Friday 10 November 2023

Make CIUT Great Again!



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Yes it's CIUT's Fall Membership Funding Drive again. You know; that time of year when we go to you our faithful listeners to ask for your support for another year. I know it's been a hard few years but CIUT was on the air the whole time with your quarentine radio needs and we even won the runner-up spot in Now Magazine's 2021 Best Radio Station poll. So thanks! But still need to pay our bills. Remember all the money we raise all goes right back into the station, and there's always something that needs fixing or replacing. So it's back to work.

CIUT 89.5fm is Toronto's listener supported community radio station. We have a unique blend of music, news, talk and arts programming not to be found any where else on the dial. All brought by volunteers with very few paid ads for more rock less talk.

THE BB GUNS LIVE ON CIUT;


My show;"Moondog's Ballroom" Tuesdays at 5pm brings the Punk, Rockabilly,Surf, Garage, Psyche, Blues, Honky Tonk, Swing, Gospel, Ska and various combinations thereof from the 1940's, 50's, 60's to today. Including some stuff rarely if ever played on the radio. I've also done live sessions with The Vibrators, Robyn Hitchcock, BB Guns, Split Lip Rayfield, CATL, Speaking Tongues, Fruitbats, Bela Clava, Three Blue Teardrops, Blue Demons, Maximum RnR, B-17, Christian & the Hangovers, Luau Or Die and more for unique recordings, with more planned for the future.

That's where you, our faithful listeners come in.

Just cuz CIUT has very few paid ads doesn't mean we have no costs. We have to pay for the equipment, a small paid staff and our transmitter, and we are hoping to buy a new one to improve our signal. But we need you to become members of CIUT and show your support.



Here's the drill;
1. Listen in to "Moondog's Ballroom" Tuesday Nov 14 from 5-5pm
2. Phone in to 416-946-7800 or more likely go online to our secure server at www.ciut.fm.
3. Make a pledge of $89.50 or more to my show and become a member of CIUT
4. Become one of the Cool Kids!

It's Just That Easy!

B-17 LIVE ON CIUT;


And as an added incentive all those who become members at $89.50 level make a pledge and become a member are added to our grand prize draw which this year includes;
For a pledge of $89.50 You, Yes You can Be DJ For A Day & Host Your Show On CIUT! For one hour you choose the music, we bring the 15,000 honking watts of power. You have a band and want to come down? Cool! Make a pledge, become a member and let's do this!

We also have exclusive CIUT merch including shirts, tote bags, hats and for a limited time only, CIUT Covid masks.

If you can't tune in for Tuesday Nov 14 no worries, you can always go to our website at www.ciut.fm and sign up online, or contact me.



So this Tuesday Nov 14 at 5pm; Tune in, Listen in, Phone in and Join up.

Besides our onair broadcast you can still hear us @;
online at www.ciut.fm
iTunes Radio
TuneIn Radio Phone App
Rogers Digital Cable - Channel 946
Bell Fibe - Channel 970
Star Choice Satellite Channel - Channel 826

THE UNBELIEVERS ON CIUT:


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THE SUICIDE DATES AT CIUT;

Thanks Again as always!

Sunday 16 July 2023

Cabaret Voltaire Vs Taylor Swift


Of all the possible artists Taylor Swift could have collaborated with Cabaret Voltaire would not have been on the list but this month the team up nobody asked for finally happened. Sort of, as in the UK Swift fans who purchased the vinyl copy of the Swift single "Speak Now" were puzzled and for some appalled to find that due to a mix-up (obscure Cabaret Voltaire référence!) the track was actually a version of the Cab's single "Yashar" dating back to 1983.

CABARET VOLTAIRE  ~  "YASHAR";


UK paper "The Guardian" describes Cabaret Voltaire as "an obscure electronic band" which does not do them justice. formed in the late 70's inn Sheffield, England the Cabs were one of the founders of the first wave of Industrial Music as well as being the genre's most successful and longest lasting icons. Along with Throbbing Gristle the Cabs not only gave the genre not only a name but also a sound (dark, atmospheric, electronic drones with plenty of white noise) and a esthetic (drab, grey, thrift shop, anti-fashion and generic graphics) but even an ideological theory consisting of various threads of Anarchy, art movements Dada, Futurism, Situationism, Constructionism, Pop Art, musical movements Punk Rock, Free Jazz, Avant Garde Classical and thinkers Marshall McLuhan, John Cage, Antoine Artuad, William Buroughs and Alistair Crowley and bands the early Velvet Underground and Roxy Music, Frank Zappa, Tangerine Dream, Kraftwerk, John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, Albert Ayler, Syd Barrett, Karlheinz Stockhausen and various Kraut Rock bands.  

