#Menestrel é uma nova tag mensal para celebrar a música em suas formas mais conceituais: os álbuns. E para abrir com chave de ouro, estreia-se com o tema #debut - que mais?

É suposto ser sobre "os primeiros trabalhos de seus artistas favoritos", mas eu quis não só escolher isso, como também um album que, lá por ser o debut da banda, não deixa de mostrar o melhor que a banda tem para oferecer.

Não é que os álbums que se seguem na discografia de Ashram sejam menos excelentes que este "Ashram" (sim, é um self-titled - e quem sabe se #selftitled não é um tema de um próximo menestrel...), mas este, lá por ser o primeiro, não fica nada atrás em excelência... e é provavelmente o que eu ouço mais vezes, talvez por ser também o álbum com o qual conheci a banda - e o único que tinha para ouvir até sair o próximo...

Na foto mostro o album na sua re-edição em digipak (limitada a 1000 unidades), com a qual substitui a edição original em jewel case, porque esta tem uma faixa extra (Fourth).

Uma edição mais recente (de 2013) também com esta faixa ainda existe em stock na editora*, aproveitem!

Mas que é isso, Ashram? Bem, Ashram é um trio Italiano de música neoclássica, e em vez de os descrever... ouçam! O disco começa assim:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wmJsvsWWIuQ

#début

* https://www.mandalia-music.com/produit/ashram/

"Baby Come Back" is a song by the British-American rock band #Player. It was released in late 1977 as the #leadSingle from their 1977 #selftitled debut album, and was the breakthrough single for the band, gaining them mainstream success, hitting #1 on the US #Billboard Hot 100 for the three consecutive weeks of January 14, 21 and 28, 1978 and #10 on the R&B charts in 1978. Their biggest #hitSingle, the song was written and performed by #PeterBeckett and #JCCrowley.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4NnI_sXZpw
Player - Baby Come Back (Lyrics)

YouTube
"Someday" is a song by American singer-songwriter #MariahCarey from her #selftitled debut studio album (1990). It is a #dancepop, #newJackSwing and #RAndB song. Prior to Carey signing a record contract, she and producer #BenMargulies had written and produced a four-track #demo which included "Someday". After signing a contract with #ColumbiaRecords, Carey began work on her debut album and she reached out to #RicWake to ask if he would produce the song.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w7maGGxIK1w
Someday

YouTube

Self-Titled Summer | Wild Flag (2011, US)

Our final entry in this series is a spotlight on number 346 on The List, submitted by mfennvt. This Portland- and Washington D.C.-based indie rock band was the quartet of Carrie Brownstein, Janet Weiss, Rebecca Clay Cole, and Mary Timony, previously of bands such as Sleater-Kinney, Quasi, The Minders, Autoclave, and Helium. This s/t was their debut and ultimately only album, but each member has continued to make kick-ass music elsewhere, including the reformed Sleater-Kinney, Pavement, and Ex Hex.

Want to read more? See the full spotlight on the Fediverse at @1001otheralbums.com or on the blog: https://1001otheralbums.com/2025/09/30/self-titled-summer-wild-flag-2011-us/

Want to skip straight to the music? Here's the Bandcamp: https://wildflag.bandcamp.com/album/wild-flag

Happy listening! And with that, I’ll now be taking about a month (maybe more) off from writing up new 1001 Other Albums blog posts. Take care of yourselves, and I'll meet you back here in November with more excellent Fediverse-recommended music.

#WildFlag #CarrieBrownstein #JanetWeiss #RebeccaCole #MaryTimony #IndieRock #selftitled #music #1001OtherAlbums

Self-Titled Summer | Wild Flag (2011, US)

For the last of our Self-Title Summer series, a spotlight on the sole album from supergroup Wild Flag.

1001 Other Albums

Self-Titled Summer | Trio (1981, Germany)

Our next spotlight on a Fedi-recommended self-titled album is on number 365 on The List, submitted by platenworm. The minimalist Neue Deutsche Welle trio called Trio was Stephan Remmler on lead vocals and keyboards, Gert “Kralle” Krawinkel on guitar and backing vocals, and Peter Behrens. This album is their debut, produced by Klaus Voormann (former bassist for Manfred Mann and Plastic Ono Band, among other things) and featuring the actual address and number for the band's shared home on the cover...a choice that would eventually lead to them moving out and breaking up. A song that got added to a reissue became a huge international hit, "Da Da Da (ich lieb' dich nicht du liebst mich nicht aha aha aha)", and has since appeared in a variety of places such as a 1997 VW ad and that piece of cinematic greatness, Bio-Dome.

