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Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Inner Fare - (2011) Dirty Doubler CS


Jeff Zagers and Rick Weaver
way back to the day

"The first side is an excerpt of our seemingly endless "drums on tape" composition entitled 'Dirty Doubler.' Also bearing the name of Dirty Doubler is a sound installation, a Family Visions movie, an object (or two), and a festival in St. Louis.

The second side is an introduction to the Inner Fare code of conduct. Musical moments captured between our initial 'meeting of the minds' in Mt. Airy, Maryland, May 2009 up until a Florida excursion laced with pure luck in February 2011."

original press c92 was limited to 30 copies

credits

released January 1, 2012

Jeff Zagers and Rick Weaver

cameos by
Alex Hampshire
Ben Kelley
Noah Anthony
Kylie Lance 
 

Rites OF Spring - (1985) ST LP

  Dischord Records ‎– № 16

The Dicks - (1980) Ten Inches 10''

 Delta Pop Music ‎– DPM007

Capitalist Casualties & Man Is The Bastard - (2009) Split LP

 Six Weeks ‎– SW 03.5

Abner Jay - (2010) Folk Song Stylist LP

 Mississippi Records ‎– MR-068

Howlin' Wolf - (2011) Moanin' In The Moonlight LP

 Chess ‎– LP-1434

The Third Eye Foundation - (1997) Sound Of Violence CD

 Merge Records ‎– MRG134CD

Hood - (1998) Rustic Houses Forlorn Valleys LP

 Domino ‎– WIGLP 42

Hood - 1996 - Silent '88 LP

 Slumberland Records ‎– slr 59

Silent ’88 is one of those records where the surface quiet is deceptive. Hood did not make silence as emptiness. They made silence as weather: grey streets, distant rooms, tape hiss, half-melodies, small guitar figures, and songs that seem to arrive already worn from memory. The music sits between lo-fi indie rock, early post-rock, and experimental home-recording culture, but it never feels like a genre exercise. It feels like a place.

The Slumberland release gives the album an interesting double identity. Hood were from Leeds, carrying that unmistakable Northern English dampness and restraint, but Silent ’88 also entered the American indie underground through one of its most beloved labels. That crossing makes sense. Slumberland understood records that could be fragile without being precious, melodic without becoming glossy, and rough without treating roughness as a gimmick. Hood fit that world perfectly while still sounding like they had brought their own weather system with them.

The LP plus 7" format adds to the charm. Silent ’88 is not just a sequence of songs, but a small physical arrangement: the album, the extra disc, the label design, the pause required to change sides, the little ritual of handling the object. That matters even more here because this post comes from your own rip. The file is not just a copy floating loose from nowhere. It carries the path from a physical record through your playback chain into the archive.

That transfer history feels right for Hood. Their music has always been full of traces: room noise, distance, blurred edges, sounds that feel found as much as played. A personal FLAC rip preserves the record as both music and encounter. Silent ’88 remains beautifully unresolved, half song and half fogged window, but the post gives it another life in the open air. Not restored into brightness, thankfully. Just carried forward with the weather still inside it.

Hood - (1995) Cabled Linear Traction LP

 Slumberland Records ‎– SLR 46