CABARET VOLTAIRE  ~  "EMPTY WALLS";


Since the 90's what is now known as Industrial Music is basically Metal dance music but the original wave of Industrial bands as laid down by bands like Cabaret Voltaire, Throbbing Gristle, Clock DVA, SPK, Severed Heads, Test Department, Einsturzende Neubauten the more obscure Robert Rental, Jass, Graph and even the early versions of the Human League, OMD and ABC were definitely not danceable and at times barely listenable to most people, and by design. The original Industrial Music bands were hardly bands at all in the traditional sense. Few of them could play any musical instruments, at least not very well. Instead they experimented with cheap analog keyboards, tape collage sound effects, disembodied voices mixed with occasional actual guitar, bass, drums and sax, buried under piles and piles of feedback, white noise and distortion. As Dick Clark would no doubt say (while plugging his ears and running from the room); "It's got no beat and you can't dance to it". After a few years of wild experimentation most of the survivors drifted into Techno Pop (Human League, OMD, ABC) or dance and trance music (Clock DVA, Severed Heads, SPK and the Throbbing Gristle offshoots Psychic TV and Chris & Cosey) with Cabaret Voltaire falling into the latter camp by the late 80's.

CABARET VOLTAIRE  ~  "SHAFT";


Before that however they made the best records of the genre. Formed by Stephen Mallinder, Richard Kirk and Chris Watson, their discography falls into different phases with the first era from about 1975 to 1980 including several singles and the first two albums featuring anti-classics "Nag Nag Nag", and "Mussolini Headkick" which codified the cacophonous wall of noise of the first wave. The second era ran through most of the 80's and focused on dense, atmospheric sound collages which eventually led to some obscure dance club hits including "Yashar" and by the end of the decade resulting in a few straightforward dance club albums which were only moderately successful. In the early 90's they broke up but they reformed a few years later recording a couple of brilliantly intricate albums of electronics and sampling as well as remixing several of their early songs. Founding member Richard Kirk died in 2021.

CABARET VOLTAIRE  ~  "MUSSOLINI HEADKICK";


Cabaret Voltaire is one of those bands I can actually remember discovering. Growing up in the pre-internet 80's it was still possible to stumble on to music you had never heard before and knew nothing about. Sometime around 1985 or 86 I found a secondhand obscure British compilation from 1979 which featured some straightforward Punk bands like the UK Subs, a Sex Pistols offshoot and Irish band the Outcasts, in fact that's why I bought it in the first place. But side two featured early Industrial bands Thomas Leer, Robert Rental and Throbbing Gristle ("United", one of their Techno Pop songs). And then there was the last track, Cabaret Voltaire's "Mussolini Headkick", one of their early singles full of white noise, grinding machinery and disembodied voices. I had never heard anything quite like it and at the time my reaction was pretty much; "What even is this and how is this even a song"? But after a couple of listens I found it oddly fascinating and eventually fell in love with them especially when I heard the Wall Of Noise anti-classic "Nag Nag Nag" which was a better Jesus & Mary Chain (who I was also already a fan of) than actual Jesus & Mary Chain.  

CABARET VOLTAIRE  ~  "NAG NAG NAG";


The song Swifties found themselves subjected to was "Yashar" from their mid period rather than from their early abrasive cacophony but the reaction was mostly horror with terms like "weird", "creepy" and "cursed" but a few of them at least have come to enjoy the tracks calling it "definitely a vibe" so maybe a few of them will discover some new audio worlds. Surviving Cabs member Stephen Mallinder pronounced himself amused by the whole affair.

CABARET VOLTAIRE  ~  "NO ESCAPE";


This is actually not the first time Taylor Swift has had a close encounter of the Industrial kind. A few years ago due to some other technical mix-up (obscure reference call back!) as a few years ago a Taylor Swift track was uploaded onto Spotify which when downloaded turned out to be a couple minutes of white noise. Being a Taylor Swift track it still managed to briefly rocketed to the top of the charts. At the time I recall posting that somewhere in a darkened, cobweb encrusted warehouse Cabaret Voltaire, Throbbing Gristle, SPK and the ghosts of Lou Reed and John Cage are sitting around saying "What the fuck"?

