LOST COAST: SOME VISIONARY MUSIC FROM CALIFORNIA by VARIOUS ARTISTS
SKU | 139587 |
Artist | VARIOUS ARTISTS |
Title | LOST COAST: SOME VISIONARY MUSIC FROM CALIFORNIA |
Label | HOUSE RULES / GOATY TAPES |
Catalog # | HR005 |
Tag | |
Release | W 26 - 2025 |
Format | Vinyl - US LP |
Exclusive | |
€ 30,99 | incl. VAT, excl. shipping |
Tracks
- timothy gray - its raining
- stephen ross david mason - untitled
- planetary peace - song without words
- lee underwood - quietude oasis
- terry garthwaite - sacred within
- martin scott - african sweet fantas
- donald eggers - full moon
- clay play - ancestress
- darrell devore - untitled
- martin espino - mexicayotl
Description
**COKE BOTTLE CLEAR - TRANSPARENT LP
A collection of obscure and unheard metaphysical sounds, 1980-1992
Lost Coast: Some Visionary Music from California assembles little unknown sounds from California’s metaphysical underground. Each recording is stylistically different—dream pop, guitar soli, fourth world, avant-electronic—but they are held together by a regional ethos of the “visionary.” This is music that envisions, seeing through the mind’s eye and conjuring new worlds.
Some people say that California is where “the nuts stop rolling”—where those too eccentric to fit in elsewhere ended up. What was meant pejoratively is easily reclaimed as a celebration of the free-thinking and the freely-freaking. Until the turn of the millennium, all manner of seekers rolled westward until they hit the pacific. Stationed along this edge, music was a way to roll still further: to imagine territories unencountered and wavelengths as yet unheard.
Lost Coast is a commemoration of the people who made these journeys and a resurrection of recordings they made little effort to broadcast. While some of the tracks were originally released on cassettes with modest distribution, others were only shared among friends or never shared at all. Assembled from the personal collection of House Rules operator Zully Adler, these recordings were all found on cassettes in flea markets, barn sales, rural thrift stores, and even stranger places—outside a gem and mineral shop, for example, and on the ranch of a retired mescalin dealer.
Nonetheless, these recordings are eminently listenable. California is a place where the strange and the pleasurable are frequent bedfellows.