Chet Atkins Picks on the Beatles (RCA Victor LPM-3531, 1966).

From the dollar-bin. Excessively smooth dinner party music. Recording quality is great (“Dynagroove Mono”) so even this beat up copy sounds perfect. George Harrison wrote the liner notes.

#MyVinylSolution

Courtney Barnett: Sometimes I Sit and Think (Mom+Pop MP221-1, 2015).

I love this album but the vinyl sounds thin and sibilant. Maybe it’s my gear. Been a minute since I replaced my stylus. But lots of new vinyl sounds bad to mediocre.

#MyVinylSolution

Beach Boys: Wild Honey + 20/20 (Brother 2MS 2166, 1974).

Twofer I have no recollection of buying but I apparently paid $6.99 for it some time after 2016. Sounds great. Wild Honey (1967) is lightweight but it grooves. 20/20 (1969) has a Charlie Manson song plus two Smile leftovers.

#MyVinylSolution

The Beach Boys Love You (Warner Brothers MSK 2258, 1977).

Rock snobs like to pretend this album is good because it marked a return to full involvement from Saint Brian Wilson, but it’s just kooky. The synths sound dope on vinyl though. It used to be funny to put “Solar System” on mixtapes (“If Mars had life on it/I might find my wife on it”), but unless you’re super high or a member of Elephant 6 it’s a chore to get through.

#MyVinylSolution

Beastie Boys: Love American Style EP (Grand Royal GR064, 1998).

Bought this reissue from grandroyal.com (r.i.p.) back in the day. The two instrumental b-sides are where it’s at in all their Matt Dike + Dust Brothers glory.

Beastie Boys: Paul’s Boutique (Grand Royal GR065, 1998).

The ridiculous 8-panel gatefold, reissued by Grand Royal in 1998. I was the typical “Fight For Your Right” teenage fan who missed Paul’s until college. Looking back, I was less than two years late but it seemed like a lost classic in 1991. One of my all-time favorite albums.

#MyVinylSolution

Beastie Boys: Get It Together 12” (Capitol 7243 8 58185 6 1, 1994).

Contains four remixes of the only Beasties song containing the n-word (via Q-Tip, but I wonder if they wished he wouldn’t have…), two album versions and two unique b-sides (“Resolution Time” and “Dope Little Song”).

#MyVinylSolution

Beastie Boys: Root Down EP (Grand Royal GR018, 1995).

Contains the album version, two remixes, and seven sloppy live recordings. Listening to Beasties vinyl reminds me how fun the 90s were. Or maybe, more realistically, how fun my 20s were…at least with the added fuzziness of nostalgia.

Beastie Boys: The In Sound From Way Out! (Grand Royal GR013, 1998).

Mostly pointless compilation of instrumentals from the Check Your Head/Ill Communication era. I guess it’s cool to be able to hear a bunch of Money Mark Nishita’s keys in one spot.

#MyVinylSolution

Beastie Boys: Intergalactic (Capitol Y 7243 8 58705 1 4, 1998).

This is the last of my Beasties vinyl. (I also have this 45 in my jukebox but that’s another story.) Making me realize I should probably trade all the goofy singles and stuff for a copy of Licensed to Ill or Check Your Head.

#MyVinylSolution

Beastie Boys: Body Movin’ (Grand Royal GR069, 1999).

Oops one more. Forgot about this dumb white label with remixes by Mickey Finn & Special K for Urban Takeover. Silly.

#MyVinylSolution

Michael Nesmith: And the Hits Just Keep On Comin’ (RCA LSP-4695, 1972).

Breaking out of alphabetical order for something I just picked up.* Classic Nez with Red Rhodes on pedal steel. Includes his only studio recording of “Different Drum,” recorded eight years after he wrote it.

* I had this one before the Great Purge of 2005 but I should’ve kept it.

#MyVinylSolution

Bermuda Strollers 73 (Edmar ELPS-1122, 1973).

In Jonathan Richman’s “Monologue About Bermuda” he says the Modern Lovers’ trip to the island signaled the end of the band because he was getting more excited by what the local guys like these guys were doing. Features “Bang Bang Lulu.”

#MyVinylSolution #JonathanRichman

B-Boy Breaks: 12 Original Tunes as Sampled by the Beastie Boys (Bootleg BBB001, 1995).

A fun collection from a time when there used to be things that were hard to find. Just checked and everything on it is available for streaming except Curtis Knight’s “Happy Birthday” (listed here as “Gotta Have It” by Jimi Hendrix).

