Pre-Order Thread

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I'm curious how this turns out. IT's supposed to be a Singer-singwriter record with just him Singing an playing guitar dealing with his divorce and Richard Swifts death.
Here's a longer article from Rolling Stone
 
I'm curious how this turns out. IT's supposed to be a Singer-singwriter record with just him Singing an playing guitar dealing with his divorce and Richard Swifts death.
Here's a longer article from Rolling Stone

I actually just read this article and was going post it here. I really like Nathaniel's writing, he has some beautiful stuff on Tearing at the Seams. So while I totally dig the sound of him with the Nightsweats, I'm pretty sure I'll like this record too. And he's playing near me in February, so I think I'll try to go see him on the tour for this as well.
 
I actually just read this article and was going post it here. I really like Nathaniel's writing, he has some beautiful stuff on Tearing at the Seams. So while I totally dig the sound of him with the Nightsweats, I'm pretty sure I'll like this record too. And he's playing near me in February, so I think I'll try to go see him on the tour for this as well.
His earlier stuff before the Night Sweats was singer songwriter folksy type of music too. He does it quite well though I much prefer the Night Sweats sound.
 
I actually just read this article and was going post it here. I really like Nathaniel's writing, he has some beautiful stuff on Tearing at the Seams. So while I totally dig the sound of him with the Nightsweats, I'm pretty sure I'll like this record too. And he's playing near me in February, so I think I'll try to go see him on the tour for this as well.
Totally agree. Tearing at the seams is a beautiful record. I dont have the debut because i opted for the live at red rocks lp which has a great energy and the preservation hall jazz band
 
Not a record but a music adjacent pre-order I just saw and am pretty excited about. (Hopefully the price drops a bit between now and the release date though) @Dead C I am not sure if you’re a Beasties’ guy but I know you’re a photo book guy...

I just finished reading this the night before last. Very enjoyable read.
 
I'm curious how this turns out. IT's supposed to be a Singer-singwriter record with just him Singing an playing guitar dealing with his divorce and Richard Swifts death.
Here's a longer article from Rolling Stone
really dig the new song off this that's on Spotify today
 
I recommend it a lot , but i have to say i have a faible for good live recordings. There is this version of s.o.b. they play with the preservation hall jazz band that i just love


Great album....great song...and outstanding live!

Nerd alert...but...a personal pet peeve is that audiences do NOT know how to clap to that song. They end up clapping on the quarter notes...when the clap is really on the upbeat between them...that's part of what makes the song cool.

You can hear it in the Red Rocks live recording. I bet the Night Sweats always get a kick out of that "live" aspect.
 
I just finished reading this the night before last. Very enjoyable read.
Probably referring to The Beastie Boys Book which is totally awesome and completely agree with this assessment. This pre-order is for a different book, It’s a book of Spike Jonze Photos that he took while working with the Beasties. If you enjoyed that book you might wanna check this out too, though it’s not set to be released until March.
 
Probably referring to The Beastie Boys Book which is totally awesome and completely agree with this assessment. This pre-order is for a different book, It’s a book of Spike Jonze Photos that he took while working with the Beasties. If you enjoyed that book you might wanna check this out too, though it’s not set to be released until March.

You are correct. I meant the earlier book. NOTHING TO SEE HERE!!
 
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What’s the over under Magnolia sends this to us?
 
What’s the over under Magnolia sends this to us?


I was thinking this might be a possibility for February but it seems like every ROTM lately is a Dualtone release and this is a Stax/Fantasy album so I am just not sure. I also don't see anything being released in February that jumps out as a ROTM other than this than maybe John Moreland's new album.
 
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I was thinking this might be a possibility for February but it seems like every ROTM lately is a Dualtone release and this is a Stax/Fantasy album so I am just not sure. I also don't see anything being released in February that jumps out as a ROTM other than this other than maybe John Moreland.

This is why I'm done with Magnolia for the forseeable future. I wanted a good mix of Country and Americana releases, not just albums from one record label. Same reason I quit Secretly.
There are very few labels I have that level of brand loyalty to.
 
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  • 150g random-colored vinyl based on album cover
  • 12", 1-LP
  • 12" x 12" color-your-own-cover insert
  • Colored pencil set*
Lilly Hiatt felt lost. She’d just returned home from the better part of a year on tour in support of her acclaimed third album, Trinity Lane, and, stripped of the daily rituals and direction of life on the road, she found herself alone with her thoughts for the first time in what felt like ages.

So Hiatt did what’s always come most natural to her in times of questioning and uncertainty: she picked up a guitar. Over the course of the ensuing winter, she wrote a mountain of new music that grappled with her sense of self and place in the world, reckoning with issues that had been bubbling beneath the surface of her subconscious in some cases for years. The result is Walking Proof, Hiatt’s fourth and most probing collection to date. Produced by former Cage the Elephant guitarist Lincoln Parish, the record walks the line between Hiatt’s rough, rock and roll exterior and her tender, country roots, exuding a bold vulnerability as she takes a deep and unflinching look in the mirror. What emerges is a newfound maturity in Hiatt’s writing, an abiding sense of calm in the face of chaos as she learns that sometimes, you have to let go in order to get what you want most.

By the time she headed into Parish’s Nashville studio in May, Hiatt had piled up more than twenty-five new songs, and with the producer’s help, she pared it down to a tight and cohesive eleven. After capturing the core performances live with her band over the course of roughly a week, Hiatt devoted the early part of the summer to finishing touches, which included contributions from friends like Amanda Shires and Aaron Lee Tasjan along with a guest appearance from her father, legendary songwriter John Hiatt, who joins his daughter on record for the first time here.

Lilly Hiatt’s not feeling so lost these days, and with Walking Proof, she’s crafted a roadmap to share with the rest of us.

TRACKLIST:

Side A -

  1. Rae
  2. P-Town
  3. Little Believer
  4. Some Kind Of Drug
  5. Candy Lunch
  6. Walking Proof
Side B -
  1. Drawl
  2. Brightest Star
  3. Never Play Guitar
  4. Move
  5. Scream




 
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