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header Blood Moons Complete
Blood Moons Complete
75OL-259 The Blood Moons – Complete
$8.00 S&H Included
Track Listing
1. Why Won’t your Ghost Fade Away
2. Wasting My Time
3. Last Breath
4. On The Streets
5. Downtown
6. Bottle Of Broken Dreams
7. I’m Alright
8. It’s Over
9. Shallow Grave
10. What’s On Your Mind
11. Dead And Gone
12. In My Head
13. Falling Apart
14. You Don’t Love Me Anymore
15. Glassy Eyes
16. What You Do To Me
17. Goodbye
18. Can’t Make You Mine
19. You’re Alone
20. Mother’s little Helper
21. I’ll Be Drunk For Christmas
Here it is, the complete recorded history of New Bedford, Mass’ The Blood Moons.
header Mark Cutler Travel Light
Mark Cutler – Travel Light
75OL-266 Mark Cutler – Travel Light
$15.00 S&H Included
Digital download and streaming available here
Track Listing
1. Two Hours To Go 2:53
2. Nothing From Nobody 4:11
3. Go With The Flow 4:44
4. The Other Shoe 4:14
5. What About You 3:48
6. Gaslight 3:45
7. It Goes Like This 3:48
8. I Killed A Man 3:38
9. East Of Eden 2:50
10. Misfits 3:23
11. Travel Light 3:50
All songs recorded and mixed by MC at Revmok Studios, except Killed A Man, recorded and mixed by Emerson Torrey at Satellite Studios. Mastered By Tom Buckland. Produced by MC. Special thanks to Kelly and Dan Cutler, Kyle and Lindsay Oelofse, Jonathan Gregg, Family, Friends, my band mates, and the folks from the Same Thing Project.
Cover design by Rick Couto.
Photography by MC.
Dedicated to George Skaubitis and Auntie Ev.
Jimmy Berger – bass guitar
Rick Couto – drums
David Narcizo – drums
Jonathan Gregg – pedal steel
Banjo Bob Kirkman – acoustic guitar
Cathy Clasper-Torch – violin
Richard Reed- keyboards
All songs written by mc copyright 2017 mok music publishing ascap
Tall Teenagers at Dusk
with The Worried, Benny Sizzler, & Supernatural ii
Dusk
Harris Ave
Providence, RI
9pm
Swampbirds CD Release Show at The Parlour
with The Low Cards, Consuelos Revenge, The Fates
The Parlour
North Main Street
Providence, RI
9pm
The Blood Moons Reunion at Pour Farm
with Silent Fields & Jimmy Goo
Pour Farm
Purchase St
New Bedford, Mass
9pm
Motif Magazine reviews Hope Anchor’s ‘Beautiful Corpses’
Hope Anchor – Beautiful Corpses
In terms of getting into the Halloween spirit, it doesn’t get any better than going to the release show for an album called Beautiful Corpses. Hope Anchor guitarist Terry Linehan warned me a few months ago that this would be their goth record. First impressions of Beautiful Corpses are that it does have a noticeably darker and urgent feel. “You Alone” kicks off with an ’80s U2-styled guitar riff before pulling the indie rock curtains over the beat. “Dead Gone” is another slab of indie rock that reminds me of some descendant of Echo & the Bunnymen and Wire. All good goth albums need a ballad and the dreamy “Rain Won’t Stop” fits the bill for a shot of indie guitar melancholy.
Hope Anchor, Jets Can’t Land, Ghosts of Industry, and Man & Wife rock Dusk on October 20.
Jodie Treloar at Villa Villekulla
with Nate Cozzolino and Jenn Lombari
Villa Villekulla
Providence, RI
7pm
The Noise reviews Keith A/B’s ‘Unbridled Optimism’
Keith A/B – Unbridled Optimism
6 tracks
Innovative textures and instrumentals are matched to quirky vocal melodies to form some intriguing songs by this solo performer; some of which verge on epic, notably the opening track “We’ll Send Our Sympathies,” which is supported by relentless rhythm guitar and a positively eerie horn-like refrain. The tumultuous churning in the back of “Your Mother Needs a Man” fails to completely obliterate the rather sweet, almost poppy vocal melody delivered with a degree of intensity which creates an interesting sensation of dissonance, literal and cognitive. “Capital S” is instrumentally deliberately jarring and angular, with over-miked guitar thrumming layered in back of Keith A/B’s almost sing-songy vocal melody. (Think Patsy Cline’s version of “Tennessee Waltz.”) The end result is an almost nightmarish ambiance, as the vocalist ominously declaims “You will tremble/ You will tremble/ You will tremble like a leaf.” Of the remaining songs, the repetitive “An Hour a Day” seems like a misfire; “Fortune Cookies” is a brazen, poppy rock song but otherwise not particularly innovative; “One Bad Egg” is an anodyne wistful ballad. But the first three songs are strange and wonderful. Recommended.