Monday, August 29, 2016

NIGHT FLIGHT: “Physical Graffiti”: Led Zeppelin’s 1975 double-LP magnum opus gets the “Under Review” documentary treatment

Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti — their sixth studio album, released as a double-LP magnum opus on February 24, 1975 — gets the “Under Review” treatment in this 2008 UK documentary, which features rare and classic performances (including their epic masterwork, eastern-influenced orchestral rocker “Kashmir”), rarely seen photographs and expert analysis by a few of their critics and colleagues. Watch it now on Night Flight Plus.

This one hour and thirty minute doc tells the complete story behind what whatRolling Stone writer Jim Miller called “their TommyBeggar’s Banquet and Sgt. Pepper rolled into one.”
LED ZEPP PHYSICAL GRAFFITI 8
Physical Graffiti was an incredible album that mixed heavy rock blues, acoustic finger-picked folk, 50s-influenced rock ‘n’ roll (a la Little Richard and Ritchie Valens) and other styles, and contained both the longest and shortest studio recordings by Led Zeppelin (“In My Time of Dying” clocks in at eleven minutes and five seconds, while “Bron-Yr-Aur” is just two minutes and six seconds). It is considered by many, including Robert Plant and Jimmy Page, to be the band’s highwater mark.
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Each of the fifteen songs on the two-LP set is examined and discussed in-depth by a host of contributors, including: Ron Nevison (who engineered recording sessions at Headley Grange); Chris Dreja (former Yardbird and bandmate of Jimmy Page’s); Maggie Bell (Swan Song recording artist); Nigel Williamson (author of The Rough Guide to Led Zeppelin; Dave Lewis (Tight But Loose editor and Led Zeppelin archivist); Malcolm Dome (Classic Rock Magazine); Rikky Rooksby (renowned guitar tutor and author); and, Neil Daniels (Robert Plant biographer), along with narration by the BBC’s Nicky Horne.
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Of these, Chris Dreja — who originally played rhythm guitar with the Yardbirds before switching over to bass, so that Page could become the band’s once and future guitar god — provides the keenest insights as to how Led Zeppelin were formed; Page who had wanted to take the band into a heavier direction (originally they were to be called the “New Yardbirds,” but Dreja says they“would have never been Led Zeppelin.“)
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Dreja:
“… The Yardbirds were a wonderful breeding ground of crazy ideas and free form, and of course Jimmy absorbed all that from us. I don’t blame him for taking them into the Zeppelin and making them tight and rock and heavy. It was an obvious thing for him to do, and he was lucky enough to find one of those rare things in the world. It’s like the Beatles. There are so few bands that have that mix of players that just feed off each other and create [such a] unique sound. It’s really rare, and I think Jimmy really hit the jackpot there.”
Dreja would end up dropping out of Page’s new Yardbirds project — he pursued photography instead — and John Paul Jones joined up on bass and keyboards.
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From the documentary we learn that Stevie Wonder may have influenced “Trampled Under Foot,” Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young may have influenced “Down By The Seaside,” and we’re treated to a performance of “Ten Years Gone” at the Knebworth Festival in 1979 (one of the live concert performances that didn’t get released on Led Zeppelin’s official DVD in 2003).
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Physical Graffiti originally began as a single album, with the band writing and recording eight songs at Headley Grange, a 3-story stone mansion (originally a workhouse for the poor, infirm and orphaned in Headley, Hampshire, England), where the band had previously recorded tracks that had ended up on Led Zeppelin IIILed Zeppelin IV and Houses of the Holy (we told you about how Page and Plant had also written several of the album’s tracks at Bron-Yr-Aur cottage in Wales in this post).
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They used Ronnie Lane’s Mobile Studio at Headley Grange, and according to engineer Ron Nevison, the eight tracks recorded were “belters,” meaning Plant was really belting out the blistering rock vocals for these tracks.
When the band realized they had already surpassed the available album length (approximately 40-minutes)— and they didn’t want to cut any of these great heavy rock tracks they’d already recorded — they decided to pad it out with tracks compiled from tapes recorded at many of the band’s previous recording sessions — beginning in July and December 1970, then January thru March 1971, May 1972, and then multiple sessions recorded in January and February 1974 — although the material was so good it can still hardly be considered “padding.”
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Nevison:
” “I never knew that Physical Graffiti was going to be a double album. When we started out we were just cutting tracks for a new record. I left the project before they started pulling in songs from Houses of the Holyand getting them up to scratch. So I didn’t know it was a double [album] until it came out.”
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The album’s cover artwork — an intricate die-cut sleeve designed by Peter Corriston — was created from a photograph taken of two five-story brownstone tenement buildings side-by-side in the East Village in New York City, at 96 and 98 E. Eighth St. at St. Mark’s Place (the fifth floor of the building had to be cropped out to fit the 12-inch square album cover format).
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Inside the little windows of the building were images of American icons — like W.C. Fields and Buzz Aldrin — along with a self-portrait by Marcel Duchamp and other images. The concept and design was created by AGI/Mike Doud (London) and Peter Corriston (New York). Photography was by Elliot Erwitt, B.P. Fallen, and Roy Harper. “Tinting Extraordinaire:” Maurice Tate, and window illustration by Dave Heffernan. The design was nominated for a Grammy Award in the category of best album package.
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When the album was released on February 24, 1975, Led Zeppelin had already begun their tenth concert tour, and immediately shot to number one on both theBillboard album charts in the U.S. and also #1 in the UK. It was the first album to go platinum on advance orders alone, a colossal achievement, and upon its release, each of the previous Led Zeppelin albums also simultaneously entered top-200 album charts again.
For much of 1975, Led Zeppelin were hammering gods of 70s rock, dominating sales charts and FM airplay, and towering over just about every other band in the land.
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Check out Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti — A Classic Album “Under Review” over on Night Flight Plus.

