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Vinyl

Vinyl love: Neutral Milk Hotel “In the aeroplane over the sea”

(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: Neutral Milk Hotel
Album Title: In the aeroplane over the sea
Year released: 1998
Year reissued: 2018
Details: gatefold sleeve, 180 gram

The skinny: I’ve not just been away from blogging over the past week or so but also from work and home and have been out living the dream. I returned just a few days ago and almost immediately reacquainted myself with my vinyl shelves, one of the very few things I miss while being away from home. So it made most sense to me to share one of these ‘vinyl love’ posts as my first upon returning from this brief hiatus and I chose Neutral Milk Hotel’s classic sophomore album, “In the aeroplane over the sea” because I just happened to be reading about it of late in the 33 1/3 books treatment of the band and album. I personally came to the album years after its 1998 release but it quickly became one of my all-time faves, landing at number three on my best albums list of that year. And the book is giving me so much more context to chew on that I felt giving it a fresh listen was overdue. The reissue in my collection was repressed to 180 gram vinyl by Merge Records twenty years after its initial release and came in a gatefold sleeve. I’m fairly certain it was one of the last records I ever purchased from Amazon, an add-on to another purchase to bring me over the free shipping threshold, but I’m even more certain that it gets more spins on my turntable than that other record*.

Standout track: “In the aeroplane over the sea”

*Indeed, I don’t even remember with which record I purchased it.

Categories
Vinyl

Vinyl love: Eyelids “A colossal waste of 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: Eyelids
Album Title: A colossal waste of light
Year released: 2023
Details: ‘purple lightning’ coloured vinyl

The skinny: Two weeks in a row and two vinyl love posts and both were amongst my favourite albums of last year. Where last week’s was just on the outside of my top ten faves, this week’s was just outside the top five. As I wrote in my end of year posts, Eyelids are a band I had not heard of at the beginning of last year, despite having been around a good while. I actually heard about the release of “A colossal waste of light”, the group’s fourth album, from a posting on The Decemberists’ Instagram account, whose drummer, John Moen, is one of the Portland based band’s principal members. Co-produced by R.E.M.’s Peter Buck, I fell hard for the hook-laden jangle pop and an album that lacks any real skippable tracks. After two listens, I was on the internet to track down a copy for my record shelves and found this rather pretty pressing on clear vinyl with purple splatter, aka purple lighting. It looks and sounds great on the platter.

Standout track: “Colossal waste of light”

Categories
Vinyl

Vinyl love: The Rural Alberta Advantage “The rise and the fall”

(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 Rural Alberta Advantage
Album Title: The rise and the fall
Year released: 2023
Details: Limited edition, gatefold sleeve, grey

The skinny: Tonight will mark only the second indoor concert I’ve attended since the beginning of the pandemic. I’ve had my eye on the show since it was announced in the fall, finally pulled the trigger on a ticket last month, and I’ve been looking forward to it ever since. Sure, I’ve seen the Toronto-based indie rock trio three times already, but the last time was almost nine years ago, and each of their performances have been incredible and memorable. Of course, I’ve been listening to them pretty much non-stop over the past week, including spinning their latest record on the trusty turntable. The Rural Alberta Advantage’s fifth album, “The rise and the fall”, didn’t quite make my top ten for 2023 but I definitely made sure to list it among my honourable mentions for the year. And when I saw it on the shelves at Rotate This during my marathon vinyl store shopping spree on Boxing Day, I didn’t hesitate to rescue it for my collection. As I said in that aforementioned post back in December, it is so much “more of the frenetically told tales of Canadian minutiae that we know and love”.

Standout track: “AB bride”