National Ransom - November 2010

Pretty self-explanatory
Post Reply
User avatar
wardo68
Posts: 854
Joined: Wed Jul 14, 2004 10:21 am
Location: southwest of Boston
Contact:

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by wardo68 »

johnfoyle wrote:Pete's drumming sounds surprisingly 80's - very Punch The Clock vibe from the track overall.
Meanwhile, I'm still scratching my head over this. And from Mr. Foyle no less!
User avatar
John
Posts: 800
Joined: Sat Oct 11, 2003 5:52 am
Location: North of England

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by John »

They must have been up to something yesterday on Elvis' website as I Lost You is now back and available to play.
User avatar
John
Posts: 800
Joined: Sat Oct 11, 2003 5:52 am
Location: North of England

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by John »

I Lost You got another play sometime between midnight and 2am on Janice Long's programme on Radio 2 and Ken Bruce played Red Shoes this morning. It's Elvis overload on the BBC.
User avatar
wordnat
Posts: 175
Joined: Tue Apr 22, 2008 4:52 pm
Location: Boise, Idaho

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by wordnat »

re I Lost You: a jaunty tune, but I prefer the live version(s). EC sounds a tad stilted here, almost like he's reading the lyric from a phone book. Thoughts? :?
User avatar
John
Posts: 800
Joined: Sat Oct 11, 2003 5:52 am
Location: North of England

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by John »

Just listened to the Janice Long programme on here
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/console/b0 ... 28_09_2010

At 1:06:52 she says that she has had a copy of the album for a while but not been able to play it as it not it was not the final mix. She describes it as "wonderful". Janice has always been a fan, I think. I remember her way back on her radio 1 evening show in the 80's raving about King of America on its release. She also had Elvis on her show when North was released.

At 1:11:12 she plays I Lost You and goes on to say that Elvis will be "turning out on her show" soon.
User avatar
Top balcony
Posts: 923
Joined: Fri Sep 08, 2006 5:48 pm
Location: Liverpool

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by Top balcony »

John wrote:Just listened to the Janice Long programme
At 1:11:12 she plays I Lost You and goes on to say that Elvis will be "turning out on her show" soon.
OMG Elvis marketing his product in the UK?

However before my hopes of a chart entry became too elevated, I realised that the Janice Long show runs on air at roughly the same time as Channel 4 showcased series 1 of "Spectacle"..

Colin Top Balcony
sweetest punch
Posts: 5963
Joined: Sat Apr 03, 2004 5:49 am
Location: Belgium

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by sweetest punch »

Mike Compton has some "possible EC CD release dates": http://mikecompton.net/calendar.php
Since you put me down, it seems i've been very gloomy. You may laugh but pretty girls look right through me.
User avatar
Ypsilanti
Posts: 542
Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2009 6:02 am
Location: down in a location that we cannot disclose

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by Ypsilanti »

sweetest punch wrote:Mike Compton has some "possible EC CD release dates": http://mikecompton.net/calendar.php
...including Oct. 31st...I'm just sayin'...Badass Halloween concert...possibly in NYC, because the West Coast has been getting all the love lately...maybe that devil costume can come out of mothballs...
So I keep this fancy to myself
I keep my lipstick twisted tight
Neil.
Posts: 1576
Joined: Mon Jun 13, 2005 6:14 am
Location: London

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by Neil. »

wordnat wrote:re I Lost You: a jaunty tune, but I prefer the live version(s). EC sounds a tad stilted here, almost like he's reading the lyric from a phone book. Thoughts? :?
Wordnat, that's why I never listen to the live versions before a new album comes out - I did that with '45' and 'Alibi', and the album versions never seemed as immediate - the studio smoothness made them seem stilted in comparison to the urgent attack of Elvis's concert singing. I haven't heard the I Lost You live version, so to these ears, it's a fresh and bouncy pop tune!
sweetest punch
Posts: 5963
Joined: Sat Apr 03, 2004 5:49 am
Location: Belgium

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by sweetest punch »

