Showing posts with label stuff you can buy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stuff you can buy. Show all posts
16 December 2010
GET YOUR DML MERCH RIGHT HERE!!! (aka Over-The-Top Seasonal Sales Pitch)
09 September 2010
we gotta move these refrigerators
What with the economy what it is and what not and what have you, combined with the imperativeness of you owning our music, our bros at Dangerbird are having a whaleuva sale over on iTunes, now thru September 21. So, lookit:
• Alive As You Are for $8.99!
• 2 (the album) for $5.99!
• The "Two Ways Out"video for 99¢!
And you can (still) even download our first record for free.
God bless us, every one.
• Alive As You Are for $8.99!
• 2 (the album) for $5.99!
• The "Two Ways Out"video for 99¢!
And you can (still) even download our first record for free.
God bless us, every one.
26 July 2010
Alive As You Are is out in the UK
And that calls for a few words on the record, how we made it, and on the product we're flooding the marketplace with, o informed consumer.
The LP bears a AAA code on the back (and when I say LP, I'm talking vinyl). You used to see these codes on CD's back in the 80's and 90's. It was designed to tell you how the CD was recorded (first letter), mixed (second letter) and mastered (third letter). For instance, AAD would mean a record was recorded analog, mixed analog, and mastered digitally (of course if it's on CD, it's digital and therefore the third letter would always be D). But those codes more or less vanished by the turn of the century. Fast forward to present times, when every band and their grandmother presses vinyl and touts it as the ultimate listening experience. In our neighborhood alone, two record stores have opened in the last year or two that only sell new vinyl. It's poppin' off. Except there's one caveat. If you recorded your album digitally, then it's meant to be listened to digitally (although someone on some message board somewhere might argue that this point is arguable). Once you go digital, it's always digital, and regardless of if it's on vinyl or not, your brain will be fed discrete little bits of data that sounds a lot like music instead of the continuous sound that is music. This vinyl revival hasn't been accompanied by renewed use of SPARS codes (as it's called; although it was never intended for LP's in the first place), so we usually don't know how these records were actually recorded, mixed and mastered; but I reckon that at least 95% of that new, shrink-wrapped $18 vinyl was recorded on a computer. Which means, at least in these eyes, your money might be better spent on the CD. But maybe you have a DJ night, and it's important to you to spin vinyl, who knows.

Anyway. Back to the AAA on the Alive As You Are LP. What this means is that we recorded the whole thing onto tape, mixed it onto another tape, and took that to Pete Lyman at Infrasonic Sound, whose very special needle etched grooves into what is now the vinyl platter you can hold in your hand (or, simply, he mastered it). Without any digitalia in the way, what comes out of your speakers is essentially a direct transfer of energy from us to you. All vibration and impulses. A more human listening experience. When we thought about our favorite records and what kind of record we wanted to make, we realized the common thread is they were pretty much all made this way. And here we are.
Why doesn't everybody do it like this? Well, it's easier to do every step of the process digitally, it's cheaper, it's more forgiving, you can "fix" mistakes and poor performances, studios are set up that way, people can't really tell the difference... and the list goes on and on. Digital production is insanely compelling, and it takes a lot of practice and discipline to lay it down, warts and voice cracks and all, on tape.
So yeah. After we were done tracking at Hyde Street in SF, we packed up and went an hour north to Prairie Sun, in Sonoma County and mixed for the next 10 days. It was our engineer Drew, our producer Nick, and us all crammed in this fishbowl of a control room around a mixing board turning knobs and moving sliders. Which is not textbook mixing, by the way, and was tense and not fun more often than not. But it worked - we mixed it on our own the way we wanted to do it, onto tape, and that is what's on the record.
The CD's different. When we turned the record in to our label, they said "hey, some of these mixes sound wack, let's have a professional remix em." So we transferred all the tapes onto a hard drive and got a guy named Jason Lader to mix it over a couple weekends at Rick Rubin's house in the hills on the days Kid Rock wasn't there, and I'm pretty sure he broke into it, because he made it out like we weren't supposed to be there and swore us to secrecy (oops). Since these mixes were bound for the CD (and iTunes/etc), to hell with all that analog self-righteousness; song by song, we picked the better mix, and five of his mixes are on the digital version.
All that said, what's so very nice is that when you buy the vinyl, you get a download code. Which gets you the digital version too. Best of both worlds. So there. If your neighborhood general store doesn't have it, you can order it here or here, or if you want to drop some Sterling on the CD here.
*** note: if you can't find the vinyl in the UK, order it from Dangerbird and they'll ship it straightaway ***
The LP bears a AAA code on the back (and when I say LP, I'm talking vinyl). You used to see these codes on CD's back in the 80's and 90's. It was designed to tell you how the CD was recorded (first letter), mixed (second letter) and mastered (third letter). For instance, AAD would mean a record was recorded analog, mixed analog, and mastered digitally (of course if it's on CD, it's digital and therefore the third letter would always be D). But those codes more or less vanished by the turn of the century. Fast forward to present times, when every band and their grandmother presses vinyl and touts it as the ultimate listening experience. In our neighborhood alone, two record stores have opened in the last year or two that only sell new vinyl. It's poppin' off. Except there's one caveat. If you recorded your album digitally, then it's meant to be listened to digitally (although someone on some message board somewhere might argue that this point is arguable). Once you go digital, it's always digital, and regardless of if it's on vinyl or not, your brain will be fed discrete little bits of data that sounds a lot like music instead of the continuous sound that is music. This vinyl revival hasn't been accompanied by renewed use of SPARS codes (as it's called; although it was never intended for LP's in the first place), so we usually don't know how these records were actually recorded, mixed and mastered; but I reckon that at least 95% of that new, shrink-wrapped $18 vinyl was recorded on a computer. Which means, at least in these eyes, your money might be better spent on the CD. But maybe you have a DJ night, and it's important to you to spin vinyl, who knows.

