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Vinyl LP Records - - - The history - - A phonograph record (also known as a gramophone record, especially in British English), often simply called a record, was an analog sound storage medium in the form of a flat disc with an inscribed, modulated spiral groove. The groove usually starts near the periphery and ends near the center of the disc. Because the records were made of polyvinyl chloride they took on the name “VINYL”. In the mid-2000s, gradually, records made of any material began to be called vinyl records, or simply vinyl. The phonograph disc record was the primary medium used for music reproduction throughout the 20th century. - - - The details - - The LP record (from "long playing" or "long play") is a phonograph record format characterized by a speed of 33 1⁄3 rpm, having a 12- or 10-inch (30- or 25-cm) diameter, and uses the "microgroove" groove specification. Introduced by Columbia in 1948, it was soon adopted as a new standard by the entire record industry. The new product was a 12- or 10-inch (30 or 25 cm) fine-grooved disc made of PVC ("vinyl") and played with a smaller-tipped "microgroove" stylus at a speed of 33 1⁄3 rpm. Each side of a 12-inch LP could play for about 22 minutes. The average LP has about 1,500 feet (460 m; 0.28 mi) of groove on each side. The average tangential needle speed relative to the disc surface is approximately 1 mile per hour (1.6 km/h; 0.45 m/s). It travels fastest on the outside edge. - - - It is one, long, groove - filled with music. But, in reality, it is “Just A Groove”, an album oriented groove. Enjoy. - - - Join the conversation on Facebook at - - - https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100008232395712 or by email at - - - dannymemorylane@gmail.com - - - You’ll hear: 1) South of I-10 by Sonny Landreth [From Landreth's 4th studio album, South of I-10 (1995)] 2) Angels by Peter Holsapple & Chris Stamey [From their 2008 album, Mavericks] 3) Rosie by Peter Wolf [lead vocalist of the J. Geils Band from 1967 to 1983] [From his 4th solo album, Long Line] 4) Five Cups of Coffee by The Jayhawks [From their 1989 album, Blue Earth] 5) Coyote Moon by Rainravens [From the 1996 album, Rainravens] 6) We Have Forgotten by Sixpence None The Richer [From their 1997 album, Sixpence None The Richer] 7) Free Your Mind by The Band [From their 1996 album, High on The Hog] 8) Open All Night by Son Volt [From Badlands: A Tribute To Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska] 9) Save Me by Aimee Mann [Written & performed for the 1999 film, Magnolia] 10) Gravity Fails by The Bottle Rockets [From the 1994 album, The Brooklyn Side] 11) Still Be Around by Uncle Tupelo [From his 1991 album, Still Feel Gone] 12) Birdland by Jolene [From the album, Hell's Half Acre, their debut LP, rel. 1996] 13) Fade Into You by Mazzy Star (w/ Hope Sandoval, lead vocals) [From their 1993 album (2nd studio), So Tonight That I Might See] 14) Carolyn by Steve Wynn [From the 1990 album, Kerosene Man] 15) Without Her Around by Swales [From the 1995 album, What's His Name] 16) Left Of The Middle by Natalie Imbruglia [From her 1997 debut studio album, Left Of The Middle] 17) Mixed Up, Shook Up Girl by Mink Deville [From the 1977 album, Cabretta] 18) Get Out Of This House by Shawn Colvin [From the 1996 album, A Few Small Repairs] 19) Box Full Of Letters by Wilco [From the 1995 album, A.M.] 20) Hearts On Fire by Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris [From Grievous Angel (1973)] 21) I'll Be Your Baby Tonight by Kris Kristofferson [From Bob Dylan: The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration] 22) Drawn To The Rhythm by Sarah McLachlan [From the 1991 album, Solace] 23) Put Down The Gun by Peter Case [From the 1989 album, The Man with the Blue Post-Modern Fragmented Neo-Traditionalist Guitar] 24) Misguided Angel by Cowboy Junkies (w/ Margo Timmins, lead vocals) [From their 2nd album, The Trinity Session] 25) She Never Spoke Spanish To Me by Joe Ely [From his 1977 self-titled album, Joe Ely] 26) Love To Love You by The Corrs [From the 1995 album, Forgiven, Not Forgotten] 27) Is Fellini Really Dead? by Elliott Murphy [From the 1995 album, Selling The Gold] 28) Gulf Coast Highway by Nanci Griffith (Duet w/Darius Rucker) [From her 1997 album, Blue Roses From The Moons] 29) 4th Of July by Dave Alvin [From his 1987 album, Romeo's Escape] 30) A Long December by Counting Crows [From their 2nd studio album, Recovering the Satellites (1996)] 31) Feel My Way by The Mysteries Of Life [From the 1996 album, Keep A Secret]
Chad and Keith close out Still Feel Gone, realizing that they’ve talked themselves into not really liking it. Also: legacy bands, hating Eric Clapton, and “honest” covers. Songs covered are “If That’s Alright,” “Sauget Wind,” and “I Wanna Destroy You.”
Chad and Keith close out Still Feel Gone, realizing that they’ve talked themselves into not really liking it. Also: legacy bands, hating Eric Clapton, and “honest” covers. Songs covered are “If That’s Alright,” “Sauget Wind,” and “I Wanna Destroy You.”
