Open today: 00:00 - 23:59

By continuing your navigation on this website, you accept the use of cookies for statistical purposes.

Hillside
Sunday In June

Sunday In June
Sunday In JuneSunday In JuneSunday In June

Artists

Hillside

Catno

C56LP018

Formats

2x Vinyl LP Album

Country

UK

Release date

Apr 1, 2021

Media: VGi
Sleeve: VG+

$44.99*

*Taxes included, shipping price excluded

A1

Sunday In June

A2

Trinity Strut

B1

Walpole Days

B2

Aguila Negra

C1

For Daniel

C2

Hidden Port (Album Version)

D1

1939 Grand Ave

D2

Walpole Days (Joe Claussell's Spiritual Healing Mix)

Other items you may like:

Pharoah Sanders has been described as ‘probably the best tenor player in the world’, emerging as a star from playing saxophone with John Coltrane in the 1960s. As a solo recording artist he is best loved by fusion fans for the jazz dance classic “You’ve Got To Have Freedom”. It’s taken from his 1980 album “Journey To The One” featured here for the first time on the complete side of a 12” single. “Got To Give It Up” is Pharoah’s outstanding rendition of the Marvin Gaye classic. It has previously been on 7” but never until now in its full length version on 12” single. It was originally a feature on the 1978 album “Love Will Find A Way” produced by Norman Connors. To have both of these masterful recordings on one 12” single is something special.
‘Kiwi Animals’ is a personal catalog of local oddities; affectionately recasting the 1980’s New Zealand Top 40 in a parallel universe of misfit pop, gonzo-tronics & voodoo-waves.Channeling South Pacific gothic sensibilities and edge of world melancholia, the album highlights unexpected electronic tangents from iconic NZ groups Blam Blam Blam & Headless Chickens.It dredges the C-90 revelations of art avante-gardists’ Drone & Kim Blackburn, along with the bittersweet pop of Rupert & Norma O’Malley. There’s the infectious minimal wave of Ballare and a reprised dance suite from Tom Ludvigson & Graeme Gash.The furthest depths of Flying Nun’s catalog are also plundered- a brilliant earworm from Stiff Herbert and a mysterious Roger Knox birthday promo. Mining the various disparate seams of a local indie label awakening, ‘Kiwi Animals’ congeals with future/primitive ingenuity and an underlying Antipodean pop mischievousness…