Chicago musician James Eric has accomplished quite a bit in recent years. Self-releasing four albums, as well as producing, editing, and composing the score for Meet The Monkeys a documentary directed by Collin Souter which focuses on the importance of arts education in elementary schools, and the positive effect that a non-for-profit theater company has on the Chicago community. In October he released a greatest hits album entitled, Tonight The Moon, and the album is a great introduction to James' music for those who have not heard his previous albums. James also has a cover album featuring songs from Smashing Pumpkins, Flaming Lips, Wilco, and more available for download on his site. Listen to: The One (mp3)
Champaign, IL trio Headlights will release its second album, Some Racing, Some Stopping on Feb. 19, 2008 on their hometown label, Polyvinyl Records. Tristan Wraight, Erin Fein, and Brett Sanderson playing keyboard infested rock with energy and certain level of wit. Their 2006 debut was nothing sort of spectacular, and follow-up should be just as impressive but in a new more mature way. The story of Headlights’ new album starts in an old, two-story farmhouse just outside of Champaign, IL. Nestled between corn and soybean fields, and within view of encroaching industry—a freight train line, a FedEx plant, and the local mall visible from the 2nd floor window—this farmhouse was the site where the band wrote and recorded its sophomore full length album. Working from home, without the pressures of studio time frames and a ticking hourly rate, the band was free to write and record as they saw fit. The songs were recorded as they were written, and many of the tracks that were used were first takes. Based around Wraight’s acoustic guitar and Fein’s keyboards, the songs on Some Racing, Some Stopping purposefully lack much of the spacey atmospherics that define the band’s earlier work. Instead, the album,which is self-produced with drummer Sanderson manning the boards, is steeped in a classic pop sensibility,reminiscent of the ’60s, Brill Building song craft, and Phil Spector production. Listen to: Lions (mp3) and TV (mp3) from 2006's Kill Them With Kindness
Europe already knows the electro-pop joy of Hey Willpower’s full-length debut, P.D.A. (Tomlab), which has gone unreleased in North America until now - it streets on Jan. 22, 2008. The US edition features a revamped sequence, all new artwork, and the addition of their sugar-high cover of Architecture in Helsinki’s underground hit “Heart it Races”. The band will be touring the US in the Spring of 08, including several appearances at SXSW in March.
2007 has been a busy year for Bracken. Firstly we had their debut LP We Know About The Need, a hyperactive exploration into skewed songwriting, avant drone and glitchy sample experiments presented, seemingly of the blue, to Anticon Records by Chris Adams, founder member of Leeds, UK’s heroes Hood. Following hot on it’s heels was a sketchbook of so-far-off-the-dial-they’ve-fallen-off-the-map ideas which ultimately made up the companion LP Eno About The Need. Issuing this deluxe double vinyl LP in an edition of one copy might be seen as commercial suicide but, hey, it’s art ain’t it? 1.We Cut The Tapes and Scatter [Steinbeck Ultramagnetic remix by Buddy Peace] (mp3)

The Peel Back: Dag Nasty "Can I Say" (1986)
I started reading Jeff Parker's novel "Ovenman" today, and the epigraph is taken from a Dag Nasty song found on this 1986 album. The quote is from "Under Your Influence" and reads as follows, "Twelve onces of courage/Makes the world look better". This sets the stage for the wonderfully named When Thinfinger to awaken from a drunken night covered in post-its. Enough about Ovenman, I first heard Dag Nasty on the now semi-famous mixtape given to me back in 1993 by a most influential girlfriend. It featured two songs from this album, and really kicked off a long standing appreaciation for punk music.
Dag Nasty "Can I Say" 1986
Values Here (mp3)/One to Two/Circles/Thin Line/Justification/What Now?/I've Heard/Under Your Influence (mp3)/Can I Say (mp3)/Never Go Back

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