Description
The Well speaks to and of Independent Project Records' past, present and future at once - There's a rare track by Neef, the first group Bruce Licher ever joined - The bands that made IPR a cult favourite among tasteful record collectors across the globe: Savage Republic, Scenic, Kommunity FK, Deception Bay, Woo, Fourwaycross.
Their side adventures, the ones even the most attentive of fans have not heard of, make a most welcome appearance: Spadra Moods witnessed the first steps of future Savage Republic bassist Thom Fuhrmann and future Scenic drummer Brock Wirtz, Snuffy was Fourwaycross bassist Steve Gerdes' solo project in the late 90s. There are highlights from recent releases: East Coast purveyors of dreamy melodies Springhouse wearing their UK folk heart on their sleeve, The Ophelias leader Leslie Medford turning psychedelia timely political on IPR's first ever digital-only single.
Previously unreleased recordings from the likes of Scenic and Barry Craig (trance music pioneer A Produce and guitarist from Afterimage) make sure the compilation never runs short of surprises. Mike White, who in the early 80s played guitar with San Francisco punk trailblazers The Sleepers, makes his IPR debut with an instrumental reverie that seems to have originated from space. A self-released, cassette-only gem from The Sunflower Conspiracy, an Indiana group who in the mid 90s were among those drawing a connection between dream pop and shoegaze, awaits much deserved discovery now that the two genres are witnessing a renaissance. There's the unexpected reunion of Shiva Burlesque: frontman Jeffrey Clark joining forces again with his old accomplice Grant-Lee Phillips to deliver one of the finest songs the two have ever recorded together (with Bauhaus and Love and Rockets founder David J lending contemplative bass).
There is no shortage of firsts, either: the label's first foray into the world of movie soundtracks - represented by an instrumental original piece from the award-winning documentary Louder Than You Think: a Lo-Fi History of Gary Young & Pavement - and its first flirtation with jazz, in the form of a track by Jazz Bedouins, an ensemble encountered in the 90s when IPR had its headquarters in Sedona, Arizona. Recordings from label heads Bruce Licher and Jeffrey Clark remind us that IPR is a place for artists run by artists - priorities have never been up for discussion. There are previews of the releases to come: retrospective reissues of Southern California underground essentials BPeople and Middle Class, David J revisiting favourites from his recent three-album compilation Tracks from the Attic with a full band. There is also IPR's latest signing: Driveway Ceiling, a band of college students moving back and forth between 60s psych, 90s indie and modern bedroom pop.