Anyway. Back to the AAA on the Alive As You Are LP. What this means is that we recorded the whole thing onto tape, mixed it onto another tape, and took that to Pete Lyman at Infrasonic Sound, whose very special needle etched grooves into what is now the vinyl platter you can hold in your hand (or, simply, he mastered it). Without any digitalia in the way, what comes out of your speakers is essentially a direct transfer of energy from us to you. All vibration and impulses. A more human listening experience. When we thought about our favorite records and what kind of record we wanted to make, we realized the common thread is they were pretty much all made this way. And here we are.
Why doesn't everybody do it like this? Well, it's easier to do every step of the process digitally, it's cheaper, it's more forgiving, you can "fix" mistakes and poor performances, studios are set up that way, people can't really tell the difference... and the list goes on and on. Digital production is insanely compelling, and it takes a lot of practice and discipline to lay it down, warts and voice cracks and all, on tape.
So yeah. After we were done tracking at Hyde Street in SF, we packed up and went an hour north to Prairie Sun, in Sonoma County and mixed for the next 10 days. It was our engineer Drew, our producer Nick, and us all crammed in this fishbowl of a control room around a mixing board turning knobs and moving sliders. Which is not textbook mixing, by the way, and was tense and not fun more often than not. But it worked - we mixed it on our own the way we wanted to do it, onto tape, and that is what's on the record.
The CD's different. When we turned the record in to our label, they said "hey, some of these mixes sound wack, let's have a professional remix em." So we transferred all the tapes onto a hard drive and got a guy named Jason Lader to mix it over a couple weekends at Rick Rubin's house in the hills on the days Kid Rock wasn't there, and I'm pretty sure he broke into it, because he made it out like we weren't supposed to be there and swore us to secrecy (oops). Since these mixes were bound for the CD (and iTunes/etc), to hell with all that analog self-righteousness; song by song, we picked the better mix, and five of his mixes are on the digital version.
All that said, what's so very nice is that when you buy the vinyl, you get a download code. Which gets you the digital version too. Best of both worlds. So there. If your neighborhood general store doesn't have it, you can order it here or here, or if you want to drop some Sterling on the CD here.
*** note: if you can't find the vinyl in the UK, order it from Dangerbird and they'll ship it straightaway ***
10 June 2010
PSYCHEDELIC SOUNDS OF THE SONIC CATHERDAL OUT NOW
Guess what: Roky Erickson/13th Floor Elevators tribute album The Psychedelic Sounds of the Sonic Cathedral - which includes our cover of "She Lives (In a Time of Her Own)" - is out (as the subject so subtly implies). Now that we've held it in our hands, we can say it looks, feels and sounds badass, and you should buy it here:
Labels:
press releases,
stuff you can buy,
vinyl
23 April 2010
19 April 2010
we got more 7" splits
FYI, if you've tried to order the Audacity split 7" in the last 2 months or so, good news - we got some more! Just a handful though, so don't wait too long this time. And of course, y'know, while you're there, there's other crap you can buy. Happy Spring.
(click below to be transported)
(click below to be transported)
14 April 2010
Roky Tribute Out June 7!
June 7 will mark the release of The Psychedelic Sounds Of The Sonic Cathedral: A Tribute To Roky Erickson And The 13th Floor Elevators, on which appears our recording of "She Lives (In a Time of Her Own)" (from the Elevators' 1967 Easter Everywhere, and which fulfills our goal of appearing on an LP with Roky Erickson and Kevin Shields. You'll be able to get it on CD or download, natch, and on limited-edition yellow vinyl, which even comes with a cool acid blotter illustration of Roky. Proceeds go to the Roky Erickson Trust.

