1
 
Spock’s Beard — Noise Floor (25th May, 2018)

Spock’s Beard — Noise Floor (25th May, 2018)

                    Spock’s Beard — Noise Floor (25th May, 2018)  Spock’s Beard — Noise Floor (25th May, 2018)≡∩≡       Spock’s Beard announce their 13th studio album “Noise Floor” to be released on May 25, 2018.
≡∩≡       Ted Leonard, Alan Morse, Dave Meros & Ryo Okumoto are joined in the studio once again by drummer & original member Nick D’Virgilio, who records his first album with the band since 2010’s ‘X’.
≡∩≡       “We are always about evolution, not revolution. But what we have done this time is make the songs more melodic,” believes vocalist/guitarist Ted Leonard. “We still love our crazy prog, but now appreciate how important it is to grab people’s attention early on.”
≡∩≡       As with all Spock’s Beard songs, most of the new album was written by the individual members, and then brought to the rest of the band as high quality demos. “We all do this type of thing in our home studios,” adds Leonard. “So, by the time they reach the stage where the entire band get to judge them, they are really developed, and therefore everyone can make a reasoned judgement.”
≡∩≡       The album was once again engineered by long~time collaborator Rich Mouser and will be released as a 2CD digipak (featuring an EP of material from the same sessions), gatefold 2LP + 2CD & as digital download.      
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Album release: 25th May, 2018
Record Label: InsideOutMusic
Duration:     51:53 + 17:06 => 68:59
Tracks:
CD1: Noise Floor
01. To Breathe Another Day     5:38
02. What Becomes Of Me     6:11
03. Somebody’s Home     6:32
04. Have We All Gone Crazy Yet     8:06
05. So This Is Life     5:35
06. One So Wise     6:57
07. Box Of Spiders     5:28
08. Beginnings     7:25
CD2: Cutting Room Floor
01. Days We’ll Remember     4:14
02. Bulletproof     4:41
03. Vault     4:39
04. Armageddon Nervous     3:32
℗ 2018 InsideOutMusic
Band Members:
≡∩≡       Ted Leonard / Vocals, Guitars
≡∩≡       Alan Morse / Guitars, Vocals
≡∩≡       Ryo Okumoto / Keyboards
≡∩≡       Dave Meros / Bass, Vocals
≡∩≡       Nick D’Virgilio / Drums, Vocals
Review
By SCOTT MEDINA  April 24, 2018 ; Score: 9.1 EXCELLENT
≡∩≡       Have pity on Thomas Waber. As head of the InsideOut Music record label which is releasing Spock’s Beard’s new album, Thomas reportedly had the unenviable job of choosing which songs made the cut for the main disc of the new album and which ones were relegated to the “cutting room floor” bonus EP. Unfortunately for Thomas, out of the dozen songs which were vying for attention, nary a one of them was a dud or stuck out like a sore thumb to get nixed from the main album. Happily, Thomas’ burden is our gain, and ultimately becomes irrelevant because all versions of the new Spock’s release includes the bonus EP. All twelve gems will be yours and you won’t want to miss a single one.
≡∩≡       Noise Floor is album number three for Spock’s 3.0, referring to the third incarnation of the band with a new lead singer. Following the departures of Neal Morse and Nick D’Virgilio as the previous front men, Ted Leonard confidently took the reins with the tour de~force Brief Nocturnes and Dreamless Sleep in 2013. Fans of that album will find much to love on this new release, too. Indeed, Ted continues to be the star of the show, which is quite a feat given his predecessors and the stellar musicianship provided by this seasoned band. However, the personnel features one prominent shift from the two previous albums: drummer and backing vocalist Jimmy Keegan is absent. Big shoes to fill indeed, and the only logical solution (to quip the band’s namesake) is to return to their roots and bring original member Nick D’Virgilio back to the drummer’s seat. Sadly, Nick’s current schedule does not allow him the possibility of officially being a full~time member of the band (and he most likely will not be able to tour with them in the near future), but you wouldn’t know it from listening to his performance on this album. As usual, he goes all out and returns to the Spock’s fold seamlessly. It’s the first album on which Ted has fronted the band with Nick manning the drum kit, but feels as natural as if this had always been the lineup.
≡∩≡       Unsurprisingly, the production throughout is immaculate thanks to long~time engineer Rich Mouser and the collective band studio skills. You won’t find a finer sounding band thanks to Rich’s knowledge of the members’ playing style and how to bring out their best performances. Much of the recording was done at Nick’s “day job”, Sweetwater Studios, so they likely had all the toys they could want at their immediate disposal. The songwriting is strong throughout, provided by the band members and their regular contributors John Boegehold and Stan Ausmus. None of the material here may reach the Top 10 Spock’s songs of all time, but they all hover within a good to excellent range which will stay in your active playlist for quite some time. As with most good progressive rock, the album will grow on you with repeated listenings and by spin #4, you’ll be hooked.
