Record Collectors brace for possible drop in value of rare singles, The Local Anesthetic compilation collects 11 legendary, extremely collectible punk records on one disc.

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Record Collectors brace for possible drop in value of rare singles, The Local Anesthetic compilation collects 11 legendary, extremely collectible punk records on one disc.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

March 3rd, 2008

Record Collectors brace for possible drop in value of rare singles, The Local Anesthetic compilation collects 11 legendary, extremely collectible punk records on one disc.

[See the attached file]For over 20 years, record collectors have bought and sold copies of extremely rare and highly-sought-after punk singles with legendary songs like “My Dad’s a F*cking Alcoholic” and “Drunken Sex Sucks.” Now, these classic releases by the Denver label Local Anesthetic are available to us all on CD/LP at a considerably lower price. Included in this bargain compendium are rare recordings -- the likes of which inspired REM’s Peter Buck and Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore to later seek out details on how they were engineered -- by The Frantix (featuring members of later Sub Pop grunge co-founders The Fluid), Bum Kon, The Nails (later to score a Top 40 hit with “88 Lines About 44 Women”), Defex and more.

In 1981, Denver’s Wax Trax Records co-owner Duane Davis formed the in-store label Local Anesthetic and released the debut single by Denver band Gluons featuring part-time Colorado resident Allen Ginsberg on vocals.

Local Anesthetic pushed forward as the only continuous independent label in Colorado, staunchly documenting the underground music scene of the early ‘80s. In tribute to the long-gone label’s influential releases, Smooch Records has compiled all the 7-inch singles released by the label, along with three other CO punk gems released prior to Local Anesthetic’s launch. This release arrives as part of a triad of Smooch archival reissues from early Mile High City bands which includes the Soul Merchants double-disc collection and the forthcoming studio discography by 80s thrash punks Bum Kon (authors of the aforementioned “Drunken Sex Sucks” masterpiece.)

Although all the singles fall under the punk umbrella, Local Anesthetic features a diverse collection of hardcore, new wave, ‘77 punk, artsy fartsy, goth, and experimental recordings from 1977-1983. Ginsberg may be the biggest name on the compilation, but “My Dad’s a F*cking Alcoholic” by The Frantix was and is the biggest hit released by Local Anesthetic. Drug-damaged punk played through broken amps, the catchy little number caught the attention of record collectors across the country and even Peter Buck from REM and Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth hunted down Denver producer Bob Ferbrache (Soul Merchants) to learn every detail about how it was recorded.

It was grunge before grunge. Bum Kon and White Trash played short, fast, and loud hardcore on par with any hardcore band from the era. The Nails and Defex were Boulder-based punk bands from 1977 who were the only two from the early era fortunate enough to release singles (not on Local Anesthetic). Only 100 copies of the Defex single made it out of the basement and existing copies fetch over $400 on eBay.

Two to three decades later, listeners are finally able to discover these landmark releases, record collectors be damned.

The Local Anesthetic Tracklisting:

Release Date: February 25th, 2008

01. Frantix “My Dad’s a Fucking Alcoholic”

02. Frantix “Car”

03. Frantix “You’re Ill”

04. Frantix “My Dad’s Dead”

05. Your Funeral “I Wanna Be You”

06. Your Funeral “The Abyss”

07. White Trash “Wake Up”

08. White Trash “Nazis in My Neighborhood”

09. White Trash “Ballad of Ronnie Raygun”

10. White Trash “I Hate Toes”

11. White Trash “Daddy Warbucks”

12. Young Weasels “Twist & Burn”

13. Young Weasels “Happy Feathers”

14. Bum Kon “Bum Kon”

15. Bum Kon “Forced Away”

16. Bum Kon “Drunken Sex Sucks”

17. Bum Kon “The Draft”

18. Bum Kon “Slow Death”

19. Gluons w/ Allen Ginsberg “Birdbrain”

20. Gluons “Sue Your Parents”

21. Frantix “Face Reality”

22. Frantix “Cat Mouse”

23. Frantix “Sharin’ Sharon”

24. Frantix “New Questions”

25. Jeri Rossi “I Left My Heart But I Don’t Know Where”

26. Jeri Rossi “It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World”

27. Rok Tots “Suicide Weekend”

28. Rok Tots “Situation Kid”

29. Defex “Psycho Surfer”

30. Defex “Machine Gun Love”

31. Nails “Cops Are Punks”

32. Nails “Big Star”

33. Nails “Another Lesson”

Kevin John Bozelka, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 02:17 (sixteen years ago) link