Chad and Keith close out Still Feel Gone, realizing that they’ve talked themselves into not really liking it. Also: legacy bands, hating Eric Clapton, and “honest” covers. Songs covered are “If That’s Alright,” “Sauget Wind,” and “I Wanna Destroy You.”
It’s home stretch time on Still Feel Gone, as Chad and Keith battle a restless puppy to talk about Uncle Tupelo and what it feels like to be too hard core for the Beastie Boys. Songs covered are “True to Life,” “Cold Shoulder,” and “Discarded.”
It’s home stretch time on Still Feel Gone, as Chad and Keith battle a restless puppy to talk about Uncle Tupelo and what it feels like to be too hard core for the Beastie Boys. Songs covered are “True to Life,” “Cold Shoulder,” and “Discarded.”
It’s home stretch time on Still Feel Gone, as Chad and Keith battle a restless puppy to talk about Uncle Tupelo and what it feels like to be too hard core for the Beastie Boys. Songs covered are “True to Life,” “Cold Shoulder,” and “Discarded.”
Chad and Keith travel further up the river into the dark jungles of Still Feel Gone. There’s light chatter, but up ahead looms a giant statue of the Minutemen. Songs covered are “Punch Drunk,” “Postcard,” and “D. Boon.”
Chad and Keith travel further up the river into the dark jungles of Still Feel Gone. There’s light chatter, but up ahead looms a giant statue of the Minutemen. Songs covered are “Punch Drunk,” “Postcard,” and “D. Boon.”
Chad and Keith travel further up the river into the dark jungles of Still Feel Gone. There’s light chatter, but up ahead looms a giant statue of the Minutemen. Songs covered are “Punch Drunk,” “Postcard,” and “D. Boon.”
Chad and Keith dig deeper into Still Feel Gone and if you listen closely, you can hear some terrible realizations being made about this album. Also: accordions, and what email was like back in the day. Songs covered are “Nothing,” “Still Be Around,” and “Watch Me Fall.”
Chad and Keith dig deeper into Still Feel Gone and if you listen closely, you can hear some terrible realizations being made about this album. Also: accordions, and what email was like back in the day. Songs covered are “Nothing,” “Still Be Around,” and “Watch Me Fall.”
Chad and Keith dig deeper into Still Feel Gone and if you listen closely, you can hear some terrible realizations being made about this album. Also: accordions, and what email was like back in the day. Songs covered are “Nothing,” “Still Be Around,” and “Watch Me Fall.”
Chad and Keith venture into Still Feel Gone and encounter one of the great Uncle Tupelo 1-2 punches. But has Chad lost the faith? It’s pistols at dawn. May they fall down easy. Songs: “Gun,” “Looking For a Way Out,” & “Fall Down Easy.”
Chad and Keith venture into Still Feel Gone and encounter one of the great Uncle Tupelo 1-2 punches. But has Chad lost the faith? It’s pistols at dawn. May they fall down easy. Songs: “Gun,” “Looking For a Way Out,” & “Fall Down Easy.”
Chad and Keith venture into Still Feel Gone and encounter one of the great Uncle Tupelo 1-2 punches. But has Chad lost the faith? It’s pistols at dawn. May they fall down easy. Songs: “Gun,” “Looking For a Way Out,” & “Fall Down Easy.”
This week we go back to September 13th, 1991 to discuss Still Feel Gone from Uncle Tupelo and The Commitments from director Alan Parker. Still Feel Gone The Commitments
September 2016 Anniversaries Part 2: Megadeth, Billy Bragg, Talk Talk, Uncle Tupelo, Guns n Roses, Dirty Three, REM
For episode 11 we dive deep into the Uncle Tupelo world and come up for air after a whole lot of Wilco. We planned on covering Son Volt, too, but decided to take up that discussion on another episode so we had time for a special guest. Spencer Hackett joins us from Columbus, Ohio, to discuss the C-Bus music scene. Thanks for listening. Give a follow at @kdfpodcast, review us on itunes and send us mail at kdfpodcast@gmail.com.
On episode #38 we're again joined by guest Neal Schmitt to review one of Tim's favorite all-time albums, 1991's Still Feel Gone from alt-country pioneers Uncle Tupelo. There plenty to discuss on our first hour-long episode - the varied songwriting, lyrical and musical styles of co-lead singers/songwriters Jeff Tweedy and Jay Farrar, and the drumming of Mike Heidorn are rich for review. The discussion leads to this question: has there been another band since Uncle Tupelo that produced a pair of talented singer/songwriters? To comment, visit digmeoutpodcast.com for links to our Facebook page and Twitter feed.
On episode #38 we're again joined by guest Neal Schmitt to review one of Tim's favorite all-time albums, 1991's Still Feel Gone from alt-country pioneers Uncle Tupelo. There plenty to discuss on our first hour-long episode - the varied songwriting, lyrical and musical styles of co-lead singers/songwriters Jeff Tweedy and Jay Farrar, and the drumming of Mike Heidorn are rich for review. The discussion leads to this question: has there been another band since Uncle Tupelo that produced a pair of talented singer/songwriters? To comment, visit digmeoutpodcast.com for links to our Facebook page and Twitter feed.