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  1. Rough Trade (64)

Items 10 to 18 of 64 total

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  1. RT-080

    Dear Catastrophe Waitress

    by Belle & Sebastian

    Just when they seemed sure to fade away into twee-pop irrelevance, this seminal Scottish indie-pop act releases their strongest album in seven years. With lots of help from uber-commercial producer Trevor Horn (ABC, Yes, Pet Shop Boys, t.A.T.u.), singer-songwriter Stuart Murdoch finally gets back to leading his band. It was a nice idea to have e... Learn More
  2. RT-088

    Twice

    by The Tyde

    Strange on paper maybe but an open-topped car stereo's dream, 'Twice' is the sound of West Coast American surfer kids obsessed with 80's English guitar pop. The summer pop album of 2003, 'Twice' sees LA's The Tyde - Darren Rademaker (vocals, guitar), Ann Do (keyboards), Benjamin Knight (guitar), Ric Menck (drums), Brent Rademaker (bass) - marry ... Learn More
  3. RT-090

    The Decline Of British Sea Power

    by British Sea Power

    The Decline of British Sea Power isn't your conventional pop record and it's not particularly a pop-sounding record from an English band. With garage rock ruling overseas and Brit-pop still making the charts in the new millennium, a four-man band from Cumbria arrived with a provocative post-punk sound brazen enough to blast away other indie rock... Learn More
  4. It’s The Ones Who’ve Cracked That The Light Shines Through

    It’s The Ones Who’ve Cracked That The Light Shines Through

    by Jeffrey Lewis

    Jeffrey Lewis is a comic book writer and illustrator, which makes sense when you hear his intimate anti-folk narratives. It's the Ones Who've Cracked That the Light Shines Through sounds like the musical equivalent of a comic -- it's homespun, fractured, naïve, and innocent in the same manner as Daniel Johnston's music. From the bittersweet life... Learn More
  5. RT-107

    Friends Of Mine

    by Adam Green

    The Moldy Peaches singer songwriter's 2003 solo album featuring 15 tracks of his sophisticated quantum-folk mix. Learn More
  6. RT-114

    Faded Seaside Glamour

    by Delays

    THE DELAYS are described as tech-friendly British Byrds, crazed acousti-rock with a fresh flowering of florid, ethereal future-pop. Packed with sumptuous West Coast harmonies; cloud- busting falsetto vocals full of beauteous yearning, splendid desolation & synth atmospherics. A 'Cathedral Of Sound'. If one characteristic defines Delays debut alb... Learn More
  7. RT-122

    Gallowsbird’s Bark

    by The Fiery Furnaces

    While the Fiery Furnaces arrived in a music scene teeming with bands formed by brothers and sisters (or, at least, by people who claim to be) and bands from New York, on their debut album, Gallowsbird's Bark, this brother-and-sister-led group from New York manages to avoid the pitfalls that those superficial similarities suggest. It's true that ... Learn More
  8. RT-135

    The Runaway Found

    by The Veils

    The Runaway Found is an arrestingly epic and assured debut, unmistakably like the work of a young band who instinctively understand that the only stakes worth playing for are the stars or bust. The Veils aspire, unashamedly, to the company of a peer group including the Verve, Radiohead, Coldplay and Muse: this is big, sweeping, serious music mad... Learn More
  9. RT-166

    The Libertines

    by The Libertines

    It’s two years since ‘Up The Bracket’ launched Peter, Carl, John and Gary, spewing crazy tales of Albion and Arcadia to a bemused and baffled public. NME put them on the cover before their first single had even been released (and The Libertines have returned the compliment, using one of our shots on the sleeve of‘The Libertines’). Excuse us for ... Learn More

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