Amazon has a vinyl edition for pre-ordering: http://www.amazon.com/National-Ransom-E ... 790&sr=1-6
Since you put me down, it seems i've been very gloomy. You may laugh but pretty girls look right through me.
sweetest punch
Posts: 5963
Joined: Sat Apr 03, 2004 5:49 am
Location: Belgium

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by sweetest punch »

Lupe-O- Tone has this: http://www.lupe-o-tone.com/

DUE TO UNPRECEDENTED DEMAND FOR OUR TWO VERY LIMITED EDITIONS OF THE 78RPM DISCS:

“A SLOW DRAG WITH JOSEPHINE” b/w “YOU HUNG THE MOON”

AND

“JIMMIE STANDING IN THE RAIN” b/w “A VOICE IN THE DARK”

BY THE LUPETONIANS
WITH VOCAL REFRAIN BY ELVIS COSTELLO

WE HAVE DECIDED TO OFFER THE OPPORTUNITY TO PURCHASE ONE OF THESE UNIQUE TWO-RECORD SETS BY THE PROCESS OF ELECTRONIC MAIL!!!

FROM SEPT 30th 2010 FOR A LIMITED PERIOD YOU MAY WRITE TO US AT growl@lupe-o-tone.com PROVIDING YOUR NAME TOGETHER WITH POSTAL AND E-MAIL ADDRESSES

SEND NO MONEY!!!

WE WILL PICK TWENTY-FIVE NAMES AT RANDOM FROM OUR MAILBAG.

IF YOU ARE AMONG THE NAMES SELECTED, WE WILL CONTACT YOU WITH DETAILS OF HOW TO MAKE PAYMENT

YOU WILL BE GIVEN FORTY-EIGHT HOURS TO COMPLETE THE PURCHASE BEFORE THE RECORDS ARE OFFERED TO THE NEXT PERSON ON THE WAITING LIST.

ORDERS ARE LIMITED TO ONE SET OF RECORDS PER CUSTOMER.

NO EXCEPTIONS, NO REFUNDS.

JUST $50 AMERICAN DOLLARS FOR THIS UNIQUE SET OF RECORDS

PLUS POSTAGE & PACKING.

OVERSEAS ORDERS WELCOME.

REMEMBER EACH PRESSING IS NUMBERED AND AUTOGRAPHED BY THE ARTIST AND WILL ONLY PLAY ON A 78RPM GRAMOPHONE

FOR PERFECT TONE, USE ONLY LUPE-O-TONE NEEDLES
Since you put me down, it seems i've been very gloomy. You may laugh but pretty girls look right through me.
sweetest punch
Posts: 5963
Joined: Sat Apr 03, 2004 5:49 am
Location: Belgium

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by sweetest punch »

The official website has a National Ransom page: http://www.elviscostello.com/micro/nati ... album-info
Since you put me down, it seems i've been very gloomy. You may laugh but pretty girls look right through me.
User avatar
Ypsilanti
Posts: 542
Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2009 6:02 am
Location: down in a location that we cannot disclose

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by Ypsilanti »

sweetest punch wrote:The official website has a National Ransom page: http://www.elviscostello.com/micro/nati ... album-info
Looks very nice, too. Sadly, the "Odile" part is all fucked up--the questions are there, but the answers are missing.
So I keep this fancy to myself
I keep my lipstick twisted tight
johnfoyle
Posts: 14852
Joined: Wed Jun 04, 2003 4:37 pm
Location: Dublin , Ireland

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by johnfoyle »

Jeans posts to listserv-

We saw actual test pressings of the 78s last night, and very spiffy
they are. EC announced an auction for the two test discs. To bid, send
a message with your high price to the Richard deLone Special Housing
Project: delones@rdshp.
No deadline mentioned but if I had cash to
throw around I would bid high and often.
User avatar
verbal gymnastics
Posts: 13637
Joined: Wed Jun 11, 2003 6:44 am
Location: Magic lantern land

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by verbal gymnastics »

All of the Odile stuff, the 78s and of course the fabulous music easily make my most anticipated EC release for a long time.
Who’s this kid with his mumbo jumbo?
User avatar
And No Coffee Table
Posts: 3521
Joined: Thu Aug 21, 2003 2:57 pm

