Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
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Black Vinyl with B-Side Etching
Record/Vinyl + Digital Album
Side A contains two Black Sabbath cover songs recorded in the midwest in the late 90's. Side B is a gorgeous etching of a black ram by artist Will Schaff.
Includes unlimited streaming of The Black Sabbath Covers
via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
When Jason Molina took on another artist’s song, he willed his own universe into it, his own personal and artistic mythology. Be it Conway Twitty or Townes Van Zandt, their blues were infused with Molina's own entrancing blues. This pair of newly discovered, home-recorded Black Sabbath covers is no different. Molina, a through-and-through fan of metal (seek out his high school metal band the Spineriders' album if you haven’t yet) peels back the sinister and stoned elements of Sabbath, zeroing in on the loneliness and brooding. He takes “Solitude,” from 1971’s unfuckwithable Master of Reality — and one of Sabbath’s more mystical, near-proggy songs — and doubles down on the title. Molina extracts Ozzy Osbourne’s gorgeously cooed vocal performance and transforms it into a high and lonesome sound, a desert campfire howler. And on his cover of “Snowblind," from 1972’s Vol. 4, it becomes obvious what a guitar hero Sabbath’s Tony Iommi was for Molina. Molina seemed to pull from Iommi’s odd, simple fingerings and tunings throughout his catalogue: from his first album (known informally as “the black album”) to Magnolia Electric Co.’s Josephine. Molina’s brief acoustic cover dials back the bombast, but you can surely connect “Snowblind”’s chord progressions with Molina’s own on the black album and Axxess & Ace. Recorded in the midwest in the late '90s, during Molina’s multi-season run of batting 1.000, these two intimate songs are a bittersweet artifact of one of the rustbelt’s titan songwriters.
Note to buyer: Do not attempt to play Side B of this 7” release. Side B is a gorgeous etching of a black ram by artist Will Schaff. If you do attempt to play the etching on Side B it will sound absolutely awful.
supported by 55 fans who also own “The Black Sabbath Covers”
I bought the cd on bandcamp on 30 november 2022, transactie referentie: 07C28307KL979312C
but I haven't recieved the album yet. when do you think I can expect the cd?
greetings Ruud Raaijmakers amai67
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