DVDG6T1-001.pdf
ORIGINALLY APPEARED ON THE AMAZING NIGHT FLIGHT WEBSITE 

Sunday, August 28, 2016

NIGHT FLIGHT: “O Superman”: Performance artist Laurie Anderson’s charting 1981 UK hit and video highlights NIGHT FLIGHT video profile

In her intro to Night Flight’s video profile on Laurie Anderson, which first aired in 1985, Pat Prescott says, “Laurie Anderson has brought the avant-garde into pop music’s mainstream. Anderson’s instrument is her body, and in 1982, the sculptor, violinist and multi-media artist hit the British pop music charts with a song called ‘O Superman.’ Using a Farfisa organ, tape loop and vocoder to manipulate her voice, Anderson — a self-confessed technocrat — parodied technology and ‘O Superman’ became new music’s first authentic sound sculpture.” Watch the complete 20-minute profile over on Night Flight Plus.

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“O Superman” was actually extracted from a four-hour long musical performance art piece of Anderson’s called “The United States – Part 1-4,” which dealt with problems and issues involving communication and linguistics.
In the video, you can see that Anderson always adds a visual dimension to her performance art; during live onstage performances she also plays violin and small keyboards while singing/speaking in a playful, sing-songy voice which is often transformed with the use of a vocoder, an instrument that was originally developed as spy technology to disguise voices.
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Behind her, a giant movie screen backdrop shows slides and presents an additional visual element to her unique way of storytelling mixed with performance art dance and music (the visuals are her own works, which often appear to have only a tangential relationship to the songs she’s performing).
Musically, she fuses electronics and simple melodies with sustained exercises in wordplay, using repetition as a device to sustain monotonous backgrounds over which she vocalizes  (“O Superman” features a tape loop of Anderson murmuring “ha, ha, ha” over and over, sounding like a Greek chorus run through an Eventide Harmonizer).
Laurie Anderson
The full title of the half-sung, half-spoken minimalist piece that brought Laurie Anderson to everyone’s attention is actually “O Superman (For Massenet)” — the parenthetical dedication refer to French opera composer Jules Massenet whose composition “O Souverain” — an aria which begins as a prayer to an authority figure, which one can presume means God, from his 1885 opera Le Cid — which had inspired Anderson, who has said it reminded her of Napoleon’s fall at Waterloo.
Anderson apparently started to get the idea for “O Superman” after listening to African-American tenor Charles Holland’s recording of the beautiful 19th century aria from Le Cid, which begins “Ô Souverain, ô juge, ô père” (O Sovereign, O Judge, O Father).
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She has also said it was at least partially inspired by the bungled attempt by the U.S. army to rescue the Iran Hostages being held in Tehran, claiming further that “O Superman” is a song of military arrogance and failure and ultimately about the price we all pay as citizens of a country who occasionally watch how their government fails to communicate for them, on their behalf.
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In June 2008, Anderson talked to MOJO magazine about the song’s beginnings (perhaps confusing the Iran-Contra arms-for-hostages deal during President Reagan’s presidency with the aborted Iran Hostages rescue attempt, which happened during President Carter’s four-year presidency), saying:
“In this case it was the Contra affair and defeat as we were experiencing a series of techno disasters- helicopters trying to rescue hostages and crashing in the desert. Oh, and as well as now, yet another war that is endless-or as the same war. The same conflict with Islam.”