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by And No Coffee Table »

Hear "Jimmie Standing In The Rain" at 1:02:50.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00v3mrl#p00bd21g
User avatar
John
Posts: 800
Joined: Sat Oct 11, 2003 5:52 am
Location: North of England

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by John »

Oh -I do like that! Lovely sound quality from the BBC website. Nicely sung by Elvis, kept restrained even at the end.
johnfoyle
Posts: 14852
Joined: Wed Jun 04, 2003 4:37 pm
Location: Dublin , Ireland

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by johnfoyle »

Great reviews in this weeks editions of two U.K. music monthlies - pity the disc will not be in the shops for another few weeks!



Uncut, Nov '10

4 stars (not defined)

Alastair McKay

Declan's back. In the 1920s. And other decades

The title, and Tony Millionaire's cover art, suggest this ambitious album is Costello's response to the new austerity . In parts, it maybe; thetitle track seems to fit Wall Street crashes of whichever decade. But there's much more besides. Produced, again, by T Bone Burnett, but veering away from the bluegrass stylings of Secret, Profane & Sugarcane, towards a kind of orchestrated R'n'B, with flurries of old-time whimsy, The Beatles gone gothic ("Church Underground") and vaudevillian story¬telling, it's dense and sometimes obscure. The high point is "Bullets For The Newborn King", a sweet lament written from the viewpoint of a regretful assassin, but "You Hung The Moon" (a swoony ballad about a seancefor an executed deserter) and "One Bell Ringing" ( about Jean Charles de Menezes?) offer strangely dreamy interludes on a record which is preoccupied with lies and death.


Mojo, Nov. 10

Phil Sutcliffe


4stars ('Brilliant')

Versatile like an old vaudevilian, he sent himself up as The Beloved Entertainer on 1989's Spike , but if Elvis Costello's an all-timer it's because he knows what high seriousness is about.

Consider You Hung The Moon:the setting is " Pimlico, London, 1919" ( says the lyric sheet, which suggests a time and place for each song); a mother holds a seance to contact her soldier son, an executed deserter. Over murmuring strings, Costello sings both the woman's grief ( "The sea has no tide/Since he was taken from my side") and the firing squad's brutal bravado (" So slap out his terrors/And sneer at his tears"). Song, singer and music together honour the bewilderment and beauty of mourning.

In One Bell Ringing, a quiet affair featuring lovely voice and trumpet harmonies, the protagonist has a terrible dream about being interrogated and shot. It makes you think about Jean Charles de Menezes. Then you read the scene-setting line "London Underground, 22nd of July, 2005° the song had already done its work.

Jimmie Standing In The Rain carries that seriuos weight too, although its hero is a fake "cowboy" singer mooching around the Depression music halls ( " Accrington, 1937 - " Now you're walking off to jeers, the lonely sound of jingling spurs"). Telling his tale amid subdued trad jazz, Costello measures his respect for this sorry figure like slow steps towards a New Orleans graveyard.

Three real Elvis mountain top moments then - and no lows. The other dozen tracks, T Bone Burnett producing , evince Costello's usual range of pungent moods, styles, and enjoyably angular writing, words and tunes. Betrayals and jealousies abound, whether accompanied by his combined Imposters/Sugarcanes band hammering late-'70 new wave rock (Five Small Words, The Spell That You Cast, Wall Street banker satire National Ransom), or gospel boogie supercharged by Leon Russell's piano(My Lovely Jezebel), or finely detailed yet unobstrusive arrangements of brass,organ, violins and more (Church Underground, Stations Of The Cross).

When moving to country idiom , it's striking how his language shifts from high tone - " Man is a miserable ape and a sad pile of sticks" (My Lovely Jezebel) - to straight-talking: " I chased the one I surely loved to someone else's arms"(I Lost You).

