Insound LP+MP3! Purchase the vinyl format of Blacklisted and you'll receive a link to download the MP3s for free immediately after check-out!
2007, Lance Rock
VINYL FORMAT. Neko Case's third album, is a lush, haunting showcase for her formidable vocal talents, as well as an intensely intimate work that evokes a dark elegance with a hint of twang.
Tracklisting
Disc 1
| 1 | Things That Scare Me |
| 2 | Deep Red Bells |
| 3 | With Bees (Outro) |
| 4 | Lady Pilot |
| 5 | Tightly |
| 6 | Look for Me (I'll Be Around) |
| 7 | Stinging Velvet |
| 8 | Pretty Girls |
| 9 | I Missed the Point |
| 10 | Blacklisted |
| 11 | I Wish I Was the Moon |
| 12 | Runnin' Out of Fools |
| 13 | Ghost Wiring |
Customer Reviews




Adrian BordeleauI could go on and on and on about this album. It is one of my favorite female vocal albums, infusing country, rock, folk and even some soul. While Fox Confessor may have been a critical hit, it bored me near to death compared to the raw energy of Blacklisted and the following live EP, The Tigers Have Spoken.
Lance Rock Records has finally done what should have been done 5 years ago - release Blacklisted on wax.
The only thing that ever bothered me about my Blacklisted CD was what I had perceived to be a symptom of poor production: brutally compressed acoustic guitars on the first two tracks. Not just slightly compressed, but demolished and painful to the ear. I was wrong. This wasn't a production issue at all - it was the CD mastering. On the LP the guitars sound natural, musical and covered in tape hiss. In fact, the whole recording is much more naked about its roots in mid-fi production.
Neko's voice, the highlight of this album, is changed too. It took me a little while to get used to the new sound. With much of the compression gone, her reverb-soaked voice has slightly less power behind it. It now has air and space around it, revealing a slightly tinny AM radio quality. Within a few tracks I found it to be more realistic, creating more of a fusion between her and the instruments.
I cannot recommend this piece of wax enough. It is a shame that the CD wasn't mastered with the same care. This isn't an issue of one medium being superior; it is an industry-wide issue of making ignorant mastering choices. Until this trend is reversed, or high-res versions of albums are available for download, vinyl will remain my medium of choice.
Lance Rock Records has finally done what should have been done 5 years ago - release Blacklisted on wax.
The only thing that ever bothered me about my Blacklisted CD was what I had perceived to be a symptom of poor production: brutally compressed acoustic guitars on the first two tracks. Not just slightly compressed, but demolished and painful to the ear. I was wrong. This wasn't a production issue at all - it was the CD mastering. On the LP the guitars sound natural, musical and covered in tape hiss. In fact, the whole recording is much more naked about its roots in mid-fi production.
Neko's voice, the highlight of this album, is changed too. It took me a little while to get used to the new sound. With much of the compression gone, her reverb-soaked voice has slightly less power behind it. It now has air and space around it, revealing a slightly tinny AM radio quality. Within a few tracks I found it to be more realistic, creating more of a fusion between her and the instruments.
I cannot recommend this piece of wax enough. It is a shame that the CD wasn't mastered with the same care. This isn't an issue of one medium being superior; it is an industry-wide issue of making ignorant mastering choices. Until this trend is reversed, or high-res versions of albums are available for download, vinyl will remain my medium of choice.