Anderson got the idea to juxtapose images of “arms” — in this case meaning weapons — with a mother’s arms (“Hold me, Mom, in your long arms, your petrochemical arms, your military arms.” )
Anderson says the image of “Mom” is meant to imply the Motherland, meaning the United States.
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Anderson recorded the song with installation artist Perry Hoberman playing the drums, flute and sax, and Roman Baran on Farfisa and Casio, and also using a walkie-talkie. Anderson herself provided the vocals, and played violin and wood blocks.
The original 8-minute plus track was initially released as a 7-inch vinyl single during the first week in June 1981 on 110 Records, in a limited-run of 5000 copies, funded with a $500 grant she’d received from the National Endowment of the Arts. 110 Records was named because of its location at 110 Chambers Street in New York City.
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“O Superman” became a huge hit in the U.K., however, climbing all the way to #2 on the UK Singles Charts in 1981, after Warner Bros. Records bought and released it as a 12-inch vinyl single (with the same picture sleeve), pressing up 80,000 copies in its first run.
Anderson scored an amazing eight album recording contract with Warner Bros., no doubt because the 12-inch single got picked up by BBC deejay and tastemaker John Peel, who played the song so frequently on his show that it seemed she might be on the verge of a hugely successful recording career.
Today, “O Superman” — which spent six weeks on the UK Singles Chart, reaching a peak position of #2 in October 1981 — remains the only hit song to chart by a performance artist.
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Anderson toured to support her first album for Warner Bros., Big Science(released on April 19, 1982) which saw her performing at rock venues on a tour of the U.S., culminating with eight days at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in Brooklyn, NY, where her art opus “The United States, Part 1-4″ was performed live in its entirety during a two-night stand on February 7–10, 1983 (the performance that night was called “United States Live (1984),” after which she took ”United States” on a 16-city tour of Europe and the United States.

See and hear the music video for Laurie Anderson’s “O Superman” — which is now on permanent exhibition at MOMA in New York City — as well as other videos, and watch an exclusive interview with the artist as well, it’s all part of our 1985 artist video profile, and can be found over on Night Flight Plus.

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originally posted on the amazing NIGHT FLIGHT website.

Saturday, August 27, 2016

Olive Films Releases Once-Lost DeMille Silent and Sci-Fi B-Movie Classics

Olive Films Releases Once-Lost DeMille Silent and Sci-Fi B-Movie Classics


Olive Films, a boutique theatrical and home entertainment distribution label dedicated to bringing independent, foreign, and classic films to DVD and Blu-ray, is excited to announce thatSeptember 13th will be the release date of seven new titles, including Cecil B. DeMille's once-lost silentThe Captive (1915), monster movie gem The Monster of Piedras Blancas (1958), and beloved (but controversial among purists) Republic serial Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe (1955).

THE CAPTIVE (1915)
DVD and Blu-ray debut of The Captive (1915), directed by Cecil B. Demille, starring Blanche Sweet, House Peters, Page Peters, Theodore Roberts, and Gerald Ward.
Thought to be lost for many years, this early Cecil B. DeMille feature was thankfully discovered in Paramount’s vault in 1970. Olive Films’ DVD and Blu-ray release on September 13th will mark the film’s first availability on home media. In addition to being from one of the all-time great American directors, the film was also produced by Jesse L. Lasky, who would form the prolific Famous Players-Lasky Corporation responsible for 731 features and 363 shorts from 1916 to 1919.

