| Search Results | Your search for "BET" produced 200 result(s): |
![]()
VINYL FORMAT + CD. Daniel Francis Doyle's newest release We Bet Our Money on You aligns with what you'd expect from the previous Early Lines member and one of Austin's few stand-alone, multi-instrumentalists. Carrying over some of those dissonant, brazen tendencies from his earlier work while espousing his ability to truly progress, his third album is clean(er), but adamantly preserves the dry 70's production qualities that Doyle and Barrett Walton of Infinity Recording are so fond of. With a handful of gu... [ read more ]
LP+CD $12.99
Other people also bought:
Hunx and His Punx Teardrops on My Telephone, Washed Out Life of Leisure PRE-ORDER, The Dandy Warhols Thirteen Tales of Urban Bohemia
![]()
The third full-length by Olympia, WA's Lois Maffeo finds the {singer-songwriter} with a new pair of musical partners, Fugazi drummer Brendan Canty on guitar and ex-Tiger Trap drummer Heather Dunn, but otherwise continuing the low-key, but never {lo-fi}, acoustic {twee pop} of the earlier Butterfly Kiss and Strumpet. The difference this time is that Maffeo's songwriting is sharper, with better melodies and cleverer lyrics. The opening Charles Atlas, a witty recasting of the wimp-turned-macho man ads from th... [ read more ]
MP3 $10.49
Other people also bought:
Tomorrowland People Mover, Technicolor One Touch Test Strip, Convocation of... Pyramid Technology
![]()
Yet another group to emerge from the ever-fertile Minneapolis music scene, the Honeydogs originally comprised singer/guitarist Adam Levy (formerly of the Picadors), his drummer brother Noah (also a member of Golden Smog) and bassist Trent Norton. The band debuted with a 1995 self-titled effort which introduced their twangy garage-pop sound; following the addition of second guitarist Tommy Borscheid, the Honeydogs returned to the studio to record their second effort, 1996's Everything, I Bet You.
MP3 $10.49
Other people also bought:
Black Flag My War, Bomb Pops Everything ( Looks Like Her ), Commercial Breakup Nothing But A Lie