≡∩≡       Many fans will have initially heard the first single which opens the album, “To Breathe Another Day”. To those who wonder if the rest of the album follows in a similar style, this punchy rocker is an accessible launching point but also is the least interesting track on the album, musically speaking. Spock’s is much more than a power~chord band and fortunately after this opening salvo, there is a wealth of quirky prog~rock material ahead. “What Becomes of Me” starts heading down that path with Dave Meros’ inimitable bass playing, but it’s not really until the third track, “Somebody’s Home” that the album earnestly starts taking off into Spock’s stratosphere and continues for the rest of the album proper. Ted frequently shines on strong choruses with extended vowels, and this track is a prime example for his vocal chords to stretch out on, as acoustic guitars mix with English horn, violins and cello before the bass and electric guitar reinvent the main theme.
≡∩≡       Next up is one of the highlights of the album, “Have We All Gone Crazy Yet” which employs a classic motif of the Beard: to feature a simple reoccurring theme that deepens with each repetition. Alan Morse shines with his trademark finger~picked electric guitar solos. Although this is the longest song on the album, it clocks in at just over 8 minutes. As far as extended epics go, this album literally comes up a bit short, but there’s no denying that the material is more accessible, very catchy, and still features plenty of the epic prog that the band is known for. “So This is Life” breathes fresh air into the Spock’s Beard catalog, lodging somewhere between Jellyfish and Neil Young. Richly layered with harmony vocals, it also features intoxicating rock star guitar soloing from Alan Morse. This gorgeous ballad would make a surprise left~field contender for a hit single and is one of the sweetest treasures to be found on Noise Floor.
≡∩≡       Back to the classic Spock’s sound, “One So Wise” hits all the right notes and is a progressive rock tour~de~force. The song retains most everything that fans have come to love in the band, including scorching keyboard and guitar solos, and is yet another highlight of the album. Somehow it lacks any memorable chorus whatsoever but that doesn’t stop Ted from wailing like it’s a lost Kansas classic. To find the album’s strongest chorus we need to go to “Bulletproof” which will stay in your head for days. Again, the Jellyfish influence is present in this most triumphant of songs. However, this short single has strangely been relegated to the bonus disc, so it likely won’t be hitting the airwaves anytime soon which is a shame. The same could be said for “Vault” which mixes electric shredding, cascading organ and acoustic riffing for a single~worthy pop/prog song, but it’s apparently not enough to secure a spot on the main album.
≡∩≡       There are two instrumental prog freak~outs on the double disc, though it’s hard to decide which one is more satisfying. Safe to say, the band got a good workout playing with their “Box of Spiders” and bonus track “Armageddon Nervous”. Nick proves that he’s got the chops to be back in the hot seat, and Ryo also particularly comes to the fore on his array of rockin’ keyboards.  Leave it to the Beard to end an album with a track called…“Beginnings”. It’s a transcendent finale with an almost “Afterglow” arpeggiation. Ted’s soaring vocals finish the album proper on an uplifting note, Alan’s guitars fading out into the cosmic ether during the final seconds. Wow, what a closer.
≡∩≡       Which returns us to the beginning as well…how to choose which songs are on the “main album” and which are on the “bonus EP”? And why split them up at all, considering that the total run time would easily fit onto one disc, most of the songs are equally strong, and this isn’t a concept album which would demand that the extra tracks be separated from the main concept songs (as on Porcupine Tree’s “The Incident”)? Ultimately, it is likely purely a decision based on flow, the thought being that a shorter, more concise album of 50 minutes will be easier for the average listener to embrace than a sprawling 70 minute single disc. Fair enough. Which brings us back to Thomas who had to decide what goes where…even if the why is somewhat obscured. The simple solution is to leave the “why’s” behind and enjoy all the wonderful music presented. As Spock’s Beard continues to impress after 13 studio albums, happily none of this “Noise” deserves the cutting room floor.
≡∩≡       Result: The Beard get lucky with album #13, continuing their arc as one of contemporary prog~rock’s most celebrated bands. Exquisitely performed and produced, “Noise Floor” features plenty of hooks and ear worms, amidst their usual quirky approach.
•   SONGWRITING: 8.5
•   MUSICIANSHIP: 10
•   ORIGINALITY: 8
•   PRODUCTION: 10
≡∩≡       http://www.sonicperspectives.com/
Review
JEDD BEAUDOINMAY 1, 2018
≡∩≡       If there’s anything that’s worked against Spock’s Beard over the last twenty~plus years it’s a sense of restraint. Some of the band’s progressive rock contemporaries have chosen solos over songs, but the Spock’s way has always been to underplay its virtuosity. Alan Morse’s lead guitar work in “This Is Life,” for instance, might go largely undetected the first three or four times you hear the song. Your focus, instead, falls on the fine vocal harmonies and the tune’s emotional colors.
≡∩≡       The same may be said for keyboardist Ryo Okomuto’s work. His sense of restraint and taste are legion in progressive rock circles. He has a voice and power that can place him shoulder~to~shoulder with his contemporary Jordan Rudess but it’s not the thing he reaches toward. “Bulletproof,” which on at least one occasion recalls Jimmy Webb’s “Wichita Lineman,” is exemplary of said approach. Okumoto lends warmly emotive piano parts for most of the song, deftly complimenting vocalist Ted Leonard until about the three~minute mark when the synths kick in and carrying listeners on a fantastical journey. (Think a more subtle rendition of the mind~bending synth odyssey of Styx’s “Fooling Yourself (The Angry Young Man).”)
