Pre-Order Thread

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Waiting for the Paul's dog's shit variant. Picked fresh and steamy from his property in Alabama.

I'll pass on that variant, thanks. These are pretty cool to be honest and if Isbell did something like these exclusives, I'd be all over it. But I don't love St Paul & The Broken Bones. These are actually pretty fairly priced to be honest. I wanted a Wax Mage of Willi Carlisle the other day but it was $60 for a 7", I said to myself they must be high.
 
Setting a personal record for single LP cancellations!
Still trying to get a copy of that fucking Boingo album. DeepDiscount took preorders they couldn't fill. JPC took an order they just canceled.
Bull Moose is my next attempt. They're basically gone from most sellers at this point.

Sign up for Notify Me on both US and UK Rough Trade. I’ve got lucky that way b4. 🤞
 
Not a pre-order (seems to be shipping now) but Three Mile Pilot's amazing and shockingly underrated 1997 2LP "Another Desert, Another Sea" just got a 25th-anniversary, AAA vinyl reissue. FFO pinback, modest mouse, SDRE...


I love this album to death and have always felt that the original vinyl master didn't do justice to it. Guess I will have to pick it up when I have a few coins to rub together!
 

Made with Sun Ra samples @avecigrec ! Sadly the wine-filled LPs have sold out
 

Made with Sun Ra samples @avecigrec ! Sadly the wine-filled LPs have sold out
Oh shit!
 

Made with Sun Ra samples @avecigrec ! Sadly the wine-filled LPs have sold out




Oooof! $75 USD shipped!

(Without wine)
 
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The popularity of Brazilian music from the 60s, 70s and 80s has experienced quite the renaissance; artists such as Gal Costa, Gilberto Gil, Arthur Verocai, Joyce et al, have become household names to an international audience passionate about global sounds. However, even for die-hard fans and collectors of Brazilian music of the past, discovering contemporary Brazilian artists is not always easy, nor accessible. But, if you know where to look, you will see that there is a resurgence well underway that can be epitomised by an exciting new wave of Brazilian artists beginning to break through and gather momentum overseas. It’s with thanks to Sound and Colours, a website devoted to promoting Latin American music and culture, that we can help shine a light on one particular collective, bursting with creativity and camaraderie.

‘Hidden Waters: Strange and Sublime Sounds of Rio de Janeiro’ is compiled by Joe Osborne (founder of specialist Brazilian music platform Brazilian Wax) and Russ Slater (editor at large of Sounds and Colours). Focusing solely on the 'Rio Scene', rather than taking on the mammoth task of tackling Brazil as a whole, this collection presents 20-plus ground-breaking artists selected from Rio’s resurgent music scene. By presenting a snapshot into the pulse of the city and the vibrant musicians that live in it, ‘Hidden Waters’ collates tracks from a wide spectrum of musical genres from the avant-garde edge to bossa nova, samba, Candomblé, lo-fi rock, jazz and funk.

‘Hidden Waters’ showcases musicians such as iconic Rio mainstays Negro Leo & Ava Rocha, Brazilian jazz upstart Antônio Neves, critically lauded Avant-pop trailblazer Thiago Nassif, breakthrough artists Ana Frango Elétrico and Letrux, lo-fi psych rocker Lê Almeida, plus the Latin Grammy-winning Bala Desejo who are set to explode onto the world stage.

The music featured on ‘Hidden Waters’ is unequivocally Brazilian, swelling with samba, bossa nova, funk, and jazz. But it’s within the album's blend; from sunny psychedelia to dusky synth-pop via experimental electronics, that marks the compilation as the sound of modern, multicultural Rio. Fans of Brazil’s fertile 60s and 70s will spot the antecedents in Tropicália. Not only in the experimentation but also through the similar political context: back in the late 60s there was Brazil’s military dictatorship, and up until the end of 2022 it was Bolsonaro’s censorious premiership. Here are a group of musicians writing and reflecting on another colourful chapter within Brazil’s musical history.

This comprehensive compilation comes with album artwork designed by Rio music’s leading album artwork designer, Caio Paiva. It features essays by professor and music critic Bernardo Oliveira and music journalist Leonardo Lichote, plus extensive notes on each track by the artists themselves.
 
They always sound better when you gotta work for them*.


*except @Mather

I think the toughest I had to work for an in-print record was Matthew Good's reissue of Avalanche. Not widely available in the US, and I wanted to support an indie shop in Canada to get it. And a huge chunk of the run had a defect that made my favorite song skip in the same place on the first three copies I had. I ate the one from the record shop, and went back and forth with Amazon.ca for the other three. The last one must have been pressed before or after the issue because it was perfect. The tension I felt waiting for that line in the song to play was something else.
 
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