But does compiling rare singles (especially ones that nobody ever heard of, okay maybe not) on a CD really sigificantly reduce the price of the original 45s? I honestly had no idea there was connection. Sometimes I'd even think it might have the opposite effect (because it makes obscure singles less obscure, but doesn't make them any less rare.)

(Also. Where's "88 Lines About 44 Women"?)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 02:23 (sixteen years ago) link

That one's probably too popular to include here. Isn't it on Rhino's Just Can't Get Enough series?

Kevin John Bozelka, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 02:33 (sixteen years ago) link

But does compiling rare singles on a CD really sigificantly reduce the price of the original 45s?

that was a shitty joke in the press release that got copied and pasted here. LOL we're a blog now!

Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 02:35 (sixteen years ago) link

KBD hasn't had any negative impact on the rare punk single after-market.
Jus sayin.

ian, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 02:39 (sixteen years ago) link

that was a shitty joke in the press release that got copied and pasted here.

What are you talking about? I paid $401 for my “Psycho Surfer”/“Machine Gun Love” single.

Kevin John Bozelka, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 02:47 (sixteen years ago) link

I wouldn't worry about your single losing value, is the point, KJB.

ian, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 02:49 (sixteen years ago) link

Where's "88 Lines About 44 Women"?)

That one's probably too popular to include here. Isn't it on Rhino's Just Can't Get Enough series?

I was joking. Is it even the same Nails?? (I don't know if the "88 Lines" ones were from Boulder, but I'd be pretty surprised if they were punks in '77.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 02:51 (sixteen years ago) link

Seriously, though -- Does compiling unknown singles tend to increase, or decrease, demand for the original 45s? I'm really curious about the economics here. (May differ case by case, though, I suppose.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 02:53 (sixteen years ago) link

I would wager it increases.
Copies of "Bummer Bitch" (to name one example) have been increasing in value, AFAIK.

ian, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 02:54 (sixteen years ago) link

Really? What about copies of "Band Aid?"

Xhuxk, Scott has gotta have some insight into this.

The paying $401 thang was a joke too.

Kevin John Bozelka, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 02:58 (sixteen years ago) link

Well, the Killed by Death comps were the first (AFAIK) comps of rare & exotic punk singles, and now "KBD" has become an ebay search keyword, garnering thousands of hits for mediocre, if rare, '77-'80 punk single.

ian, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 03:03 (sixteen years ago) link

I would wager it increases.
Copies of "Bummer Bitch" (to name one example) have been increasing in value, AFAIK.

Yeah I would think it probably increases as well. When people hear these things they're more likely to desire the original single. If they don't know what it sounds like, they're less likely to pay big bucks.

Bimble, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 04:38 (sixteen years ago) link

Does name-dropping increase the desirability of a CD?

libcrypt, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 04:50 (sixteen years ago) link

it evens out in the end...for every person who hears it on a CD that says "I have to own that single," there's a person who says "thank god that's on CD now I don't have to save up to buy that single".

dan selzer, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 05:16 (sixteen years ago) link

I have that Jeri Rossi single - but that's because I heard it on a Homework comp and thought "I have to own that single".

Killed By Death is definitely a good example of compilations increasing the price of 7"s - most of those singles were much cheaper before they were comped. Seems there's a particular type of collector who'll seek out anything that's on KBD and pay more for it.

Colonel Poo, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 09:20 (sixteen years ago) link

I might get this comp for the Frantix tracks - those singles are already expensive, presumably because My Dad's A Fuckin' Alcoholic is on Killed By Death #6!

Colonel Poo, Tuesday, 4 March 2008 09:21 (sixteen years ago) link


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