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	<title>throwing muses &#8211; HHBTM Records</title>
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	<description>HHBTM Records is an independent record label based in Georgia. Since 1999.</description>
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	<title>throwing muses &#8211; HHBTM Records</title>
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		<title>Throwing Muses &#8211; Purgatory / Paradise (LP)</title>
		<link>https://www.hhbtm.com/product/throwing-muses-purgatory-paradise-lp/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[diana@hhbtm.com]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Sep 2022 19:43:35 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[HHBTM is honored to be handling the vinyl/cassette release and distribution for Throwing Muses Purgatory/Paradise. Released last November on CD with an accompanying book of lyrics/essay/artwork, Purgatory/Paradise won the band some of the best reviews of their illustrious career. Coming on the heels of Kristin Hersh&#8217;s Rat Girl, a stunning piece of literature, P/P heralds [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>HHBTM is honored to be handling the vinyl/cassette release and distribution for Throwing Muses Purgatory/Paradise. Released last November on CD with an accompanying book of lyrics/essay/artwork, Purgatory/Paradise won the band some of the best reviews of their illustrious career. Coming on the heels of Kristin Hersh&#8217;s Rat Girl, a stunning piece of literature, P/P heralds a creative renaissance from one of the most unique artists in the history of rock. Hersh has always written with a cinematographer s eye, the epitome of show v. tell, and P/P is a masterpiece of detail. Sweaty and noirish, it unfolds like a film. We&#8217;ve listened to it to probably 50 times here at HHBTM headquarters and we&#8217;re still finding a new perspective and meaning each time we listen. Throwing Muses has inspired this label in so many ways, from the people who run it to the bands who record for it, and we&#8217;re beside ourselves with delight to be bringing this record into the world in vinyl form. But while it&#8217;s a thrill to be involved with this record, it&#8217;s not nearly as thrilling as the album itself a masterpiece. You can keep your True Detective; we&#8217;ve got Purgatory/Paradise.</p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">19118</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>Kristin Hersh &#8211; Wyatt at the Coyote Palace</title>
		<link>https://www.hhbtm.com/product/kristin-hersh-wyatt/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[diana@hhbtm.com]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 May 2019 06:22:59 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Listening to a <a href="https://pitchfork.com/artists/1934-kristin-hersh/">Kristin Hersh</a> album is like receiving, unfiltered, a direct feed of someone’s thoughts, with all the internal symbols, memories, private jokes intact before they apply all the translation and explanation and interpretation to the outside world.

<em>Wyatt at the Coyote Palace</em> (named for one of her sons) is a typically personal and idiosyncratic affair. Like all her solo and Throwing Muses studio releases since 2010’s <em>Crooked</em>, <em>Wyatt at the Coyote Palace</em> is accompanied by a book of essays and artwork: less commentary on the tracks, and more another set of puzzle pieces to put together. (As well as a recipe for “hooker gazpacho.”) Like 1999’s <em>Sky Motel</em>, the sonics are rich; in addition to acoustic guitar, Hersh plays bass, drums, piano, horns, and cello, and engineer Steve Rizzo helps make it among her slickest-sounding recordings. After five years of tweaking results, she builds many of the arrangements to the beefiness of a typical Muses track; others are interspersed with muffled field recordings, an effect like hearing songs through mental fog. Like the Throwing Muses comeback album <em><a href="http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/18660-throwing-muses-purgatoryparadise/" data-uri="5e3b6cae0fdc00a9437e422cf33cffa4">Purgatory/Paradise</a></em>, the album is fragmentary and self-referential; songs reappear throughout the album in reprises, or reworks of and callbacks to past material.

And like her 2001 solo effort <em>Sunny Border Blue</em>, the album is viscerally preoccupied with loss: “I’m so fucking tired of dissolution,” Hersh says in “Sun Blown.” Sometimes it’s general loss—the running joke throughout the album’s accompanying essays is Hersh and her bandmates’ brushes with death, both funny and sneakily serious (a fair amount of essays end in the hospital). A few years ago Hersh divorced from her husband of 25 years. It’s crept into all her work since—last year’s book <em><a href="http://pitchfork.com/thepitch/946-kristin-hershs-dont-suck-dont-die-giving-up-vic-chesnutt/" data-uri="35d697e9f2f86a15358b57c88c32af7c">Don’t Suck Don’t Die</a></em> started out as a eulogy for singer-songwriter <a href="http://pitchfork.com/artists/740-vic-chesnutt/" data-uri="5b0a3c1011ec2ce9dbf453ef7b5a5251">Vic Chesnutt</a> but became a concurrent eulogy for the two songwriters’ marriages. But “Sun Blown” is perhaps the most explicit she's been: “The bailing mate dance, failing patience, fool's silver...” Like most of Hersh’s imagery, it’s not oblique at all when you get the reference: in this case, silver being the traditional 25th anniversary gift. The verse appears as a refrain throughout the album: leading into “Green Screen” and its descending counterpoint of a melody: “Red skin blackening, what is happening? <em>The Art of Kissing</em>, the heart of missing you.”

Unsurprisingly, this is heavy listening. “Shaky Blue Can,” “Shotgun” (reminiscent of “<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UyPJJ89gwfk" data-uri="d661b39c000a1b128fc9a25b38baaab4">Terra Nova</a>”) and “Secret Codes” are up there with “<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQEy_Dzkx30" data-uri="788d8b8ec79f4bc321fe023e572b4a58">Listerine</a>” and “Flooding” as among the most fragile material Hersh has recorded. But her work is always threaded through with levity; these songs resist easy classification. “Detox” breaks through into anger—confrontational lyrics, distorted guitar solo—but the almost poppy “Wonderland” recalls the Muses’ midcareer singles; “Hemingway’s Tell” could easily be adapted into one. For every bracing line like “everyone like me’s a dead man,” there’s a gnomic one-liner like “Incense, strawberry candles and soap—way to butcher a street.” The former track, “Killing Two Birds,” is deceptively cheery—the essay accompanying it sets it during a teenage coke-fueled jog. The latter, “Between Piety and Desire” (like <em>Purgatory/Paradise</em>, a play on street names) becomes a “we don’t like the shit, ‘cause we belong in it.” The “we” is key. As memoirs, her albums are so intensely personal it’s little wonder she’s amassed a cult fanbase (and cadre of crowdfunders); as art, they’re arguments for the value of unapologetic individuality.

- <a href="https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/22636-wyatt-at-the-coyote-palace/">Pitchfork</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tracklisting:</p>
<ol>
<li>Bright</li>
<li>Bubble Net</li>
<li>In Stitches</li>
<li>Secret Codes</li>
<li>Green Screen</li>
<li>Hemmingway&#8217;s Tell</li>
<li>Detox</li>
<li>Wonderland</li>
<li>Day 3</li>
<li>Diving Bell</li>
<li>Killing Two Birds</li>
<li>Guadalupe</li>
<li>American Copper</li>
<li>August</li>
<li>Some Dumb Runaway</li>
<li>From The Plane</li>
<li>Sun Blown</li>
<li>Elysian Fields</li>
<li>Some Gone Slapstick</li>
<li>Cooties</li>
<li>Christmas Underground</li>
<li>Between Piety and Desire</li>
<li>Shaky Blue Can</li>
<li>Shotgun</li>
</ol>
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