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My friend Rob and I did a lengthy/detailed version of his That Record Got Me High podcast about this one đŸ‘‚đŸ»
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Feb 24, 2025

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The most outre, difficult, awesome album in the history of LPs. 28 tracks of crazy. This double album might be the strangest record released in major-label rock history. As the Simpsons’ Matt Groening once said, I listened to it once and hated it, then seven more times convinced me it was the greatest album of all time. Do yourself a favor and tune in. đŸŽ¶
Jun 17, 2024
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I have kinda genuflected at the altar of this album since it first came out. I owe at least two of my "meh" bands to it/them. It was the sound of Liverpool in my head; rainy, grey, moody, caught between gothic stoicism and a dappled-light magical realism of moonlight reflected on the waves that surround that port city. Tough and tender. Bluster and vulnerability. Light and shade. All in one package. Just like Liverpool itself. My friend Rob Elba and I did a full podcast episode on it a few years ago that still stands up pretty well as a definitive evaluation of what singer Ian McCulloch once boastfully called "The Greatest Album Ever Recorded" (not that I'm making him wrong about that). Will's guitar playing never, ever left my head -- I tried to model my whole "less is more" approach upon his twinning of Television and the Velvets. "Silver" and "Seven Seas" could chart today, they still sound so fresh.
May 4, 2024
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Shameless self promotion alert -- my new book (published by the good folks at HoZac) is officially out on Friday and some of the advance press is now starting to land, which is fun to see. (You can order it here, if you're so inclined: https://hozacrecords.com/product/aifl/) Our friends at Flood Magazine were among the first to write it up and decided to feature a book about EPs by.... posting a playlist of some of my/contributors' favorite songs from their favorite EPs. Sounds about right! "His new book An Ideal for Living: A Celebration of the EP, both makes a case for the format’s legitimacy and backs that claim up with a fairly bulletproof top-25 EPs list for every decade dating back to the 1950s. From the Joy Division release referenced in the book’s title to the iconic Simon & Garfunkel collection depicted on the book’s cover and well beyond, duBrowa is intent on helping readers understand the value of these truncated tracklists as being much more than an afterthought in an artist’s oeuvre." BONUS POINTS FOR THE USE OF THE WORD OEUVRE. :)
May 30, 2024

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Hey tyler hopefully this doesn’t violate some PI.FYI golden rule But after nearly two years of writing, editing and arguing, my book about the EP is coming out in May and can be preordered here: https://hozacrecords.com/product/aifl/ The book is about the origins, history and cultural impact of the EP since these little objects first started coming out in the 50s. Over 50 of my music biz friends then helped me shape the list and review the top 200 ever released, according to us (ha). For those of you who are into this kind of geekery/snobbery, I can’t wait to hear what you think. A labor of love, as all books are! ❀
Mar 27, 2024
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I will fail to explain just how much this band meant to me in the 90s. So I will borrow from AV Club who did a fine job of distilling it: “Unwound is the best band of the ’90s. Not just because of how prolific, consistent, and uncompromising it was, but because of how perfectly Unwound nested in a unique space between some of the most vital forms of music that decade: punk, post-rock, indie rock, post-hardcore, slow-core, and experimental noise. That jumble of subgenres doesn’t say much; in fact, it falls far short of what Unwound truly synthesized and stood for. Unwound stood for Unwound. But in a decade where most bands were either stridently earnest or stridently ironic, Unwound wasn’t stridently anything. It was only itself. In one sense Unwound was the quietest band of the ’90s, skulking around like a nerdy terror cell. In another sense it was the loudest, sculpting raw noise into contorted visions of inner turmoil and frustration.” R.I.P. Vern Rumsey. This is their finest song, from their finest album. I really can’t say enough about the sheer bloody minded genius of this group. đŸ–€
Mar 23, 2024