New Album Releases 03/18/08: Muse, The Kills, The Bravery, Daniel Lanois, Meredith Monk, Pugwash, Reissues Aplenty & More
Published March 18, 2008
The Feelies
Crazy Rhythms
A&M
American Underground, College Rock, Jangle Pop, Alternative Pop/Rock
Good Riddance
Remain in Memory: The Final Show
Fat Wreck Chord
Punk Revival, Hardcore Punk, Straight-Edge
Adam Green
Sixes & Sevens
Rough Trade
Alternative Singer/Songwriter, Contemporary Singer/Songwriter, Alternative Pop/Rock, Anti-Folk
Mickey Hart/Diga Rhythm Band
Diga Rhythm Band
Rykodisc
Worldbeat, Ethnic Fusion
Mickey Hart
Planet Drum
Rykodisc
Pan-Global, Worldbeat, Ethnic Fusion
The Hush Sound
Goodbye Blues
Decaydance/Fueled By Ramen
Indie Pop, Alternative Pop/Rock
Ernie K-Doe
Here Comes the Girls
Great American Music
New Orleans R&B
King Tubby
King Tubby on the Mix, Vol. 1
Original Music
Dub, Roots Reggae
King Tubby
King Tubby on the Mix, Vol. 2
Original Music
Dub, Roots Reggae
Daniel Lanois
Here Is What Is
Red Floor
Adult Alternative Pop/Rock, Alternative Pop/Rock, Alternative Singer/Songwriter
The Matches
A Band in Hope
Epitaph
Punk-Pop
Denis Matsuev
Unknown Rachmaninoff
RCA Red Seal
Post-Romantic Piano Music
Mission of Burma
The Horrible Truth About Burma: Definitive Edition
Matador
American Punk, Post-Punk, Indie Rock
Mission of Burma
Signals, Calls and Marches: Definitive Edition
Matador
American Punk, Post-Punk, Indie Rock
Mission of Burma
Vs.: Definitive Edition
Matador
American Punk, Post-Punk, Indie Rock
Mogwai
Mogwai [EP+6]
Chemikal Underground
Experimental Rock, Post-Rock/Experimental
Gil Morgenstern
20th Century Duos for Violin and Cello
Engine Company
Modern and Contemporary Chamber Music
Muse
Haarp [CD/DVD]
Warner Bros.
Alternative Pop/Rock
Oliver Nelson
Fantabulous
Verve
Hard Bop, Post-Bop, Modern Big Band, Modern Creative
Neon Neon
Stainless Style
Lex
Indie Electronic, Alternative Dance
New Found Glory
Hits
Geffen
Punk-Pop, Punk Revival, Emo
Murray Perahia
Bach: Partitas Nos. 2-4
Sony
Baroque Keyboard Music
John Schneider
Lou Harrison: Por Gitaro - Suites for Tuned Guitars
Mode
Contemporary Chamber Music
Original Soundtrack
21
Columbia
Alternative Dance, Indie Rock, Soundtracks, Alternative Pop/Rock, Indie Electronic
Original Soundtrack
Electric Apricot: Quest for Festeroo
Hip-O
Jam Bands, Soundtracks, Blues-Rock
Original Soundtrack
Tyler Perry's Meet the Browns
Atlantic
Contemporary R&B, Soundtracks, Neo-Soul, Urban
Playradioplay!
Texas
Island
Indie Electronic, Indie Pop
Rocko
Self-Made
Island
Dirty South, Southern Rap, Hardcore Rap
Sheek Louch
Silverback Gorilla
Koch
East Coast Rap, Hardcore Rap
Switches
Lay Down the Law
Interscope
Indie Rock
Tall Firs
Too Old to Die Young
Ecstatic Peace!
