Locations

Downtown

  • 203 SW 9th Ave
  • Portland, OR 97214
  • (503) 222-0990

Hawthorne

  • 3574 SE Hawthorne
  • Portland, OR 97205
  • (503) 239-7561

Hours

  • Mon-Fri 10-7
  • Sat 10-8
  • Sun 11-6

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Wig in a Box
This is the tribute album to end them all! Off Records and the two creators of Hedwig and the Angry Inch rounded up an inspired all-star ... (Click the album for more)
  • $14.95 CD
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Warp20 (Chosen)
The definitive best of Warp Records. Ten songs chosen by you (Warp20.net), with an additional ten chosen by Warp cofounder Steve Beckett. Pa... (Click the album for more)
  • $19.95 CD
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Worl's Funkiest Covers
Carefully selected by Deano Sounds, World’s Funkiest Covers features some of the funkiest covers from around the world and throughout time... (Click the album for more)
  • $22.95 Vinyl
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Cajun and Zydeco Classics
Excellent and affordable introduction to the world of Cajun and Zydeco. With C.J. Chenier, Queen Ida, BeauSoleil and more.
  • $7.95 CD

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An Anthology of Noise & Electronic Music/ First A-Chronology Vol. 1
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Subtitled: First A-Chronology 1921-2001. At last, the Sub Rosa label issues the highly-acclaimed Anthology Of Noise & Electronic Music collection on vinyl -- 3LPs housed in a luxurious triple gatefold sleeve. Containing early and contemporary classics as well as pieces that had never been heard before. Volume 1 begins in the 1920s with the Russolo brothers, and examines each decade in turn -- Varèse, Cage, Schaeffer, Xenakis, the great pioneers crafting the first traces of a music that was markedly revolutionary: electronic music, created from nothing and an artifice without boundary that was to be entirely invented. Whereas composers such as Stockhausen, Berio and Pousseur had come from Serialism and began making electronic music as a continuation of their work with traditional instruments, others such as Boehmer and Oliveros immediately began composing using electronic bases. There were those who invented new methods, like Schaeffer and musique concrète, others were outsiders, revolutionaries and visionaries like Xenakis and Cage, and still others who derived their sound from Dadaism, the complex forms of free-jazz, John Coltrane, the acoustic and electronic improvisation scene, alternative rock, psychedelic and industrial music, the German Krautrock wave of the 1970s, and so on.

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