Want to read more? See the full spotlight on the Fediverse at @1001otheralbums.com or on the blog: https://1001otheralbums.com/2025/09/27/self-titled-summer-trio-1981-germany/

Want to skip straight to the music? Here's a(n unofficial) Bandcamp: https://triofan.bandcamp.com/album/trio-full-album-1981

Happy listening!

#Trio #NeueDeutscheWelle #NewWave #synthpop #rock #Germany #1980s #selftitled #music #1001OtherAlbums

Self-Titled Summer | Trio (1981, Germany)

As the second-last part of the Self-Titled Summer series, a spotlight on the debut album from the German Neue Deutsche Welle trio called, well, Trio.

1001 Other Albums

Self-Titled Summer | Tracy Chapman (1988, US)

Our next spotlight on a Fedi-recommended self-titled album is on number 821 on The List, submitted by shiawase. This singer-songwriter and her impeccable take on folk rock first hit the airwaves via demos she cut at her college radio station. After one of those demos was stolen from said radio station and sent to a music exec, Chapman was pretty much immediately signed to Elektra Records. This s/t is her fantastic debut with a loaded 1-2 punch of a beginning, "Talkin' Bout a Revolution" followed directly by "Fast Car", songs that are still landing an impact today.

Want to read more? See the full spotlight on the Fediverse at @1001otheralbums.com or on the blog: https://1001otheralbums.com/2025/09/24/next-m-self-titled-summer-tracy-chapman-1988-us/

Want to skip straight to the music? Here's a Songlink: https://album.link/ca/i/79565550

Happy listening!

#TracyChapman #FolkRock #1980s #selftitled #music #1001OtherAlbums

Self-Titled Summer | Tracy Chapman (1988, US)

As part of the Self-Titled Summer series, a spotlight on the brilliant debut album from folk rock singer-songwriter Tracy Chapman.

1001 Other Albums

Self-Titled Summer | Throwing Muses (1986, US)

Our next spotlight on a Fedi-recommended self-titled album is on number 771 on The List, submitted by puffer. This alt rock/post-punk group originated in Rhode Island as a high school band formed by sisters Kristin Hersh and Tanya Donelly. Fast forward a few years and line-up changes later, Throwing Muses became the first American band signed to British label 4AD, signed on the strength of their 1985 demo tape. The album we look at here is their (technically untitled) brilliant debut studio album. Following this album, Throwing Muses would become quite intertwined with (and, in a way, partially responsible for) the Pixies, though I'm sure you know a Pixies fan or two who doesn't know them. Continuing as a trio sans Donelly since 1992, the band has kept releasing albums and touring in-between Hersch's solo work. Earlier this year, Throwing Muses released their 11th studio album, Moonlight Concessions, and have an Australia/New Zealand tour coming up in December.

Want to read more? See the full spotlight on the Fediverse at @1001otheralbums.com or on the blog (now in full-screen width! 🤓): https://1001otheralbums.com/2025/09/21/self-titled-summer-throwing-muses-1986-us/

Want to skip straight to the music? Here's an Internet Archive link: https://archive.org/details/0577_throwing_muses_throwing_muses_1986__mlib

Happy listening!

#ThrowingMuses #KristinHersh #TanyaDonelly #AltRock #PostPunk #4AD #1980s #selftitled #music #1001OtherAlbums

Self-Titled Summer | Throwing Muses (1986, US)

As part of the Self-Titled Summer series, a spotlight on the debut studio album from alt rock/post-punk band Throwing Muses.

1001 Other Albums

Wolves – Self-Titled Review

By Dear Hollow

Remember when hardcore was, like, hardcore? Wolves does. The generically named yet tongue-in-cheek UK hardcore gang makes antiestablishment music cool again, but not in the tired way. It’s not the noise-and-noise-only approach of early punk’s darlings Sex Pistols or Black Flag, but it ain’t pop-punk’s catchy anthem either. It’s jerky, jagged, unhinged, and doesn’t give a fuck about your feelings – it’s angular!1 But it’s also melodic, heartfelt, and overwhelmingly sincere. Calling out fascism and nationalism and the assholes who tote them, while getting personal and vulnerable with themes of parenthood and heartbreak, Wolves offers a scathing forty-eight minute romp through both the unfriendliness and melodicism of hardcore’s storied history.

