New B-side 7 Inch

Hello ladies and gentleman, fish and dogs, Parrots, fruitbats and other fans of Circa Survive. It is the end of a decade and yet it is the beginning of a decade. As I write this, it’s somewhere in between the two and just in time for this splendid event we are proud to announce the release of our first 7″. Click the photo above to check it our or purchase it.
The record, with artwork by Esao Andrews, features two previously released b-sides from On Letting Go which we have used to raise money for various causes over the past two years. In keeping with that spirit, we will be giving all of the proceeds from this 7″ directly to our friend Trent Jacobi who suffered some terrible injuries recently. We hope this will help to put a dent in his hospital bills. You can read more about his accident here. Http://www.fearbefore.net Thankfully, Trent was able to make it back to the U.S.A before the doctors expected and was able to spend the holidays at home. We wish him well.
There is something about a 7″ that oddly enough makes me feel as though we’ve “made it”. When I started playing in punk rock and hardcore bands 12 years ago my friends and I always had the goal of putting out that little piece of black vinyl to tout at shows. It seemed something pure and solid in our basement culture that we could hold onto proudly, a sign that we’d made our mark. Somehow, due to various bands splitting up, material not being recorded, or more commonly the lack of cash, this seemingly simple goal has eluded me for years. The guys at Equal Vision have done a great job of designing this with a DIY feel. In fact, I just talked to my buddy at EVR and he is folding the cardboard cases together right now. Is it fair to say it’s DIY if my buddy is doing it for me? and it’s on a record label? Maybe not but the 12 years or so of work that I and the other members of Circa Survive have put in on the roads and the couches and vans and planes… Well, it doesn’t get much more DIY than that.
Here’s to the guys in my band and to every other musician out their that has a goal, whether it’s a pressing of 100 pieces of vinyl or it’s a platinum record. Keep up the hard work and it will come through to you.
Happy New Year!
Brendan,
+ Colin + Steve + Anthony + Nick
An Afterthought….
I have to wonder aloud before I disappear back into the real world… When we look back on this decade how will we see the music it produced. As we were swimming through this shitstorm of bad pop and bad rock that flooded the mainstream media outlets, I have to admit there were times I saw this as the worst decade of music since rock and roll was invented. But already, looking back I see Coldplay, The Red Hot Chili Peppers, Tool, Radiohead, My Chemical Romance, bands with true intent and purpose that were able to make an impact on the masses. And that was just to name a few. Perhaps it’s just easier to see all the horrible shit that’s happening when it’s happening. Hopefully, when it’s all said and done and we look back on these ten years we will only remember the good. The bad will slowly trickle away as a fad and we will never have to hear Puddle of Mudd again.
So I ask you, what will the next decade be like for music? What’s coming? A revival? Something brilliant and new? How do you see this past decade? good or bad? and how does it compare to other decades of music?



December 31st, 2009 at 7:40 pm
The last decade of music was good & bad. You’re right. Radiohead, My Chemical Romance, & all the other bands you mentioned were amazing and showed true intent on making an impact on the people of this world. I think the next decade will be good for music. Shitty music will keep appearing, as it always does. But I believe that it is a newer, fresher start to many small bands. They will flourish. Music will, hopefully, be completely reborn.
December 31st, 2009 at 8:15 pm
i think this next decade should be completely dominated by you guys…that can be your next goal!!! Turn all radio stations to circa stations!!!
December 31st, 2009 at 9:37 pm
just thinkin back on radio music.. very tired. It was so played out n lacked such inspiration. Such drive and heart was missing, it wasnt until ‘05 when i first heard Circa that i realized that music can be SOO much more than the bs that mainstream put out i mean its pathetic, i completely stopped listenin to radio once Your band opened my ears and mind in ways i never thot possible. Seems like mainstream is a ”me too” thing, one artist does something and another goes ooh me too.. quite sad how they put fashion before passion. thats not what its about. we all have our own minds so lets dip into our inner feelings rather than someone else’s. Thanks to all of you Circa Survive for showing me this. Thanks for being YOU. Infinite Love
December 31st, 2009 at 9:42 pm
super duper rad, it is bought
January 1st, 2010 at 4:14 pm
I can’t wait to see what will come out this decade. I think that this has been the best decade ever for music because western pop culture has pretty much met it’s zenith at this point so everyone’s just mixing and matching other subcultures and everything (i.e the independent music’s mostly late 60’s and 80’s infatuations). I think there’s so much clout against “mainstream” ideals at this point that it opens up so many possibilities for people to discover truer art (including music). Hell, the new grizzly bear record debuted at #8 on Billboard.
