Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
LA's Desert Origins was released on October 26, 2004, by Matador Records. [1] The album contains a 62-page booklet of liner notes, which contain photographs, artwork, accounts from vocalist/guitarist Stephen Malkmus and guitarist Scott Kannberg (a.k.a. "Spiral Stairs"), and notes Malkmus wrote for Melody Maker about each of the songs on the original album. [2]
Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain was released on February 14, 1994, by Matador Records. [2] As of 2009, the album had sold about 500,000 copies. [3]In 2004, Matador released Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain: LA's Desert Origins, a compilation containing the album in its entirety, as well outtakes and other rarities from the same era.
Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain vinyl bonus 7" "Haunt You Down" and "Jam Kids" appear on Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain: LA's Desert Origins. "Nail Clinic" [38] Hey Drag City! Appears on Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain: L.A.'s Desert Origins. 1995 "Here" [39] Amateur: Appears on Slanted and Enchanted. "It's a Hectic World" [40] Homage: Lots of Bands Doing ...
Both B-sides are included on the reissue Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain: LA's Desert Origins. The unlisted B-side track on the 12" version of the single is an instrumental recording of "Rain Ammunition," and has never been reissued. In May 2007, NME magazine placed "Cut Your Hair" at number 28 in its list of the 50 Greatest Indie Anthems Ever.
"Gold Soundz" is the second single released from Pavement's 1994 album Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain. The song did not perform particularly well as a single, failing to chart on the Billboard Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart, where their previous single, "Cut Your Hair", peaked at number 10.
West's debut performance was in 1993 at a Drag City festival in Chicago. Also that year, the band contributed to the AIDS-Benefit Album No Alternative produced by the Red Hot Organization with their song "Unseen Power of the Picket Fence". [citation needed] Pavement's second album Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain was released in 1994.
An early 1993 demo of the song did not feature the controversial verse; guitarist Spiral Stairs recalled in 2004 that when Malkmus first revealed these new lyrics to his bandmates at the New York City recording sessions for Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain, "we almost lost our lunch from laughing so much." [3]
Come Fly with Me (Michael Bublé album) The Complete U2; The Concrete's Always Grayer on the Other Side of the Street; Conquering South America; Consuming Fire; Counterpoints (McCoy Tyner album) Critical Energy; Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain: LA's Desert Origins; Crossing Bridges; Crush.Fukk.Create: Requiem for Generation Armageddon