≡∩≡       His team player tendencies are on display on the bonus edition instrumental “Armageddon Nervous” and on the blazing album cut “One So Wise.” But in both he’s not trying to outshine Morse or Leonard as much as he’s seeking to elevate them. If it’s all a bit too polite at times, if it gives the listener a sense that Okumoto and his mates (including drummer Nick D’Virgilio who returns after a seven~year absence) are holding something back, then so be it. The music’s better for it.
≡∩≡       https://www.keyboardmag.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/spocksbeard/
Website: http://www.spocksbeard.com/
About Spock’s Beard
≡∩≡       Spock’s Beard began in 1992 when brothers Neal (lead vocals) and Al Morse (guitar) teamed up with drummer Nick D’Virgilio. After self~financing their first album, bassist Dave Meros joined, and The Light was recorded in 1994. Consisting of four lengthy songs, this debut album was well received by progressive rock fans, but received little public acclaim. Ryo Okumoto joined in 1995 to play keyboards. In 1996, The Official Bootleg was released, a live performance containing the entire first album plus one song from the upcoming second album. The same year saw the band sign with various record labels around the world, in addition to releasing Beware of Darkness, which contained the same style of music, but in shorter pieces (all ten minutes or less, except for the 15~plus~minute last track). Spock’s Beard’s third studio album, The Kindness of Strangers, was released at the end of 1997; Day for Night followed in 1999 and V was issued a year later.
≡∩≡       Deciding they had the experience and chops to attempt a concept album, they spent the next few years putting together Snow. The double album revolved around the title character, an albino teenager who could possibly be the Messiah. Taking a much more detailed approach to the material, the band had a difficult two years writing the album and was rewarded with a strong promotional push from Metal Blade Records. Following Snow, Neal Morse became a born~again Christian and left the band. The remaining members quickly regrouped, however, with D’Virgilio assuming lead vocal duties, and managed to release Feel Euphoria the following year. Their first three albums were re~released in 2004, and in 2005 they delivered both the new studio offering Octane and Live in 2005: Gluttons for Punishment. The following year saw the release of the group’s eponymous ninth studio long~player, followed by the aptly named X in 2010. Three years later the band returned with Brief Nocturnes and Dreamless Sleep, the first outing with new singer Ted Leonard and drummer Jimmy Keegan in place of Nick D’Virgilio. Arriving in 2015, The Oblivion Particle marked the return of D’Virgilio, and in 2017 Spock’s Beard released Snow Live, a complete performance of their acclaimed concept LP featuring the group’s original lineup and current members. ~ David White
_____________________________________________________________

Spock’s Beard — Noise Floor (25th May, 2018)

ALBUM COVERS XI.

33EMYBW — Golem (25 Sept., 2019)
First Aid Kit — Stay Gold (2014)
STEREOLAB: Oscillons from the Anti~Sun
Ronnie Godfrey — Shades of Blue (Oct. 25, 2019)
Pancrace — The Fluid Hammer (09 Sep 2019/2LP)
Stereolab — Margerine Eclipse (Nov. 29, 2019)
WaqWaq Kingdom — Essaka Hoisa (Nov. 15, 2019)
Jack Peñate — After You (29th Nov. 2019)
White Lies — To Lose My Life… [10th Anniversary Deluxe Edition]
Avey Tare — Eucalyptus (July 21, 2017)
Bonnie “Prince” Billy — I Have Made A Place (Nov. 15th, 2019)
Hallelujah the Hills — A Band Is Something to Figure Out (2016)
Hallelujah the Hills — I’m You (Nov. 15, 2019)
Philip B. Price — Bone Almanac (Nov. 8, 2019)
The Who — WHO [Deluxe Edition] (22 Nov. 2019)
Courtney Barnett — MTV Unplugged [Live In Melbourne] (2019)
Hail The Ghost — Arrhythmia (6th Dec. 2019)
The Growlers — Natural Affair (25th Oct. 2019)
Signe Marie Rustad — When Words Flew Freely (Nov. 15, 2019)
Sean Henry — A Jump from the High Dive (Nov. 1, 2019)
SOFIA TALVIK — Paws of a Bear (Sept. 27, 2019)
David Thomas Broughton & Juice Vocal Ensemble — Sliding The Same
David Thomas Broughton — The Complete Guide To Insufficiency /re
Grimes — Visions (2012)
RADEK BABORÁK a jeho ORQUESTRINA na PIAZZOLLOVSKÉ ALBUM.