Occasionally his writing's so hyperactive it resists comprehension. In Dr. Watson, I presume.... can he be telling us,obliquely,about a psychrist advising him that to escape depression he'd need to start forgiving people, even Thatcher? Nah. That would be like Samsom getting a haircut.
johnfoyle
Posts: 14852
Joined: Wed Jun 04, 2003 4:37 pm
Location: Dublin , Ireland

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by johnfoyle »

User avatar
Top balcony
Posts: 923
Joined: Fri Sep 08, 2006 5:48 pm
Location: Liverpool

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by Top balcony »

Thanks John - great clip

Colin Top Balcony
Pigalle
Posts: 99
Joined: Thu May 14, 2009 3:04 am

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by Pigalle »

sweetest punch wrote:Lupe-O- Tone has this: http://www.lupe-o-tone.com/

DUE TO UNPRECEDENTED DEMAND FOR OUR TWO VERY LIMITED EDITIONS OF THE 78RPM DISCS:

“A SLOW DRAG WITH JOSEPHINE” b/w “YOU HUNG THE MOON”

AND

“JIMMIE STANDING IN THE RAIN” b/w “A VOICE IN THE DARK”

BY THE LUPETONIANS
WITH VOCAL REFRAIN BY ELVIS COSTELLO

WE HAVE DECIDED TO OFFER THE OPPORTUNITY TO PURCHASE ONE OF THESE UNIQUE TWO-RECORD SETS BY THE PROCESS OF ELECTRONIC MAIL!!!

FROM SEPT 30th 2010 FOR A LIMITED PERIOD YOU MAY WRITE TO US AT growl@lupe-o-tone.com PROVIDING YOUR NAME TOGETHER WITH POSTAL AND E-MAIL ADDRESSES

SEND NO MONEY!!!

WE WILL PICK TWENTY-FIVE NAMES AT RANDOM FROM OUR MAILBAG.

IF YOU ARE AMONG THE NAMES SELECTED, WE WILL CONTACT YOU WITH DETAILS OF HOW TO MAKE PAYMENT

YOU WILL BE GIVEN FORTY-EIGHT HOURS TO COMPLETE THE PURCHASE BEFORE THE RECORDS ARE OFFERED TO THE NEXT PERSON ON THE WAITING LIST.

ORDERS ARE LIMITED TO ONE SET OF RECORDS PER CUSTOMER.

NO EXCEPTIONS, NO REFUNDS.

JUST $50 AMERICAN DOLLARS FOR THIS UNIQUE SET OF RECORDS

PLUS POSTAGE & PACKING.

OVERSEAS ORDERS WELCOME.

REMEMBER EACH PRESSING IS NUMBERED AND AUTOGRAPHED BY THE ARTIST AND WILL ONLY PLAY ON A 78RPM GRAMOPHONE

FOR PERFECT TONE, USE ONLY LUPE-O-TONE NEEDLES
This offer is now closed

Lupe-O-Tone thanks you for your interest and will soon contact those selected.
Look out for other fine Lupe-O-Tone releases in the future.
johnfoyle
Posts: 14852
Joined: Wed Jun 04, 2003 4:37 pm
Location: Dublin , Ireland

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by johnfoyle »

http://www.spinner.com/2010/10/05/elvis ... al-ransom/

Elvis Costello Seeks Hope and Beauty in the Music on His 'National Ransom' Album
Oct 5th 2010

by Steve Baltin

Throughout his more than 30-year career, Elvis Costello is one of the few artists of whom it can be said he has truly done it all, continuing going wherever the music takes him. His superb latest collection, 'National Ransom,' finds the music and producer T Bone Burnett taking him back in time, exploring seemingly anachronistic "1920s rock 'n' roll" on 'Slow Dance With Josephine' and to 1919 on 'You Hung the Moon,' all with the astute eye, sharp lyrical play and daring that has made him one of the most respected and revered artists of the past three decades. Spinner spoke with the singer/songwriter about the new album, finding hope through music in troubled times and why no artist can make an album as good as Stevie Wonder's 'Innervisions.'

Congratulations on 'National Ransom.' I love how the music from the past fits in. One of the songs I highlighted was 'The Spell That You Cast,' and to me it had kind of a rockabilly, almost Eddie Cochran feel to it.

