Sold Date:
September 25, 2022
Start Date:
October 25, 2016
Final Price:
$24.69
(USD)
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Robert Pollard - Not In My Airforce [New Vinyl LP]
Artist: Robert Pollard
Title: Not In My Airforce
Format: Vinyl LP
Genre: Rock
UPC: 655035086712
Release Date: 2016
Record Label: Guided By Voices
Album Tracks
1. Maggie Turns to Flies
2. Quicksilver
3. A Girl Named Captain
4. Get Under It
5. Release the Sunbird
6. John Strange School
7. Parakeet Troopers
8. One Clear Minute
9. Chance to Buy An Island
10. I've Owned You for Centuries
11. The Ash Gray Proclamation
12. Flat Beauty
13. King of Arthur Avenue
14. Roofer's Union Fight Song
15. Psychic Pilot Clocks Out
16. Prom Is Coming
17. Party (Bonus Track)
18. Did It Play? (Bonus Track)
19. Double Standards Inc. (Bonus Track)
20. Punk Rock Gods (Bonus Track)
21. Meet My Team (Bonus Track)
22. Good Luck Sailor (Bonus Track)
Vinyl LP pressing including bonus seven inch vinyl single. Guided By Voices Inc. Is more excited than a bucket of photo-excited electrons to announce the 20th anniversary reissue of Robert Pollard's first solo album Not In My Airforce. Originally released by Matador Records on September 10, 1996, the album includes several songs that have become fan favorites and staples of GBV live shows throughout the years: "Psychic Pilot Clocks Out, " "Flat Beauty, " "Quicksilver, " "Get Under It, " and "Maggie Turns To Flies, " among others. Other album tracks have inspired a band name ("Release The Sunbird"), a music blog ("The Ash Gray Proclamation") and a record label ("Prom Is Coming"). We're pretty sure that at least one British nuclear missile-equipped submarine has been named after "Parakeet Troopers, " but MI6 refuses to confirm. The vinyl version of the album includes a six-song seven-inch single, which was the original plan in 1996, before the bean-counters insisted on combining the bonus songs with the CD and LP. These bonus songs ("Party, " "Did It Play?, " "Double Standards Inc., " "Punk Rock Gods, " "Meet My Team, " and "Good Luck Sailor") swelled the original release to 22 songs-not that there's anything wrong with that. Everyone can agree that more Bob is good. The charming, good-looking, record-buying public would like to hear NIMAF as both God and Bob originally intended. This is a landmark recording in the Pollardian corpus, in that it both presaged the flood of solo albums, side projects, collaborations, and line-up changes to come, and established the precedent that Robert Pollard, whether solo or in concert with his Dayton, OH, pals, is a flat-out miracle worker of songcraft.
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