I too wonder about how this particular decade will be remembered, and how people will associate certain sounds with the 00’s in 20 years like “this is such a noughties song” etc. To be perhaps overly academic about it, I think it’s a really post-modern (whatever that even means) thing in that because this has been a decade where innovation was produced through mixing as far the music goes, the only true innovation is how the music itself is physically presented and released (i.e. In Rainbows). I think it’s pretty obvious that music will necessarily become more electronic, yet there will probably be a backlash eventually when people will revert back to more acoustic music and vice versa in an endless cycle.
Please pardon this rambling, badly punctuated mini-essay as I am still quite hungover from last night and am listening to the purple chick version of SMILE by the beach boys (which I can’t recommend enough), but as a closing statement I think this decade will necessarily pick up where the last left off. The 00’s set the palette and opened up pop culture to real art for the first time since the 60’s and everyone has the ability to hear music and be influenced by it in ways like never before due to file sharing (i’m way pro-pirate), so artists are bound to continue to synthesize the best things about music and create the most wonderful sounds ever heard by human ears. Watch out for the next pet sounds in a few years, i’m workin hard on making it happen
Happy new year guys. I can’t wait to hear the new record. I’m sure it’ll be brilliant.
January 1st, 2010 at 4:44 pm
Please don’t play on the radio. Thats all i ask. I understand that it’s selfish and rude sounding, but you guys are like the only thing that makes me different from anybody else anymore, and i don’t want to be ordinary. Haha.
January 1st, 2010 at 4:52 pm
Ever since i could drive a car and choose what i want to listen to while going anywhere, i have only listened to CDs and MP3s and wouldn’t even try listening to the radio. there’s only a couple of radio stations that are tolerable, such as classic and alternative rock stations. all the good music (including Circa
) i found via the internet or from friends. the time of radio is dying, and the internet will grow in power and introduce more and more great music.
by the way, i can’t wait for your new record dudes! the videos were so awesome
January 1st, 2010 at 5:29 pm
intent on hearing both your new record and secret & whisper’s new record. happy new year
January 1st, 2010 at 8:02 pm
I’m fuckin sick of this R&B shit. Lady Gaga + Rihanna make me go nuts, especially Rihanna, no idea why people would like such a soul-less marketing machine. Heres hoping for a revival of rock, REAL rock not this poser cutesy tight jeans rock, the real stuff. Happy 2010 everyone, lets make it good, we all have the power right infront of us.
January 1st, 2010 at 9:12 pm
Well Payton who knows if we will end up on the radio some day. But I’m sure there are plenty of things about you that are different than other people. You’ll find those things I’m sure.
January 1st, 2010 at 10:14 pm
I think that this decade has had wonderous music. Music like brand new, bright eyes, circa survive (ofcourse), death cab for cutie, explosions in the sky… just to name a few. the music of the 2000’s has been impacted by something that has made it possible for bands to become popular over night. Technology. The internet has produced so much excitment over music and social networking and youtube has made it more possible for music to become more personal. Music has become much easier to make, a few kids in their basement with a shitty mic and audacity can record a whole “album”. but with the internet, music has become more widespread and more copied. There is a generic quality to alot of music in this day. Which has its positives and negatives. Thats why i love circa survive. theres not much out there like this band. But i agree, generic shitty rock music, and pop bullshit requiring an auto tuner and complete lack of skill has taken over the minds of the youth of america. Creativity is losing its value, and could pose a serious problem to music in the future. Still there is alot of hope, there are many people out there, like you guys, who will continue making amazing music and continue being unique and creative.
January 1st, 2010 at 11:15 pm
with bands like the mars volta, coheed and cambria, mastodon, and the decemberists, i am truly happy with this decade in music. so many bands have succeeded at combining storytelling with a rock sound that’s unique to this decade. more diverse and abundant music with plot and themes is what i hope for in the years to come.
and payton, if they play on the radio, more power to them for spreading their music to a broader audience.
January 1st, 2010 at 11:51 pm
does this 7″ have a proper name?
