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habbazoot

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Everything posted by habbazoot

  1. Somewhere in my house I have a white shirt with that design on it
  2. Damn, too bad you didn't post this like a year ago, I woulda had a ton more stuff you'd be interested in (and i'd also get more than like 10 cents a CD...) Anyway, found some you might be interested in: -NoFX - Coaster -Lagwagon - Hoss -Good Riddance - Operation Phoenix -The Mighty Mighty Bosstones - Skacore, The Devil, and More EP -The Presidents of the United States of America - Pure Frosuing and S/T -V/A - FAT Wrecktrospective: Twenty Years...and Counting! (a three disc Fat Wreck comp, a mix of greatest hits, demos, and the entire Fat Club 7" series) lemme know if you're interested
  3. Selling some stuff so I can pay a speeding ticket. Shipping is 3.50 for records and 2.50 for tapes, combine stuff to save yadda yadda. If you're outside the US message me we can work something out. 12" Beastie Boys - Paul's Boutique - 2009 180 gram reissue in a quad-fold sleeve - $18 (it's been played like once or twice) The Germs - I Fucked Your Mom live picture disc - $10 Great Apes - Thread - $8 7" Dead Kennedys - Nazi Punks Fuck Off! - an early press with red/blue ink. Original sleeve is in pretty rough shape (some splits, there's one tear that someone fixed with some scotch tape) but the record is in a white sleeve in it's own polysleeve. Also no armband. $10 Cassettes Beck - Mellow Gold - $7 Beck - One Foot in the Grave - $14 Dads - Brush Your Teeth, Again - OFFER Green Day - 1,039/Smoothed Out Slappy Hours (first run on Lookout, no barcode) - $8 REM - Automatic for the People - $4 V/A - Fat Wreck Chords Presents: Survival of the Fattest (Propaghandi, No Use for a Name, Lagwagon, Tilt, NoFX, etc) - $4 V/A - Alternative Tentacles Virus 100: A tribute to Dead Kennedys (Faith No More, Napalm Death, Nomeansno, Neurosis, etc all covering Dead Kennedys songs) - $6 Also, I have this The World is a Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid to Die mad libs book. They did a contest a couple years ago where they made these books, and you could send it in for a chance to win a 7". I got one and totally forgot about it. It's been untouched this whole time. It's numbered 35/50. If anyone wants it let me know. I'll say it's 10 bucks shipped but also I have no idea what to sell this for so just message me an offer we can easily work something out. Edit: I'm mainly looking to sell, but I'll trade for a few records...like if you have Double Dagger's Ragged Rubble I'll give you anything here
  4. Caught them at a show tonight. I don't really like them that much, but i love this album and they played a great set. The Body was killer too. They had a tour variant of this, purple with black splatter, if anyone was interested. Hope some info about Sister Fawn gets released soon, i dig it way more than this half of it.
  5. The individual orders sold out but the bundle is still up. Another 7" for only 2 bucks more? i'm alright with that
  6. So I got Interstate 8 today I only just finished Sleepwalkin', but to anyone else who has it: is sound quality of yours fucking terrible? The music itself sounds fine, but there's CONSTANT surface noise in the right channel. It honestly sounds like a shellac record in just the right channel. I thought maybe it was something with my needle but no other record has that happening. Also the beginning of Sleepwalkin sounded ROUGH... Edit: alright so somewhere during Tundra/Desert it went away, Enter the Sad Parts sounded beautiful. Side B has been a lot better too. Not sure what the deal was...
  7. Hopefully not too many people go after it, I've been waiting for a new Roar release for way too long
  8. I doubt anyone here has it but does anyone have this and would like to sell it to me pleeeaaaassseeeeeeee
  9. i sold my second press a few weeks ago for 60-something bucks and as far as i could tell that was the first time it was sold secondhand online (at least on discogs, though for some reason the transaction isn't showing up on the page?). idk about the first press but the second press sounds like ass (constant, loud surface noise) good luck dude
  10. Yeah, it's the only cap'n jazz release i've never seen for sale anywhere. I search ebay every couple weeks usually, and i tried here 2 years ago but no luck. figured i'd try again
  11. It's around that time of the year... does anyone have this and is looking to sell? long shot, i know, but just checking...
