


Light in the Attic & Friends (Black Friday RSD World Exclusive)
AVAILABLE: BLACK FRIDAY / NOV. 24th, 2023
For over 20 years, Light in the Attic has illuminated some of musicâs most unique â and often forgotten â voices. But reviving these long-out-of-print recordings is only half of the process. âWe believe that an essential component of archival work, aside from simply honoring the music, is to seek ways in which to bring fresh perspectives, context, and reverence to the original artists and their work,â says LITA Founder and Co-Owner Matt Sullivan. Thus, LITAâs acclaimed 7â vinyl and digital singles Cover Series was born, in which contemporary acts pay homage to their favorite LITA artists and songs. Spanning more than a decade, a handful of these sought-after recordings have previously been issued as limited-edition 45s, while nearly a dozen tracks are brand new recordings. Now, all twenty of these inspired tributes will be available together for the very first time as a special, limited-edition 2-LP set entitled Light in the Attic & Friends â being released exclusively for Record Store Dayâs annual Black Friday event, taking place on November 24th at participating independent retailers.
From Charles Bradley & The Menahan Street Band covering Detroit singer-songwriter Sixto Rodriguez and Mac DeMarco performing a song by Japanese icon Haruomi Hosono to Iggy Pop & Zig Zags honoring funk queen Betty Davis and Ethan & Maya Hawke covering country great Willie Nelson, these performances bridge the gap between generations, languages, and musical traditions. âMany musicians whom weâve reissued had to make huge sacrifices in their day, yet most never saw fame nor were they appreciated on a larger scale until much later in life,â adds Sullivan. âEach offering is so much more than just a cover; it is a tribute to the unwavering human spirit and the personal sacrifice each artist forged through song.â
Mastered by GRAMMYÂŽ-nominated engineer John Baldwin, Light in the Attic & Friends is pressed on special smash colored wax and features stunning cover artwork by renowned British artist Sophy Hollington. Rounding out the package is an eight-page booklet, featuring in-depth track notes by North Carolina-based filmmaker and writer Lydia Hyslop, as well as artist photos.
More Info on Each Track:
CHARLES BRADLEY & THE MENAHAN STREET BAND â âIâLL SLIP AWAYâ
(covering SIXTO RODRIGUEZ)
After releasing a pair of albums in 1970 and 1971, Detroit singer-songwriter Sixto Rodriguez (1942-2023) walked away from his musical career, unaware that his psychedelic folk was gaining a cult following in South Africa. After decades of speculation (including rumors of his death), Rodriguez enjoyed a career resurgence in his 70s after being the subject of the Academy Award-winning documentary, Searching for Sugarman. Similarly, celebrated soul singer Charles Bradley (1948-2017) also found success later in life after years of obscurity, while his remarkable story was chronicled in the 2012 documentary, Soul of America, just one year after he released his debut on Dunham/Daptone Records. In 2011, the two artists shared the stage at New Yorkâs Bowery Ballroom, playing to a sold-out crowd. A year later, Bradley â backed by the always phenomenal Menahan Street Band â recorded this stirring cover of Rodriguezâs 1967 debut, âIâll Slip Away.â
SWEET TEA â âAFTER LAUGHTER (COMES TEARS)â
(covering WENDY RENE)
In the mid-60s, Memphis singer Wendy Rene (born Mary Frierson) signed to Stax Records with her vocal quartet, The Drapels. The group was short-lived, but Rene caught the ear of the soul labelâs biggest star, Otis Redding, who championed her solo career. While Rene soon shifted her focus to motherhood, she found unexpected recognition when her 1964 debut, âAfter Laughter (Comes Tears),â was used in The Wu Tang Clanâs âTearz.â Since then, it has been sampled by dozens of artists, including Alicia Keys and Ariana Grande. Rene, who passed away in 2014, lived to enjoy many of these tributes, including this one by Sweet Tea (featuring Erika Wennerstrom and Jesse Ebaugh of Heartless Bastards, Alex Maas of The Black Angels, and Robb Kidd of Golden Dawn Arkestra). Recorded in 2012, this moving rendition captures the essence of Reneâs original recording, including its soulful doo-wop flavor.
VASHTI BUNYAN & DEVENDRA BANHART â âHOW COULD YOU LET ME GOâ
(covering MADELYNN VON RITZ aka LYNN CASTLE)
As Los Angelesâ first female barber, Madelynn Von Ritz (aka Lynn Castle) spent her days styling the biggest stars of the 60s. Behind the scenes, she was a songwriter whose work caught the ears of industry heavyweights â including Lee Hazlewood, who produced her debut single in 1967. Amid debilitating stage fright, Castle soon retreated from the spotlight, but that didnât stop her from writing and recording songs at home. Over the following decades, she built a vast catalog, spanning country, pop, rock, goth, and childrenâs music â none of which was released until 2017. Here, another singer-songwriter who achieved late-in-life recognition, Vashti Bunyan, pairs up with Devendra Banhart to pay homage to Castle through a dreamy cover of her haunting new wave track, âHow Could You Let Me Go.â
BARBARA LYNN â âWEâLL UNDERSTANDâ
(covering THE SUPREME JUBILEES)
Vocal group The Supreme Jubilees was formed in the 70s by cousins and brothers who grew up singing together in their Fresno, CA church. In 1980, the septet released their sole album, Itâll All Be Over, which offered an enticing blend of gospel, R&B, soul, disco, and plenty of sweet harmonies. But, amid disappointing sales and financial struggles, they disbanded shortly after. Three decades later, one of 500 original copies of Itâll All Be Over was re-discovered by a record store owner, leading to its eventual reissue by LITA. Among the albumâs highlights is the super-smooth âWeâll Understand,â covered in 2022 by 81-year-old R&B singer, songwriter, and guitarist Barbara Lynn, who made her return to the studio after nearly a decade. Lynn, a 2018 National Heritage Fellowship recipient, is joined by her daughter and granddaughter on backing vocals, as well as rising soul star Akelee âDoveâ with production by Tommy Brenneck.
