Sold Date:
March 16, 2014
Start Date:
March 9, 2014
Final Price:
$80.00
(USD)
Bid Count:
21
Seller Feedback:
9
Buyer Feedback:
11
INCREDIBLY RARE TEST PRESSING OF AN ALREADY OUT OF PRINT, VERY SCARCE debut LP by MOONHEARTS (Mikal Cronin, FUZZ).
THIS IS A TEST PRESSING - 1 OF 3 KNOWN COPIES. Comes with the original red jacket and the only original project # card.
This LP immediately went out of print and has stayed that way despite constant requests for it to be reissued. This is the best of the entire slew of Mikal/Ty Segall scene-related releases IMO. A full LP of the special brutally blown out garage rock that could still be heard when more Oblivians stylings could be heard than Beach Boys in Mikal's writing/recording. Very hard to find. Heavy vinyl, near 180 gram weight.
condition is new/un-played.
The Moonhearts (formerly Charlie and the…) fired up the ole failing
7-track (no shit!) tape machine and soaked it in their guitar-driven
trash pop to glorious effect, and along with friendly accomplice Ty
Segall to bring forth an LP that slays asses. We are talking “butt
cutters” from start to stop. The band’s debut LP continues along the
lineage set by a few great 7″s offering their take on sinking the
fuzz-covered hooks straight into some hefty, meatier chunks of blown out
punk scuzz. Peppering it up with a few minor mind-benders and melodic
garage-moves to great effect. There’s even some spine-shivering,
nihilistic elements of beautifully twisted sound-torture that recall No
Trend in spots, though for the most part, rough, angsty, blown out punk
with big melody. The Moonhearts require (and deserve) the
“pre-cliché-culture” treatment if anybody out there does. Because though
familar, it is done so well, it becomes thee furthest thing from
“paint-it-by-numbers and get a grade” punk. It’s just real, brute shit, a
record that’s got balls and with a great sense of melody, doing what it
does correctly. If you don’t have their “Charlie & the” Moonhearts
tapes, 7″s or split 12″, you will be socked in the face by this. But for
those who are even slightly aware of their previous
punch-you-in-the-fuckin-face iron hooks played through what sounds like
torn speakers on 11 next to your ear, well this ain’t no exception. And
the lyrical content is direct and emotional WITHOUT dumping some sad,
emotional, self- deprecating “look at me” turd all over it. The
Moonhearts have definitely moved into a solid, unified, long-player mode
with this one.