Post-Rock/Experimental, Indie Rock
The Teenagers
Reality Check
XL
Indie Rock, New Wave/Post-Punk Revival
These New Puritans
Beat Pyramid
Domino
New Wave/Post-Punk Revival, Indie Rock, Experimental Rock
Various Artists
Buzzcuts
Razor & Tie
Post-Grunge, Alternative Pop/Rock, Punk-Pop
John Zorn
The Dreamers
Tzadik
Modern Composition, Anime Music, Cartoon Music, Television Music, Film Music, Surf
Bar Kokhba Sextet
Lucifer: The Book of Angels, Vol. 10
Tzadik
Jewish Music, Avant-Garde Jazz, Modern Composition, Chamber Jazz, World Fusion, Modern Creative
- New Album Releases 03/18/08: Muse, The Kills, The Bravery, Daniel Lanois, Meredith Monk, Pugwash, Reissues Aplenty & More
- Published: March 18, 2008
- Type: News
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Business, Music: Lists, Music: News, Music: Recording
- Part of a feature: New CDs
- Writer: Glen Boyd
- Glen Boyd's BC Writer page
- Glen Boyd's personal site
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Comments
Hart really knows his stuff, percussion wise. The man is all about the World beat. I don't have Diga Rhythm but as I recall the Planet Drum thing is pretty cool.
i like Diga a lot more...but heck, i like anything if you add tablas on top of it. ;-)
I'm sure I've heard Diga at some point, but for whatever reason never actually bought it. I guess that's what reissues are for.
Man, this makes me want to pull out some of my 80s Dead shows just for the drums section. Man those guys could make some spectacular noise.
I'll make ya a deal. You can keep your Dead/Hart, I'll keep my Tunnel Of Love and Lamb Lies Down On Broadway, and we'll call it even...
-Glen
my point was not to convince you that you "should" like the Dead...just that Diga is really a percussion record.
I'm pretty much open to anything Mark. But everytime I've tried out anything associated with these guys, it's just never worked for me. And I'm not a real big fan of those world music type drum records to begin with. They are fun to watch every year at our Bumbershoot festival here in Seattle, but on a purely emotional level, the music itself doesn't move me a whole lot.
-Glen
Aw, man, I missed all the fun the other day with Mark's post. That's what I get for actually working. I might not have been up for the grilling, however - I'm not a Dead fan, either. Just don't dig their sound, plain and simple.
Remind me to buy you a beer next time I see ya Mr. Johnson.
-Glen
i always knew there was a reason to distrust you Porcupine Tree fanatics.
I don't really care if either of you like the Dead or not, but it is fun talking about them.
If I wanted to be smart I'd ask which sound you didn't like, Tom. Depending on when you listen, the Dead created all sorts of sounds. From 65 to 69 they were straight up psychedelic craziness. In the 70s they focused on songwriting as well as long jams. In the 80s they found midi and the sound went a totally different direction and the 90s. Well the 90s weren't their best period.
Solo projects though, that's another story all together.
Ok, I think the dead have successfully hijacked enough threads for now.
Oh, I know how to switch the subject. Mark, give me some The Roches suggestions. I've just started listening to them and am really digging what I have (especially the Suzzy/Maggie disk Why the Long Face
What are your favorite albums?
well, to go way back, you can't go wrong the self-titled, Robert Fripp-produced record.
Nerds is also good.
Speak is really good too, but that might be out of print.
All I can say is that I've been around enough Dead stuff to say that I don't particularly dig any of it. It's just a band-feel thing - nothing grabs me, and I've heard enough that it covers the spectrum and that spectrum is decidedly "blechy" colored. I won't say "never," as Mark pointed out surprising a hater with something unexpected and he liked it, but it would take something extraordinary.
Percussion fans ought to check out the Ramiro Musotto record; Brazilian electronic and drum-based music. Very cool stuff.
I'm definitely checking out the Lanois.
Some people just don't get the Dead. Most probably associate them with these grand rock concerts full of wasted dancing hippies. They just don't get it. But there's so much to "it" that it takes a special person to be able to get it. I guess they'd rather go to a concert and hear tunes exactly like they are on the album? Beats me.
Actually, I'd rather just listen to the album.
I've seen Muse a couple of times in Atlanta at the Tabernacle..they really are meant to be a stadium band.


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I won't be running out to the record store to buy the Mickey Hart reissues
big mistake! this is mostly percussion and, more important, Hart worked with Zakir Hussain on it. it's really cool.