BADBADNOTGOOD feat. JONAH YANO â âKEY TO LOVE IS UNDERSTANDINGâ
(covering THE MAJESTICS)
At the turn of the 80s, everyone was eager to jump on the new sounds of hip-hop, including Milwaukee businessman-turned-producer Marvell Love. Hoping to make a quick profit, Love recruited a local R&B group, The Majestics, to record a rap track. While the long-running vocal act was more interested in classic funk, they would soon become known for releasing Milwaukeeâs first hip-hop single, âClass A,â in 1982. Although The Majestics (who still perform today) never recorded another rap song, the 45 became a sought-after rarity. Yet, it was the ballad on its B-side, âKey to Love (Is Understanding),â that caught the ears of Torontoâs BADBADNOTGOOD. In 2019, the instrumental group partnered with Montreal singer-songwriter Jonah Yano to record their own rendition of the smooth-as-silk track, sharing âAs lovers of old soul, funk, and rare recordings, âKey To Loveâ has always had an impact on our heart and ears.â
IGGY POP & ZIG ZAGS â âIF IâM IN LUCK I MIGHT GET PICKED UPâ
(covering BETTY DAVIS)
Queen of Funk Betty Davis (1944â2022) enraptured audiences with her raw and powerful vocals, her provocative lyrics, and her space-age blend of funk, R&B, and blues. During her all-too-brief career, Davis smashed several glass ceilings, including becoming the first Black woman to write, produce, and arrange her own albums. She was defiant, original, and far ahead of her time. Itâs fitting then, that an equally fierce iconoclast, Iggy Pop, would cover Davisâ 1973 single, âIf Iâm In Luck, I Might Get Picked Up.â Backed by L.A. trio Zig Zags, the Godfather of Punk does Davis proud in this 2012 cover. The band has managed to find "a secret heavy Sabbath vibe lurking just below the funk surface,â which adds even more oomph to lyrics like âDonât you crush my velvet donât you ruffle my feathers neither/I said Iâm crazy Iâm wild I said Iâm nasty.â
MOZART ESTATE â âLOW LIFEâ
(covering PUBLIC IMAGE LTD.)
Johnny Rotten reinvented himself after The Sex Pistols broke up in 1978. Reverting to his birth name, Lydon established Public Image Ltd (PiL) and embarked on an experimental post-punk journey, incorporating elements of dub, avant-garde, prog-rock, and dance into the long-running groupâs evolving sound. PiLâs 1978 debut, First Issue, offered a taste of what was to come, including the raucous âLow Life,â covered here by British indie pop band, Mozart Estate. Hyslop explains that Mozart Estateâs mononymous frontman, Lawrence, founded the group âas a response to his other bandsâ lack of commercial success, making him perhaps the perfect postâpostâpunk heir to carry the torch of antiestablishmentarianism that Lydon lit and beat âem at their own game.â Recorded in 2021, the cover fleshes out PiLâs lo-fi track with pop-forward instrumentation and lush harmonies.
LESLIE WINER & MAXWELL STERLING â âONCE I WASâ
(covering TIM BUCKLEY)
One year after releasing his 1966 self-titled debut, singer-songwriter Tim Buckley (1947-1975) delivered his psychedelic-folk-rock masterpiece, Goodbye and Hello. A preview of the musical explorations that the artist would embark on during his tragically short career, the introspective album featured such highlights as âOnce I Was.â The melancholic tune, which finds the singer reflecting on past loves, is covered here by another sonic explorer: visionary musician, poet, and author Leslie Winer. Winer, whose multidimensional career includes such highlights as pioneering trip-hop and becoming the worldâs first androgynous fashion model, reinvents the song alongside British composer and double bassist, Maxwell Sterling. Backed by Sterlingâs cinematic arrangements, Winer transforms the song with her distinctive and mesmerizing vocals â delivering an utterly haunting performance.
ETHAN & MAYA HAWKE â âWE DONâT RUNâ
(covering WILLIE NELSON)
During his nearly seven-decade-long career, country icon Willie Nelson has written some of the genreâs most enduring standards â from âCrazyâ to âOn the Road Again.â From a discography that spans nearly 100 studio albums, one of Nelsonâs lesser-known but most striking releases is 1996âs Spirit. A stylistic outlier, the understated concept album features stripped-down, Spanish-influenced instrumentation and emotionally raw songwriting as Nelson delves into heartbreaking themes of love and loss. Among its tracks is the quietly reassuring âWe Donât Run,â in which Nelson sings âWe donât run, we donât compromise/We donât quit, we never do.â Here, father-daughter collaboration Ethan and Maya Hawke reimagine the song as a sweet ode to love, strength, and loyalty. Recently recorded at Electric Lady Studios in New York, the track features producer Christian Lee Hutson on a number of instruments including electric guitar and Wurlitzer.