CABARET VOLTAIRE VS QUEEN ~  "WE WILL NAG YOU";


Besides music the Cabs were also pioneers of making videos using Dada techniques of collages and cut-ups of found footage and I've long been using Cabaret Voltaire tracks for my video mashups. Including this one which takes a remix of "Nag Nag Nag" and a short art film by Canadian filmmaker David Rimmer (who also died this year) which gives a good idea of the sonic chaos of early the Cabs.

CABARET VOLTAIRE  ~  "NAG NAG NAG" (remix);


Another I'm quite fond of was one I did for a remix of another early track using another Dada film.

CABARET VOLTAIRE  ~  "IF THE SHADOWS COULD MARCH";


To close out here's another one for which I took the original version of the above song and remixed it myself by slowing it down and mixing it with some found silent film footage.

CABARET VOLTAIRE  ~  "IF THE SHADOWS COULD MARCH" (slowed down remix);


For any Swifties still reading (Hi BTW) here's a remix of "Yashar" the Cabs themselves did at the end of the 80's when they were becoming more of a dance band which you should find less annoying. Enjoy.

CABARET VOLTAIRE ~ "YASHAR" (REMIX);


Sunday 5 February 2023

Flashback Fridays; My List Of Top 33 1/3 Albums Of 2008


This popped up my feed recently as something I wrote back in 2009 when I was still sorta doing album reviews. I didn't actually have a blog page back in January 2009 but I posted it to my Facebook blog (anybody remember Facebook blogs? No? Me neither) and I still think it holds up as a breezy piece of writing. One thing though; I can usually remember everything I ever wrote but honestly a few of these bands I don't recall at all. Side note does anybody remember albums? No? Me neither. Anyhoo join me as we travel back in time to the dying embers of the Bush Era shall we;

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

My opinionated list of The Top 33 1/3 albums of 2008;

1. Andre Williams & The Hound Dogs ~ Can You Deal With It? ~ Bloodshot
After his odd country experiments with the Sadies the seventy something Detroit soul man (he co-wrote "Shake A Tail Feather") returns to the Garage Blues that has become his latter day trademark. This time out he has his hottest back up band yet with wailing fuzz guitar, tight rhythm section and a horn section to boot. Oh yeah; and it also has his best country song yet with "Pray For Your Daughter".

ANDRE WILLIAMS & THE HOUND DOGS ~ "PRAY FOR YOUR DAUGHTER";


2. The HorrorPops ~ Kiss Kiss Kill Kill ~ Hellcat
Serious psychobilly purists may pretend to despise them but they know how to make good catchy songs which is exactly why cd's were invented in the first place, unless I've completely misunderstood this whole rock n' roll thing, which is always a possibilty

THE HORRORPOPS ~ "MISS TAKE";


3. The Knifings ~ Superb Limb Of Such Magnificence ~ s/r
For their sophomere effort they continue to toss out their eccentric combination of Art Punk, Math Core, Cow Punk, College Rock, Glam Metal and what ever else they're listening to this week. So what's next? Ska/Metal? Bluegrass/Thrash? Prog/Grunge? I just hope it's not hip hop. Seriously guys, don't do that. I mean it.

4. Creepshow ~ Run For Your Life ~ Stomp
Few bands are able to replace their singer and carry on successfully, let's see, there's AC/DC and ...ummm...not Van Halen. Anyhoo Toronto's Psychobilly crew replaces Jen Hellcat with her (almost) twin sister Sarah Sin and misses nary a beat on their sophomore release. As was the case last time it's a little short so either they are rationing their material or they're not that prolific. We shall see.

CREEPSHOW ~ "RUN FOR YOUR LIFE";


5. The John Henrys ~ Sweet As The Corn ~ Ottawa always seems to have a couple of good country-rock bands hanging around, The John Henrys, besides having a cool name, have the most authentic Burrito Brotherish sound yet. Great songs too.

THE JOHN HENRYS ~ "SWEET AS THE CORN";


6. Gruesomes ~ Grusomemania ~ Riccochet
A rerelease of the Montreal garage teen kings 1987 sophomore (in every sense or the word) album in time to remind us what a solid garage band they were, and how fast they learned their chops. Less fuzz drenched than the first album and an ever so slightly less campy slice of garage trash, it still kicks the ass of all the various Estrus or Jon Spencer spawn that has passed for garage over the past decade.