When rock 'n' roll first kind of happened, it was because some people jammed together a couple of styles that nobody thought should work, like Elvis Presley had put together rhythm & blues and bluegrass, and he ends up with a rock 'n' roll version of 'Blue Moon of Kentucky'; or Ray Charles does secular lyrics and gospel music, and he gets soul. So the strongest stuff has always been from people kind of mixing up the chemicals, and that's all we're still doing. We're not making any great claims to making an innovation here. But 'Spell You Cast' is a fun tune to play. It has a double bass and drums, but it has a mandolin and an electric tenor guitar. I thought it had a little bit of rock 'n' roll to it, it has a little bit of a kind of mod thing going on in there.

It's interesting how you talk about mixing because there are so many elements people now have to draw upon to create sounds.


That's right, we should be in the best time. You got no excuse for it being dull and playing the same four changes because you can listen to anything all over the world. Look at the Good, the Bad and the Queen: you've got Damon Albarn from Blur bringing in that sort of pop-song sense that he has from that group, and it's got Paul Simonon [of the Clash] on bass playing a punky reggae, and he's got Tony Allen on drums and got an Afrobeat thing going on in the rhythm. That's a truly modern band. Not saying that's better than everything else; it just shows you the way you can construct things now. It isn't the way I do it, necessarily, but I do dig it when people do that. You get stuck in any one church for too long, it's probably not gonna be healthy for the way you move music forward. [But] you constantly see bands make success and then five minutes after they've made that success they want to change it in some way, which is legitimate to them, but it takes a little trust on the part of the listener. Radiohead, there's a good example: They had some big hits and then they made records that are very crushed and use a lot of sonics that come from dance music, and people were horrified when those records came out first. Now you listen to them and they sound great.

Going back to the Good, the Bad and the Queen; you say that's not how you would do it.


I'm not picking things from such extreme worlds as Damon is, but it's the same sort of idea. And lots of younger groups that I hear, when you read interviews with them they'll be referencing records from the '60s, from the '80s, last week, and trying to combine them. And that's all I did when I started out. Obviously, I knew the music I'd grown up with from the '60s and I did know music from further back in time 'cause I was around it in my parents' record collection. And also, almost as soon as I got started I had success, therefore I was in pop music along with whoever you're talking about, the Clash and the Jam and everybody else, the Police, the Pretenders. So we listened to each other's records and probably there was a degree of competition at that stage. Now I don't think I'm in competition with anybody, I don't want to be, least of all with myself.

Is that something you to attribute to being older and more mature, or because with the success you've had you have nothing left to prove?

Well, I think also when you have the benefit of surprise, you were part of a new idea and then after a while you become somebody that they know, and then what are you gonna be known for? Are you gonna be known for repeating yourself or are you gonna be known for doing different things? And I'll take the risk of being known for doing different things, even if it means sometimes you lose some of your audience because you do something that matters to you it doesn't necessarily have to matter to everyone else. I'll take the chance.


The two people that come to my mind that have followed a similar trajectory as you in terms of being able to move about so freely are Tom Waits and Neil Young, who are both peers of yours. But as you've moved about in music, are there people you've looked to as examples you've admired?


Rock 'n' roll's become such a self-contained history and it was seen as a revolutionary force, and, in truth, a lot of rock 'n' roll is very conservative and predictable. Therefore, people like Neil, who, of course, I've always admired, and I'm the same as everybody, I don't like every record he puts out to the same degree, but I love the fact that he really throws himself into it. He doesn't do anything half-heartedly; if he's doing a full-on white-noise record it's a full-on f---ing white-noise record. And then he'll be doing an acoustic record and it'll be beautifully played. I know Neil less well, but Tom I've known 25 years, maybe longer, 30 years. I first met him, I don't want to say we were friends back then, but I used to stay at the hotel he lived in on Santa Monica Boulevard [In L.A.], so the first time I met him he was just at home. I can't say I befriended him then, but I've known him a long time and I've watched the way he has followed what he really believes, and it's inspiring.

