Before the Poison
$ 32.95 Each time Marianne Faithfull issues a recording, fans and pundits hold their breaths waiting for another outing as iconoclastic as Broken English.
|
Guero
$ 29.95 Ever since his thrilling 1994 debut with Mellow Gold, each new Beck album was a genuine pop cultural event, since it was never clear which direction he would follow.
|
If We Can't Trust The Doctors...
$ 29.95 Writhing and preening like a fistful of wild-eyed Southern preachers, Blanche sells sweet snake oil by the wagonload on their debut release If We Can't Trust the Doctors.
|
Lost Son
$ 34.95 Lost Son is a beautiful album, a collection of narratives whose characters are both fascinating and doomed.
|
Lullabies to Paralyze
$ 29.95 They are so good, so natural on Lullabies to Paralyze that it's easy to forget that they just lost Oliveri, but that just makes Homme's triumph here all the more remarkable.
|
The House Carpenter's Daughter
$ 29.95 Striving to preserve the kinds of songs that "teach us about what we know in our hearts," Natalie Merchant presents here 11 songs of traditional and contemporary folk music.
|
The Secret Migration
$ 32.95 Not so much a band as a long, strange trip, the chaotic avant pop pranksters Mercury Rev formed in Buffalo, NY, in the late '80s.
|
Trials and Errors
$ 29.95 Trials & Errors was recorded at a live show one night in Brussels in 2003, shortly after Jason Molina had put Songs: Ohia to rest.
|
KC Accidental
$ 32.50 Single: KC Accidental slams it off the rails with a driving beat and wailing guitars
|
Shooting Rubberbands at the Stars
$ 29.95 As debut albums by young bands go, Shooting Rubberbands at the Stars is nearly flawless
|
The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions
$ 32.95 The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions is an attractive six-disc box set featuring all of Dexter Gordon's '60s recordings for the label in chronological order
|
Carbon Glacier
$ 32.95 Even at her warmest, she exudes a certain collegiate coolness, and when Carbon Glacier begins to drag Veirs manages to retain and command a level of anticipation/fascination that's the mark of a true artist.
|
Escondida
$ 32.95 Escondida is the studio debut by Texas-born singer/songwriter Jolie Holland.
|
Hell Among The Yearlings
$ 34.95 Lacking some of the focus that made her debut album so stunning, Hell Among the Yearlings is nevertheless a thoroughly satisfying second album from Gillian Welch.
|
Niņo Rojo
$ 32.95 As was promised upon the release of Rejoicing in the Hands in the spring of 2004, Niņo Rojo is a companion piece.
|
Stripping Cane
$ 34.95 Jeffrey Foucault is a fine singer/songwriter who's been well taught by his influences, namely Springsteen circa Nebraska, Mellencamp performing "Jackie Brown," and Guy Clark.
|
The Triumphs & Travails of Orphan Mae
$ 29.95 A prolific writer and gifted musician, Laura Veirs is a musical risk-taker. Her recordings offer a haunting mix of deadpan folk and blues with sparse arrangements and Pacific Northwest flavours.
|
You were there for me
$ 29.95 One has to consider the collaborative union of renegade roots music guitarist Tony Rice and woolly Zen bluegrass legend Peter Rowan to be the most natural thing on earth and one that is long overdue
|
89/93 An Anthology
$ 39.95 Uncle Tupelo wasn't the first band to merge the soulful twang of country music with the passionate roar of punk rock
|
Lightnin' Strikes
$ 34.95 Sam Hopkins was a Texas country bluesman of the highest caliber whose career began in the 1920s and stretched all the way into the 1980s.
|
Midnight Special
$ 39.95 Together, McGhee and Terry worked for decades in an acoustic folk-blues bag, singing ancient ditties like "John Henry" and "Pick a Bale of Cotton" for appreciative audiences worldwide.
|
Live at Newport
$ 39.95 Long before Christian rockers were using so-called "Devil's music" to promote a religious message, the Rev. Gary Davis demonstrated that acoustic blues and folk didn't have to be about matters of the flesh.
|
Live at the Regal
$ 32.95 B.B. King is not only a timeless singer and guitarist, he's also a natural-born entertainer, and on Live at the Regal the listener is treated to an exhibition of all three of his talents
|
|