Kids, print these off and give one to your special valentine today!
MP3 :::
The Yardbirds – For Your Love
A daily, usually vulgar, music blog focused on psychedelic, shoegazing, space rock, folk, post rock, hauntology, ambient/noise, and related genres.
Kids, print these off and give one to your special valentine today!
MP3 :::
The Yardbirds – For Your Love
Mark McGuire’s new album, Guitar Meditations Vol. II, is two minutes shy of a hundred and twenty minutes of stunningly beautiful electric guitar music. Maybe it if was his first release in a year or two, Guitar Meditations… might seem like an event, but with at least five or six solo records released in the past three years, it just seems like more of a good thing.
With at least two songs clocking in at around thirty minutes, you might think Guitar Meditations… would get boring, but it never does. “Beneath The Bells” shimmers and bubbles like early Tangerine Dream, while ”Wandering Memory” finds McGuire picking folksy melodic lines over a bed of synths for the first thirteen minutes, then switching to 80s prog-pop palm mute riffs for a bit, before ending with the kind of beautiful, easygoing jangly riffs people only seem love when some dude is mumble-singing over them. “Postcard,” which I’m attaching for download, wonderfully confuses the “overproduced” guitar sound of 80’s soft-rock power ballads with the trebly guitar lines of Yo La Tengo or The Clean.
Mark McGuire and Emeralds have put out some of the best ambient and drone records of the past ten years, records that belong beside classics like Aphex Twin’s Selected Ambient Works II, Fenessz’s Endless Summer, and The Stars of the Lids’ The Tired Sounds of the Stars of the Lids. Those searching for the proof behind that statement should look no further than Guitar Meditations II.
Guitar Meditations II can be purchased from Volcanic Tongue and Mimaroglu.
MP3 :::
Mark McGuire – Postcard
Photo and video credit Louisville Courier-Journal
The press conference ear X-tacy owner and charter member of the national Coalition of Independent Music Stores John Timmons assembled this morning at the store was a rather powerful pow wow. A few things solidified this. Though he kept his composure, Timmons was visibly broken up during much of his 20 minute statement. All the local media were there – the major network affiliates, Gabe Bullard from WFPL, LEO Weekly, Velocity, and countless bloggers – not to mention many luminaries of the music community, including Forecastle Festival founder JK McKnight, The For Carnation/Dead Child’s Todd Cook, and Lebowski Fest’s Will Russell. Though I didn’t realize until halfway through, Jim James, whose My Morning Jacket sold out Madison Square Garden on New Years Eve, was to my left with his wife and young daughter. It was fitting, as Timmons mentioned all the historic in-store performances that occurred at ear X-tacy, specifically citing My Morning Jacket’s live album Celebración de la Ciudad Natal, which was recorded in the store in the summer of 2008 to a crowd of 500 people.
But beyond all that, the moment that empirically proved ear X-tacy’s value in local and regional music (and in some cases, on a national level) was the Q & A. It was long, and the majority of it did not consist of questions – but testimony. “I’m not a member of the media, but I live here and I just wanted to say…” is what often followed when John called on someone to speak. While not all comments were necessarily relevant, it didn’t matter – each was evidence to how vital the store is to the community. ear X-tacy, for many, is the epicenter for Louisville music. There were very few questions because there’s not much to question. This press conference was a come-to-Jesus meeting, and Timmons laid it all out there.
ear X-tacy is not closing, but they’re not doing well, and they have no explicit plan. The purpose of today’s conference was nothing more than to let everyone know the truth, and how bad it’s gotten. “As the owner, I see this store completely different than others see it or our customers see it. I see what this store can be, and what’s wrong with it,” said Timmons. “The economy has certainly killed us.”
However, his own personal passion and the outpouring of support, including the Save ear X-tacy Facebook group boasting 20,000 members, has solidified a strong effort to stay open. “The easy thing would be to turn the lights off and walk out next month,” said Timmons, “but this isn’t my store, this is all of ours, and I will do everything to stay open.” This included Timmons drawing money from his own retirement and staff not receiving any raises for the last three years – a decidedly unsustainable model, but one that kept them somewhat afloat. Timmons also said that ear X-tacy’s ThinkIndie digital store is a “money pit.”