GOLD LEAVES â âWONâT YOU TELL YOUR DREAMSâ
(covering LEE HAZLEWOOD)
Singer, songwriter, and psychedelic cowboy Lee Hazlewood (1929-2007) has long been a cult favorite, revered for his vivid â often quirky â storytelling, his warm, orchestral pop arrangements, and his distinctive sing-speak baritone vocals. While best known for his collaborations with Nancy Sinatra, Hazlewood also had a robust solo catalog, including 1971âs Requiem for an Almost Lady, which the artist described as âa composite of all my memories of ladies.â Among the tracks is âWonât You Tell Your Dreams,â which details the days immediately following a breakup, as mundane tasks are overshadowed by feelings of loss. Here, the song is covered lovingly by Gold Leaves (the project of singer-songwriter Grant Olsen). Emulating Hazlewoodâs warm, 1960s production, Olsen enhances his recording with soft pedal steel guitars (courtesy of Bill Patton) and lilting, multi-layered vocals.
SWAMP DOGG, JOHN C. REILLY, JENNY LEWIS & TIM HEIDECKER â âTHE KNEELING DRUNKARDâS PLEAâ
(covering THE CARTER FAMILY via THE LOUVIN BROTHERS)
Written by the legendary Carter Family and famously recorded by Grand Ole Opry regulars Ira and Charlie Louvin for their 1959 gospel album, Satan Is Real, âThe Kneeling Drunkardâs Pleaâ tells the tale of an inebriated man begging God for forgiveness. This all-star 2022 version (featuring indie sweetheart Jenny Lewis, actor/musician John C. Reilly, legendary R&B/soul artist Swamp Dogg, and comedian/actor/musician Tim Heidecker) pays homage to The Louvin Brothersâ signature tight-knit harmonies and bluegrass roots, as Lewis and Reilly share lead vocals. Swamp Dogg, meanwhile, brings the house down with a heartfelt spoken-word contribution, while Heidecker adds gospel flavors with a deftly-played organ accompaniment.
SILAS SHORT â âYOUâVE BECOME A HABITâ
(covering LEO NOCENTELLI)
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee and GRAMMYÂŽ Lifetime Achievement Award recipient Leo Nocentelli is best known for his foundational work with The Meters â including penning funk classics like âCissy Strutâ and âHey Pocky AâWayâ and backing the likes of Dr. John, Paul McCartney, and Labelle. But in between sessions with the pioneering New Orleans band, Nocentelli spent much of 1971 writing the stripped-down solo album, Another Side, blending elements of folk and country with his funk roots. The long-lost album, which finally saw the light of day in 2021, features such reflective songs as âYouâve Become a Habit,â covered here by Chicago-native and Stones Throw recording artist on the rise, Silas Short. Mirroring the intimate nature of the song, Short brings his sweet vocals to the front, while adding modern grooves through bluesy guitar and organ arrangements.
MAC DeMARCO â âHONEY MOONâ
(covering HARUOMI HOSONO)
One of Japanese pop musicâs most influential figures, Haruomi âHarryâ Hosono is a living legend whose five-decade-long career has encompassed electronic music, funk, experimental, psychedelic rock, and folk, among other styles. A founding member of the pioneering acts Happy End and Yellow Magic Orchestra, Hosono has also enjoyed a prolific solo career â including video game and film soundtracks, star-studded collaborations, and over two dozen albums. Among his many fans is the offbeat singer, songwriter, and producer, Mac DeMarco, who puts his own touch on âHoney Moon,â a track off Hosonoâs 1975 album, Tropical Dandy. The Canadian-born artist maintains the songâs dreamy, calypso vibe â and sings its original lyrics in Japanese. In 2019, a year after the cover was recorded, DeMarco joined his idol on stage in Los Angeles, where the two artists performed a duet of the song.
CAMERON BETHANY â âSEND IT ONâ
(covering DâANGELO)
In 2000, singer, songwriter, producer, and multi-instrumentalist DeAngelo (born Michael Eugene Archer) secured his position as one of R&Bâs biggest stars with his sophomore album, Voodoo. Inspired by the warm sounds of classic 60s and 70s soul, Voodoo was hailed as a neo-soul masterpiece, earning DâAngelo a spot at the top of the Billboard 200 and his first GRAMMYÂŽ Awards. While the single âUntitled (How Does It Feel)â â and its provocative video â became the albumâs biggest hit, it was followed by the equally soulful ballad, âSend It On,â covered here by Memphis star and Unapologetic recording artist Cameron Bethany. Like DâAngelo, Bethany is the son of a Southern preacher who trained his voice singing in church. He is also proving to be one of R&Bâs most unique and promising talents â as heard here in this inspired, multi-layered performance.