Wolves is hardcore in a traditional way, but that doesn’t forego on experimentation. The quintet at its core recalls the hardcore fury of Gallows or Verse in their punky politically inclined foot on the gas, but they toss in a generous helping of post-hardcore, healthy cup of mathcore, and a drizzle of post-metal into their stew of titles. Furthermore, four out of five members are also vocalists2 and panic chord abuse runs rampant alongside a groovy swagger. It recalls Every Time I Die, The Dillinger Escape Plan, and Poison the Well without committing to them completely, creating a hardcore album that rides neatly on the borders with intensity when needed and thoughtful melody when the situation calls for it. Both bolstered and hindered by their four vocalists and a gratuitous runtime, Self-Titled is math-curious, -core-furious, and genre-spurious debut LP.

Wolves justifies its lengthy runtime with some tasteful experimentation. While the backbone of tempo-abusing furious hardcore punk, a hefty amount of melody adds a heartfelt ache to the tracks (“All or Something”), while post-metal’s dirge-like hypnotism appears to slow things down in a far more somber and dreary tone (“New Liver, Same Eagle”). These moments can be hit-or-miss, however, as the more Intronaut-inspired expanses that rely on clean vocals fall drearily flat (“A Stolen Horse”), the bluesy riffs can grate after so many reiterations (“A Guide to Accepting One’s Fate”), and the more chaotic mathcore faithful can derail the otherwise interesting grooves (“Nicaea to See You (To See You Nicaea)”). Furthermore, although the melodic nature recalls the yearning moments of Counterparts or The Ghost Inside, the four-vocal attack does not bode well, the fry vocals feeling particularly grating against the layered plucking (“All or Something,” “A Stolen Horse”).

Thankfully then, the bulk of Self-Titled is one hell of a beatdown romp that toes the line between its influences in a relentless blend of mathy and groovy. Wonky panic chords and dissonant technical sweeps courtesy of The Dillinger Escape Plan add a desperate and unhinged dimension (“LEECHES!,” “Emergency Equipment”), while bluesy swagger that recalls the heyday of Every Time I Die makes riffs sound “yuuuuge” against the backdrop of blistering hardcore tempos, resulting in some seriously mosh-worthy content (“Thirteen Crows and One Pigeon,” “The Rich Man and the Sea”). Second track “Reformed (Try Love)” is of special note, that while its groovy riffs are rad, the spoken word callout is the most hardcore thing I’ve heard this year, calling out those who are “one step from Nazi propaganda” and nationalism-flirting politicians, businessmen, and influencers, British and American: “Mate, they don’t give a fuck about you, but you′ve let them whisper in your ear… ’cause it′s easier to hate than to look in a fucking mirror.” In Wolves’ words, “Christ, what a shower of cunts.”

WolvesSelf-Titled is all about balance, as their unapologetic brashness blends surprisingly well with their tongue-in-cheek vibe and vulnerable melodics. At its core, it’s a math-curious hardcore romp that fits neatly alongside the likes of both Gallows, Botch, and even Stray from the Path, so it’s easy to forgive the overloud vocals, mediocre cleans, periodically gratuitous repetition, and album length. When its experimental edge succeeds, it’s a home run, but that’s not the star of the show – its political edge and weaponized mathcore influence will rip you a new one. Wolves is here to make sure you’re not “duped by absolute scumbags” and have a rip-roaring time doing it.

Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Ripcord Records
Websites: theycalluswolves.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/theycalluswolves
Releases Worldwide: September 5th, 2025

#2025 #30 #BlackFlag #Botch #BritishMetal #Counterparts #EveryTimeIDie #Gallows #HardcorePunk #Intronaut #Mathcore #PoisonTheWell #PostMetal #Review #Reviews #RipcordRecords #SelfTitled #Sep25 #SexPistols #StrayFromThePath #TheDillingerEscapePlan #TheGhostInside #Verse #Wolves

Self-Titled Summer | Suzanne Vega (1985, US)

Our next spotlight on a Fedi-recommended self-titled album is on number 820 on The List, submitted by shiawase. Though many people likely only know of this artist via DNA's dance remix of "Tom's Diner", this singer-songwriter was an important part of the folk music revival and Greenwich Village music scene boom of the early 80s. The album we look at here is Vega's debut, a collection of stories presented in a stripped-back neo-folk style. And Vega is still going strong! She just released her 10th studio album, Flying with Angels, and is currently touring Europe/UK until the end of the year.

