Showing posts with label rykodisc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rykodisc. Show all posts

Monday, March 16, 2026

various artists - Mojo Presents: Piece Of Cake (20 Years Of Rykodisc)

What can I say about Rykodisc that I haven't already said? As a reissue label, they were responsible for my first listens to so many important artists and bands: Bowie, Zappa, Mission of Burma, Big Star. They ended up shepherding the catalogs of Hannibal, Restless, and Twin/Tone, give the Meat Puppets' SST catalog a home, and offer Morphine a place to grow. Along with current labelmate and previous fellow indie traveler Rhino, they were a label that you could count on for quality. They now exist only as a historical imprint, still the label of note on Morphine reissues, but not having released a new record in something like 20 years.

But when Mojo celebrated Ryko's 20th anniversary in 2003, the esteemed label was still running hard. From this comp alone, there were contemporary tracks from the Fire Theft (ex-Sunny Day Real Estate), Josh Rouse, Kelly Willis, and Joe Jackson. They co-released Warren Zevon's last record in the UK, and put out a new Robert Wyatt record in 2003. And the reissues! The Replacements' and Soul Asylum' Twin/Tone catalogs, the early recordings of the Flaming Lips, all the Galaxie 500 records on Rough Trade. Rykodisc put out remastered versions all around this time, making these recordings easily attainable for the first time in years. This one's capped off by a hidden track from Bill Hicks, whose records were, you guessed it, also available posthumously on Rykodisc.

Click here to download.

Monday, July 22, 2024

various artists - Steal This Disc 3

In fact, I did not steal this disc. I paid a dollar ninety-nine for it mere weeks ago.

A quick one, as I prepare for a full-day training session on my Sunday. It's fascinating how the music you're introduced to at an early age shapes your entire listening existence. While I didn't own an exact copy of this in the early 90s, my early CD collection was littered with Ryko releases. The Bowie and Zappa reissue series, Hendrix's Radio One sessions and "Live at Winterland" set, "Hardcore Devo" Vols. 1 & 2, and Mission of Burma's Ace of Hearts output all populated my shelves before I graduated high school. They were mostly appointed in the distinctive green Rykodisc jewel cases, making them stand out that much more amongst the other pieces of my slowly-growing collection.

This one broadens my decidedly-narrow view from junior year. There are a trio of Beatles-adjacent tracks from Ringo, Badfinger, and Paul McCartney's brother. Rykodisc really leaned into world music with the likes of 3 Mustaphas 3 and the Oyster Band. I had no clue Jerry Jeff Walker and Evan Johns had put out records on Ryko until I snagged this; Nils Lofgren was less surprising, as was a Henry Kaiser project.

I don't know if it says more about the priorities of the music industry or the tastes of listeners that you just don't get this sort of awesome shotgunning any more. I suspect it's the former; I know that amongst my own aging group of freaks that we're even more likely to acknowledge that we want to listen to Ornette Coleman, Lack Of Interest, Wendy Carlos, and Barbara Dane, often times one right after the other.

The fold-out cover, exhibited below, is just the cherry on top of a collection that still fucking slaps.

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Tuesday, February 9, 2021

Mission Of Burma - Mission Of Burma

My first exposure to Mission Of Burma was via Rhino's "Faster & Louder" series back in 1993, which might as well just serve as my Rosetta Stone for the music I'd obsess over during next three decades. The first volume remains imprinted in my brain; it's the mixtape from the older brother I never had. It's hard to overstate the impact of hearing "Pay To Cum", "Dicks Hate The Police", "Get It Away", and, yes, "That's How I Escaped My Certain Fate" all in the same place. Add in the cover art by Gary Panter, the photos by Ed Colver, Jenny Lens, and Glen Friedman, and suddenly I had a checklist of things to look for when I went to a record store, or when I started exploring modern art.

My second exposure to Mission Of Burma came a couple years later, when I turned up a cherry copy of Ryko's "Mission Of Burma" double LP for some stupidly-low amount of money at one of the numerous record stores that used to dot Fells Point. Maybe I paid $12 for a copy that didn't look like it'd ever been played and still had the obi strip on it. Ryko was still a couple years away from their comprehensive remastering program, and all that Ace of Hearts material from the 80s was out of print, so I snagged this, alongside a copy of "London Calling" and "Q: Are We Not Men?" for less than it'd cost to get a newly-pressed copy today.

There's been a couple rounds of reissues since then; the aforementioned 1997 Rykodisc remastering campaign, and Matador's consolidation of most of the Burma catalog in 2008. Matador has kept those records in print in really nice editions on vinyl, including a really sick copy of "Signals, Calls, And Marches" on orange wax that they released with Newbury a few years back. But this, comprised of their contemporary material released before their 1983 breakup, as well as a pair of live cuts and unreleased cuts, still lives near and dear to my heart. When I saw a seller who I was ordering another record from had it for a few bucks on CD, well, I knew what to do...



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Post #400: Double Dagger - Ragged Rubble

It took from May to August 2000 to go from 100 to 200 posts. Then I hit 300 posts two days before Christmas 2000. And now I'm here, anot...

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