ROEDELIUS â âLE CHANT des FAUVESâ
(covering TINARIWEN)
Tinariwen is a long-running collective of musicians from the nomadic Tuareg population of the Malian deserts. Formed in 1979, the group began performing at weddings, baptisms, and parties, but when they heard Western rock, everything changed. Since then, the GRAMMYÂŽ-winning group has gained an international audience through their âdesert blues,â blending electric guitars with traditional Saharan music. While Tinariwen issued a series of cassettes over the years, their 2001 LP, The Radio Tisdas Sessions, marked their first wide release. Its opening track, âLe Chant des Fauvesâ is covered here by the pioneering German electronic composer, Roedelius. The 2022 recording found Roedelius, now 88, reimagining the song as a sparse instrumental which, Hyslop notes, âEvokes an eerily beautiful sense of desolation.â
MARK LANEGAN â âSAME OLD MANâ
(covering KAREN DALTON)
Karen Dalton (1937-1993) was a fixture in the 60s folk scene, earning the adulation of her peers through her world-weary vocals, her talents on the banjo or 12-stringed guitar, and her nuanced interpretations of traditional material, blues standards, and the songs of her contemporaries. While she would influence everyone from Nick Cave to Adele, Dalton remained relatively unknown during her lifetime, releasing only two albums. In 2012, Mark Lanegan (1964-2022) honored Dalton with a cover of the traditional âSame Old Manâ from her 1971 LP, In My Own Time. In contrast to the singerâs stripped-down rendition, Lanegan â who fronted the seminal band The Screaming Trees and collaborated with the likes of Isobel Campbell, Queens of the Stone Age, and Kurt Cobain â performs his version over a bed of lush instrumentation â including a mellotron, a fretless eâbow guitar, and banjos â all courtesy of musician and producer, Alain Johannes.
ANGEL OLSEN â âSOMETHING ON YOUR MINDâ
(covering DINO VALENTI via KAREN DALTON)
Among the artists that Karen Dalton influenced is singer-songwriter Angel Olsen. Olsen, who narrates Daltonâs personal journals in the 2020 documentary, Karen Dalton: In My Own Time, performs âSomething on Your Mind.â Penned by Dino Valenti of Quicksilver Messenger Service, the tune originally appeared on Daltonâs 1971 album In My Own Time and has long been considered a signature song of hers. Of the poignant track, Olsen says, ââSomething On Your Mindâ is about letting yourself face something that keeps setting you back.â Accompanied only by her piano, Olsenâs moving rendition allows the songâs lyrics to take center stage.
MARY LATTIMORE â âBLINKâ
(covering HIROSHI YOSHIMURA)
Japanese ambient music pioneer Hiroshi Yoshimura rose to prominence in the 70s, thanks to his beautifully minimal kankyĹ ongaku (environmental music). His acclaimed 1982 debut, Music For Nine Post Cards, was inspired by the stunning views of nature from the windows of Tokyoâs Hara Museum of Contemporary Art. Recorded at his home on a keyboard and Fender Rhodes, the album paints nine aural scenes, including âBlink,â covered here by harpist Mary Lattimore. In addition to her solo work, the classically trained musician has collaborated with Thurston Moore, Meg Baird, and Kurt Vile. Originally recorded for Aquarium Drunkardâs Lagniappe Sessions, Lattimoreâs hypnotic cover of âBlinkâ beautifully translates to the harp.
ACETONE â âPLAIN AS YOUR EYES CAN SEEâ
(covering JIM SULLIVAN)
In the late 60s, singer-songwriter Jim Sullivan (b. 1940) moved to Los Angeles with dreams of stardom. He hung out with Hollywood hotshots like Harry Dean Stanton, made a cameo in Easy Rider, and hired members of the legendary Wrecking Crew to perform on his 1969 debut, U.F.O. But the album, and his self-titled follow-up, failed to find an audience. Then, in 1975, he disappeared in the New Mexico desert. Over the years, amid a myriad of conspiracy theories, Sullivanâs music developed a cult following. Among his fans are fellow Angelenos Steve Hadley and Mark Lightcap, both formerly of Acetone â a supremely talented 90s band that, similar to Sullivan, found little success on the national scene despite local promise. Here, the artists pay tribute to Sullivan with a languid cover of his U.F.O. track, âPlain As Your Eyes Can See.â
STEVE GUNN & BRIDGET ST. JOHN â âRABBIT HILLSâ
(covering MICHAEL CHAPMAN)
A central figure in Britainâs folk and progressive scenes, singer, songwriter, and guitarist Michael Chapman (1941-2021) built a prolific catalog (over 50 albums) and a broad following during his five-decade-long career. Among his early highlights is 1970âs Fully Qualified Survivor, considered âthe quintessential Chapman LP, from its layers of beautiful acoustic guitars to its deranged vocals to its floating conga drums.â Here, Brooklyn singer-songwriter and longtime Chapman devotee Steve Gunn offers a modern take on the albumâs track, âRabbit Hills,â alongside singer, songwriter, and guitarist Bridget St. John, a British folk icon in her own right.