Martin Barre — Roads Less Travelled (26 Oct. 2018)
No~Man — Love You To Bits (Nov. 22, 2019)
Martin Barre — Away With Words
Guranfoe — Sum of Erda (Dec. 13, 2019)
Virginia Plain — Strange Game (Dec. 13, 2019)
Cold Chisel — Blood Moon (6 Dec., 2019)
930 x 827 tmavší podklad.jpg
CECILIA BARTOLI — Opera Proibita (Sept. 13, 2005)
Bruce Ackley, Fred Frith, Henry Kaiser, Aram Shelton — Unexpecte
Benoît Pioulard & Sean Curtis Patrick — Avocationals (2019)
Florist — Emily Alone (July 26, 2019)
The Flaming Lips — The Soft Bulletin (Nov. 29, 2019)
Cosmo Sheldrake — Galapagos [Original Soundtrack] 2019
Ben Featherstone — Prisoner to the Wind (Dec. 20th, 2019)
Oiseaux~Tempęte — From Somewhere Invisible (19 Dec., 2019)
Nonlocal Forecast — Bubble Universe! (March 1, 2019)
ROBERT FRIPP — THE KITCHEN (New York, NY) — 05 FEB 1978
KING CRIMSON, The Night Watch
Juraj Griglák, From The Bottom (Sept. 16, 2019)
Juraj Griglák — From the Bottom (Sept. 16, 2019)
Lilien Rosarian ~ A Day in Bel Bruit (June 9, 2019)
Jim Noir — A.M Jazz (Dec. 20, 2019)
Sean O’Hagan — Radum Calls, Radum Calls (2019)
Bill MacKay and Katinka Kleijn — STIR (Oct. 17, 2019)
Alice Peacock — Minnesota (Sept. 20th, 2019)
Sean McMahon ― You Will Know When You’re There (March 1, 2019)
Tylor Dory Trio — Unsought Salvation (Dec. 21, 2019)
Intocable ― Percepcion (March 15, 2019)
Third Coast Percussion & Devonté Hynes — Fields (Oct. 11, 2019)
Scorn — Cafe Mor (Nov. 15, 2019)
Alogte Oho and his Sounds of Joy — Mam Yinne Wa (Nov. 8, 2019)
P/\ST — /Expedice do vnitrobloku\ (Oct. 5, 2019)
Destroyer — Have We Met (Jan. 31, 2020)
Devendra Banhart — Ma (September 13, 2019)
Bellows — The Rose Gardener (Feb. 22, 2019)
Roland Tings — Salt Water (Nov. 8, 2019)
A Winged Victory for the Sullen — The Undivided Five
Alessandra Leão ‎— Macumbas e Catimbós (24/05/2019)
Stephen Duffy — I Love My Friends [Expanded Ed] (10 May 2019)
Carissa Johnson — A Hundred Restless Thoughts (Dec. 18th, 2019)
Georgia — Seeking Thrills (10th Jan., 2020)
The Chap — Digital Technology (10 Jan., 2020)
Field Music — Making a New World (Jan. 10, 2020)
Lydia Ainsworth — Darling Of The Afterglow (2019)
Lydia Ainsworth — Phantom Forest (May 10, 2019)
Circa Waves — Sad/Happy (March 13th, 2020)
Hawktail — Formations (Jan. 10, 2020)
Moonchild — Little Ghost (6th Sept. 2019)
Susanne Sundfør — Self Portrait (Original Score, 10th Jan. 2020)
Frances Quinlan — Likewise (Jan. 31, 2020)
Harvestman — Music for Megaliths (May 19, 2017)
Anika Nilles — For a Colorful Soul (Jan. 10, 2020)
Of Montreal — Ur Fun (Jan. 17, 2020)
Drive~By Truckers — The Unraveling (Jan. 30, 2020)
Wolf Parade — Thin Mind (Jan. 24, 2020)
Lucia Cadotsch — Speak Low (Feb. 26, 2016)
The Adobe Collective — All the Space That There Is (10 Jan 2020)
David Cross & Peter Banks — Crossover (17 Jan., 2020)
Whyte Horses — Empty Words (March 9, 2018)
Whyte Horses — Hard Times (17th of Jan., 2020)
Bombay Bicycle Club — Everything Else Has Gone Wrong (01/24/20)
John McLaughlin, Shankar Mahadevan, Zakir Hussain — Is That So?