January 2nd, 2010 at 1:31 am
I have to say that puddle of mudd may be one of the most annoying bands I have ever heard.
When I used to check fuse for the no.1 countdowns on rock and alt rock expecting to hear some good music as it had in the past, it would infuriate me to see a band like puddle of mudd consistently staying in the top spot. Their music was so terrible that I couldn’t even stomach listening to ten seconds of it. It sounds like a constipated kurt cobain without any of the talent. It really is grunge rock regurgitated in mainstream form.
Its such a sad decade in music when a band like puddle of mudd can achieve so much success by streamlining the progress in music made by bands like pearl jam, nirvana, and soundgarden.
The only bright spot in such a creatively spent music scene are bands like circa survive, brand new, saosin, and dredg who are ready to step out into the spotlight and usurp the power of the sellout bands. The only reason I say these four bands is because they have the greatest potential to appeal to the masses without compromising who they are. I can see a lot of people becoming fans of these bands if only they were given the opporutunity to listen to their music.
There were definitely some bands of this era that had the potential to be amazin. I remember when linkin park was a brilliantly unique band, until they streamlined their music and allowed themselves to be restricted by their record label. Even incubus, whose music earlier in the decade was just amazing, seems to have evolved into something more corporate and generic. Both bands just seemd to fall short of what they could have been.
This may sound horrible, but I hope for the day when a radiostation like KROQ will be playing circa survive on its stations, instead of bands who have clearly lost their way.
January 2nd, 2010 at 3:12 am
For me this decade is the best decade for music..started with Hoof Hooey (the band that i started playing with) doing punk and alternative stuff..moved to post-hardcore which did not stay with me for long..then i was introduced to you guys by a friend and that changed it all..started listening to you guys and couple of other bands like copeland, paper rival, appleseed cast etc..indie/ambient started growing on me at a real fast pace and now im happy to be someone who feels music (credit goes to circa)
Juturna was the best album for me this decade..avalon and the remix were equally impressive..colin’s singles are great to listen to..some of other bands which are worth mentioning are copeland, mutemath, appleseed cast and evaline..recently started listening to as tall as lions and im liking it so far..
I dont know about the changes that this decade will bring to my choice of music..im happy and scared at the same time..
January 2nd, 2010 at 5:33 am
Music is subjective, music is infinate, music is a pain, an art, feeling, polarity, opinionated/political, overplayed, underplayed, not realized, over-thought, too much to handle, but yet so much controversy beyond the point of enjoying the music itself. I listen to the radio, I listen to my dads old classic rock records, I listen to A Day To Remember’s Homesick album and it’s epic breakdowns, I listen to fleetwood mac’s records appreciating there beautiful harmonies and melodies, I listen to Blink-182 because there music has done so much to people yet there mediocre compared to a Berkley College of Music Graduate. Major Labels. Major, what Classic Rock was created from, what minor labels are afraid to crush a band from, The major label, where the money is, where the fame is, where an artist wants to get to make there dream living into music, to get there music overplayed through the radio because the major label has the power to feed that into the consumers head. Music is marketing to the major label industry, they feel proud of the music but concern themselves with there money more. Where is the love? Keep the music in place, play it to be heard, not tired of. Radio’s not bad bad, it’s the lack of the music that’s played on it. The music industry is changing, music is becoming free and uncontrolled, performances are becoming overdone, people are making there own studios, everything is going digital, and the mainstream radio’s rock is Miley Cyrus only because it’s what the market wants rather than what deserves to be heard on the radio. What will we do? We’re controlled, we’re restriced, we are scared of everything, we’re progressing. S—. Looking at music from the passed ten years can be either looked back at bad, good, or both. Neutral in all aspects. Music will always change and have it’s ups and downs do to people with there original distinctive voices and known sounds but this passed decade of music has been good, maybe not as good as some would want but good and maybe missed or craved to be lived in the future. Who knows? We wait.
January 2nd, 2010 at 2:10 pm
you guys should have put b-sides from the new record, i’d be hella freaking out. and i’ve already bought these songs. i love you guys with all of my heart and soul but this is b-side overkill man.
musically, this decade blows. i can go to downtown bakersfield and find musicians with 10x the talent as those who’ve made it to the realm of popularity. no ones buying albums anymore, so musicians just sell images. ideas that kids can conform to, and eventually it comes out of their pockets one way or another.