- Featuring over a decadeâs worth of inspired performances from Light in the Atticâs Covers series
- 20-track collection includes Ethan & Maya Hawke covering Willie Nelson, Charles Bradley & The Menahan Street Band interpreting Sixto Rodriguez, Iggy Pop & Zig Zags performing a Betty Davis gem, Angel Olsen paying homage to Karen Dalton, Mac DeMarco performing a song by Haruomi Hosono, and Swamp Dogg, John C. Reilly, Jenny Lewis & Tim Heidecker covering a country classic in tribute to The Louvin Brothers
- Double LP pressed on special limited edition color wax
- Featuring new cover art by renowned British artist Sophy Hollington
- Booklet with track-by-track notes by Lydia Hyslop
Original: $20.00
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Description
AVAILABLE: BLACK FRIDAY / NOV. 24th, 2023
For over 20 years, Light in the Attic has illuminated some of musicâs most unique â and often forgotten â voices. But reviving these long-out-of-print recordings is only half of the process. âWe believe that an essential component of archival work, aside from simply honoring the music, is to seek ways in which to bring fresh perspectives, context, and reverence to the original artists and their work,â says LITA Founder and Co-Owner Matt Sullivan. Thus, LITAâs acclaimed 7â vinyl and digital singles Cover Series was born, in which contemporary acts pay homage to their favorite LITA artists and songs. Spanning more than a decade, a handful of these sought-after recordings have previously been issued as limited-edition 45s, while nearly a dozen tracks are brand new recordings. Now, all twenty of these inspired tributes will be available together for the very first time as a special, limited-edition 2-LP set entitled Light in the Attic & Friends â being released exclusively for Record Store Dayâs annual Black Friday event, taking place on November 24th at participating independent retailers.
From Charles Bradley & The Menahan Street Band covering Detroit singer-songwriter Sixto Rodriguez and Mac DeMarco performing a song by Japanese icon Haruomi Hosono to Iggy Pop & Zig Zags honoring funk queen Betty Davis and Ethan & Maya Hawke covering country great Willie Nelson, these performances bridge the gap between generations, languages, and musical traditions. âMany musicians whom weâve reissued had to make huge sacrifices in their day, yet most never saw fame nor were they appreciated on a larger scale until much later in life,â adds Sullivan. âEach offering is so much more than just a cover; it is a tribute to the unwavering human spirit and the personal sacrifice each artist forged through song.â
Mastered by GRAMMYÂŽ-nominated engineer John Baldwin, Light in the Attic & Friends is pressed on special smash colored wax and features stunning cover artwork by renowned British artist Sophy Hollington. Rounding out the package is an eight-page booklet, featuring in-depth track notes by North Carolina-based filmmaker and writer Lydia Hyslop, as well as artist photos.
More Info on Each Track:
CHARLES BRADLEY & THE MENAHAN STREET BAND â âIâLL SLIP AWAYâ
(covering SIXTO RODRIGUEZ)
After releasing a pair of albums in 1970 and 1971, Detroit singer-songwriter Sixto Rodriguez (1942-2023) walked away from his musical career, unaware that his psychedelic folk was gaining a cult following in South Africa. After decades of speculation (including rumors of his death), Rodriguez enjoyed a career resurgence in his 70s after being the subject of the Academy Award-winning documentary, Searching for Sugarman. Similarly, celebrated soul singer Charles Bradley (1948-2017) also found success later in life after years of obscurity, while his remarkable story was chronicled in the 2012 documentary, Soul of America, just one year after he released his debut on Dunham/Daptone Records. In 2011, the two artists shared the stage at New Yorkâs Bowery Ballroom, playing to a sold-out crowd. A year later, Bradley â backed by the always phenomenal Menahan Street Band â recorded this stirring cover of Rodriguezâs 1967 debut, âIâll Slip Away.â
SWEET TEA â âAFTER LAUGHTER (COMES TEARS)â
(covering WENDY RENE)
In the mid-60s, Memphis singer Wendy Rene (born Mary Frierson) signed to Stax Records with her vocal quartet, The Drapels. The group was short-lived, but Rene caught the ear of the soul labelâs biggest star, Otis Redding, who championed her solo career. While Rene soon shifted her focus to motherhood, she found unexpected recognition when her 1964 debut, âAfter Laughter (Comes Tears),â was used in The Wu Tang Clanâs âTearz.â Since then, it has been sampled by dozens of artists, including Alicia Keys and Ariana Grande. Rene, who passed away in 2014, lived to enjoy many of these tributes, including this one by Sweet Tea (featuring Erika Wennerstrom and Jesse Ebaugh of Heartless Bastards, Alex Maas of The Black Angels, and Robb Kidd of Golden Dawn Arkestra). Recorded in 2012, this moving rendition captures the essence of Reneâs original recording, including its soulful doo-wop flavor.
VASHTI BUNYAN & DEVENDRA BANHART â âHOW COULD YOU LET ME GOâ
(covering MADELYNN VON RITZ aka LYNN CASTLE)
As Los Angelesâ first female barber, Madelynn Von Ritz (aka Lynn Castle) spent her days styling the biggest stars of the 60s. Behind the scenes, she was a songwriter whose work caught the ears of industry heavyweights â including Lee Hazlewood, who produced her debut single in 1967. Amid debilitating stage fright, Castle soon retreated from the spotlight, but that didnât stop her from writing and recording songs at home. Over the following decades, she built a vast catalog, spanning country, pop, rock, goth, and childrenâs music â none of which was released until 2017. Here, another singer-songwriter who achieved late-in-life recognition, Vashti Bunyan, pairs up with Devendra Banhart to pay homage to Castle through a dreamy cover of her haunting new wave track, âHow Could You Let Me Go.â
BARBARA LYNN â âWEâLL UNDERSTANDâ
(covering THE SUPREME JUBILEES)
Vocal group The Supreme Jubilees was formed in the 70s by cousins and brothers who grew up singing together in their Fresno, CA church. In 1980, the septet released their sole album, Itâll All Be Over, which offered an enticing blend of gospel, R&B, soul, disco, and plenty of sweet harmonies. But, amid disappointing sales and financial struggles, they disbanded shortly after. Three decades later, one of 500 original copies of Itâll All Be Over was re-discovered by a record store owner, leading to its eventual reissue by LITA. Among the albumâs highlights is the super-smooth âWeâll Understand,â covered in 2022 by 81-year-old R&B singer, songwriter, and guitarist Barbara Lynn, who made her return to the studio after nearly a decade. Lynn, a 2018 National Heritage Fellowship recipient, is joined by her daughter and granddaughter on backing vocals, as well as rising soul star Akelee âDoveâ with production by Tommy Brenneck.
