Archive for the ‘Bleachers’ Category

Bleachers – Terrible Thrills Vol. 3 #4 (High Quality Vinyl Rips)

Monday, June 24th, 2019

Bleachers
Foreign Girls (featuring Ani DiFranco)
And, Nothing Is You
And here we are, the final chapter of Bleachers’ Terrible Thrills Vol. 3. This one brings us a reworking of “Foreign Girls” that features folk rock legend Ani DiFranco, as well as “And, Nothing Is You”  which is a remix of “Nothing Is U” that removes most of the electronic effects from the original and replaces them with more acoustic orchestrations.  Both of these new versions feel like more low-key, intimate versions of the originals. While the album versions both started quiet but then built themselves up to grandiose, bombastic finales, these versions both stay sedate for their entirety. I don’t think either surpass the originals (I like my bombastic pop songs) but they’re still great, and DiFranco’s contributions to the new version of “Foreign Girls” are fantastic.

Like before, I have cleaned these up digitally to remove as many imperfections, scratches and other issues as possible. I also gave both a slight loudness boost. If you load the first track into an audio editor, you’ll notice that the very top of the waveform at the loudest part is clipped off just a little bit, but I can’t imagine that it’s clipped to a degree where anyone could hear a problem with it. If anyone does pick up any audio problems with these though, please let me know and I’ll do my best to fix them. I think they came out pretty great.

As fun and exciting as Terrible Thrills Vol. 3 has been, if Jack decides to do this again for his next album, I hope he forgoes the “record club” format for something a bit more accessible. As I mentioned last time, I had to delay uploading the second volume for nearly a month because my copy came to me completely scratched. That’s not fun. I get the appeal of something like this; it gives the music an emotional value that you don’t get from a stream or digital-only copy. But vinyl is intrinsically an unkind format that is easily damaged and incredibly inconvenient. And while it’s (relatively) easy for me to rip vinyl cuts to a digital format so I can rock them on my MP3 player, not everyone is so lucky. Music should be easy to listen to, don’t you think so? At least the cuts were on standard records that preserved the recording quality relatively well, and Jack didn’t go the Joyful Noise route, saving exclusive cuts for shitty flexi-discs or other novelty formats (seriously, fuck that label).

Anyways Jack, if you’re reading this, maybe for the next series you could try bringing back CDs, the most underrated of formats. It’s only a matter of time before CD nostalgia kicks in, might as well get ahead of the curve!

Just don’t put it on tape. If you put it on tape I swear to god…

So yeah, enjoy the rips everyone! And if you missed the earlier releases in the series, you can find part one here, and parts two and three here!

Bleachers – Terrible Thrills Vol. 3 #2 & #3 (High Quality Vinyl Rips)

Thursday, May 30th, 2019

Terrible Thrills Vol. 3 #2
I Miss The Last Days of Disco
Don’t Take The Money (Demo)
All My Heroes/Hate That You Slow Me Down (with Muna)

Terrible Thrills Vol. 3 #3
Everybody Lost Somebody (with Julien Baker)
Good Morning After a Breakup/Vietnam Documentary

Better late than never.

After receiving a copy of Terrible Thrills Vol. 2 #2 that looked like it was used as a sharpening tool by Freddy Kruger, I got my replacement copy in the mail yesterday, alongside a copy of the third volume in the series. Thanks to Jack for personally responding and helping me get a replacement!

Neither copy look like they were sanding with a brillo pad this time around, so here you go.

Quick note regarding the audio quality though; even with pristine copies of these singles, they were pretty difficult for me to rip. These have a lot of quiet spots, odd intentional distortion effects, and sudden (also intentional) popping and clicking sounds. All of those things make removing things like (unintentional) pops, crackles and other surface noise very difficult.

I have a program called ClickRepair that I’ve been using for probably over a decade. It’s usually very good at scrubbing out any unwanted rice krispie-esque distractions from a record, but these proved difficult even for that powerhouse. Each time I tried to run it through that program, no matter what settings I chose, it would pick up the intentional distortion effects as clicks. The end result sounded like digitally scrambled garbage.

Thankfully, I have another program that also does this task called MAGIX. I mostly use that for EQ adjustments and surface rumble removal (it’s absolutely impeccable at that and makes it worth the price alone). I usually don’t use the click removal features on that because it alternates between too strong and not strong enough, but I was able to tweak it to knock out most of the more obnoxious crackles on each record. Some tiny imperfections remain, but vinyl is an imperfect format (as this entire ordeal clearly demonstrates) so they’re the kind of thing you just have to live with.

Most of the tracks sounds fine, but there are a few minor pops in the beginning of “Everybody Lost Somebody” that I just wasn’t able to scrub out. Sorry about that. However, other distortions in the recording, including some odd vocal clipping that come near the end of the song, are part of the recording so they’re not on me.

I do realize that 90% of the people who listen to these tracks won’t even notice these things, but I also realize the 10% who do will be the ones to leave comments, so I felt the need to elaborate.

Audio and shipping issues aside, these tracks are great. Julien Baker’s cover of “Everybody Lost Somebody” is fantastic. Like Mitski’s take on “Let’s Get Married” it strips the song down letting the lyrics speak for themselves more. I never noticed the lyrics “I think pain is sitting alone in the corner” before, great line. Muna’s “All My Heroes” feels like an amalgamation of modern-day autotuned pop and vintage 80s pop, also fantastic.

Of the “new” Bleachers tracks, which remix/rework album cuts, my favorite is “I Miss The Last Days of Disco,” which is a rejiggering on “I Miss Those Days” with added “disco” beats and vocal effects. It reminds me Antonoff’s other group Fun and “Some Nights.” Very anthemic.

Again, Jack has said that these tracks can be freely shared and copies, so please do with these as you wish and come back after part four comes out, as I’ll be sure to share them too. Just remember that it takes a bit longer for me to post them as I live in Japan and international shipping can be a real asshole. And if you’re looking for part one in the series, I got them here.

I also put all of these up on my YouTube channel so be sure to check that out too!