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Saturday, December 24, 2016

Warfrat Tales......recommended......

From John N comes this most interesting compiltion of music from California's 1980's Warfrat
Records.....lot of fine material on this one, tracks from Gun Club, The Last, Rain Parade, and plenty more......let's make it easy (on ME) by simply pasting the attached description:
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The original Warfrat Tales was a compilation of LA bands of the 1980's who had recorded at Lyceum Sound with Vitus Matare (the Last, Trotsky Icepick). This 2005 re-release contains all the original material plus additional 13 tracks/bands that weren't included the first time around.

At the dawn of the eighties, the L.A. underground music scene was comprised of a heady mix of bands and styles that included punk, post-punk, cow-punk, neo-psych, power-pop, jangle-pop, rockabilly, and everything in between. In addition to its quite unprecedented musical diversity, what also set this underground scene apart from others before it and those since was the genre-defying camaraderie between the various bands involved. As such, it was not unusual to see someone like Chris D. of The Flesh Eaters- ferocious purveyors of an exceedingly dark blues-punk hybrid that made them legends among the hardcore crowd- befriend and support a band such as The Dream Syndicate, who were in the process of spearheading a psych-revival that would come to be known as the Paisley Underground. Many of these relationships were forged through shared ties with the indie record labels that mushroomed in and around the scene whose rosters often reflected the amazing variety of the L.A. underground itself, a phenomenon that helped give rise to the era of the indie compilation as the best way to promote the music. A storied example of this was Warfrat Records, a tiny artist-run label, whose recordings were made in a (literally) makeshift studio called Lyceum Sound, which was actually a sound-proofed two-car garage (we're talking egg-cartons on the walls here) that had been rented out by members of The Last as a rehearsal space. The "studio" was originally conceived as a much preferred return to sonic austerity for The Last after having had their sound subjected to the sterilizing effects of the professional recording process on their debut LP,L.A. Explosion!  Eventually, Lyceum Sound played host to bands such as The Gun Club, Rain Parade, The Long Ryders and Savage Republic to name but a few, all of whom engaged in something like recorded rehearsals. As The Last's manager Gary Stewart remembers, the WarfRat record label was born out of necessity: "I didn't so much dream up the WarfRat label as I was forced to start it, as a way of releasing a single [...] that was getting some airplay on Rodney Bingenheimer's Sunday night radio show." The compilation WarfRat Tales was intended as a way to promote many of the bands who regularly passed through Lyceum Sound as well as to pay off some bills (according to Stewart, the album accomplished only one of these objectives). The album itself is one of the better comps to emanate from the L.A. underground, and has the added advantage of being primarily comprised of unique "demo" performances that are often superior to the more polished versions available The Rocky Horror Picture Showfronting The Doors, sets the tone for this consistently great and intensely moody set of songs. Another highlight is "Stop the Clock" by the Earwigs, a strange mash-up of punk, ska and early new-wave that functions as a tension-filled time-capsule of cold war paranoia. WarfRat Tales also features some wonderfully scruffy cuts from Paisley Underground mainstays Rain Parade, including a stunning rendition of "This Can't Be Today," later re-recorded for their debut LP, Emergency Third Rail Power Trip. Perhaps the most essential track is "Creeping Coastlines of Light" by The Leaving Trains, a twangy, moody, transcendent slow-burner that is the equal of anything recorded by the scene's more well-known "roots" bands such as The Long Ryders and True West. WarfRat Tales is worth revisting because it offers a significant glimpse into an amazingly vibrant music scene long since gone; however, what makes it truly distinctive is the way its austerely-recorded tracks capture the passion and camaraderie that made the L.A. underground what it was.
elsewhere. The opener, "Try to Rise," a creepy, campy psychedelic rocker by The Last that sounds a bit like Frankenfurter of 

1. The Last- Try to Rise  (2:57)
 2. The Leaving Trains- Leaving Train  (3:07)

 3. 100 Flowers- 100 Flowers  (1:08)
 4. Earwigs- Stop the Clock  (2:04)

 5. Wednesday Week- Boy You Got Me Good  (3:32)

 6. Rain Parade- I Look Around  (3:00)

 7. The Question?- Brand New World  (2:52)

 8. The Point- Pothead  (5:04)

 9. To Damascus- Night Surfing  (1:51)

10. The Last- Anything That's Out There  (2:36)

11. Urinals- I'm Like You  (0:49)

12. The Gun Club- Watermelon Man  (3:18)

13. Rain Parade- Look Both Ways  (3:24)

14. The Up & Out- I'm Learning  (3:24)

15. Hector & The Clockwatchers- Octavia  (3:43)

16. The Gun Club- Fire of Love  (1:55)

17. The Question?- One More Time  (2:54)

18. The Up & Out- Gruelled Again  (2:57)

19. Urinals- Scholastic Aptitude  (1:24)

20. Earwigs- Automatic Reverse  (2:16)

21. To Damascus- And Leave and Leave Me  (2:27)

22. 100 Flowers- From the Fire  (2:20)

23. The Question?- Shall Be Love  (3:35)

24. Rain Parade- This Can't Be Today  (4:14)

25. Wednesday Week- Anyone Like Me  (2:16)

26. Hector & The Clockwatchers- Mishap at Greebsley's  (2:47)

27. The Leaving Trains- Creeping Coastline of Lights  (3:12)

28. The Last- Brand New Drug  (3:39)

9 comments:

  1. http://www66.zippyshare.com/v/I2Hr8WGF/file.html

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  2. says file does not exist - any chance for another try? i had this LP years ago and lost it in flood - look forward to hearing it again. thanks and Merry Christmas.

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  3. Scott,
    any chance you could redo the link?! This post got caught up in the week from hell; few people will have had a chance to grab the file. Thanks!

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  4. hello, up to 5 or 6 requests now. this link never has worked! please rectify.... r, keith

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  5. I will repost it when I get to it. R Keith please, you are acting like an entitled ass. This is not my Damon career and you are not my employer

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  6. http://www26.zippyshare.com/v/vlRWZ7uq/file.html

    keith if u miss this one, too bad

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    Replies
    1. thanks for nothing asshole, keith

      Delete
  7. So, what EXACTLY did you want? I went the extra mile to try to get this link to you, apparently yo didn't act quickly enough......you have ben rude, impolite, and acted entitled through the entire thing......this is not a flea market where you just go to pick up free stuff...it's a community that shares and discusss music. If something is deleted, such is life, when I posted the link the SECOND time I told you to hurry.....I guess you didn't......calling me names is not exactly the best method of getting it posted again, and right now, I wouldn't do it for you anyway. With respect brother, I really don't think you understand what we are doing here. It's ok, not everyone gets it, BUT, WHAT have YOU contributed? I'm guessing NOTHING.....and yet, you expect me to expend extra time to make sure you havae this album (which I HAVE DONE to try to help you out)....plaease stick around, maybe you'll see what we are trying to do here, what we are NOT is a musical Odd Lots where everyone can dumpster dive for anything they want and thn complain if it isn't here.....we share and discuss music. If you want some special priority for your requests, why the hell don't YOU contribute something to the blog, anyone who does THAT gets put to the top of the list, as they are HELPING, as opposed to just bitching.

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  8. I for one would love to get a link for this release. I have the original LP and love it, but the bonus tracks here make this invaluable. Please reupload this again, and thanks in advance for such a great blog with superb music! All the best!!

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