Highlights: the mars volta, tool, circa, porcupine tree, radiohead,
garbage: lil wayne, drake, autotune, mtv, itunes.
January 3rd, 2010 at 12:53 am
this passed year has been flooded with meaningless tools of music to gain money. half the music clamed to be the biggest hits were not at all even music, let alone made by the artist that achieved these awards. although there were some sparks in this past decade, like circa survive themselves and many others that got us here today, and im sure will help lead beautiful music like circa survives, or radioheads, or rise against into the futur. i myself, amongst many others who have received the musical flame from influences like these will try and produce pure music like theirs but i guess we will just have to wait with wonder and excitment with what is to come and every little fingerprint of every person will count.
January 3rd, 2010 at 4:36 am
the good thing about bands like Circa Survive and The Mars Volta and Tool is that they do the publicity stuff every now and then, such as doing an interview or having a photo shoot here and there. these guys are not media whores and putting themselves out there on display. they care more about their music and making sure that its good rather than spending precious time on commercials and products, like so many do in today’s mainstream music
January 3rd, 2010 at 7:54 am
I remember finding the radio tolerable back in 2004. Now it’s just completely trite with excessive autotuning. It’s kind a bias to just blame it on hip-hop and r&b because it’s being widely used a myriad of genres. As far as hip hop goes, P.O.S has made a big impact on reviving my love for hip hop. As for the next influential artists of the coming decade would be the aforementioned P.O.S, My Chemical Romance, The Mars Volta, Circa Survive, Adele.
Lady Gaga and Owl City is what’s wrong with popular radio in general.
January 4th, 2010 at 12:16 am
I love lady gaga. You guys realize that she’s super talented and she’s actually writing all this music right? When’s the last time a female pop singer of her status was doing that?
January 4th, 2010 at 1:50 pm
This decade was very poor in music.. most of the musicians were just trying to make music that would have a chance of becoming popular instead of doing what you guys do.. that is playing what you want to play with heart, soul, and sounding incredibly personal. For me Circa Survive were one of the few different things that appeared in the 2000s and the best of them all. But I could name a few, like radiohead, interpol, hopesfall, mew, arctic monkeys, queens of the stone age. But Circa is above them all. Keep up the good work! Love you all.. peace
January 4th, 2010 at 10:18 pm
you, being brendan of circa survive, probably dont know how much it means to kids like me for you to drop puddle of mudd like that. thank you so much. i just have to share this that in the town where i live the band circles are so pathetically still stuck up on mainstream music of that era, its so pathetic, and ive done so much to try to change and educate them on what real music is but it seems that they weren’t on it for the music in the first place. if they were in it for the music it wouldnt be that hard just takes ears. man. sorry for the rant and thank you again. btw im from the philippines where its stupid. but were improving. i think.
January 5th, 2010 at 8:17 am
music now holds alot of promise i think…not stating the obvious or anything… but i hope as i mature i could be one of the live to see another resurrection of somthing like the kings of alternative/progressive rock…considering manyother genres are taken… every time i listen to juturna and on letting go i hear promise from steve’s amorous offbeat awesomeness that never gets tiring to colins ingenious rythms to brendans mezmerizing leads to nicks rock on bass lines that are a show all of their own…things all i celeberate but when you add drugs to the other wise glorious mix aka anthony green you get somthing which i wake up to every day… because it starts aday good and has infinite replay value…somthing called circa survive and its probably nothing that they havent heard as of late coming from a guy that trying to suck up to his idols using big words…but it doesnt hurt to provide a little support… im glad you guys still remember that a musician is supported by their fans or they wouldnt be anything…and i cant wait for your third album…but as my friend asked me out making this and being so “eloquent”? i told him i dont know but i hurd the pride that someone might hear me…
January 5th, 2010 at 2:55 pm
“I think that this decade has had wonderous music. Music like brand new, bright eyes, circa survive (ofcourse), death cab for cutie, explosions in the sky…”
what the fuck are you talking about? do you honestly think that explosions in the sky is a popular enough band to make a mark in music at all? because let me tell you that they arent. seriously, not one of you idiots knows enough about music to say anything about this decade as a whole. I bet some of the people writing about the twentieth century were like 6 years old in 2000 and had no fucking idea what music even was at all. Im sorry to seem like an ass but it really does bother me to read about people talking about something they know nothing about. gain some birth in your music listening, listen to all types of music over the next ten straight years, and then state your opinion about the decade as a whole you fucking ignorant pieces of shit. Half of you have it in your mind that there is one type of music you like and that it is the only good music out there. well let me tell you that your music taste is all mental. You tell yourself to like a certain type of music and thats all you will listen to. I know because i used to be the same way. I loved circa survive and brand new and all these bands that the typical person writing on this website would like. I talked shit on rap and pop music and bands like puddle of mudd all the time. Then I opened my eyes to different types of music and learned to appreciate music that i wouldnt have ever even listened to before. From miriah carey to criminal manne. Its all good music in its own way and just because you dont like them doesnt mean that they didnt make a mark in music this decade. just stop and think about the fact that your music taste is based on the type of music you allow/force yourself to listen to for whatever reason. Maybe you wanna seem like a badass so you listen to lil wayne or you wanna seem like a creative and original person so you listen to circa survive. Although thats a kind of a radical thing to say, i think what is more reasonable and also true is that you dont like certain music for the reasons you think you do. If you really think about it i think you will see this.
