Combustible Edison - Forbidden Isle Of Demos


Label:

Modern Harmonic

Genre:

Alternative

Product No.:
AMHA 8277
UPC: 090771827715
Availability:
In Stock
Category:

Vinyl Record



$26.98

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1992 demo reel got the band inked to Sub Pop and kicked off neo-lounge movement!

LP cut by Kevin Gray and pressed on black vinyl

Contains demo versions of six swanky cuts and seven others left off the album

Includes a literal placemat's worth of liner notes from Jim Allen!

A sonic apéritif!

This is the apéritif that started the album that helped start the cocktail and exotica rebirth of the ‘90s! It's hard to call recordings as lush and beautiful as these demos, but that's what they are. These reels preceded the band's Subpop debut I, Swinger, and contains early versions of most of that album along with songs you've never heard them do on record before!

The devil's in the demos! A singing, dancing tour of the seven wonders of the cocktail world hosted by Satan — it's as awesome an origin story as any band could want. Especially the ensemble that kicked off the ‘90s neo-lounge scene.

In 1992, the band squeezed into bassist Nicholas Cudahy's living room to cut a home demo on his 8-track cassette recorder. "I think we recorded Liz in the bathroom," reports drummer/vibraphonist Aaron Oppenheimer. "And then Nick mastered it down to these 2-track tapes." The process was anything but laborious. "Every song we played maybe a couple of takes. And then Nick went and locked himself in the room and came out with a demo."

Some songs wouldn't make it to the band's 1994 Sub Pop debut album, I, Swinger, and some would never see the inside of a proper studio at all.

In their final I, Swinger versions, the bulk of the demo tunes sparked a nationwide movement. Legions of musicians swapped the Stooges and Ramones for Esquivel and Arthur Lyman in their pantheon of influences. But the tape that started it all was buried for decades until Nick unearthed it.

In hindsight, the 1992 recordings seem as shockingly prescient as they were anachronistic, having foreshadowed everything from neo-swing to post-rock. And the ripples are still spreading.

"I do feel like there is yet another resurgence of cocktail culture and tiki bars and things," Oppenheimer avers. "Maybe it'll find a new audience. And maybe those folks who were fans 30 years ago will think, ‘Oh, yeah, that stuff is pretty good!' It's exciting."

 

 



Side A
Cadillac
Satan Says
Carnival Of Souls
Theme From The Tiki Wonder Hour
A Shot In The Dark
Summer Samba
Is That All There Is?
Side B
Intermission
Spy Vs Spy
Pavillion
Breakfast At Denny’s
Rotisserie
The Best Is Yet To Come

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