Keeley Forsyth — Debris (17 Jan., 2020)
Gemma Ray — Psychogeology [Feb. 15th, 2019, Deluxe Edition, 2020
Deserta — Black Aura My Sun (Jan. 17, 2020)
Broken Social Scene — Live at Third Man Records (Feb. 28, 2020)
Kyrie Kristmanson — Lady Lightly (Jan. 10, 2020)
Futurebirds — Teamwork (Jan. 15th, 2020)
Ospalý pohyb — Ostrava (October 17, 2016)
Ospalý pohyb — ø (May 24, 2016)
Caspian — Dust and Disquiet (Sept. 25, 2015)
Caspian — On Circles (January 24, 2020)
Jennifer Curtis & Tyshawn Sorey: Invisible Ritual (2020)
The Innocence Mission — See You Tomorrow (Jan. 17, 2020)
The Sufis — Double Exposure (Jan. 24, 2020)
Blackbird & Crow — Ailm (17 Jan 2020)
Blackbird & Crow © 2020 Author: Megan Doherty
Torres — Three Futures (29th Sept. 2017)
Torres — Silver Tongue (Jan. 31, 2020)
Andy Statman — Old Brooklyn (2011)
Recondite — Dwell (Jan. 24, 2020)
Silkworm — In The West (24 Jan., 2020)
James Harries — Superstition (Jan. 31, 2020)
James Harries — Before We Were Lovers
Yorkston | Thorne | Khan — Navarasa : Nine Emotions (2020)
Fruition — Broken At The Break Of Day (Jan. 23, 2020)
Loveblind / Sleeping Visions (March 27, 2020)
Rizan Said — Saz û Dîlan (Oct. 11, 2019)
HMLTD — West of Eden (7 Feb., 2020)
HMLTD ©Dean Hoy
ÁSGEIR: IN THE SILENCE
Ásgeir — Bury the Moon (7 Feb., 2020)
Frazey Ford — U kin B the Sun (Feb. 7th, 2020)
Erlend Apneseth — Fragmentarium (Jan. 31, 2020)
Les Filles de Illighadad — Eghass Malan (Oct. 28, 2017)
Nina Kohoutová — Blue Sunray (Feb. 6th, 2020)
Alphaxone — Dystopian Gate (Jan. 14, 2020)
Cheerleader — Almost Forever (Feb. 7, 2020)
Oh Wonder — No One Else Can Wear Your Crown [Deluxe Edition]
Tame Impala — The Slow Rush (Feb 14, 2020)
REBECCA FOON — WAXING MOON (21st Feb., 2020)
Thomas Köner — Motus (Feb. 20, 2020)
Julianna Barwick — Circumstance Synthesis (Dec. 20, 2019)
ELYSIAN FIELDS — Pink Air
The Men — Mercy (Feb. 14, 2020)
Le Butcherettes — DON’T BLEED EP (14 Feb 2020)
The Gray Havens — She Waits (Nov. 7, 2018)
The Heliocentrics — Infinity Of Now (Feb. 14, 2020)
Caribou — Our Love (October 14, 2014)
Caribou — Suddenly (Feb. 28th, 2020)
Jack Peñate — After You [Expanded Edition] (2020)
These New Puritans — The Cut (2016~2019) (14 Feb. 2020)
Sarah Harmer — Are You Gone (Feb. 21st, 2020)
Sonny Landreth — Elemental Journey (May 22, 2012)
Sonny Landreth — Blacktop Run (Feb. 21, 2020)
Lanterns On the Lake — Spook the Herd (21 Feb., 2020)
Lanterns On the Lake — Spook the Herd (21 Feb., 2020)
Humanist — Humanist (21 Feb., 2020)
Sega Bodega — Salvador (Feb. 14, 2020)
Myopia Exclusive Crystal Clear Vinyl
Molina — Vanilla Shell (Jan. 24, 2020)
Debashish Bhattacharya JOY!guru cover
Cate Le Bon — Here It Comes Again (2020)
CocoRosie — Restless (Feb. 12th, 2020)
Wrekmeister Harmonies — We Love to Look at the Carnage (2020)
Calexico / Iron & Wine — Years to Burn (2019)
Fairport Convention — 50:50@50 (June 9, 2017)
Fairport Convention — Shuffle and Go (29 Feb., 2020)
James Taylor — American Standard (Feb. 28th, 2020)
The Magnetic Fields — Quickies (May 15, 2020)
Moses Sumney — græ Part 1 & 2 (May 15, 2020)
The Dream Syndicate — „The Universe Inside“ (April 10, 2020)
The Third Mind — The Third Mind (Feb. 14, 2020)
ANNA CALVI — HUNTED (March 6, 2020)
Jonathan Wilson — Rare Birds (March 2nd, 2018)
Jonathan Wilson — Dixie Blur (March 6, 2020)
Luke Haines — Beat Poetry For Survivalists (6 Mar. 2020)
Sink Ya Teeth — Two (28th Feb. 2020)
Stian Westerhus — Redundance (March 5, 2020)
Thomas Dybdahl — The Great Plains (Feb 24, 2017)
Thomas Dybdahl — Fever (March 13, 2020)
PETR KALANDRA — Petr Kalandra & ASPM 1982 — 1990 (Feb. 26, 2020)
Al Di Meola — Across the Universe: The Beatles, Vol. 2 (2020)
Sam Gendel — Satin Doll (13 Mar 2020)
Chapelier Fou — Deltas (Sept. 22, ​2014)
Chapelier Fou — Meridiens (Feb. 28, 2020)
CocoRosie — Put the Shine On (6 March 2020)
Dungen — Live (March 13, 2020)
Queer Jane — Home (Dec. 1, 2016)
Hornscape — Hornscape (March 6th, 2020)
Joywave — Possession (March 13, 2020)
Walter Martin — The World at Night (Jan. 31, 2020)
Morrissey — I Am Not a Dog On a Chain (March 20th, 2020)
Human Impact — Human Impact (13 March 2020)
Hibiscus Biscuit — Reflection of Mine (March 1st, 2020)
Markus Reuter — TRUCE (Jan. 17, 2020) cover
Orchards — Lovecore (March 13th, 2020)
Julia Holter — Never Rarely Sometimes Always (March 13, 2020)
Cathedral Bells — Velvet Spirit (March 6, 2020)
Bacchae — Pleasure Vision (March 6, 2020)
The Dears — Times Infinity Volume One (September 25, 2015)
Amanda Palmer — Forty~Five Degrees: Bushfire Charity Flash Rec.