on a brighter note i fucking love circa survive and i cant wait for the new cd to come out. I feel like i have been waiting forever.
January 5th, 2010 at 5:49 pm
i have this conversation all of the time with my friends. i’m thinking there’s going to be more noisy experimental stuff with lots of circuit bending. it’ll have a more “home-made” sound. i think it’ll take over the whole “indie” scene that was in the last decade.
January 6th, 2010 at 10:15 am
hopefully they start playing some circa on the radio and other musicians realize the spotlight they soak up for fame and fortune and not the real purpose of making music.. to be free/expressive. i feel like some musicians dont take their shit seriously, i feel like they just write a song in five minutes and put some shitty mainstream sound thats sounds just like every other song out there. i dont understand the music indusrty sometimes, it has all these talented bands, groups, solo artist, etc.. that really no one knows about but then we have these stupid nonsence hip-hop, pop, rock, so on so forth – music, that everyone knows. its ridiulious. but hopefully this decade gets a wake-up call from you guys.
January 6th, 2010 at 1:48 pm
Oh, Brendan
where were you when the juturna vinyl was put out?
January 7th, 2010 at 5:45 am
Brendan, your guys music has been a huge plus this past decade… Brother… Your guitar tones are so beautiful, are practically hard to emulate… any hints to get such a juicy combination of tones to make the ultimate one similar to yours?? Or just tips to produce good tones?
January 7th, 2010 at 11:38 am
please start touring.
January 7th, 2010 at 1:59 pm
Damn, I’ve grown up in a setting where all the popular music is shitty. I want to know what its like to be able to think of good music and popular music as the same
January 7th, 2010 at 6:08 pm
i think genres are going to keep mixing more and more in the future. It’s impossible to name the genres of all these bands we like (circa, mars volta, brand new, etc, whatever). What’s Circa? Post-rock, experimental? What genre is Brand New? Brand new is pop-punk, pop-rock, experimental, post-hardcore, i don’t even know, all of those combined. Rap these days…rap is getting more and more mixed too. We have mainstream artists like Lil Wayne putting out an album with distorted guitars and drums. We have Wiz Kalifa mixing rap and techno. THAT’S what this next generation of music is going to be. Mix-and-match. That’s all it can be…we’ve heard everything else.
January 7th, 2010 at 6:13 pm
oh and i just wanna put this out there…i read someone writing about saosin. I hate saosin. They DEFINE sell-out. The songs are totally pop songs with rigid structures. It’s boring. I mean, yeah you can typically break down Circa’s songs to verse-chorus-verse etc, but I still like Circa because I find their songs more full of emotion and not as dull. I liked and still do listen to Translating the Name because i think that record had a lot of energy in it. But now??? Saosin’s new cd is garbage.
January 8th, 2010 at 4:54 pm
I was excited for months. I checked the page daily. Now, I’m bored of waiting – this is the first time I’ve briefly checked the page since the last studio update. What-do-ya-know; nothing. Circa really took their time on this album. Then took some more time. Then took even more time. Then…
More time.
January 8th, 2010 at 5:52 pm
You know Nickelback got band of the decade? This is when you have to a step back and say ‘what the hell’? People must have hearing problems. But everyones right, there have been many wonderful bands in the past decade. The best being you guys of course.