Want to read more? See the full spotlight on the Fediverse at @1001otheralbums.com or on the blog: https://1001otheralbums.com/2025/09/15/self-titled-summer-suzanne-vega-1985-us/

Want to skip straight to the music? Here's a Songlink: https://album.link/ca/i/1429191144

Happy listening!

#SuzanneVega #SingerSongwriter #folk #FolkMusic #GreenwichVillage #1980s #selftitled #music #1001OtherAlbums

Self-Titled Summer | Suzanne Vega (1985, US)

As part of the Self-Titled Summer series, a spotlight on the debut album from singer-songwriter and “Mother of the MP3”, Suzanne Vega.

1001 Other Albums

Self-Titled Summer | Suzanne Vega (1985, US)

Our next Self-Titled Summer spotlight is on number 820 on The List, submitted by shiawase. Here’s a quick rundown:

  • Point of origin(s): Born in California (in 1959) and raised in New York City, as a college student singer-songwriter Vega became part of the folk music revival and Greenwich Village music scene boom of the early 80s. Vega was part of Jack Hardy‘s songwriters’ group at the Cornelia Street Cafe, from which a cooperative and monthly anthology (The CooP/Fast Folk Musical Magazine) arose to give an outlet for independent artists to perform and put out their first recordings. Vega’s first was “Cracking” on the inaugural Fast Folk comp (February 1982), followed by a handful of other songs on subsequent Fast Folk issues over the next three years.[1] A year after Vega was signed to A&M Records, in May 1985 she released this, her debut album, which includes most of those Fast Folk songs (with the exception of “Tom’s Diner” and “Gypsy”, both of which would end up on Vega’s second album) plus more. Vega also performed the entire album (plus “Tom’s Diner” and “Gypsy”, as well as some great monologues) as a solo acoustic set at the SpeakEasy club in Greenwich Village the week the s/t came out. This lovely performance was released as a radio broadcast to promote the album; in 2014, the recording was finally released as an album (though possibly unofficially?), Live at the Speakeasy (also found under the title Live in New York 1985).
  • Tasting notes: Masterful storytelling via stripped-back contemporary folk/neo-folk, acoustic guitar
  • Standout track: The album’s first single, “Marlene on the Wall”; also “Small Blue Thing” and “The Queen and the Soldier”. I also really dig all the live Speakeasy versions.
  • Where are they now?: Vega’s s/t was a hit, as was her addition to the Pretty in Pink soundtrack (“Left of Center“) in 1986 and then her second album, Solitude Standing (1987). In 1989, she became the very first woman to headline the Glastonbury Festival. The following year then saw Vega’s biggest hit – indeed what most people know her for – being a remix of “Tom’s Diner” by British electronic dance duo DNA. Though originally showing up in clubs as an unsolicited bootleg titled “Oh Susanne”, Vega soon gave DNA permission for an official release. Around the same time, this song garnered Vega fame for a rather random reason, as the original a cappella version was used as the test song when the MP3 format was being developed by Karlheinz Brandenburg, particularly to see how the human voice fared with its compression algorithm. Brandenburg refined the algorithm until Vega’s voice sounded right, and christened Vega “Mother of the MP3”.
    Vega has gone on to do many other wonderful things, including: experimenting with the folk genre, winning many awards, being featured on a number of soundtracks, becoming a published author, becoming a playwright (with “Barely Breathing” Duncan Sheik!), hosting a Peabody Award-winning radio series, acting in an off-Broadway musical, and starting her own recording label and re-recording her back catalogue.
    Vega just released her 10th studio album this last May, Flying with Angels, and is currently touring it with dates in Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, England, and Scotland still to come.
  • Websites: Artist website, Bandcamp, Wikipedia

Happy listening!

  • “Gypsy” and “Night Moves” (Jun and Sep ’82 comps), “The Queen and the Soldier” and “Some Journey” (Feb and Jun ’83), “Tom’s Diner and “Knight Moves” (Jan and Apr ’84), and finally “Small Blue Thing” (May ’85). ↩︎
  • #1980s #FastFolkMusicalMagazine #folk #folkMusic #GreenwichVillage #ListenToThis #music #musicDiscovery #selftitled #singerSongwriter #SuzanneVega