BADBADNOTGOOD feat. JONAH YANO â âKEY TO LOVE IS UNDERSTANDINGâ
(covering THE MAJESTICS)
At the turn of the 80s, everyone was eager to jump on the new sounds of hip-hop, including Milwaukee businessman-turned-producer Marvell Love. Hoping to make a quick profit, Love recruited a local R&B group, The Majestics, to record a rap track. While the long-running vocal act was more interested in classic funk, they would soon become known for releasing Milwaukeeâs first hip-hop single, âClass A,â in 1982. Although The Majestics (who still perform today) never recorded another rap song, the 45 became a sought-after rarity. Yet, it was the ballad on its B-side, âKey to Love (Is Understanding),â that caught the ears of Torontoâs BADBADNOTGOOD. In 2019, the instrumental group partnered with Montreal singer-songwriter Jonah Yano to record their own rendition of the smooth-as-silk track, sharing âAs lovers of old soul, funk, and rare recordings, âKey To Loveâ has always had an impact on our heart and ears.â
IGGY POP & ZIG ZAGS â âIF IâM IN LUCK I MIGHT GET PICKED UPâ
(covering BETTY DAVIS)
Queen of Funk Betty Davis (1944â2022) enraptured audiences with her raw and powerful vocals, her provocative lyrics, and her space-age blend of funk, R&B, and blues. During her all-too-brief career, Davis smashed several glass ceilings, including becoming the first Black woman to write, produce, and arrange her own albums. She was defiant, original, and far ahead of her time. Itâs fitting then, that an equally fierce iconoclast, Iggy Pop, would cover Davisâ 1973 single, âIf Iâm In Luck, I Might Get Picked Up.â Backed by L.A. trio Zig Zags, the Godfather of Punk does Davis proud in this 2012 cover. The band has managed to find "a secret heavy Sabbath vibe lurking just below the funk surface,â which adds even more oomph to lyrics like âDonât you crush my velvet donât you ruffle my feathers neither/I said Iâm crazy Iâm wild I said Iâm nasty.â
MOZART ESTATE â âLOW LIFEâ
(covering PUBLIC IMAGE LTD.)
Johnny Rotten reinvented himself after The Sex Pistols broke up in 1978. Reverting to his birth name, Lydon established Public Image Ltd (PiL) and embarked on an experimental post-punk journey, incorporating elements of dub, avant-garde, prog-rock, and dance into the long-running groupâs evolving sound. PiLâs 1978 debut, First Issue, offered a taste of what was to come, including the raucous âLow Life,â covered here by British indie pop band, Mozart Estate. Hyslop explains that Mozart Estateâs mononymous frontman, Lawrence, founded the group âas a response to his other bandsâ lack of commercial success, making him perhaps the perfect postâpostâpunk heir to carry the torch of antiestablishmentarianism that Lydon lit and beat âem at their own game.â Recorded in 2021, the cover fleshes out PiLâs lo-fi track with pop-forward instrumentation and lush harmonies.
LESLIE WINER & MAXWELL STERLING â âONCE I WASâ
(covering TIM BUCKLEY)
One year after releasing his 1966 self-titled debut, singer-songwriter Tim Buckley (1947-1975) delivered his psychedelic-folk-rock masterpiece, Goodbye and Hello. A preview of the musical explorations that the artist would embark on during his tragically short career, the introspective album featured such highlights as âOnce I Was.â The melancholic tune, which finds the singer reflecting on past loves, is covered here by another sonic explorer: visionary musician, poet, and author Leslie Winer. Winer, whose multidimensional career includes such highlights as pioneering trip-hop and becoming the worldâs first androgynous fashion model, reinvents the song alongside British composer and double bassist, Maxwell Sterling. Backed by Sterlingâs cinematic arrangements, Winer transforms the song with her distinctive and mesmerizing vocals â delivering an utterly haunting performance.
ETHAN & MAYA HAWKE â âWE DONâT RUNâ
(covering WILLIE NELSON)
During his nearly seven-decade-long career, country icon Willie Nelson has written some of the genreâs most enduring standards â from âCrazyâ to âOn the Road Again.â From a discography that spans nearly 100 studio albums, one of Nelsonâs lesser-known but most striking releases is 1996âs Spirit. A stylistic outlier, the understated concept album features stripped-down, Spanish-influenced instrumentation and emotionally raw songwriting as Nelson delves into heartbreaking themes of love and loss. Among its tracks is the quietly reassuring âWe Donât Run,â in which Nelson sings âWe donât run, we donât compromise/We donât quit, we never do.â Here, father-daughter collaboration Ethan and Maya Hawke reimagine the song as a sweet ode to love, strength, and loyalty. Recently recorded at Electric Lady Studios in New York, the track features producer Christian Lee Hutson on a number of instruments including electric guitar and Wurlitzer.