THE DEARS — ‘Lovers Rock’ (May 15, 2020)
Eivind Aarset & Jan Bang — Snow Catches On Her Eyelashes (2020)
Waxahatchee — Saint Cloud (March 27, 2020)
Michael Landau — The Michael Landau Group Live (Oct. 31, 2006)
Låpsley — Through Water (March 20th, 2020)
Elysian Fields — Transience Of Life (May 7, 2020)
Baxter Dury — The Night Chancers (20 March 2020)
The Weeknd — Beauty Behind the Madness (Aug. 28th, 2015)
The Weeknd — Beauty Behind the Madness (Aug. 28th, 2015)
False Heads — It’s All There But You’re Dreaming (13 March 2020)
False Heads — It’s All There But You’re Dreaming (13 March 2020)
The Album Leaf — OST (March 20, 2020)
Real Estate — The Main Thing (28th Feb., 2020)
Villagers — The Art Of Pretending To Swim (03/19, 2020) DELUXE E
Villagers — Darling Arithmetic [Deluxe Version] (April 10, 2015)
Noveller — Arrow (June 7, 2020)
Justine Vandergrift — Stay (Feb. 7th, 2019)
The Electric Soft Parade — Stages (Jan. 8, 2020)
Ben Watt — Storm Damage (31st Jan., 2020)
Anoushka Shankar — Love Letters (7 Feb., 2020)
Roger Eno | Brian Eno — Mixing Colours (20 March, 2020)
Alberto Posadas : Poética del Laberinto, cycle pour quatuor de s
Sufjan Stevens — Aporia (March 27, 2020)
Beck — Deep Cuts (March 2020)
BECK — Uneventful Days (St. Vincent Remix)
Béla Fleck & Toumani Diabaté — The Ripple Effect [2LP, March 27,
Arbouretum — Let It All In (March 20, 2020)
Pearl Jam — Gigaton (March 27, 2020)
Loveblind: Visions
Loveblind: Visions
San Fermin — San Fermin (Nov. 11, 2013)
San Fermin — The Cormorant I & II (Oct. 4, 2019/April 3, 2020)
Stove — ‘s Favorite Friend (Oct. 31, 2018)
Queer Jane — Amen Dolores (March 27, 2020)
Rory Block — Prove It On Me (March 27, 2020)
Lizzy Farrall — Bruise (March 27, 2020)
Lilly Hiatt — Walking Proof (27 March, 2020)
The Chats — High Risk Behaviour (March 27, 2020)
Kazuomi Eshima & Masahiko Takeda — Inheritance for Soundscape
Marissa Nadler — unearthed (March 20, 2020)
Lucy Railton — Paradise 94 (22 Mar 2018)
BECCA STEVENS — WONDERBLOOM (March 20th 20, 2020)
Trees Speak — Ohms (3rd April, 2020)
Teho Teardo — Ellipsis dans l’harmonie (March 6th, 2020)
Ellipsis dans l’harmonie BACK COVER
Cocteau Twins — Head Over Heels
Cocteau Twins — Treasure
Cocteau Twins — Garlands (1982, Reissue 2020)
1600 x 1600 High Violet (10th Anniversary Expanded Edition).jpg
Riva Taylor — ‘This Woman’s Heart .1’ (27 Mar 2020)
Amy LaVere — Painting Blue (27 Mar 2020)
Sea Wolf — Through a Dark Wood (March 20, 2020)
Locate S,1 — Personalia (April 3, 2020
Anna Burch — Quit The Curse (Feb 2, 2018)
M.Ward — Migration of Souls (April 3, 2020)
Peel Dream Magazine — Agitprop Alterna (3rd April 2020)
ANDREW BIRD — CAPITAL CRIMES (April 1st, 2020)
Spy Machines — Spy Machines (April 3, 2020)
Richard Barbieri ‎— Past Imperfect / Future Tense (Mar 2020)
DAVID POMAHAČ — DO TMY JE DALEKO (Feb. 7, 2020)
KIESLOWSKI Tiché lásky
Born Ruffians — Juice (April 3, 2020)
LENKA NOVÁ — DOPISY (21.03./24.04., 2020)
Ezra Bell — This Way to Oblivion (3rd April, 2020)
Songdog — Happy Ending (27th March, 2020)
Laurel Halo — Raw Silk Uncut Wood (July 13, 2018)
Laurel Halo — Possessed (April 10, 2020)
Laura Marling — Song for Our Daughter (April 10th, 2020)
Hamilton Leithauser (The Walkmen) — Dear God (Aug. 2015)
Hamilton Leithauser — The Loves of Your Life (10 April 2020)
Don Gallardo — The Lonesome Wild (April 2, 2020)
Cowboy Junkies — Ghosts (30 Mar 2020)
The Mountain Goats — Songs for Pierre Chuvin (April 10, 2020)
Darnielle, Jon Wurster, Matt Douglas, Pete Hughes. ©Josh Sanseri
Erik Griswold — All’s Grist That Comes To The Mill (03/20, 2020)
Erik Griswold — All’s Grist That Comes To The Mill (03/20 2020)
Varga Marián — Solo in Concert (1. feb. 2018)
Joe Bonamassa & The Sleep Eazys — Easy To Buy, Hard To Sell
Midwife — Forever (April 10, 2020)
