DMZ: Lost Studio Sessions 1978 LP

22.00

In stock

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DMZ "The Lost Studio Sessions 1978" LP promo

13 ripping songs totalling 33 minutes from the original 20-song 65 minute master reel tapes, recorded in early February 1978 for producers Flo & Eddie, the night before DMZ (the raw-assed pre-Lyres outfit that never made it!) spent 3 days trapped by a blizzard recording their Sire album.
4 page insert with info, pics and Rick Coraccioโ€™s ultra-detailed journal on how it all went down!
LP includes DOWNLOAD CODE

Tracklist:
MIGHTY IDY #1 (2:28)
BAD ATTITUDE (3:00)
BABY BOOM (2:12)
OUT OF OUR TREE (3:09)
FROM HOME (1:36)
SHIRT LOOP (1:46)ย  (NOT RECORDED FOR SIRE LP)
BOY FROM NOWHERE (1:32) (NOT RECORDED FOR SIRE LP)
WHEN I GET OFF (4:43) (NOT RECORDED FOR SIRE LP)/DESTROYER (2:09)
HEโ€™S WAITINโ€™ (2:31) (NOT RECORDED FOR SIRE LP)
DO NOT ENTER (2:23)
I DONโ€™T KNOW WHEN TO STOP (3:00) (NOT RECORDED FOR SIRE LP)
MIGHTY IDY #2 (2:32)

Kapital Ink zine: โ€œIn the annals of R&R history, as far as local American rockโ€™nโ€™roll scenes go, Boston is hardly ever looked upon in the same shining light as, say, NY, Detroit, San Francisco or even Austin or Seattle. Unlike those other towns, thereโ€™s never even been a definitive book about the scene. Maybe itโ€™s because Boston is a perennial hard-luck place (just witness the Red Sox) with a serious New York inferiority complex hanging over its head. Boston is ignored by the industry at large, despite the fact that the city has spawned countless heavyweights in both a commercial (Aerosmith, Boston, the Cars) and aesthetic (Modern Lovers, Real Kids, Mission Of Burma) (Crypt editor note: and DMZ!! and LYRES!!) sense. Boston was the first US city to directly reflect the influence of the Velvet Underground, as epitomized by the Modern Lovers, whoโ€™ve proven to be almost as influential in their own right. Fast forward to the days of hardcore, and Boston was one of the pre-eminent strongholds of shave-head mania, shoring up its rep as an angry, intolerant New England outpost. Naturally the town has produced more than its share of local legends: Willie Alexander (who actually was in the Velvet Underground, albeit when the band was on its Lou Reed-less last legs); Jonathan Richman (geekus supremus โ€“ no small thing considering the subsequent indie hordes, to whom heโ€™s a savior); and most of all, the great Real Kids, (Crypt editor note: and DMZ!! and LYRES!!) who couldโ€™ve been the equivalent of the MC5, Stooges or Flaminโ€™ Groovies in the annals of American rock if it hadnโ€™t been for a series of bad breaksโ€ฆ but letโ€™s not get into that because itโ€™ll only reinforce Bostonโ€™s eternal self-pitying plight. The fact is, the scene in Boston was more or less built by a string of bands who are so organically-interconnected that it seems like an act of God.โ€

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