Categories
Vinyl

Vinyl love: The Clientele “Suburban light”

(Vinyl Love is a series of posts that quite simply lists, describes, and displays the pieces in my growing vinyl collection. You can bet that each record was given a spin during the drafting of each corresponding post.)

Artist: The Clientele
Album Title: Suburban light
Year released: 2000
Year reissued: 2014
Details: 180 gram

The skinny: Okay. So I don’t usually make a habit out of posting two of these ‘Vinyl love’ pieces in a row. However, my most recent vinyl purchase, that of the long awaited reissue of “The violet hour“, and of course its requisite go-round on the turntable, immediately put me in the mood to listen to more of The Clientele. And while posting the piece a few days ago, I came to the realization that I hadn’t beforehand published a single ‘Vinyl love’ post on any of their long players, of which I now have all of them on my shelf. So I’ve decided to remedy (and perhaps overcompensate for) this oversight and run the gamut over the next few months, starting back at the beginning, with their debut, 2000’s “The suburban light”. The English dream pop trio cobbled together demos and rough (sometimes home) recordings for this debut, preferring their sound to the versions that resulting from time spent in proper studios and because of this, the album was oft mislabeled a compilation* rather than an album proper. My copy of the record was the one Merge reissued in 2014 with the original artwork and tracklist, as part of its 25th anniversary series, pressed to 180 gram vinyl using the original analogue tapes. So beautiful.

Standout track: “Rain”

*Indeed when I posted about “Rain” (the song above) for its entry on my Best tunes of 2000 list, I referred to the album as such.

Categories
Vinyl

Vinyl love: The Clientele “The violet hour”

(Vinyl Love is a series of posts that quite simply lists, describes, and displays the pieces in my growing vinyl collection. You can bet that each record was given a spin during the drafting of each corresponding post.)

Artist: The Clientele
Album Title: The violet hour
Year released: 2003
Year reissued: 2025
Details: standard black

The skinny: Here’s one that’s been on my vinyl wish list for a very, very long time, perhaps even from day one of my collecting vinyl in earnest. “The Violet hour” was my introduction to London-based dream pop outfit The Clientele and to say I was obsessed with its gauzy sound for the larger part of the 2000s would be putting it mildly. I’ve been intently following the group ever since and every single one of their long players has found a place on my record shelves, all but this one… until now. As I wrote when the song featured below appeared on my Best tunes of 2003 list, the original recordings had been thought to have been lost, which was why this was the only album in their discography that hadn’t seen a recent vinyl reissue. When it was located, incidentally in the year of the album’s 20th anniversary, I was hopeful that this reissue would finally see the light. And now, two years later, here it is and I wasted no time in procuring a copy. It’s a thing of beauty.

Standout track: “Porcelain”

Categories
Tunes

Best tunes of 1994: #25 Frank Black “Headache”

<< #26   |   #24 >>

Back in the early 90s, Toronto alternative radio station CFNY collaborated with music retailer extraordinaire HMV on a series of alternative music compilations. Fittingly titled “Free at last”, the radio station would hand them out as promotional items at events and the store would give them out free with purchases of music by at least one of the artists appearing on the compilation. There were five of them made (that I know of) from 1991 to 1995 and I’m pretty sure they were available both on cassette tape and compact disc, though the art work differed between the two.

I must have had friends that had a few of the volumes because I still have a couple of copies dubbed to cassette packed away in the basement. I also have stowed with them a legit one that I got myself from HMV: Volume 4, from 1994. Looking at the track listing, I figure I probably got a copy with Lush’s second album “Split”. Other artists that appeared on this volume included The Breeders, The Charlatans, Meat Puppets, The Tindersticks, and yes, you guessed it, Frank Black. The very track of focus today, the only single off his sophomore solo long player.

I had only just gotten into his band, the Pixies, a year or two before they announced their break up in 1993 and almost immediately, the frontman* appeared with his debut solo album. In truth, Black had been working on solo material for some time, recording some covers for a planned album as early as during the sessions for Pixies 1991 long player, “Trompe le monde”. The eventual self-titled debut only ended up with one cover on it** when it came out but had a banger of a single on it called “Los Angeles”, whose video I recorded one night from CityLimits and watched and rewatched and rewatched. The sophomore release, “Teenager of the year”, appeared the following year, including twenty two tracks, mostly of typical Pixie length, in and around the two to two and a half minute mark. I never really got into that album as a whole but man, did I love “Headache”, and this was mostly due to the compilation I spoke about above.

“This wrinkle in time, I can’t give it no credit
I thought about my space and I really got me down
Got me so down, I got me a headache
My heart is crammed in my cranium and it still knows how to pound”

Economical as ever, Black packs it all into three minutes. There’s no running start here, going from zero to a hundred, right from the get-go. Crashing drums and slacker guitars, feeling so free and loose. But it’s Black’s vocals and melody that are the star. There ain’t no time to sit and ponder one’s place in the universe and in history. You just gotta go for it. Live it and sing along with Frank. Back him up, screaming all the way. You’ll never be sorry.

*Adjusting his assumed moniker slightly from Black Francis to Frank Black.

**Which I loved.

For the rest of the Best tunes of 1994 list, click here.