Moondog — On The Streets Of New York (Feb. 14, 2020)
Damon Locks Black Monument Ensemble — Where Future Unfolds (2019
Meredith Monk & Bang on a Can All~Stars — Memory Game (03/27/20)
Pharoah Sanders — „Live In Paris (1975): Lost ORTF Recordings“
I Like to Sleep — Daymare (April 17, 2020)
MoE/Mette Rasmussen — Tolerancia Picante (March 25, 2019)
The Tiger Lillies — Cold Night in Soho (10 Feb. 2017)
The Tiger Lillies — Edgar Allan Poe’s Haunted Palace
Sarah Jarosz — World On The Ground (June 5, 2020)
Kate Amrine — This Is My Letter to the World (Jan. 24, 2020)
Fiona Apple — Fetch The Bolt Cutters (17 Apr., 2020)
The Tiger Lillies — Covid~19 (April 10, 2020)
Veneer — Recovery (April 15, 2020)
Siobhan Wilson — The Departure (10 May, 2019)
BC Camplight — Shortly After Takeoff (24 April 2020)
Siobhan Wilson — There Are No Saints (14 Jul, 2017)
Brendan Benson — Dear Life (April 24, 2020)
Ali Holder — Uncomfortable Truths (April 10, 2020)
From Atomic — Deliverance (April 2020)
Whyte Horses — Hard Times (17th of Jan., 2020)
Gerald Cleaver — Signs (March 27, 2020)
Sophie Tassignon — Mysteries Unfold (April 24, 2020)
HOUPACÍ KONĚ: SOULKOSTEL 8 11 2019 (April 25, 2020)
Sarah Longfield — Dusk (April 22, 2020)
Ariel Pink — House Arrest (2002/Mar 2011/April 24, 2020)
All The Best, Isaac Hayes (A Spoken Word Album)
Prophecy Playground — Comfort Zone (Feb. 15, 2020)
Mark Lanegan — Straight Songs Of Sorrow (8th May, 2020)
Genesis Revisited: Live at The Royal Albert Hall — 2020 Remaster
Joan As Police Woman — Cover Two (May 1, 2020)
Kuře v hodinkách — Flamengo
Kuře v hodinkách — Flamengo
Devon Williams — A Tear in the Fabric (May 1, 2020)
Johanna Warren — Chaotic Good (May 1, 2020)
emozpěv — Spolu (1st May 2020)
THE LEAGUE OF ASSHOLES — UNPLUGGED (1st May 2020)
Morgan1
Zuzana Mikulcová — Slová
The Fratellis — Half Drunk Under A Full Moon (8th May, 2020)
The Fratellis — Half Drunk Under A Full Moon (8th May, 2020)
Cocteau Twins — Victorialand (April, 1986, Reissue 2020)
Coloured Clocks — Flora (May 2, 2020)
I Break Horses — Warnings (08 May 2020)
Hawkwind — Acoustic Daze (25 Oct. 2019)
Indoor Voices — Animal (Feb. 14, 2020)
I Break Horses — Chiaroscuro
Einstürzende Neubauten — Alles In Allem (May 29th, 2020)
100 Gecs — 1000 gecs (May 31, 2019)
Evergreen — Overseas (15 Jun 2018)
Kurt Rosenwinkel Trio — Angels Around (May 8, 2020)
The Feather — Room (10 July, 2020)
Eyvind Kang — Ajaeng Ajaeng (May 1, 2020)
Eyvind Kang — Ajaeng Ajaeng (May 1, 2020)
Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith — The Mosaic of Transformation (May 15, 20
Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith — The Kid (October 6, 2017)
Mr. Alec Bowman — I Used to Be Sad & Then I Forgot (May 1, 2020)
György Ligeti — Lontano (22. Oct.,1967)
OWEN PALLETT — Heartland (March 3, 2014)
Badly Drawn Boy — Banana Skin Shoes (22nd May, 2020)
A.O. Gerber — Another Place to Need (May 22, 2020)
Kaleidoscope — Faintly Blowing (11 April 1969, Reissue, Remaster
Perfume Genius — Set My Heart On Fire Immediately (15th May 2020
Perfume Genius — No Shape (5 May, 2017) BC
Perfume Genius — No Shape (5 May, 2017) FC
Sungazers — Wasting Space (May 18, 2020)
Cermaque — Lament (22nd May, 2020)
Mountaineer — Bloodletting (May 22nd, 2020)
Jetstream Pony — Jetstream Pony (May 22, 2020)
Steve Earle — Townes (May 8, 2009)
Steve Earle & The Dukes — Ghosts of West Virginia (May 22, 2020)
Sixth June ‎— Trust (17 Jan 2020)
White Tail Falls — Age of Entitlement (May 29, 2020)
Weyes Blood — “Wild Time” from Titanic Rising
Nicole Atkins — Italian Ice (29 May 2020)
Deerhoof — Future Teenage Cave Artists (May 29, 2020)
Deradoorian — Find the Sun (Sept. 18, 2020)
Bob Dylan — Rough and Rowdy Ways (June 19th, 2020)
The Magnetic Fields — QUICKIES VINYL BOX SET (June 19, 2020)
