
Jimi Hendrix – Valleys Of Neptune What if Hendrix had collaborated with Miles Davis, gotten into synthesizers, put together that big band he’d been planning at the time of his death? Would rock as we know it be different now? What would Hendrix have made of hip-hop? Would he have had a hand in inventing it? Something about his music points so strongly toward unimaginable next accomplishments that it’s hard to consign him to the past.
Hendrix’s estate was a mess for years, and many shoddy reissues tugged his spirit into dingy corners. With the release of “Valley of Neptune,” a new phase begins. This album of previously unreleased studio material is the first in a new campaign from Experience Hendrix, the company led by the artist’s stepsister Janie. Deluxe reissues of the three sets Hendrix made with his band the Experience will be released on the same day, and Janie recently said that there’s enough unheard stuff in the vault to make for a decade of new releases. Read The Full Review

Broken Bells – Broken Bells Calling Broken Bells “the new Postal Service” is really kind of a lame comparison. It conveys a significantly different musical style and evokes an era-specific pop culture phenomenon that doesn’t need to be replicated. But like Benjamin Gibbard and Jimmy Tamborello, Burton and Mercer are an immensely talented pair who’ve made a really great album. And we hope it’s not their last.
If you’ve heard “The High Road,” the group’s single that dropped in December, then you’ve already heard the best track on the record. That may make for a slightly anti-climatic listen for those most anticipating the release, but that’s not to say there aren’t numerous musical gems to be enjoyed. Read The Full Review

Liars – Sisterworld As they’ve done previously with Berlin and Salem, Liars drew inspiration from a specific location for Sisterworld, cocking a wary eye at Los Angeles—though it’s hardly the L.A. Randy Newman would recognize. This is a place of profound alienation, a pothole-cracked parallel City Of So-Called Angels where the fringe elements lurk in the shadow of Hollywood glitz. Like most Liars albums since the group’s disco-punk false start, that fringe is certifiably lunatic: Here, Liars’ usual creeping unease turns seductive—the increasingly rational voice of the inner psychopath, Charlie Manson whispering in your ear. Read The Full Review
Ok, we’re back with the second installment of “The Top 10 Reissues of 2009″. Seeing as all such lists are completely subjective and as such subject to the whims of their imperfect, ego-driven, sex-god authors (well, at least this list is), you can expect to see a few albums you may not agree with, or maybe never even heard of. Yes, I’m that cool—I listen to albums you’ve never even heard of. Sometimes albums that haven’t even been written yet. Albums that only exist in my own warped, feeble mind. MUWHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! Yes, I lead a sad life.
Anyhoo, I chose the albums that I did not in the hopes of being esoteric and cool (I’m thirty, work a corporate job and have a double chin and a bad haircut; I gave up on pursuing “cool” a while ago) but because I really, truly love these albums. They are my “desert island” albums, my shoulder to cry on when I’ve had a bad day, or a friend to dance with when I need to celebrate. I know I could find real people to fill these roles, but it’s easier to buy things. Plus most of the people I know don’t make very good music. Herb for example. (Just kidding Herb.)
So here’s #6-4 of my favorite reissues of the year. If you haven’t heard them, pick up a copy at Pure Pop (or have them order you a copy if it’s not in stock). If you end up loving the album, buy me a beer. If you hate it, kick me in nuts and demand your money back. Or just leave a comment in the field below. Enjoy!
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6) Marble Sky – “The Sad Return”
Underground cassette culture can be a curse or a blessing. While it can be truly amazing to discover the next great noise god on your coveted, handmade uber-limited release C-20, it can also be incredibly frustrating when (because you were too broke or not in the know enough to purchase it) the album everyone is talking about goes out-of-print.
