| | Sunshine Necromance CD Sunshine Discography of CDs
Sunshine is a band who melds the stylings of new wave, punk, and shoegaze into some strange hybrid of textures, loops, synth, and waves of sounds that fit together in a semblance of perfection. From the Czech Republic, their status as entities somehow foreign to the United States makes sense in what they create. They sound like they are from somewhere else. Everything fits where it should. Necromance is the culmination of these ideas, a record of the most affecting phenomenon; even after you are done you feel like you are still listening to it. Durations get lost in the meantime. Something is urgent here, subdued under heavy waves. Names could be thrown out with relatable elements, such as the Faint, the Cure, the Rapture, and the Birthday Party, but nothing really works. Influences and textures are so well melded that they become their own magic, their own Necromance. ~ Blake Butler
Sunshine (6~Czech): Kay (vocals, guitar, keyboards, loops); Dan (keyboards, drums, percussion); Martin (synthesizer, bass guitar, loops, sequencer).
Additional personnel: Pavel Marcel (piano, keyboards, bass guitar); Vilem (keyboards); Zdenek Sikyr (Moog synthesizer). Sunshine Necromance Songs | 1. | Insomnia |
| 2. | Narcoleptic Feedback |
| 3. | Daydreams About White Lines |
| 4. | Punk and Chic |
| 5. | Scars of Love |
| 6. | Vertigo, The |
| 7. | Last Your Day |
| 8. | Thru Magnetic Fields |
| 9. | Spooky Cat Song, The |
| 10. | (MA3 Yrautibo Teews) |
| 11. | Astral Love |
| 12. | Astral Love - (hate mix//Bit Bob mix) |
| 13. | Astral Love - (3n1h5nus orp mix) |
| 14. | Astral Love - (cross mix/toxicky boom mix) |
| Necromance Review
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Buy Necromance CD  | | Sunshine
17 x 11 inch Masterprint
Price: $14.99 |
Purchase Necromance CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Echo & The Bunnymen The Fountain CD (2009)
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| | Paul McCartney Good Evening New York City CDs (2009) With DVD; Digipak
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$15.98 Unlike its 2002 predecessor Back in the U.S., Good Evening New York City doesn't cherrypick highlights from a tour, it commemorates a specific event: the inauguration of Citi Field -- the replacement for the now-defunct Shea Stadium, where the Beatles played a legendary show in 1965 -- in the summer of 2009. The circumstances may be different -- different enough to lead to a Billy Joel cameo on "I Saw Her Standing There," the piano man returning a favor from Paul, who played at Billy's Shea-closing shows in 2008 -- and McCartney might have two strong albums of new material to draw upon, but as an album, Good Evening New York City plays a lot like Back in the U.S. with a whopping 17 of its 35 tracks shared between the two titles. More importantly, the vibe is the same, with Macca delivering an expertly balanced and sequenced set with all the skill of the old pro that he is. Apart from the inclusion of "Mrs. Vanderbilt" and "I'm Down," there are no surprises, either in song selection or performance, but ...
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| | John Fogerty Blue Ridge Rangers Rides Again CDs (2009) With DVD; Deluxe Edition
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| | Guided By Voices Bee Thousand CD (1994)
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$11.45 Sounding like a Big Star album recorded in Sebadoh's practice space, this exploration into '60s rock mythology is the one that sealed Guided By Voices' lo-fi legend. From their hideaway in Dayton, Ohio, Guided By Voices previously released six albums with almost no distribution (the first five, in fact, had none at all) and minuscule production values before gaining the critical attention that would blossom with BEE THOUSAND. The production remains maddeningly haphazard here, but the seemingly tossed-off melodies are ever grander. And with the help of a Breeders' cover of their "Shocker In Gloomtown," Guided By Voices are now quite ready for indie-rock stardom.
What voices guide songwriter Robert Pollard? He kept ...
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| | Big Pete Pearson Finger In Your Eye CD (2009)
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$12.75 Big Pete Pearson grew up singing and playing guitar and bass in the juke joints of Austin, TX, long before that town became a Mecca for maverick musicians. He sang in church too, but was playing in bars by the time he was nine, including a stint with T.D. Bell & the Cadillacs. He grew up singing alongside his cousin W.C. Clark, today considered the godfather of the Austin blues scene. In his late twenties, Pearson moved to Phoenix, AZ where he is still based. He recorded sporadically when he was young, but has led successful bands in his hometown for decades. His location has hampered his career, which is a shame because he's an old-fashion blues shouter, with a timeless style and a booming voice that can cut through the volume of even the loudest backing band. His regular group, the Rhythm Room All-Stars, featuring the mighty harp playing of Bob Corritore, backs him up here, and the set also includes a bevy of special guests the likes of Pinetop Perkins, Duke Robillard, and Eddie Taylor, Jr. Corritore's massive harp, Pinetop's rolling piano, and Pearson's vocals dominate the title track, a dark, no-good woman blues, and while Pearson threatens his unfaithful lover with death, the vocal has such playfulness that it's hard to take seriously. "The Time Has Come" changes pace with Bruce Bears contributing jazzy Hammond B-3 to a mellow shuffle that's all passion and longing. The woman is still low-down, but here Pearson is full of frustrated passion. Doug James blows some fine bluesy sax to add to the late-night mood. "Sister from the City" is a salute to wild urban women. Pearson's ...
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