The Magnetic Fields — QUICKIES VINYL BOX SET (June 19, 2020)
This Will Destroy You — Vespertine (June 9, 2020)
Jake Blount — Spider Tales (May 29, 2020)
Jake Blount — Spider Tales (May 29, 2020)
Yoko Ono, Kim Gordon & Thurston Moore — YOKOKIMTHURSTON
Psychic Markers — Psychic Markers (29 May, 2020)
The Memories — Pickles & Pies (May 29, 2020)
Songs for the Late Night Drive Home (Feb. 5, 2016)
Spc Eco — Dark Matter (Nov. 20, 2015)
SPC ECO — June (June 1, 2020)
Yves Tumor — Heaven to a Tortured Mind (April 3, 2020)
Norah Jones — Pick Me Up Off the Floor (June 12th, 2020)
Larkin Poe — Self Made Man (June 12th, 2020)
Ezra Furman — Sex Education [Original Soundtrack] (April 24, 202
Endless Field — Alive in the Wilderness (June 12, 2020)
Wesley Gonzalez — Appalling Human (June 12, 2020)
Noveller — Arrow (June 12, 2020)
Kim Myhr & Australian Art Orchestra — Vesper (17.04. 2020)
Kim Myhr & Australian Art Orchestra — Vesper (17.04. 2020)
Andrej Šeban — Triplet (March 22, 2019) inner cover
Andrej Šeban — Triplet (March 22, 2019) cover
The Crossing & Donald Nally — James Primosch: Carthage (05/2020)
Jerskin Fendrix — Winterreise (April 17, 2020)
Zoongideewin — Bleached Wavves (June 19, 2020)
ULRICH SCHNAUSS — A Long Way To Fall — Rebound (3rd April, 2020)
Sports Team — Deep Down Happy (5th June, 2020)
Wrekmeister Harmonies — We Love to Look at the Car (2020)
Midlake — Antiphon (Nov. 4, 2013)
ANASTASIA MINSTER — Father ©Michael Haley
Jessie Ware — Glasshouse (Deluxe; 20 Oct 2017)
Teen Daze — Morning World
Jessie Ware — What’s Your Pleasure (June 26, 2020)
Art Feynman — Half Price At 3:30 (June 26th, 2020)
Bo Ningen — Sudden Fictions (26th June, 2020)
Khruangbin — Mordechai (June 26, 2020)
Pottery — Welcome to Bobby’s Motel (June 26th, 2020)
Orlando Weeks — A Quickening (June 12, 2020)
John Craigie — Asterisk the Universe (June 12, 2020)
Kavus Torabi — Hip to the Jag (May 22, 2020)
Nadine Shah — Kitchen Sink (June 5, 2020)
Paul Weller — On Sunset [Deluxe Edition] (3rd July, 2020)
Corb Lund — Agricultural Tragic (June 26, 2020)
Christine Ott — Chimères (pour ondes Martenot) (May 22, 2020)
The Beths — Jump Rope Gazers (July 10th, 2020)
Ashley Paul — Window Flower (May 13, 2020)
Grey Daze — Amends [Deluxe Edition] (July 3, 2020)
Grey Daze ©Photo credit: Anjella / Sakiphotography
Ajimal — As It Grows Dark / Light (June 26, 2020)
Ajimal — As It Grows Dark Light (June 26, 2020)
Eleanor Friedberger — Rebound (May 4th, 2018)
ELEANOR FRIEDBERGER — NEW VIEW (January 22, 2016)
Immigrant Union — Judas (June 19, 2020)
Julianna Barwick — Healing Is a Miracle [Japan Edition] (2020)
Neil Young & Crazy Horse — Colorado (Oct. 25, 2019)
Neil Young — Homegrown (19th June, 2020)
The Jayhawks — XOXO (July 10, 2020)
Joy Division — Closer (40th Anniversary) [2020 Digital Master] (
Daniel Bachman — The Morning Star (July 27, 2018)
Daniel Bachman — Green Alum Springs (June 6, 2020)
Becca Mancari — The Greatest Part (June 26, 2020)
Ytamo — Vacant (June 12, 2020)
Bright Eyes — Down In The Weeds, Where The World Once Was (Aug.
Thin Lear — Wooden Cave (24th July, 2020)
Devendra Banhart — Vast Ovoid (July 24, 2020)
Cub Sport — LIKE NIRVANA (24 July, 2020)
Sara Serpa — Recognition (June 5th, 2020)
Sara Serpa, Ingrid Laubrock, Erik Friedlander — Close Up (2018)
Klara Lewis — Ingrid (1st May 2020)
Buju Banton — Upside Down (June 26, 2020)
Son Lux — Learning Structures vol. 1~4 (Oct. 11th, 2019)
learning structures, vol. 3 distance between us (Oct. 11, 2019)
learning structures, vol. 2: end firma
learning structures, vol. 3: distance between us
The Boomtown Rats — Citizens of Boomtown (13 March, 2020)
Ralph of London — The Potato Kingdom (19th June, 2020)
Mike Polizze — Long Lost Solace Find (July 31, 2020)
Land of Talk — Indistinct Conversations (July 31, 2020)