This was the case with “The Sad Return”, the first album by Marble Sky (side project of Impregnable/Secret Abuse/Roman Torment/etc. etc.’s Jeff Witscher). Released originally in a run of only 15 cassette copies on Callow God in 2007, “The Sad Return” became one of the most talked about underground albums of that year. The lo-fi, blissful synthesizer drones on the album recalled everything from Brian Eno’s “Apollo…” to Eliane Radigue’s Arp works to New Age pioneers like Steven Halpern or Laraaji, yet had a unique, decayed beauty that was distinctly its own.
While low-quality mp3 rips of the album existed online, for the fans clamoring for a physical copy it seemed like a proper reissue would never come. Finally, nearly two years after the initial release, the wonderful Students of Decay label released a gorgeous, remastered version of “The Sad Return” on CD, with sophisticated and evocative artwork pro-printed on a standard digipak. This time, they did a run of 500 copies, so this one should stay in print for a little while….but I wouldn’t sit on it.

5) Klaus Schulze – “X”/”Mirage”
2009 was a big year for reviving 70s progressive synth and Berlin School electronic music. While new artists like Oneohtrix Point Never paid homage with bliss riffage that owed heavily to the period, the nostalgia kick was also fueled by vinyl and CD reissues of some classic albums from two of the original masters, Klaus Schulze and Kraftwerk
Klaus Schulze started his career as a drummer for prog ambient legends Tangerine Dream and later was a founding member of Ash Ra Tempel. However, he is probably best remembered for his solo works, which constituted some of the first true “ambient” music. “Mirage” and “X” were two of his greatest works from what is arguable his greatest working period, the late 1970s.
“Mirage”, first released in 1977, is easily the darker of the two albums, with an abundance of minor keys and heavy, brooding oscillations. The album starts off with the haunting and lovely “Velvet Voyage” sounds just as its name implies, moving gentle from one theme to the next and blending lovely synthesized vocal and string choruses with sequenced rhythms and burning riffage. The simple chiming, xylophone-esque sequence that starts off the second track, “Crystal Lake”, could easily be mistaken for an early John Carpenter movie soundtrack. However, the track quickly moves along to introduce increasingly complex polyphony as sequence builds upon sequence, then fading out to a beautiful, droning New Age bliss-out. The final track, “In Cosa Crede Chi Non Crede?”, is the shortest piece on the album (it still has an epic 19-minute+ runtime) but provides a nice gentle, jingling comedown from the heaviness of the previous two 1/2 hour epics.
“X” was Schulze’s 1978 follow-up to “Mirage” and despite the short amount of time between releases, it shows a tremendous amount of growth. The compositions are more complex and allow for much less subtle displays of technical skill and mastery of dynamics. Compared to the relative sedateness of “Mirage”, “X” simply rocks out. From the proggy riffage of “Friedrich Nietzsche” that could put Rick Wakeman to shame through to driving motorik of “Frank Herbert”, “X” is in many ways a more confident and arguably more commercial Schulze release that foreshadows his work in the 1980s, while still retaining some of the Berlin School elements that make his 1970s work so powerful.

4) Kraftwerk, “The Catalog”
Everybody knows Kraftwerk. Even people who told listen to electronic music (hell, even your mom) will recognize the main riff from “Autobahn” or recognize a picture of the group from their heyday. Whether it’s the kitschy, commercial quality of their later work or the famous “man-machine” robotic quality of their stage presence/marketing persona, Kraftwerk somehow became an ubiquitous part of our modern cultural zeitgeist.
So Kraftwerk is the most famous German electronic group of the 1970s…..but how many people do you know who own their albums? They’re one of those bands that everyone has heard of, but not that many listen to. A big part of the reason is that their sound is frozen in time, encased in early electronic music kitschy-ness that can turn some people off. But a bigger reason is availability and quality of the existing recordings. The original vinyl releases have become increasingly rare and expensive for good quality copies, and the original CD releases suffered from poor mastering.