  12. I have that "My Two Dads" Dan Bassini zine or whatever the hell it was somewhere, you interested in it?
  13. Dads - American Radass (first press, black) http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=181279091011
  14. Wanna get rid of some things. Everything PPD. FYP - Toys That Kill - black - unplayed - $12 Japandroids - No Singles - white - $16 Joan of Arc Presents: Don't Mind Control - blue /500 - First disc really warped. When I first got it I couldn't even play it, it sat on my shelf for two years. Tried it out the other day and it's still pretty warped, but it plays. It sounds fine though - $11 V/A - Fat Music for Fest People II - PBR tri-color /339 - 10" - unplayed - $20 That Fat Music comp is so pretty.....but I need money. Feel free to make an offer on something, but I feel these prices are pretty fair
  15. The fact that so many books still name the Beatles "the greatest or most significant or most influential" rock band ever only tells you how far rock music still is from becoming a serious art. Jazz critics have long recognized that the greatest jazz musicians of all times are Duke Ellington and John Coltrane, who were not the most famous or richest or best sellers of their times, let alone of all times. Classical critics rank the highly controversial Beethoven over classical musicians who were highly popular in courts around Europe. Rock critics are still blinded by commercial success: the Beatles sold more than anyone else (not true, by the way), therefore they must have been the greatest. Jazz critics grow up listening to a lot of jazz music of the past, classical critics grow up listening to a lot of classical music of the past. Rock critics are often totally ignorant of the rock music of the past, they barely know the best sellers. No wonder they will think that the Beatles did anything worth of being saved. In a sense the Beatles are emblematic of the status of rock criticism as a whole: too much attention to commercial phenomena (be it grunge or U2) and too little attention to the merits of real musicians. If somebody composes the most divine music but no major label picks him up and sells him around the world, a lot of rock critics will ignore him. If a major label picks up a musician who is as stereotyped as one can be but launches her or him worldwide, your average critic will waste rivers of ink on her or him. This is the sad status of rock criticism: rock critics are basically publicists working for free for major labels, distributors and record stores. They simply publicize what the music business wants to make money with. Hopefully, one not-too-distant day, there will be a clear demarcation between a great musician like Tim Buckley, who never sold much, and commercial products like the Beatles. And rock critics will study more of rock history and realize who invented what and who simply exploited it commercially. Beatles' "aryan" music removed any trace of black music from rock and roll: it replaced syncopated african rhythm with linear western melody, and lusty negro attitudes with cute white-kid smiles. Contemporary musicians never spoke highly of the Beatles, and for a good reason. They could not figure out why the Beatles' songs should be regarded more highly than their own. They knew that the Beatles were simply lucky to become a folk phenomenon (thanks to "Beatlemania", which had nothing to do with their musical merits). THat phenomenon kept alive interest in their (mediocre) musical endeavours to this day. Nothing else grants the Beatles more attention than, say, the Kinks or the Rolling Stones. There was nothing intrinsically better in the Beatles' music. Ray Davies of the Kinks was certainly a far better songwriter than Lennon & McCartney. The Stones were certainly much more skilled musicians than the 'Fab Fours'. And Pete Townshend was a far more accomplished composer, capable of "Tommy" and "Quadrophenia". Not to mention later and far greater British musicians. Not to mention the American musicians who created what the Beatles later sold to the masses. The Beatles sold a lot of records not because they were the greatest musicians but simply because their music was easy to sell to the masses: it had no difficult content, it had no technical innovations, it had no creative depth. They wrote a bunch of catchy 3-minute ditties and they were photogenic. If somebody had not invented "beatlemania" in 1963, you would not have wasted five minutes of your time to read a page about such a trivial band.
  16. If anyone has extras of Built to Fail, The Apology, and All the Little Ones are Rotting, I'd also be interested..
  17. So I got this EP for a friend who didn't think they were gonna get it, but they ended up getting it. Unplayed, /500 "mustard/beer" color. Has download code and everything. If anyone wants to trade 333 for it (or to sell at a reasonable price) that'd be very much appreciated. my store ordered it, but didn't get any.
  18. I ordered a copy of this off of discogs, but arrived cracked in half... ...so does anyone have a copy for sale? I'd really love to get it for 15 bucks shipped, but that's pretty low so I get it's not totally feasible
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