#MyVinylSolution

Meet the Beatles (Capitol ST 2047, 1976 reissue).

Picked this up at the estate sale of my neighbor who was a great guy (R.I.P.). You have to be a real grump not to love Dave Dexter’s U.S. stereo mixes. They sound so fun and exciting! They’re not right but they’re good!

#MyVinylSolution

The Beatles: Something New (Capitol ST 2108, 1978 reissue).

Another one from my neighbor’s estate sale. Americans called this the “third album” and it’s made up of fairly deep cuts (b-sides, EP tracks, etc.). John’s vocals on “Slow Down” rip.

The Beatles: The Beatles (Apple SMO 2051/52, 1978 French release on white vinyl).

Disques en pâte blanche! Tirage limité. Got this in high school as a gift from an older guy who had an inappropriate crush on my girlfriend. The white vinyl was the coolest thing I’d ever seen in 1988. Not sure I ever actually played it before today. Sounds ok, a little noisy.

#MyVinylSolution

The Beatles: 20 X 4 (Trade Mark of Quality).

Think I got this dumb boot at a record fair back in the early 90s. The only good things on it are two Paul songs with Donovan from the Post Card sessions: “Blackbird” and the unreleased “Heather.” The liner notes are comically inaccurate and it contains two songs absolutely *not* by any Beatles.

This version is not listed on Discogs.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl #records #beatles

Belle and Sebastian: Girls in Peacetime Want to Dance (Matador OLE-1056-1, 2015).

This is the only B&S I have on vinyl and it’s not even in my top-six B&S albums. I love “The Party Line” though. Oops I played side 3 first. Listening today, it’s better than I remember. Records encourage you to listen to music as sequenced by the artist, which is good.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl

Big Star: Radio City (Ardent ADD-1501, 2011 reissue).

The eternal #vinyl question: Does this sound crappy because it’s a lousy pressing…or is it my gear? I can imagine there are good versions of this out there that don’t sound sibilant and shrill, but not this one. I like the back cover photo taken at TGI Friday’s though. And the songs, of course, are perfect.

#MyVinylSolution #BigStar

Boxcar Willie: King of the Road (Suffolk Marketing SMI-124K, 1980).

As advertised on T.V. This was my dad’s record, one of only a handful in my possession. It’s a perfectly adept collection of covers of country classics. Sort of a Temu Hank Williams. Not available in stores.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl

Here's the ad that inspired my parents to send a check for $7.98 to Boxcar Willie.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLde1--V8eE

1980 Boxcar Willie "King of the Road - 20 Greatest Tracks" TV Commercial

YouTube
Just noticed my runout groove has "Cut By TRUTONE-Pa 3-81" on it. Which I assume means this was released no earlier than March 1981?

Phoebe Bridgers: Stranger in the Alps (Dead Oceans DOC 142, 2017).

So many great songs on this. I could’ve seen her on this tour in a tiny venue (Lady’s Literary Club in Grand Rapids) but it was a Tuesday night. Sigh. “Jesus Christ I’m so blue all the time” hits me every time I hear it. She might have gotten a little goofy after this but this one’s pretty perfect.

#myvinylsolution #vinyl #phoebebridgers

Bright Eyes: I’m Wide Awake, It’s Morning (Saddle Creek LBJ-72, 2005).

I love this album. The #vinyl has a nice soundstage. It’s the only Bright Eyes I have on wax and it’s the only one I need. Has Emmylou given her harmonic blessing to any precocious young songwriters since this?

#MyVinylSolution #BrightEyes

James Brown: Get On the Good Foot (Polydor PD-2-3004, 1972).

“My Best To Jake & Family. I Feel Good. James Brown.” My prized possession. When I got the opportunity to get his autograph I thought it would be phony to ask him to sign some mint record I just bought so this is it…in all its masking taped glory.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl #JamesBrown

Full gatefold. (Story in alt text.)

Anna Burch: Quit the Curse (Polyvinyl PRC-346, 2018).

I love this album but the vinyl sounds mid at best. Pretty bad, actually, at least on my stuff. In the video for “2 Cool 2 Care” she does the hula hoop in slow motion which made me a fan for life.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl

Butter 08 (Grand Royal GR029, 1996).

I was way into JSBX in 1996 and this was Russell Simins’ band with Miho and Yuka from Cibo Matto. It sounds exactly how you’d expect (chaotic) and I don’t think I’ve listened to it in 30 years. Pretty fun.