The film also boasts a somewhat storied production history. According to rumor, DeMille and his co-writer Jeannie MacPherson engaged in an affair during writing and shooting. If one believes this story, indications of their relationship can be found in the subtexts of the film itself. On a darker turn, an extra was unfortunately killed during filming. According to star Blanche Sweet, this was a result of real, loaded guns being used as props. More tragedy followed shortly after filming ended, as Page Peters, who was just rising to fame as an actor, drowned in 1916.

For the DVD and Blu-ray release of The Captive, Olive Films has commissioned a brand-new score by composer Lucy Duke. "The opportunity to create an original score to a DeMille silent film is a singular opportunity-- a musician's dream come true!" said composer Lucy Duke. "I hope that the music is true to the era while remaining valid in a contemporary context, shining a new light on this film."
THE MONSTER OF PIEDRAS BLANCAS (1958)
DVD and Blu-ray debut of The Monster of Piedras Blancas (1958), directed by Irvin Berwick, shot by Philip Lathrop, starring Jeanne Carmen, Les Trmayne, John Harmon, Don Sullivan, and Forrest Lewis.
The Monster of Piedras Blancas, previously unavailable on DVD or Blu-ray, has become a sort of Holy Grail of monster b-movies. The Monster of Piedras Blancas, previously unavailable on DVD or Blu-ray, has become a sort of Holy Grail of monster b-movies. Shot over the course of two weeks, the film was produced with a final budget of $29,000. This micro-budget necessitated a resourceful craftsmanship from the filmmakers that resulted in the endearingly campy monster flick that fans know and love. For example, the monster’s costume supposedly recycled the hands from The Mole People (1956) and the feet from This Island Earth (1955). Many people note its similarities to the Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954) creature, and indeed producer Jack Kevan had a hand in the costume and makeup of both films. Science Fiction fans will also recognize prolific actor Les Tremayne (The War of the WorldsForbidden Planet) and pin-up queen Jeanne Carmen (The Devil’s Hand). At the time of its original release, its shocking gore earned it a place in the hearts of many young horror fans. This b-movie monster gem arrives on DVD and Blu-ray for the first time ever on September 13th.
COMMANDO CODY: SKY MARSHAL OF THE UNIVERSE (1955)
Blu-ray debut of Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe (1955), directed by Fred C. Brannon, Harry Keller, and Franklin Adreon, starring Judd Holdren, Aline Towne, William Schallert, Gregory Gaye, Ricahrd Crane, and Lyle Talbot.
Another title coming to DVD and Blu-ray from Olive Films on September 13th is the Republic Serial Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe. A debate exists among serial purists as to whether or not it can truly be counted as part of the serial canon. Originally, its 12 episodes were intended for a weekly television series. Its premiere, however, was as a weekly theatrical serial in 1953, with it finally airing on television in 1955. Episodes do not end with the traditional cliffhanger, but they do share many other themes and even characters in common with the canonical serials. In fact, Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe can be considered a prequel to Radar Men from the Moon, in which the titular character first appeared. According to rumor, the character always wore a mask because producers wanted the actor playing him to be more dispensable.
Other Olive Films August Title ART + FACTS
Blu-ray debut of Yours, Mine and Ours (1968), directed by Melville Shavelson, starring Lucille Ball, Henry Fonda, Van Johnson, Tim Matheson, and Tom Bosley.
 
Blu-ray debut of The Horrible Dr. Hichcock (1964), directed by Robert Hampton (aka Riccardo Freda), starring Barbara Steele, Robert Flemyng, Montgomery Glenn (aka Silvano Tranquili), and Teresa Fitzgerald (aka Maria Teresa Vianello).

Note: Olive Films will be presenting the 77-minute US cut, as it is currently the only version available for licensing. Contrary to popular opinion, the US cut is not censored to be less explicit-- the cut affects mostly the pacing.