GOLD LEAVES â âWONâT YOU TELL YOUR DREAMSâ
(covering LEE HAZLEWOOD)
Singer, songwriter, and psychedelic cowboy Lee Hazlewood (1929-2007) has long been a cult favorite, revered for his vivid â often quirky â storytelling, his warm, orchestral pop arrangements, and his distinctive sing-speak baritone vocals. While best known for his collaborations with Nancy Sinatra, Hazlewood also had a robust solo catalog, including 1971âs Requiem for an Almost Lady, which the artist described as âa composite of all my memories of ladies.â Among the tracks is âWonât You Tell Your Dreams,â which details the days immediately following a breakup, as mundane tasks are overshadowed by feelings of loss. Here, the song is covered lovingly by Gold Leaves (the project of singer-songwriter Grant Olsen). Emulating Hazlewoodâs warm, 1960s production, Olsen enhances his recording with soft pedal steel guitars (courtesy of Bill Patton) and lilting, multi-layered vocals.
SWAMP DOGG, JOHN C. REILLY, JENNY LEWIS & TIM HEIDECKER â âTHE KNEELING DRUNKARDâS PLEAâ
(covering THE CARTER FAMILY via THE LOUVIN BROTHERS)
Written by the legendary Carter Family and famously recorded by Grand Ole Opry regulars Ira and Charlie Louvin for their 1959 gospel album, Satan Is Real, âThe Kneeling Drunkardâs Pleaâ tells the tale of an inebriated man begging God for forgiveness. This all-star 2022 version (featuring indie sweetheart Jenny Lewis, actor/musician John C. Reilly, legendary R&B/soul artist Swamp Dogg, and comedian/actor/musician Tim Heidecker) pays homage to The Louvin Brothersâ signature tight-knit harmonies and bluegrass roots, as Lewis and Reilly share lead vocals. Swamp Dogg, meanwhile, brings the house down with a heartfelt spoken-word contribution, while Heidecker adds gospel flavors with a deftly-played organ accompaniment.
SILAS SHORT â âYOUâVE BECOME A HABITâ
(covering LEO NOCENTELLI)
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee and GRAMMYÂŽ Lifetime Achievement Award recipient Leo Nocentelli is best known for his foundational work with The Meters â including penning funk classics like âCissy Strutâ and âHey Pocky AâWayâ and backing the likes of Dr. John, Paul McCartney, and Labelle. But in between sessions with the pioneering New Orleans band, Nocentelli spent much of 1971 writing the stripped-down solo album, Another Side, blending elements of folk and country with his funk roots. The long-lost album, which finally saw the light of day in 2021, features such reflective songs as âYouâve Become a Habit,â covered here by Chicago-native and Stones Throw recording artist on the rise, Silas Short. Mirroring the intimate nature of the song, Short brings his sweet vocals to the front, while adding modern grooves through bluesy guitar and organ arrangements.
MAC DeMARCO â âHONEY MOONâ
(covering HARUOMI HOSONO)
One of Japanese pop musicâs most influential figures, Haruomi âHarryâ Hosono is a living legend whose five-decade-long career has encompassed electronic music, funk, experimental, psychedelic rock, and folk, among other styles. A founding member of the pioneering acts Happy End and Yellow Magic Orchestra, Hosono has also enjoyed a prolific solo career â including video game and film soundtracks, star-studded collaborations, and over two dozen albums. Among his many fans is the offbeat singer, songwriter, and producer, Mac DeMarco, who puts his own touch on âHoney Moon,â a track off Hosonoâs 1975 album, Tropical Dandy. The Canadian-born artist maintains the songâs dreamy, calypso vibe â and sings its original lyrics in Japanese. In 2019, a year after the cover was recorded, DeMarco joined his idol on stage in Los Angeles, where the two artists performed a duet of the song.
CAMERON BETHANY â âSEND IT ONâ
(covering DâANGELO)
In 2000, singer, songwriter, producer, and multi-instrumentalist DeAngelo (born Michael Eugene Archer) secured his position as one of R&Bâs biggest stars with his sophomore album, Voodoo. Inspired by the warm sounds of classic 60s and 70s soul, Voodoo was hailed as a neo-soul masterpiece, earning DâAngelo a spot at the top of the Billboard 200 and his first GRAMMYÂŽ Awards. While the single âUntitled (How Does It Feel)â â and its provocative video â became the albumâs biggest hit, it was followed by the equally soulful ballad, âSend It On,â covered here by Memphis star and Unapologetic recording artist Cameron Bethany. Like DâAngelo, Bethany is the son of a Southern preacher who trained his voice singing in church. He is also proving to be one of R&Bâs most unique and promising talents â as heard here in this inspired, multi-layered performance.