All those people are inspiring, but you look back further into pop music before things were seen in terms of rebellion, Frank Sinatra changed his style a bunch of times. Bing Crosby started out some kind of jazz singer, then he was a movie actor, and then by the end of his career people saw him as your favorite uncle who plays golf and wore a hat. Louis Armstrong, one of the most revolutionary musicians in the history of music, ever, and at the end of his career he's seen as some sort of likable guy that sings 'Wonderful World' and a lot of people don't know anything about how much music comes out of him. You just take these really famous examples and then you think of all the other people with much smaller careers that are more like the scale of my life, and you gotta look at those people.

This idea of change wasn't invented by rock 'n' roll. Marvin Gaye wanted to be Nat 'King' Cole, then he makes a bunch of R&B records for Motown, then he makes 'What's Going On.' Stevie Wonder's the same: He's a harmonica protégé making instrumental records, then he's a great singer at 13 and then he makes 'Music of the Mind' and 'Innervisions' -- it's unbelievable! These are the kind of leaps, any time you feel yourself hemmed in, you just gotta look to the best stuff and hope that you've got the inspiration to go even a little bit to where they've managed. Nobody can make a record as good as Stevie Wonder made in those days. I don't think so, anyway; nobody can make a leap like that now.

You talked about how both Louis Armstrong and Bing Crosby were perceived at the end of their careers. At this point, albeit nowhere near the end of your career, how do you see yourself being perceived?

I don't spend a lot of time worrying; there's way too much music. I think one of the reasons I say I find it hard to imagine anybody doing anything as astounding as 'Innervisions' now is because there seems to be a lot of caution based on self-consciousness now. Although a lot music appears to be dangerous, you can see one of the thoughts in the making of it is, "How do I look doing this?" Because of the focus and the fact people are commenting all the time before the music's even finished, people are telling you it's no good, one of the unhealthy things about the ubiquity of commentary around music today is that so much of it uninformed.

The illusion is that art is a democracy, and it isn't: It's a benevolent dictatorship. The artistic idea is one person or one group of people determining to go a certain way, and if you don't take people with you in your audience you're doing it for yourself and it can still be valid. But it isn't a democracy: You're not making great music by committee with everybody in your audience sort of pitching in ideas of which way it should go. Plenty of people can tell you what you should be doing, but very few people can do it. Lots of people can point at what's wrong with something, but they can't actually create anything. So there's no end result off all that hot air; it's just hot air. And you gotta go with what you believe, and I don't consequently sit around wondering that much about the way people are seeing it in the long term. I'm too busy just doing it.

When you hear the finished record of 'National Ransom,' what do you take from it?

I take it from that we're in a moment that we've been in before in many other circumstances, that people are all sharing the experience of song. We're going over the edge of a cliff maybe here. I think the humanity in the characters, all the little struggles that are described in these songs, I always hope that we'll take it out that really the best that we can find within ourselves in these times is not the appeal of fanaticism, intolerance -- that's the truth of it. That's why I think songs are worth singing and worth hearing and being together. That's why the record ends like it does, with 'Voice in the Dark,' which is a hopeful song. So there has to be something better within us than all of that. I'm looking for that, even the smallest bit of light in the picture in all of these songs. I'm trying to find some beauty in all of this, otherwise it would truly be intolerable. There wouldn't be any reason for us to make any more records or sing any more songs.
User avatar
Jeremy Dylan
Posts: 934
Joined: Thu Oct 15, 2009 6:39 pm
Location: Sydney, Australia
Contact:

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by Jeremy Dylan »

Oh, and the Oct 25 release date seems to be holding true for Australia btw.
User avatar
And No Coffee Table
Posts: 3521
Joined: Thu Aug 21, 2003 2:57 pm

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by And No Coffee Table »

Free download of "The Spell That You Cast" if you provide an email address:
http://cdn.topspin.net/fbshare/ARTIST/3 ... =400&h=300
User avatar
Jeremy Dylan
Posts: 934
Joined: Thu Oct 15, 2009 6:39 pm
Location: Sydney, Australia
Contact:

Re: National Ransom - New Album Due Nov. 2

Post by Jeremy Dylan »

And it sounds wonderful.
Post Reply