 
Jekyll and Hyde... Together Again (1982), directed by Jerry Belson, starring Mark Blankfield, Bess Armstrong, Tim Thomerson, Krista Errickson.
 
DVD and Blu-ray debut of Mankillers (1987), directed by David A. Prior, starring Edd Byrnes, Gail Fisher, Edy Williams, Lynda Aldon, William Zipp, Suzanne Tegmann, and Christine Lunde.
About Olive Films
Olive Films is a Chicago-based boutique theatrical and home entertainment distribution label dedicated to bringing independent, foreign, documentary, and classic films to life. Its catalog boasts over 500 titles ranging from Hollywood classics to contemporary titles. More information about Olive Films may be found at olivefilms.com.

Friday, August 26, 2016

101 HORROR MOVIES YOU MUST SEE BEFORE YOU DIE | 101 SCI-FI MOVIES YOU MUST SEE BEFORE YOU DIE


 The popular, previously out-of-print guides are back

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND are two comprehensive film guides by Steven Jay Schneider, both of which were out-of-print for nearly seven years.

101 Horror Movies You Must See Before You Die is a whirlwind tour of the best and most influential films that have gripped audiences and filmmakers alike since the very beginning of cinema. It’s a a thorough appreciation of the genre, because it approaches the subject chronologically. You'll move through gothic classics like James Whale's The Old Dark House (1932) and Terence Fisher's Dracula (1958), to zombie movies like Dawn of the Dead (1978) and 28 Days Later(2002).

All the sub-genres are covered too, with insights from critics, film historians, academics and experts,from Eyes Without a Face (mad scientist) and The Howling (werewolf) to Nightmare on Elm Street (slasher) and The Silence of the Lambs (serial killer). And you'll learn that it's not just American teenagers who are horror-film fodder. There are classic horror films from Japan (Onibaba), Russia (Vij), Italy (Suspiria), France (Les Diaboliques), Belgium (Man Bites Dog), Germany (M), and the Netherlands (The Vanishing). Immerse yourself in the most compelling of movie genres. Prepare to be possessed - and whatever you do, don't answer the phone. 


101 Sci-Fi Movies You Must See Before You Die explores the most imaginative contributions to the genre, with intriguing details and insights by the author and a host of critics, film historians and more.

From the classic low-budget, space exploration Flash Gordon tales of the Saturday matinee serials to the slick, CGI-realized world of The Matrix, science fiction films have long been pushing the boundaries of the visually and dramatically fantastic. Take a classic cop chase, and set it on Mars. Think of a haunted house story, then add the Nostromo. Take the boy-meets-girl classic, then make them mutants. Turn the known world on its head, play with the laws of physics, and all the while hold your audience spellbound.



About the Author

Steven Jay Schneider is a film critic, scholar, and producer with MA degrees in Philosophy and Cinema Studies from Harvard University and New York University, respectively. An expert in horror films, he is the general editor of the best-selling 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die. He has written and and edited a number of books on the horror, including Fear Without Frontiers: Horror Cinema Across the Globe (Fab Press), New Hollywood Violence (Manchester UP), 100 European Horror Films (British Film Institute), Horror Film and Psychoanalysis: Freud's Worst Nightmares (Cambridge UP), Traditions in World Cinema (Edinburgh UP), and The Horror Film (Taschen). His all-time favorite horror films are The Haunting (1964), The Shining and Rosemary's Baby. He has recently moved to Hollywood to produce horror movies of his own, including one with Wes Craven and the sequel to White Noise. 

REVIEWS TO FOLLOW CLOSER TO DATE OF RELEASE

Monday, August 22, 2016

MOOSTERBLOG SUMMER SWINDLE WEEK FOUR!!


WELCOME TO THE MOOSTERBLOG SUMMER SWINDLE!! 

(for more information on the full contest rules view the original post here)

 

WEEK FOUR!

  WE'VE GONE GREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEN!