January 8th, 2010 at 11:21 pm
With the ease of recording and producing music, I can guarentee we will see A LOT more shitty music over the next few years.
However, this will allow musicians without the tools get the tools, and produce nothing but awesome music.
More shit music tho, but theres always a light.
January 10th, 2010 at 7:36 pm
I believe you forgot Circa Survive on the bands that made an impact on this recent decade.
January 11th, 2010 at 2:14 pm
I just got my b-sides record in the mail, it’s completely beautiful and worth the $5, it’s worth 4 times as much. I’m so excited to be one of the thousand to have one in my hands, and I can’t wait for the new cd to come out
this is so amazing<3
January 12th, 2010 at 3:48 pm
Thanks to your music I have made it through some of the most trying pieces of my life for sure. I must admit to be only 20 yrs old, however for that age I have been through tough experiences of all kinds. At a vulnerable age…13…I lost two Grandfathers to cancer, I was very very close with due to them living nearby, lost most of my best friends due to a ridiculously not believable rumor(found out who my “real friends” were), got arrested for what should’ve been a felony, good thing I had nice cops who knew I was a good girl caught in the middle of a bad incident and left me with a misdemeanor(you know doing things with my life), was recently in a terrifying accident, been in the hospital since December 5th, just got home 5 days ago and am the luckiest girl in the world because I broke my spine(and every other bone but my left leg and arms)one above where Christopher Reeves broke his spine, and am chugging along in my recovery. Thanks to many prayers sent my way and being a fast healer, I assume. Music sounds more beautiful than it did before and the sky is more gorgeous than I remember. Your tunes especially have helped me through this very hard time in my life. So thank you for being there for me, in a way, and delivering notes that flow together like a peaceful brook on a sunshine filled day.
January 12th, 2010 at 4:20 pm
haha that last line about the brook and sunshine filled day is pretty lame, but idk how else to explain it. plus i got a brain injury during the accident give me a break
January 12th, 2010 at 9:00 pm
I feel like we’re entering a new sort of electronic era. We’re getting passed playing guitars in the straight sense. We like pedals a lot more now. We like synths and computers that bleep and bloop. We like to explore sonic boundaries that the last generation considered noise. I’d like to think that this decade will be the experimental decade in which a new sound will be born.
January 14th, 2010 at 4:16 pm
Re: Afterthought
I have recently wondered the same kind of thing regarding the past decade, but also in terms of fashion. It does seem like the bold trends (in all areas) of pop culture faded away into a mass-consumable blah. Looking back at decades, we had poodle skirts, then minis & go-go boots, then bell-bottoms, then hammer-pants, then some jeans & flannel kinda, and then….well… what?
Nothing really pops out at me and screams, ‘2000s!’ Do we just need some temporal distance, or did we really stop producing those wow-factors in music & fashion?
January 14th, 2010 at 4:37 pm
I ordered one 7 days ago and i still haven’t gotten it yet…
January 18th, 2010 at 12:34 am
Nice thought Brendan. Must say Lateralus was probably one of the greatest albums in music to come out in the decade. Justin Chancellor drops bombs on his Wal bass. Stoked for the new album. (both Tool and Circa)
January 21st, 2010 at 9:38 am
I believe that every decade has it’s good and it’s bad music. The thing that changed for the past decade was the excessive publicity and easy access to information. So the ones who control this information made a big difference on what we are forcefed, Lady Gaga and all the bad pop and bad rock. On the other hand, if we take a look on the underground and the international scene, there was the release of an unbelievable album by Ulver from Norway, Justice gave electronic music a new breath in my opinion and bands like the parlor mob were ignored. A new folk genre has emerged (devendra banhardt, sufjan stevens) and some metal band really pushed music to its technical limits once again (between the buried and me for example). So all in all, a lot of good things happened, but if a tree falls in a forest and no one is there to hear it, will it make a sound? And if a tree falls in a forest and a million people are there, will other people help?
January 21st, 2010 at 9:41 am
Oh! and I forgot to mention Circa Survive in the bands taht changed music in the last decade, no matter how much music I listen to, I always come back to Juturna and can’t help but feel amazed by how inspired and fresh this album is.
January 29th, 2010 at 5:39 pm
Love the Vinyl! I Just got it! Hey I was wondering is the albumn art the house in Frozen Creek?