#myvinylsolution #vinyl

J.J. Cale: Naturally (Shelter SR-2122, 1974 pressing).

Hearing J.J. Cale for the first time back in college made me realize what an overrated fraud Clapton is. Cale is a quietly soulful singer and guitarist and a sophisticated songwriter. His “After Midnight” is so good it makes you hate Clapton even more.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl

Cat Mother and the All Night Newsboys: The Street Giveth and the Street Taketh Away (Polydor 24-4001, 1969).

This is pretty generic 1969 white boy boogie but Lester Bangs reviewed it favorably for Rolling Stone so I picked it up when I saw it cheap. Bangs lumped them in with “non-innovative, journeymen groups [who] don’t feel compelled to try so hard” but to him that was a compliment. I bet he never played it again after writing it up. I won’t either.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl #LesterBangs

The Bobby Charles Quartet (Fenton 2026, 1966).

Fenton Records was a mid-60s vanity label that released a bunch of 45s by teenage garage bands from West Michigan. This is not that. It’s goofy lounge music and as far as I know it’s Fenton’s only LP.

#MyVinylSolution #FentonRecords #vinyl

I didn’t realize until I was putting this away that 1) it has a multi-page gatefold insert, and 2) the last page is signed by all four members of the quartet, none of whom is named Bobby Charles, “To the Bergstroms, my kindest people.”

Clem Snide’s Journey (Foreign Leisure FL-009, 2011).

Eef Barzelay presents six acoustic covers of Journey songs. I love his voice and his interpretations. This was definitely a “support the artists you like by buying their stuff” purchase. Ghost of Fashion and Soft Spot are both important albums in my life, and I hope Eef is able to afford to keep making music.

#myvinylsolution #vinyl

Ray Charles: Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music Volume Two (ABC-Paramount ABC-435, 1962).

Garage sale find. Vinyl is beat up but still sounds great in glorious mono, which reminds me I should’ve switched my headshell to the one with a conical stylus in the cart, which is supposedly better for old mono grooves.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl

Judy Collins: Living (Elektra EKA-75014, 1971).

Ugh, I was reading Sylvie Simmons’ Leonard Cohen biography and I found this in the dollar bin and thought what the hell. It’s not great. “Vietnam Love Song” is unlistenable. The two Cohen song are alright.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl

Phil Collins: Face Value (Atlantic SD-16029, 1981).

Like every 10yo boy in 1981 I loved “In the Air Tonight” but within five years I was ashamed to admit it. It still sounds dope on #vinyl but the other songs are pretty lame. Collins seems like a nice guy and his hits are bangers but the filler is not killer.

#PhilCollins #MyVinylSolution

Sam Cooke: Live at the Harlem Square Club, 1963 (RCA AFL1-5181, 1985).

Classic, raw soul performed for a hip, receptive audience. Different vibe from his buttoned up, urbane At the Copa. Cooke is the most soulful singer of all time. Peter Guralnick wrote the liner notes.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (Atlantic SD 7200, 1970).

Sometimes there’s a reason they call it classic rock. This is a great album and just sounds so good. I wish Jerry played pedal steel on every song though. The harmonies, the guitar tones, the whole stoney vibe. It’s classic. We have all been here before.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl #CSNY

David Crosby: If I Could Only Remember My Name (Atlantic SD 7203, 1971).

Other than track 1 on side 1, this is an outrageously high fidelity listening experience with a deep, deep soundstage that makes you feel like you’re tripping. Best $2.99 I’ve ever spent.

#MyVinylSolution #DavidCrosby #vinyl

Crosby-Nash (ABC AA-1102, 1978).

A just alright compilation of the “best” of these two from their various solo and duo albums. Most of it sounds like rich guys doing blow on a sailboat, taking themselves very seriously. I probably picked this up after being blown away by If I Could Only Remember My Name. It’s not like that.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl #DavidCrosby #GrahamNash

The Cure: The Walk (Sire 1-23928, 1983).

Six-song U.S. release combining the “Let’s Go to Bed” and “The Walk” singles. America never had a singles market so this was marketed as a $5.99 “mini-LP” and the price is even printed on the sleeve and on the spine. Great songs, of course.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl #TheCure

The Cure: Concert (Fiction fixh10, 1984).

My wife bought this in high school. I like these live versions better than the studio versions. The sleeve boasts “no overdubs” and the runout grooves say PLAY ME LOUD on side one and EAT ME TOO on side two. Robert Smith is funny!