ROEDELIUS â âLE CHANT des FAUVESâ
(covering TINARIWEN)
Tinariwen is a long-running collective of musicians from the nomadic Tuareg population of the Malian deserts. Formed in 1979, the group began performing at weddings, baptisms, and parties, but when they heard Western rock, everything changed. Since then, the GRAMMYÂŽ-winning group has gained an international audience through their âdesert blues,â blending electric guitars with traditional Saharan music. While Tinariwen issued a series of cassettes over the years, their 2001 LP, The Radio Tisdas Sessions, marked their first wide release. Its opening track, âLe Chant des Fauvesâ is covered here by the pioneering German electronic composer, Roedelius. The 2022 recording found Roedelius, now 88, reimagining the song as a sparse instrumental which, Hyslop notes, âEvokes an eerily beautiful sense of desolation.â
MARK LANEGAN â âSAME OLD MANâ
(covering KAREN DALTON)
Karen Dalton (1937-1993) was a fixture in the 60s folk scene, earning the adulation of her peers through her world-weary vocals, her talents on the banjo or 12-stringed guitar, and her nuanced interpretations of traditional material, blues standards, and the songs of her contemporaries. While she would influence everyone from Nick Cave to Adele, Dalton remained relatively unknown during her lifetime, releasing only two albums. In 2012, Mark Lanegan (1964-2022) honored Dalton with a cover of the traditional âSame Old Manâ from her 1971 LP, In My Own Time. In contrast to the singerâs stripped-down rendition, Lanegan â who fronted the seminal band The Screaming Trees and collaborated with the likes of Isobel Campbell, Queens of the Stone Age, and Kurt Cobain â performs his version over a bed of lush instrumentation â including a mellotron, a fretless eâbow guitar, and banjos â all courtesy of musician and producer, Alain Johannes.
ANGEL OLSEN â âSOMETHING ON YOUR MINDâ
(covering DINO VALENTI via KAREN DALTON)
Among the artists that Karen Dalton influenced is singer-songwriter Angel Olsen. Olsen, who narrates Daltonâs personal journals in the 2020 documentary, Karen Dalton: In My Own Time, performs âSomething on Your Mind.â Penned by Dino Valenti of Quicksilver Messenger Service, the tune originally appeared on Daltonâs 1971 album In My Own Time and has long been considered a signature song of hers. Of the poignant track, Olsen says, ââSomething On Your Mindâ is about letting yourself face something that keeps setting you back.â Accompanied only by her piano, Olsenâs moving rendition allows the songâs lyrics to take center stage.
MARY LATTIMORE â âBLINKâ
(covering HIROSHI YOSHIMURA)
Japanese ambient music pioneer Hiroshi Yoshimura rose to prominence in the 70s, thanks to his beautifully minimal kankyĹ ongaku (environmental music). His acclaimed 1982 debut, Music For Nine Post Cards, was inspired by the stunning views of nature from the windows of Tokyoâs Hara Museum of Contemporary Art. Recorded at his home on a keyboard and Fender Rhodes, the album paints nine aural scenes, including âBlink,â covered here by harpist Mary Lattimore. In addition to her solo work, the classically trained musician has collaborated with Thurston Moore, Meg Baird, and Kurt Vile. Originally recorded for Aquarium Drunkardâs Lagniappe Sessions, Lattimoreâs hypnotic cover of âBlinkâ beautifully translates to the harp.
ACETONE â âPLAIN AS YOUR EYES CAN SEEâ
(covering JIM SULLIVAN)
In the late 60s, singer-songwriter Jim Sullivan (b. 1940) moved to Los Angeles with dreams of stardom. He hung out with Hollywood hotshots like Harry Dean Stanton, made a cameo in Easy Rider, and hired members of the legendary Wrecking Crew to perform on his 1969 debut, U.F.O. But the album, and his self-titled follow-up, failed to find an audience. Then, in 1975, he disappeared in the New Mexico desert. Over the years, amid a myriad of conspiracy theories, Sullivanâs music developed a cult following. Among his fans are fellow Angelenos Steve Hadley and Mark Lightcap, both formerly of Acetone â a supremely talented 90s band that, similar to Sullivan, found little success on the national scene despite local promise. Here, the artists pay tribute to Sullivan with a languid cover of his U.F.O. track, âPlain As Your Eyes Can See.â
STEVE GUNN & BRIDGET ST. JOHN â âRABBIT HILLSâ
(covering MICHAEL CHAPMAN)
A central figure in Britainâs folk and progressive scenes, singer, songwriter, and guitarist Michael Chapman (1941-2021) built a prolific catalog (over 50 albums) and a broad following during his five-decade-long career. Among his early highlights is 1970âs Fully Qualified Survivor, considered âthe quintessential Chapman LP, from its layers of beautiful acoustic guitars to its deranged vocals to its floating conga drums.â Here, Brooklyn singer-songwriter and longtime Chapman devotee Steve Gunn offers a modern take on the albumâs track, âRabbit Hills,â alongside singer, songwriter, and guitarist Bridget St. John, a British folk icon in her own right.
- Featuring over a decadeâs worth of inspired performances from Light in the Atticâs Covers series
- 20-track collection includes Ethan & Maya Hawke covering Willie Nelson, Charles Bradley & The Menahan Street Band interpreting Sixto Rodriguez, Iggy Pop & Zig Zags performing a Betty Davis gem, Angel Olsen paying homage to Karen Dalton, Mac DeMarco performing a song by Haruomi Hosono, and Swamp Dogg, John C. Reilly, Jenny Lewis & Tim Heidecker covering a country classic in tribute to The Louvin Brothers
- Double LP pressed on special limited edition color wax
- Featuring new cover art by renowned British artist Sophy Hollington
- Booklet with track-by-track notes by Lydia Hyslop

