OUR FEATURED ARTIST AND LABEL THIS WEEK ARE:

 


 

WEEK FOUR OF THE MOOSTERBLOG SUMMER SWINDLE, WE ARE ALMOST HALF WAY DONE AND CAN YOU BELIEVE THERE ARE PEEPS THAT STILL AREN'T ON BOARD???! CONGRATULATIONS TO ADAM SHARANI FOR WINNING THE MARKET SQUARE RECORDS PRIZE PACK LAST WEEK. NOW ONTO THIS WEEKS GRUB!, WE HAVE A BEAUTIFUL PRIZE PACK FROM PAPERNUT CAMBRIDGE AND GARE DU NORD RECORDS(CHECK OUT THE PIC BELOW) (MIGHT ALSO EXPLAIN WHY WE ARE ALL GREEN AND SHIT!)


IF YOU AREN'T FAMILIAR WITH THE LABEL OR THE BAND CHECK THEM OUT ON THEIR LINKS ABOVE. GREAT STUFF!

PAPERNUT CAMBRIDGE
"Former Death In Vegas and Thrashing Doves guitarist and now prolific underground producer/engineer Ian Button has a list of current projects and collaborations that include Go Kart Mozart, David Cronenberg's Wife, Deep Cut, Darren Hayman, Pete Astor, Rotifer, Paul Hawkins etc.

Papernut Cambridge is his new band/project - based on an imaginary band from a dream in 1990 and brought to life in 2013 by assembling a group of friends and collaborators, Papernut Cambridge have now released two albums: 'Cambridge Nutflake' was released in November 2013, 'There's No Underground' came out in October 2014, and a covers album, 'Nutlets 1967-80' was released in June 2015, all on Gare Du Nord Records. The next album release is 'Love The Things Your Lover Loves' in May 2016."


GARE DU NORD RECORDS 
A London based Transcontinental Record Label founded in 2013 featuring releases from  Rotifer / Papernut Cambridge / Ralegh Long / Picturebox / Rapid Results College / Alex Highton.

HERE'S WHAT'S IN THE PRIZE PACK:

ALL PAPERNUT CAMBRIDGE RELEASES:
"LOVE THE THINGS YOUR LOVER LOVES" 10" RECORD ON BEAUTIFUL WHITE VINYL
"OTHER THINGS YOUR LOVER LOVES" CASSETTE TAPE
"LOVE THE THINGS YOUR LOVER LOVES" CD
PAPERNUT CAMBRIDGE BUTTON PACK
POSTCARD AND BAG
plus other goodies as we see fit! ;)

THE CONTEST




THE CONTEST IS VERY SIMPLE. FIND THE CONTEST IMAGE ON ONE OF OUR SOCIAL MEDIA OUTLETS(@MoosterRecords) AND PLACE A GREEN HEART EMOJI IN THE COMMENTS AND REPOST IT FOR AN ADDITIONAL CHANCE TO WIN! PLEASE USE HASHTAGS #MOOSTERSUMMERSWINDLE AND #PAPERNUTCAMBRIDGE. EACH PERSON THAT DOES SO WILL BE PLACED IN THE DRAWING TO TAKE PLACE AUGUST 29

also...don't forget to like GARE DU NORD RECORD on all social media and let us know so we can enter your name in for each "like"(up to 2)


DRAWING WILL TAKE PLACE ON AUGUST 29TH!

GOOD LUCK! AND HAPPY SUMMER!

RULES

1) Enter the weekly Label Based Contest(running every other week from JULY 11 to SEPTEMBER 26)

2) Make sure you LIKE Mooster Records and all the other labels on Facebook. Then simply LIKE or COMMENT ON our contest image for up to TWO more chances to win.

3) Make sure you FOLLOW Mooster Records and all the other labels on Instagram. Then simply LIKE or COMMENT ON our contest image for up to TWO more chances to win.

4) FOLLOW Mooster Records and all the other labels on Twitter, then send us a tweet using the hashtag #MoosterSummerSwindle.

I'm no good at math but that's a buncha chances, roight?


MOST IMPORTANTLY: CHECK BACK EVERY WEEK!!!


If you don’t want to do all the searching, I have all the links in one VERY convenient location, RIGHT HEAH!

INFORMATION:

For more information on each label click on the links above



BLAH

***UNFORTUNATELY THIS IS ONLY AVAILABLE TO OUR FRIENDS IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA, (sorry shipping is just TOO DAMN MUCH to everywhere else)***