Full tracklisting:
Roky Erickson & The Black Angels / 'Roller Coaster'
The Strange Attractors / 'Reverberation (Doubt)'
All The Saints / 'Don't Fall Down'
A Place To Bury Strangers / 'Tried To Hide'
Dead Meadow / 'Kingdom Of Heaven'
Darker My Love / 'She Lives (In A Time Of Her Own)'
Sarabeth Tucek / 'Splash 1 (Now I'm Home)'
Lower Heaven / 'Fire Engine'
Hush Arbors / 'Dr Doom'
Cheval Sombre / 'You Don't Love Me Yet' (feat. Sonic Boom)
Le Volume Courbe / 'I Love The Living You' (feat. Kevin Shields)
Black Acid / 'Unforced Peace'
I Break Horses / 'Goodbye Sweet Dreams'
And there's a Facebook page too for you to be-fan.
Full tracklisting:
Roky Erickson & The Black Angels / 'Roller Coaster'
The Strange Attractors / 'Reverberation (Doubt)'
All The Saints / 'Don't Fall Down'
A Place To Bury Strangers / 'Tried To Hide'
Dead Meadow / 'Kingdom Of Heaven'
Darker My Love / 'She Lives (In A Time Of Her Own)'
Sarabeth Tucek / 'Splash 1 (Now I'm Home)'
Lower Heaven / 'Fire Engine'
Hush Arbors / 'Dr Doom'
Cheval Sombre / 'You Don't Love Me Yet' (feat. Sonic Boom)
Le Volume Courbe / 'I Love The Living You' (feat. Kevin Shields)
Black Acid / 'Unforced Peace'
I Break Horses / 'Goodbye Sweet Dreams'
And there's a Facebook page too for you to be-fan.
Labels:
press releases,
street dates,
stuff you can buy
02 December 2009
We have a merch store - and you can buy the new Darker My Love/Audacity Split 7" there now!
Remember back in June when we recorded a few songs for some 7 inches? Well, one of em is ready for the holiday season, and comes in 7 inches of stocking-stuffability.
Our dear friend Matzah at I Hate Rock N Roll has started a little series called "Under the Covers," in which two bands cover each other, and we get to grace Volume Numero Uno. Audacity might be the best band round these parts right now, and gotta say they really smoke us out of our hole with their rip-roarin' version of "Summer Is Here." Meanwhile, we laid track on their "Mr. Alvarez," and we're pretty pleased with the results. And the best part is: it's out now! This shit is super limited, as in, 300-copies limited, and we only get a handful of em! You can only hear it on wax, so hurry hurry hurry!

Which brings us to point number two:
We now finally have a MERCH STORE, like for real. We have a lotta stuff that you can buy, which we will personally ship to you. It's all sitting in the basement waiting for a loving home. And if you buy the new split, we'll throw in some stickers or buttons or something. So when you consider that your purchase as a gift for your loved one will directly go towards gifts for our loved ones, it's a real value added deal.
Happy December,
Us
Our dear friend Matzah at I Hate Rock N Roll has started a little series called "Under the Covers," in which two bands cover each other, and we get to grace Volume Numero Uno. Audacity might be the best band round these parts right now, and gotta say they really smoke us out of our hole with their rip-roarin' version of "Summer Is Here." Meanwhile, we laid track on their "Mr. Alvarez," and we're pretty pleased with the results. And the best part is: it's out now! This shit is super limited, as in, 300-copies limited, and we only get a handful of em! You can only hear it on wax, so hurry hurry hurry!

Which brings us to point number two:
We now finally have a MERCH STORE, like for real. We have a lotta stuff that you can buy, which we will personally ship to you. It's all sitting in the basement waiting for a loving home. And if you buy the new split, we'll throw in some stickers or buttons or something. So when you consider that your purchase as a gift for your loved one will directly go towards gifts for our loved ones, it's a real value added deal.
Happy December,
Us
Labels:
holidays,
press releases,
stuff you can buy
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