#myvinylsolution #vinyl #thecure

The Cure: In Between Days (Elektra 0-066882, 1985).

Another one of my wife’s from high school. Before we were dating I’d sometimes see her at the local record store. Her blowing her Baskin-Robbins paycheck on Cure tapes and singles, and me buying up the Smiths discography one 12” per week until I had them all. “In Between Days,” of course is a perfect song.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl #TheCure

Daystar: The Complete Recordings (2019).

This was my homie DP’s band in Portland. I know people have a bad attitude about “friend rock” but this is actually a good album. Influenced by 70s melodic rockers like Badfinger, but not pastiche. Plus one song contains a subtle inside joke about a dipshit we knew in high school.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl #portland

Del tha Funkee Homosapien: Mistadobalina (Elektra 0-66490, 1991).

I love Del. His debut album is, for me, the peak of the P-Funk sampling era of hip hop. But when I heard the Monkees sample on this song I almost lost my mind. Worlds collide. This 12” contains a few remixes that later ended up a best-of comp.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl @vinylrecords

Del tha Funkee Homosapien: Made in America (Elektra 0-66303, 1993).

Found this non-album single at Flipside Records (R.I.P.) in Kalamazoo back in the day. It’s apparently from the soundtrack of a Whoopi Goldberg movie I’ve never seen. It came out between Brother George and No Need for Alarm and was a sign of what was to come.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl @vinylrecords

Jackie DeShannon: Laurel Canyon (Imperial LP-12415, 1969).

She’s cool but this is pretty lightweight and sometimes goofy. Like, her cover of “Sunshine of Your Love” is super corny. Still, she’s got a soulful voice and a hot band (including Dr. John on piano) and her originals are good if a little touristy. Does anybody really need to promote Los Angeles?

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl @vinylrecords

Paul & Linda McCartney: Ram (Apple SMAS-3375, 1971).

Jumping out of alph order because I’m watching that new Paul doc and wanted to hear this. I should probably find a cleaner copy. This one’s scratched up pretty bad. The quality cuts through the noise and still sounds great. Top three solo Beatle album for sure.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl @vinylrecords

Detroit with Mitch Ryder (MCA-25970, 1987).

Reissue of a 1971 album with one bonus track (“Gimme Shelter”) and updated liner notes by Dave Marsh. I somehow ended up with two copies. Produced by Bob Ezrin. Ryder can belt and his band includes Steve Hunter who would go on to work with Ezrin on albums by Alice Cooper and Lou Reed. Detroit hard boogie.

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl @vinylrecords

Neil Diamond: Hot August Night (MCA 2-8000, 1972).
I love Neil Diamond. It might be nostalgia but I don’t think so. These songs are great. And I’m a grouch but I hate when people do the “so good! so good!” during “Sweet Caroline,” which the audience decidedly does *not* do at this concert. My copy is beat up from the dollar bin and it’s good enough. The cover image is iconic, inspiring Lester Bangs’ famous “whanging his clanger” line.
#MyVinylSolution #vinyl @vinylrecords

Doctor & the Medics: Laughing at the Pieces (IRS-5797, 1986).

A few years ago I realized the version of this on streaming is the original UK release and not the superior US release that I had on tape as a 15yo. This is the third copy of this dumb album I’ve purchased: once on tape, twice on #vinyl; it did not survive the great purge of 2005-2008…which was probably fair.

#MyVinylSolution @vinylrecords

Donovan: Sixty Four (Donovan Discs VI0001, 2017).

My wife got me this (signed!) for my birthday in 2020. I kept the padded envelope it came in because Donovan filled out the customs slip himself. Pretty cool. Demos of five covers and four originals. (And I’m still mad at Dylan for being so mean in Dont Look Back.)

#MyVinylSolution #vinyl @vinylrecords

Great album. Found it in a charity shop and by chance I was listening to them at the time too 😅
@gloriousnoise My parents had this album and played it a lot when I was a kid.
@Defiance It’s so good.
@Defiance @gloriousnoise same. my mom and i went to see cs&n in the 80s and standing arm-in-arm singing along to 'our house' is a blessed memory.
@crumbleneedy @gloriousnoise Oh yeah that’s wonderful. Nothing like the bonding power of music.
@gloriousnoise coming into it as a Genesis super fan, I really wish I liked that album more. In the Air Tonight is tops though
@gloriousnoise aww ...we love singing “song for judith” lines to greet loved ones

@gloriousnoise

There is a Bobby and a Charles, though!