This year, all that changed when Kraftwerk reissued eight of their best-known albums individually and as a boxed set called “The Catalog” (the name is a bit misleading, as it doesn’t include Kraftwerk’s more experimental, krautrock inspired early work) on both CD and vinyl formats. Finally, you get to hear Kraftwerk as they were meant to be heard, and if there was ever a band whose albums demanded the ultimate in pristine quality, it is Kraftwerk. While they wrote some melodies and vocal harmonies that rival The Beatles and The Beach Boys (well, at least their lesser works….) the real star of the Kraftwerk show are the synthesizers. Hearing these albums remastered makes you realize just how powerful it must have been to hear these machines live for the first time, the completely inorganic zippering highs and gut-thumping low end.
An analog synthesizer is a beautiful thing, and Kraftwerk’s songs were nothing more than an ode to the machines they loved, just like a e.e. cummings love poem is as much an ode to the words themselves as to any human object. It’s no accident that Kraftwerk called one of their best albums “The Man-Machine”. They wanted to be robots; they wanted to be nothing more than passive operators of this wonderful equipment, the ultimate “gear heads”. As a result, it makes Kraftwerk’s rise to popular success even more impressive.
More than anything though, these are just fun songs that provide a nice historical look at the origins of modern electronic dance music. If you’re a Kraftwerk initiate, I recommend picking up “Computer World” or “The Man-Machine” and going from there. Just don’t be surprised if you develop an overwhelming desire to become a robot.
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Ok, that’s it for Part 2. Join us next week for Part 3, featuring the three best reissues of 2009!
First off, let me introduce myself. My name is Jay Blanchard, but some of you probably know me better as Spitting Out Teeth, the moniker I’ve used for my now-defunct music blog and radio show on 105.9 The Radiator. It’s also my nom de plume on the comments fields of various local music and culture blogs, including Aether Everywhere, The Contrarian and the very Pure Pop blog you’re reading right now. I’m also an experimental musician, recording and/or playing live with Solah, Yellowknife, the le duo and my solo project, VIKOMT.
But who cares about me….you’re here for music. Specifically, lists about music. Even more specifically, lists about good music that came out in 2009, which is what I promise to deliver. While I could easily write a top ten (or twenty….or fifty) list of my favorite CD, vinyl, cassette, reel-to-reel, wax cylinder, etc. releases from this glorious annus horribilis (didn’t this year suck? and doesn’t that phrase look like “horrible anus”? didn’t he steal that joke from “Saxondale“?), I’ve decided instead to focus on some of the amazing reissues that came out in 2009.
Why focus on reissues? Well, partly because in this post-modern age with ever-advancing technology, I believe in a work of art as a living document, and I’m amazed by how a great technician can improve on an already great album and introduce it anew to a modern generation. Or I’m just an old fogey who’s locked in the past. Tomayto, Tomahto.
Ok, less talky, more listy. Here ’tis.
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10) Warp20 box set
Like many of you, I came of age musically in the early-to-mid 1990′s, a epic time of musical innovation, especially in electronic music. While genres such as House and Jungle were finally starting to reach much broader audiences (did anyone over the age of 15 in 1995 not know at least one person with a set of turntables & a mixer?), more esoteric forms of electronica were starting to show up in the underground.
While most of the electronic music showing up in clubs had steady beats and easy ambient trance synthlines, more avant-garde explorers of the format were creating harsh digital glitches and cut-and-paste rhythms that were anything but danceable. While the music went under many different names, it was most commonly known as “IDM”, or Intelligent Dance Music. At the forefront were artists such as Autechre, Aphex Twin, Squarepusher, Plaid, Prefuse 73, Richard Devine and Jamie Lidell. While there music varied greatly, they all shared one thing in common—Warp.
“From MTV intros to movie soundtracks to television commercials, the sounds of Warp became a pervading part of the cultural landscape, almost subversively gaining mass appeal through its rapid appropriation.”
Warp Records (founded in 1989) was one of the first, and most definitely the most prominent, of IDM record labels. Starting in 1989, Warp blended cutting-edge album artwork with music that challenged both the mind and emotions. In many ways, Warp releases became the soundtrack of the mid-90s, a fractured timespace of pre-millennial chaos and exploding technological change. From MTV intros to movie soundtracks to television commercials, the sounds of Warp became a pervading part of the cultural landscape, almost subversively gaining mass appeal through its rapid appropriation. I certainly can’t think of another example where avant-garde music so quickly and completely became embraced by the mainstream media.