Timmons did allude to the idea of possibly downsizing the store’s current 10,000 square ft. floor or moving to a different building. We’ve already seen this happen over the past few years, as ear X-tacy’s apparel and general ephemera stock took up the entire second floor, which is now used as storage. However, he was adamant about their general location. “We belong on Bardstown Road,” he said.
ear X-tacy’s value in the community is unequivocal, but Timmons shared one story that provides one of the most direct correlations. Before the store began reporting Soundscan, the general thought was that only soul and country music sold in Louisville. The store’s record sales actually revealed a much more eclectic market than what the cigar-chompers in New York gave Louisville credit for. From there, a wider spectrum of acts began routing tours through Louisville, demonstrating what Timmons called “the synergy between radio, the store, and the live show.”
It was shortly after that anecdote that Timmons shared his biggest and most passionate statement – a plea. “We don’t want a handout or a bailout or your money. We want your business.”
There it is. It’s not enough to do a pity purchase next week. It’s about changing your buying habits, and making a conscience decision to shop local, even at the sake of convenience. Since it’s somewhat naive to believe that the majority of people are as willing as they say they are to do this, there should be a restructure of some sort. John Timmons was vague about the future plans for ear X-tacy outside what he didn’t want to happen – moving, closing, et al. Perhaps this is our call to action to help, and I certainly have an idea that I will be throwing their way. What do you think? How do we save this staple of our music and arts community and make it sustainable in the digital age (by digital, I mean “entitled to get free shit”)? Let’s make this a collaborative effort, like any community worth its salt in any arena should do. Use the comments below to swap ideas.
In the meantime, find something you’ve been meaning to get.
UPDATE: Backseat Sandbar has the whole thing on video.
My birthday is August 28th. If you want to be the. fucking. champ., you can buy me and me lady passes to All Tomorrows Parties, which I want so bad in my life. They celebrate ten years this September at the delightfully creepy Kutshcer’s, and they brought in delightfully creepy Jim Jarmusch to pick his favorites to play.
A good list thus far… Explosions in the Sky, Sonic Youth, The Breeders, Fuck Buttons, The Books, Papa M, Aspe, The Brian Jonestown Massacre, Wooden Shjips, The Black Angels, Vivian Girls, and more. Fucking killer. And of course, the Friday Don’t Look Back series continues this year with The Stooges, Sleep, The Scientists, and Mudhoney (who I saw a couple years ago at Chicago’s Double Door and, yes, they’ve still got it).
The rodeo goes down September 3 – 5 in Monticello, NY. More info at the ATP Festival site.
MP3 :::
Fuck Buttons – Flight of the Feathered Serpent
The Books – That Right Ain’t Shit
The Brian Jonestown Massacre – Seer
Wooden Shjips – Motorbike
Vivian Girls – Where Do You Run?
The Black Angels – Dee Ree Shee

Last Christmas my friend got his niece the first High Places album and she gave it her coveted best new music designation. Like much of the stuff coming out around that time, it wasn’t hard to imagine it as a fitting soundtrack for playtime. Pots and pans, whimsical use of world music sampling, and saccharine vocals held the LA duo guarded from rigorous criticism in it’s naive execution. On their upcoming second full-length, High Places vs. Mankind, they haven’t abandoned this aesthetic entirely, but it is, to my pleasant surprise, a slightly different beast. The drum beats crack and shuffle with renewed confidence and guitars take a higher seat in the mix to create more complex moods. A little dissonance is a welcome addition to the percussion-heavy minimalism we’ve come to expect, and Mary Pearson explores darker textures for her voice that really pull this out of it’s niche. We know you’re already excited about this, and for good reason. Out with the cute, in with the new.
High Places vs. Mankind will be available April 6th on Thrill Jockey.
