell Phones') with contemporary African sign-painter THIAM BELLOU. PS: There will also be a sweet, 100 minute, free digital download available for everyone who purchases the issue, with music from Nathan Salsburg, Shana Cleveland, Neal Cassady backed by members of the Grateful Dead, Religious Knives, Ora Cogan, a new side project by Bobb Bruno from Best Coast, Derek Monypeny, some Jamaican gospel, Sir Richard Bishop, outtakes from YETI editor Mike McGonigal's 'Last Time Singing' gospel compilation + way more
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