Tad — Ritual Device / Daisy

Author: tracysigler | Posted: January 7th, 2007 | | Tags: , , , , , | 2 Comments »
Tad -- Ritual Device / Daisy

Tad -- Ritual Device / Daisy

  • Artist: Tad
  • Title: Ritual Device / Daisy
  • Year: 1988?
  • Format: Vinyl 7 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 6
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1988? – At our store RIP Records in Norfolk, VA
  • Keeper: Maybe

Tad, Tad, Tad. Do I like your clear vinyl single of “Ritual Device” and “Daisy”? I guess so. I liked it more than I expected, or remembered. It’s very uh… Sub-Pop circa 1988, which is not a bad thing. There was a time I just couldn’t get enough of this stuff. I don’t think I’ll play it ever again though. Maybe you need a new home. It’s not you, Tad, it’s me.


Tad / Pussy Galore — Damaged I / Damaged II

Author: tracysigler | Posted: March 29th, 2006 | | Tags: , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Tad / Pussy Galore -- Damaged I / Damaged II

  • Artist: Tad / Pussy Galore
  • Title: Damaged I / Damaged II
  • Year: 1989
  • Format: Vinyl 7 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 6
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1989 – Bought it for myself at our store RIP Records in Norfolk, VA.
  • Keeper: Maybe

This is a combo 7 inch with Tad on one side and Pussy Galore on the other. I suppose I could’ve filed it under P, or Various, but I have it under T just because. In our actual record collection that is. Both songs are Black Flag covers, “Damaged I” and “Damaged II”, which were both on Black Flag’s break-out album uh… “Damaged.”

I guess that original record made a big impact on folks for trendy indie artists to be recording covers from it only eight years later, in 1989. Another 16 or so years later and that seems a little strange. I bought the original Black Flag “Damaged” album in 1981. I loved it then as an angsty teenager, but it’s not the kind of thing you want to play often. Same goes for this 45. It’s kind of fun to have two cultish bands doing covers of a cultish band on a 45, limited edition of 2500, but I doubt I’ll ever play it again. And in the late 1980s no record label was cooler than Sub Pop. So cool in fact that even though my brother and I owned a record store we had to get this one just like everyone else, by joining the Sub Pop Singles Club.