However, the hottest fires burn out the fastest, and as the confusion of the late 1990s led to post-millenial malaise, IDM quickly lost its fanbase. Taken out of its cultural context, the music failed to have the same appeal, and experimental audiences turned in droves to the sedate post-rock, ambient and drone sounds coming from labels such as Kompakt, Kranky and Constellation. However, Warp somehow soldiered on as a label, continuing their excellent taste in artists with releases by Boards of Canada, Grizzly Bear, Broadcast, Bibio and many others.
To celebrate its 20th birthday, Warp released the Warp20 box set this year, a massive 4xCD, 3xLP collection of some of the best tracks they ever released. This is one set that truly looks as good as it sounds as well, featuring Warp’s famous minimalist white-and-purple design style and abstract 3D imagery. My only complaint about the set would be the lack of a DVD of Warp’s highly influential music videos, but a great collection of Warp videos already exists and can be purchased separately. For anyone who wasn’t old enough to have heard this music at the time of its creation, or for those of you who want to relive your halcyon days, this is your time to get a true Warp experience.

9) King Crimson “In the Court of the Crimson King”/ “Red”
Ok, I’ll admit it—I’m not a big prog rock fan. As much as I appreciate the complex time signatures and love the analog synth riffage, it’s just a genre that appeals more to me in theory than in practice. That said, I was still pretty blown away by listening to these two reissues by the legendary King Crimson.
First off, I’ve been doing a lot of production lately so I’m becoming more and more of a tech geek by the day. As a result, I’m always in awe of a really good remix or remastering of an album. It’s amazing how some fader tweaks & a bit of EQ and compression in the right hands can make a dull album shine like a diamond (or vice versa in the wrong hands–think Metallica’s latest). For “In the Court of the Crimson King” and “Red”, the great Robert Fripp teamed up with Steven Wilson to create a new (and MUCH better) stereo mix of each album, as well as a 5.1 surround sound version. Each album also features a bonus disc of alternate takes or mixes of album tracks.
Another reason to love these albums—King Crimson isn’t your standard sterile virtuoso prog band. There are some absolutely beautiful moments on these albums, full of true emotion. And did I mention these guys can rock a metal riff? Some very Sabbath-like moments on here. So whether you’re a prog fan or not, these albums are worth picking up.

8 ) The Rolling Stones – “Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out” (40th Anniversary box set)
Ah, The Rolling Stones. Say what you will about their laughable entries into psychedelia in the mid-60s….or their even more laughable forays into reggae in the 70s….or their just plain piss-poor attempts at a return to blues-rock form in the 80s. One thing you can’t deny however is that from 1968′s “Beggar’s Banquet” until 1972′s “Exile on Main Street”, these guys were untouchable. And while their albums from this period are masterpieces of down-and-dirty rock and roll, many who lived through the period would argue that the studio tapes just didn’t capture their best work, which was happening on stage during their raunchy and drug-fueled live performances.
“Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out” is the Stones’ sole official live release from this era, capturing what is arguably their greatest performance ever, a November 1969 show at NYC’s Madison Square Garden (along with a few songs from a Maryland show on the same tour). Some of you may know this show from the Maysles’ brothers’ documentary “Gimme Shelter”. While the film helps give the performance context, you don’t need images to release that this show was pure electric magic. With Mick’s vocals ranging from seductive purr to brutal lion howl and Keith’s guitar licks cutting like a razorblade, it’s no surprise that the great Lester Bangs said ” I have no doubt that it’s the best rock concert ever put on record.”
This year, to celebrate the fortieth anniversary of the performances, the album was reissued in box set form to include previously unreleased bonus tracks from the concerts, as well as tracks by show openers B.B. King and Ike & Tina Turner. Long live rock and roll.