THE GRUESOMES ~ "HEY!";


7. Gaslight Anthem ~ The 59 Sound ~ Side One Dummy
New Jersey's vaguely rootsy blue collar pop-punks who aren't The Bouncing Souls split the difference between Social Distortion and Bruce Springsteen. It could use a little more aggro, or at least bombast, (see The Roman Line below) but it's probably closer to Middle America (and Canada) than the Anglo-Centric Souls.

THE GASLIGHT ANTHEM ~ "THE 69 SOUND";


8. The Primordials ~ 14 Prime Numbers ~ s/r
A note perfect homage to sixties Brit-beat no frills garage, mostly made up of hopelessly obscure covers, in a perfect case of "we have better record collections than you" nerdly one upsmanship.

9.The Summerlad ~ City of Noise ~ Saved By Radio ~
Speaking of sprawling excess an Alberta psych-prog trio put out an album with only two tracks, one of which is forty minutes long, fully twice as long as "Inna-gadda-da-vida". Makes the Greatful Dead seem like D.R.I., sort of.

THE SUMMERLAD ~ "CITY OF NOISE";


10. Various Artists ~ Life is Hard, West African Music in Britain ~ Honest Jon's
An intresting collection of fiendishly rare recordings made by the community of East African immigrants in Britain in the 1920's for export back to Africa. Since these were done for a small audience of Africans rather than to entertain whites the recordings make no attempt to pander or "Tom" and the songs are in various West African tongues rather than English. As this is the same region of Africa that most American and Caribbean slaves originally came from it's a unique opportunity to hear where the blues truly came from, and how they must have changed once they got here not to mention how these latter African musicians were in turn influenced by the Blues and Country records they heard. It's textbook cultural exchange. Excellent job of remastering as well, they sound brand new, unlike the scratchy field recordings of Lomax and the like. This English label has also put a similar comp from Iraq and probably more for all I know.

JACOB SAM & THE KUMASI TRIO ~ "PALM WINE MUSIC";


11. Various Artists ~ The Great Lakes Surf Battle ~ s/r
A comp of Toronto's oddly vibrant surf scene featuring highlights from The Blue Demons, The Robots, Vo Drats and the Calrizians along with Dr Mysterion and the Wolfman and Montreal's Trebelmakers. The Calrizians mash-up of Black Sabbath and Blondie is a brilliant coup even if some writer (I think it was Chuck Eddy) thought of it first.

THE BLUE DEMONS ~ "CASBAH";


12. Elliott Brood ~ Mountain Meadows ~ Six Shooter
Their second full lengther continues their odd genre of Goth-Grass. I'm not sure what it all means but it's plenty atmospheric.

ELIOTT BROOD ~ "THE VALLEY TOWN";


13. No No Zero ~ Rough Stuff ~ Folk Brand
Ex members of the Exploders continue their odd genre of sleaze-core. I'm pretty sure what it means and it's plenty noisy.

14. Drunkulla ~ All New Moves ~ s/r
Toronto's answer to The Hellacopters (with two ex Sinisters, one ex Illuminatti and one ex Flamejob) offer up more ridiculously excessive trash n' roll sleaze garage on their second album. Chock full o' flying guitars and windmill drums, the songwriting has also improved (songs are longer than 90 seconds) since the debut, so has the production.

15. The Fleshtones ~ Take A Good Look ~ Yep Roc
I don't know how many albums they've done by now because some of them frankly sucked; but when they're on point their trademarked (literally) "Super Rock" shames those half their age (literally), like say the Hives, Vines, Jet etc. Oh, and they also put out a pretty cool xmas album this year.

16. Bravo Johnson ~ The Crooked & The Straight ~ Stone Junction
An Americana Country/Folk rock group from California make a bid for serious cred with a sprawling double album, just like the Band or Dylan...sigh. Any comparisons to the Band, Byrds, Burritos, Buffalo Springfield, and especially Tom Petty are entirely intentional and the whole thing's exessive length pretty much means that at least some of it has to be waste but you have to admire their ambition.

BRAVO JOHNSON ~ "ACE IN THE HOLE";


17. The Pack A.D. ~ Funeral Mixtape ~ Mint
Some folks do the two man band thing because they saw the White Stripes do it, some do it because it's just easier and cheaper and some do it because they really know what to with it. The Pack are the latter, their Joplinsque blues drenched roar is tougher and more authentic than the Stripes, to say nothing of Jon Spencer. In fact lets say nothing more of him.