MP3 :::
Files removed per request

Both us and No Conclusion immediately tear open emails from De Stijl Records as soon as we get ‘em, just like how Christmas used to be. And with good reason – everything around those parts are 100% solid, and this beautiful damage jammage from Jerusalem and the Starbaskets is no exception. Jerusalem grabs the crusty grit of Elevators-style garage, adds a touch of space rock expansiveness, and calibrates said sounds to match their Midwestern stomping ground. While the tones are interstellar, they, kinda like Amen Dunes, have the uncanny ability to create a bucolic, rural psychedelia that’s as dusty as it is cosmic. Mega like.
Go see about them over at De Stijl’s website.

The Strange Boys are the brainchild of few stumbling kids out of Austin, TX who play hot-bed confessionals, scruffy twilight ballads, and drinking jams. With a mix of influences from Bob Dylan to the Seeds, they arrive at a pleasantly concocted hybrid of psychedelic nature and southern mannerisms that have led them to play with everyone from King Khan to Roky Erikson. For their new album Be Brave, they recruited two members of Mika Miko, and Tim Presley of Darker My Love, to be released on In The Red. Singer Ryan Sambol sounds like he’s trying to one-up Daniel Johnston at his own game (which is a bit unfair considering dude doesn’t even know what day it is), with a bit of a drunken country slur. That aside, he is a pretty masterful storyteller. The songs move along at a crawling pace, packing in garage rock crunch, wailing harmonica, and outsider folk leanings for an album full of surprises. You can catch these dudes supporting Deerhunter and Spoon this Spring.
Be Brave is available February 23rd on In the Red.
For Fans Of: Daniel Johnston, Smith Westerns, Black Lips
MP3 :::
The Strange Boys – Laugh At Sex, Not Her
The Strange Boys – Friday in Paris
The folks at ProdSimp were rad enough to give us a pair of tickets to give away for the Tortoise and Disappears show tomorrow night, February 11, at Headliners Music Hall. Both bands rule hard, it’s going to be great, and you’re probably going either way, so why not save some coin and participate in our contest? To enter, send me some lyrics that Sir Wesley Willis could’ve penned about either Tortoise or Disappears (or both in the same song). I’ll start:
You are a rocking maniac
You were in The Sea and Cake and Gatr Del Sol
Millions Now Living Will Never Die is a rock and roll joyride
You really whip a polar bear’s ass with a belt
John McEntire
John McEntire
John McEntire
John McEntire
See? That was fun. You may either enter a comment below or shoot a message to kb [at] thedecibeltolls(dot)com. Need to see that shit by tomorrow at noon EST, and you’ll be notified by email that yours was the most awesome. You must either live in Louisville or be able to reasonably make it here to be eligible. If you don’t win, there will still be some tickets available at the door tomorrow night at 8 p.m., so don’t sleep on it.
I’m attaching the press release below, so that you know what I know. But if this is at all a possibility, this is quite a bellwether warning for indie music retailers, as ear X-tacy is one the nation’s most recognizable and lauded independent record retailers – a name that often finds itself in the same sentence as Electric Fetus and Amoeba Records…
UPDATE: I will be attending this press conference and will be tweeting live on The Decibel Tolls Twitter
John Timmons, founder of the independent record store and owner for nearly 25 years, is expressing his concern for the survival of ear X-tacy, as we know it. Timmons will announce details of the store’s situation during a press conference Friday, February 12, at 10:00am, at the store,1534 Bardstown Road.
With the 10,000-square-foot prime location’s lease about to expire in March 2010, Timmons is focusing attention on the realities of a dire situation and the potential impact of losing one of the nation’s top 10 record stores. The absence of this local treasure would have a financial impact on the local media, especially public radio. It would affect concerts, promoters, and leave a void on Bardstown Road in the Highlands, an area already severely impacted by the economy’s downturn. The synergy of Louisville’s local businesses would be affected and the city’s music and cultural landscape definitely would be altered. The dynamics of “keep Louisville weird,” a local movement founded by John Timmons, would suffer from such a loss.
“This is not about business. It’s about something my customers have built and have come to expect. It’s about a place to experience music,” Timmons said. “Many tourists seem to make ear X-tacy a destination point as out-of-towners have learned about ear X-tacy through national exposure. I think the store is a place that makes Louisvillian’s proud. It’s been a community effort to build it and it’s going to take a community to sustain it.”