7) The Stone Roses, “The Stone Roses”
I will always remember the first time I heard The Stone Roses. It was 1997 and I just couldn’t shut up about Radiohead. My friend Mike, who was a few years older than me, was getting pretty sick of it & decided it was a good time to try to turn me onto something else. He asked me “Have you ever listened to The Stone Roses? No? Then borrow this. But it’s my favorite album, so I want it back.”
Skeptical that I could appreciate anything other than OK Computer entering my earholes at that moment in time, I reluctantly took the album. Half just to humor Mike, and the other half because I was intrigued by the Jackson Pollock-esque cover art (which I later discovered was created by the band’s guitarist, John Squire). I went back to my apartment and popped the CD into my stereo. About 30 seconds into “I Wanna Be Adored” I was completely sold.
While the Ian Brown‘s ethereal siren song vocals and the lush production is enough to make this album a classic, it’s really the tremendous variety of sounds encompassed during its 11 tracks. From the post-punk overtones of “I Wanna Be Adored” to the jangle-pop of “She Bangs the Drums” to the abstract looping beauty of “Don’t Stop” to Irish folk song on “Elizabeth My Dear”. I can hear echoes of everyone from The Beatles to The Kinks to Syd Barrett to Joy Division to Happy Mondays to…..you name it. This is truly a postmodern pop album, completely unafraid of genre-hopping and paying homage to influences. NME’s claim that this is “the greatest debut album ever” is more than arguable, but it’s definitely a contender.
This year, on the 20th anniversary of the album’s release, “The Stone Roses” was reissued as either a single CD, a single LP, a 2xCD & 1xDVD deluxe set, and a massive “collector’s edition” 3xCD, 3xLP, 1xDVD set for the true obsessives. No matter what version you pick up, you’re in for a treat.
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That’s all for now folks. Look for part two of this saga, selections #6-4, next week!
5. 2009 Has Been a Great Year for Music: Whatever your genre preference, there’s been a lot of wonderful stuff coming out in 2009. It’s impossible to be brief and concise conveying the scope of quality 2009 titles. Some of my personal favorites include Phoenix’s Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix, The Fuck Button’s Tarot Sport, Fever Ray’s Fever Ray and Beirut’s March of the Zapotec/Holland. Of course, I’ve barely scratched the surface.
4. Vinyl’s Still Going Strong: The resurgence of vinyl’s popularity over the last few years has been an absolute blessing for audiophiles. We’re at a point now where it’s safe to assume any given album will see a vinyl issue, often coupled with a voucher for an mp3 download of your purchase. These days, it’s a no-brainer picking sides in the format war. (Incidentally the only new record I purchased on both cd and vinyl this year was Bad Lieutenant.)
3. Reissues Abound: The extent to which an old album can be cleaned-up, remixed and remastered is staggering. 2009 saw the best-sounding records of the 60′s, The Beatles catalog, reissued and sounding vastly improved. It’s nothing short of revelatory to listen to one of your favorite albums after a top-notch remastering. Currently, about half our staff are obsessively listening to and extolling the virtues of the magnificent sounding reissue of King Crimson’s Red.
2. A Good Showing From The Elder Statesmen: Question: What do Bob Dylan, Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr and Yoko Ono have in common? Answer: They’ve all been producing music for over twenty-five years and they all released great albums this year. 2009 has been kind to the old guard, or should I say the old guard has been kind to us in 2009? There’s been so much good stuff from established acts this year, one could ignore all the newer artists and still have plenty to listen to.
1. We Are Still Here: It’s been a tough decade for the music retail industry. CD burner’s, legal and illegal digital music distribution and the prevalence of mp3 players have all put a tight squeeze on our livelihood, and yet we’re still here. Truthfully, it’s a bit of a miracle we’ve managed to hang in, and for that, we are greatly thankful. It’s a lot of hard work, but we believe in it and are proud to continue to make tangible music product available to those who want it.