THE PACK AD ~ "MAKING GESTURES";


18. The Roman Line ~ Between The Stirrup & The Ground ~ indie
They get the obvious comparisons to Social Distortion with their itchy throated vaguely rootsy So-Cal punk. It's not paticularly original but it is well done and considering that most others insist on copying Blink 182 or worse I'm not going to look a gift horse in the mouth. And they manage to write a couple of anthem-like numbers that I can picture an audience of drunken punters bellowing along to.

19. Hollywood Fats & The Paladins ~ Live 1985 ~ Topcat
The California bluesman played with everyone from the eighties revival including the Paladins, Blasters, Kid Ramos and The T Birds and he no doubt would have been a star if he had lived. As it is we have only a few rare recordings and the occasional unreleased obscurity like this one to show his chops. The Blues are in sore need of another hot guitar man right about now.

HOLLYWOOD FATS & THE PALLADINS ~ "LET'S HAVE A PARTY";


20. Blue Rodeo ~ Blue Road ~ WEA
They've put out so many albums that we kinda forget they're there, but this live quickie gives them a chance to get all stipped-down and back to bascis enough to remind us that they were Alt-Country before it had a name, and they can still deliver the goods. It is a little short though, the Sadies have already managed to put out a double live, so they fleshed it out with a full DVD.

BLUE RODEO ~ "TO LOVE SOMEBODY";


21. Fuad & the Feztones ~ Beeramid ~ Riccochet
Ex Gruesomes Bobby Beaton and John Davis take time out from their creative loafing to put out their tribute to the frat-rock garage that pimply and pale white boys got drunk to in the early sixties before the bluesier trash garage of the mid sixties which the Gruesomes themselves would later riff on. If they keep this up they could either go forward and start a prog rock band or go back further and start jitterbugging or something, actually John Davis was in the Crazy Rhythm Daddies so he already did that, or was that the Charleston?

22. The Screamagers ~ The Screamagers ~ s/r
All their lo-fi minamilist trash garage tidbits are less than two minutes long, and are either about monsters, zombies, martians or spiders. And the singer sounds like Glen Danzig's younger brother. I'm not sure why this is so catchy but it just is. This is the sort of thing you would have found on one of those "It came from Canada" comps on OG records in the 1980's. It's a Canadian thing, you wouldn't understand, I'm not sure I do either.

THE SCREAMAGERS ~ "DAY OF THE CENTIPEDES";


23. The Weirdies ~ In 3D ~ s/r
Formed out of various moving parts left over from the Tijuana Bibles and the Threat, they sound more like the former than the latter. As for the original touch, the new girl singer sounds disturbingly like Betty Rubble. A acquired taste that I'm not sure how many others will acquire but strangely catchy I thought.

THE WEIRDIES ~ "PARTY OVER HERE";


24. Oscar B ~ La Morte Aux Trousses ~ s/r
To everything there is a season Turn Turn Turn; Montreal loses one great psychobilly band, The Alley Dukes and gains a new one, out the ashes of the Alley Dukes' last lineup no less. Most of their songs are in French which I don't speak so I'm not sure what the title means, something about dead pants...no that can't be right..oh well what the hell, I'm pretty sure it doesn't matter.

25. The Stolen Minks ~ High Kicks ~ New Romance
Halifax first full length (more or less) slapdash girly garage combo are ever so slightly less slapdash and girly at times sounding rather like Boss Hog. Lest we forget this is exactly how Neko Case started out, not to mention Boss Hog.

THE STOLEN MINKS ~ "CONSECUTIVES";


26. The Speaking Tongues ~ Wild Sounds ~ indie
Yeah I know another crash boom bang bluesy two piece Toronto band, maybe it has something to do with the impossibilty of finding parking down town for a van. Anyway you have to admit the formula still rocks. Highlights include a harmonica hodown, yippie-ky-ay!

THE SPEAKING TONGUES ~ "HELL DOWN BELOW ME";


27. I'm Not Jim ~ You Are All My People ~ Bloodshot
A side project from Silos frontman Walter Salas-Humara (Or is it a side project? Silos bassist Drew Glakin died this year) collaborating with a novelist I 've never heard of and Jon Spencer's producer for some artsy Americana. It's pretty wordy (natch, with a novelist aboard) and gimmicky (Jon Spencer's producer ditto) but it has it's interesting moments. It's worth noting this is not the first time the Silos have gone experimenting, they once did an album with Tortoise I believe.

28. The Wilders ~ The Wilders ~ Free Dirt
Their take on the whole Alt Country thang is less twang and more hoedown, less honky tonk more old timey. The only cover here is of a Skillet Lickers number, and if you don't know who they were then you might not be a redneck. They still put in enough country rock for the younguns' though.

