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Tony Molina - On This Day LP
  • 1: On This Day '24
  • 2: Fc '3
  • 3: Faded Holiday
  • 4: Lie To Kick It
  • 5: Despise The Sun
  • 6: No Place To Turn
  • 7: Have Your Way
  • 8: Take Some Time
  • 9: Broken Down
  • 10: Just As The Tide Was Flowing
  • 11: Ovens Theme Pt. 5
  • 12: Livin' Wrong
  • 13: Been Wronged
  • 14: Transplant Blues
  • 15: Ghosts Of Punishment Past
  • 16: Out From The Dark
  • 17: Don't Belong
  • 18: Inside Your Mind Pt. 2
  • 19: Violets Of Dawn
  • 20: Ovens Theme Pt. 6
  • 21: Meet The Author
pré-commande14.11.2025

il devrait être publié sur 14.11.2025


Last In: 2026 years ago
Tony Molina - In the Fade

It would be impossible to encapsulate the entire Tony Molina musical worldview in a single record. This is a man whose home stereo, in a single day, could be blaring The Move, Malo, Internal Bleeding, Dear Nora, and The Melvins. All that said, you’d be hard pressed to find a better entry point to his work than In the Fade, a record that according to the artist himself, ties the entire catalog together.

pré-commande12.08.2022

il devrait être publié sur 12.08.2022


Last In: 2026 years ago
RURAL FRANCE - SLOTHS LP
  • 1: Slab
  • 2: Thirty-Seven Forever
  • 3: How You Gonna Get Even
  • 4: Someone You Forgot
  • 5: Lonely Heart Pyramid Scheme
  • 6: Soulseeker
  • 7: Jukebox Weepie
  • 8: Casio
  • 9: High Hopes (Ballad Of Rural France)
  • 10: Electrical Tape

Much like the duo’s music, the story of Rural France is both mundane and magical. Tom Brown (also of transatlantic janglepunks Teenage Tom Petties) and Rob Fawkes moved to London in their mid-twenties. Despite living under the same roof, they never picked up a guitar – except for one drunken, failed attempt at writing a Spoon song (“Big Chops” …don’t ask). It was only after both separately relocating to Wiltshire and starting families that they began assembling songs as a way of meeting up. Tom had amassed a pile of sprightly slacker jams that were calling out for Fawkes’ messily melodic guitar lines. Rural France was born.

After a debut album on their hero, ex-Lemonhead Nic Dalton’s Half-a-Cow Records, they retreated to a garage to record their next two albums: RF (2021) and Exacamondo! (2024), both released on much-respected jangle label Meritorio Records. Despite being lo-fi in the truest GbV sense, both records were warmly received by the DIY indie blogosphere, with their short, scrappy, but supremely melodic songs landing on numerous AOTY lists. RF even won Album of the Year at Janglepop Hub.

Raven Sings The Blues probably summed up the sound best: “With drunken visions of Beach Boys harmonies playing in the back of their heads and hooks that consume Teenage Fanclub cheeriness with the same beautiful brevity that drives Tony Molina, the pair have knocked out eleven rumpled classics.” Album four, SLOTHS, arrives via Meritorio Records and Safe Suburban Home Records on 08/05, and is a slightly different beast. For one, it’s been mixed by a professional – Rob Slater (Westside Cowboy, Yard Act, Thank) – giving the guitars and drums room to breathe. It’s easily their most high-fidelity record to date. It’s also their jangliest, most baroque and thoughtful album yet. But alongside added organ, horns and mellotron – and drums from Tom’s Teenage Tom Petties bandmate Jeff Hamm – it still retains the buzzes, hums and little freak-outs that stick to the duo’s original “Pavement playing Teenage Fanclub” mission statement. “Rob and I both wanted to do something a little slower and a little more melancholy,” says Tom. “We resisted our usual urge to hit the distortion pedal and made something that fitted where we are now and celebrates how we still listen to Meatloaf when we get drunk.”

SLOTHS is also the most thematically consistent Rural France record to date. While it wouldn’t be right to call it grown-up, it definitely has homeowners’ insurance. From the Silver Jews-esque Americana of “Slab” and mid-life rallying cry of “Thirty Seven Forever”, to the horn-embossed loser anthem “Lonely Heart Pyramid Scheme,” the songs celebrate (and rail against) the absurdities of getting older, forming a band in your thirties, and the strange phenomenon of time passing. Because no matter how slow you move, everything else goes fast. SLOTHS.

pré-commande08.05.2026

il devrait être publié sur 08.05.2026


Last In: 2026 years ago
John Kander - Kiss of the Spider Woman (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
  • 1: Overture
  • 2: Dear One / Querido
  • 3: I Do Miracles
  • 4: Her Name Is Aurora (Stagg)
  • 5: I Will Dance Alone
  • 6: A Visit
  • 7: Her Name Is Aurora (Gala)
  • 8: Gimme Love
  • 9: Never You
  • 10: An Everyday Man
  • 11: She's A Woman
  • 12: Kiss Of The Spider Woman
  • 13: Where You Are
  • 14: Only In The Movies

Dream Girls, Beauty And The Beast director Bill Condon returns to the movie musical in this dazzling Technicolor-hued fantasy. Valentín (Diego Luna), a political prisoner, shares a cell with Molina (Tonatiuh), a window dresser convicted of public indecency. The two form an unlikely bond as Molina recounts the plot of a Hollywood musical starring his favorite silver screen diva, Ingrid Luna (Jennifer Lopez). Based on the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical hit. "The film juxtaposes very gritty, graphic, prison scenes with equally extreme 1950s period authentic technicolor musical sequences that replicate both technicolor look and aspect ratio as the film switches between both environments. Lopez looks great and the musical sequences are glorious. The supporting cast, especially the two male leads are top shelf Oscar worthy performances. It is superbly executed.

pré-commande19.12.2025

il devrait être publié sur 19.12.2025


Last In: 2026 years ago
Diners - Domino LP

Diners

Domino LP

12inchBRN302LP
Bar/None Records
22.08.2023

2nd Grade, Dear Nora, Frankie Cosmos, Tony Molina, Big Star, Paul McCartney. This is Diners’ 7th full length album, produced by Mo Troper (Lame-O Records). On Domino, Diners has replaced their gentle pop sound with a more bombastic rock and roll approach while maintaining their upbeat positive world view. Diners teamed up with power pop prince Mo Troper and Grammy nominated engineer Jack Shirley to deliver her best record yet. For the last ten years, LA-based Blue Broderick has been making daydreamy guitar pop as Diners, outlining her optimistic worldview within the simple catchiness and charming style of ‘60s luminaries like Harry Nilsson and Brian Wilson. On “Domino,” her energetic new album, she’s taken a turn toward overdriven, uptempo power pop, applying her affirming lyricism to an unabashed rock record. With production help from Portland songwriter Mo Troper, “Domino” places her breezy melodies alongside stomping Big Star guitars and hazy fuzz bass, lending a new urgency to her anthems. “This is the rock record that I always wanted to make,” Broderick says. “I know that any time I turn it on, it’s what I set out to do

pré-commande22.08.2023

il devrait être publié sur 22.08.2023


Last In: 2026 years ago
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