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Music Books



20% Record Store Day 2017 Discount



RISE ALBUMS OF THE YEAR 2016



Limited Colour Vinyl!



Erased Tapes Records




280018
Formats

  • LITA157CDCD  £ —Out of stock

    Remastered from pristine original master tapes. Liner notes by Hunter Lea with Lynn Castle interview. Unseen photos, press shots and handwritten lyric sheets.


  • LITA157LPLong Player  £30.00
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    Remastered from pristine original master tapes. Liner notes by Hunter Lea with Lynn Castle interview. Unseen photos, press shots and handwritten lyric sheets. LP housed in a deluxe gatefold Stoughton tip-on jacket.
    PRE-ORDER

Label

Light In The Attic

Lynn Castle

Rose Colored Corner


Light In The Attic Records is very excited to continue its Lee Hazlewood Archive Series with Rose Colored Corner, a collection of intimate recordings Lynn Castle made with Jack Nitzsche in 1966 and her complete recorded output with Lee Hazlewood on LHI Records. For the first time ever Lynn is sharing recordings from her personal archive and telling her story. In the 1960s Lynn became the first lady barber in LA just as long hair on men became hip. By day she was styling The Monkees, Boyce and Hart, Del Shannon, Sonny and Cher, the Byrds and countless others…by night she was writing songs. Despite lacking the desire to self promote and a crippling insecurity that made it hard to sing in front of anyone, her songs managed to bend the ears of such industry heavyweights as Phil Spector, Jack Nitzsche and Lee Hazlewood. Her sole 1967 45 The Lady Barber b/w Rose Colored Corner, released on Lee Hazlewood Industries is a slice of psychedelic pop heaven. A full length album was never completed, but her sparse demos with Jack Nitzsche give the listener a peek of what one might have sounded like. If you are familiar with Nitzsche’s mid-60s work with Tim Buckley, Bob Lind, and Buffalo Springfield…you can squint your ears and imagine her songs bejeweled with lush strings, finger cymbals, and delicate harpsichord. Instead, the songs remained unheard until now. Just because her songs weren’t recognized at the time doesn’t diminish their magic. This music is meant to be found and heard.

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