THE WILDERS ~ "HEY LITTLE DARLIN";


29. The Warped 45's ~ The Warped 45's ~ s/r
Debut from Toronto country rock outfit borrows shamelessly from Uncle Tupelo, Golden Smog, Rank & File and Wilco to good effect.

THE WARPED 45'S ~ "RADIO SKY";


30. The Bicycles ~ Oh No It's Love ~ Fuzzy Logic
Not everything in the sixties was all surf, garage, psyche, folk rock, country rock and blooze jams you know. Some pasty kids just liked to make catchy non threatening pop songs, some still do.

THE BICYCLES ~ "OH NO IT'S LOVE";


31. Sarah Blackwood ~ Way Back Home ~ Stomp
Solo debut from the new Creepshow singer reveals that in her heart of hearts she'd rather be Emmy Lou Harris. With tattoos. Remember that cool ballad that Creepshow did on the first one? Like that.

SARAH BLACKWOOD ~ "LONELY PARADE";


32. The Brutal Knights ~ Living By Yourself ~ Deranged
If you're going to recreate 1980's hardcore this is how you do it, short songs with maybe one and a half chords apiece, way too much treble on the guitar, spastic drumming and even more spastic shouting about being a drunken sleaze bag. Then repeat.

THE BRUTAL KNIGHTS;


33. Like a Martyr ~ The North ~ s/r
So what if you haven't bought a new cd since Pearl Jam went into seclusion or wherever, that doesn't mean you should be totally banned from the air waves does it? No? Oh well, I heard this after sitting through yet another collection of cds from that cookie cutter Emo/Screamo/Pop-Punk crap that passes for non-metal or hardcore hard rock these days and thinking that it was pretty cool that these guys from B.C. obviously have no clue how anachronistic they are and don't care.

1/3. Gowiiee ~ The Door ~ Sweetreleaf
Normally the mere thought of a "rock opera" about deforestation in B.C., which is also a fundraiser for said no doubt worthy cause would be enough to make me want to run out and buy a rusty chainsaw, and I actually care about such things, really I do. However; good intentions do not necessarily make for good art, I hope the class is taking notes. Fortunately this Australian dude's tastes run to Led Zep and Free Bird rather than Ani DiFranco and the Dixie Chix so this is actually pretty cool. And it is a good cause for which he's apparently raised a bucket of cash, so there.

Honorable mention: NQ Arbuckle, Baskery, Bellevue, Black Lungs, Micheal Brennon, Christian D & the Hangovers, Galatus, The Get Rights, Gunsmoke, Merle Haggard, The Heavy, The High Dials, Japandroids, Waylon Jennings, The Micronite Filters, My Morning Jacket, Owl Farm, Wyckam Porteous, The Psychs, Micheal Rault, Mr. Rick & Biscuits, Mavis Staples, The Streetdogs, Surefire Machine, Telepathic Butterflys, Teenage Head w/ Marky Ramone, Luther Wright & the Wrongs

Box sets;
1. Johnny Cash ~ At Folsom Prison ~ Sony
2. Hank Williams ~ Rare and unreleased ~ Time Life
3. Various Artists ~ Steelin' it, The Steel Guitar Story ~ Proper
4. Various Artists ~ Rockin' Memphis ~ Proper
5. White Zombie ~ Let Sleeping Corpses Lie ~ Geffen

DVD's;
1.American Hardcore
2.Jandek on Corwell
3.Gram Parsons; Fallen Angel
4.The Last Pogo (reissue)

TEENAGE HEAD FROM "THE LAST POGO";


Dishonorable mention;
Guns & Roses ~ Chinese Democracy ~
After taking at least as long to finish as the Great Wall of China itself (with marginally fewer casualties) Axl finally releases a full album. It doesn't actually suck but it doesn't rock either, slick and ponderous and less fun than cock rock has any right to be. This year their old rivals Motley Crue also put out yet another of their seemingly endless series of comeback albums that was at least cheerfully aware of their anachronistic stupidity, hell they shamlessly revel in it and therein lies the differance. Axl (and Metallica, and Megadeth) always took themselves way too seriously as brooding artistes while the Crue are perfectly happy to be lunkheaded Peter Pans. Who knew that the Crue, (or at least Nikki) would turn out to be the smarter of the two. So it kinda does suck after all.

GUNS & ROSES ~ "CHINESE DEMOCRACY";