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FREE MP3s NEW MUSIC TUESDAY

New Music Tuesday: The Low Anthem, Danielson, The Caribbean, The Cave Singers, Tahiti 80 And More

To celebrate today’s crop of releases, here are new mp3s from ALSO, Arbouretum, Banjo Or Freakout, Julianna Barwick, Bass Drum Of Death, the Builders And The Butchers, the Caribbean, the Cave Singers, Count Fleet, Danielson, Darwin Deez, David Dondero, Rachel Goodrich, Sarah Lee Guthrie & Johnny Irion, Marcellus Hall, Loch Lomond, G. Love, the Low Anthem, the Luyas, Make Out, Malachai, Dustin O’Halloran, Phineas And The Lonely Leaves, Puro Instinct, Sister Crayon, Colin Stetson, Tahiti 80 and Toro Y Moi. Also, vote for your favorite of today’s new releases.

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NEWS

Win A Copy Of Matt And Kim’s “Sidewalks” On Vinyl And CD!

Sidewalks is the third and latest album from Matt And Kim, and it’s a good one. You can buy the 10-track LP from iTunes here, but we have copies of Sidewalks on vinyl and compact disc for one lucky MAGNET reader. All you have to do is be the first person to email us the answer to this question: What are Matt and Kim’s last names? (Send the email to magnetmag@aol.com, and be sure to put “Matt And Kim Contest” in the subject line.) We apologize to our overseas readers, but this contest is only open to residents of the U.S. Check out Sidewalks‘ cool cover art after the jump.

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120 REASONS TO LIVE

120 Reasons To Live: The Connells

Nothing did more to further the cause of Alternative Nation-building than 120 Minutes, MTV’s Sunday-night video showcase of non-mainstream acts. For nearly two decades, the program spanned musical eras from ’80s college rock to ’00s indie, with grunge, Britpop, punk, industrial, electronica and more in between. MAGNET raids the vaults to resurrect our 120 favorite and unjustly forgotten videos from the show’s classic era.

#45: The Connells “’74-’75”

The Connells belonged to that Southern axis of ’80s college rock (the dB’s, Guadalcanal Diary, Miracle Legion and, of course, R.E.M.) toward which we inadequately deploy the word “jangle” when so many other adjectives fail us. One disadvantage to remembering these acts as happy-go-lucky, Rickenbacker-strumming pop songwriters is that so many of them were so damn good at writing heart-crushing ballads. The Raleigh, N.C., band led by brothers Mike and David Connell may have outdone all their contemporaries with 1993’s “’74-’75,” a relatively late-career (the group debuted in 1985) offering that was a huge hit in Europe; the Connells found themselves opening for Def Leppard after the song took off. The reasons why “’74-’75” failed to catch on in the U.S. is regrettable but expected: Alt-rock was more in the mood for breakthrough hits by Smashing Pumpkins, the Breeders, Beck and Green Day. It had to be a pretty eventful year in music for the Connells’ finest to get swept under the rug.

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GUEST EDITOR

From The Desk Of The Jayhawks’ Mark Olson: Books

Gary Louris and Mark Olson left Jayhawks fans in a lurch when they parted ways rather abruptly in 1995. Turns out Olson had tired of all the obligations and trappings that came with the Minneapolis-spawned group’s hard-won success. So he escaped to the Mojave Desert to ply a rootsier, salt-of-the-earth trade with the help of wife Victoria Williams. Ah, but time—and perhaps a little fiscal motivation—has a way of smoothing over the rough patches in many productive creative partnerships. (Unless you’re Bob Mould and Grant Hart.) And 15 years later, the Jayhawks have returned to us more-or-less fully intact. For how long, no one really knows, but they just did a string of shows to back the enhanced reissues of 1992’s Hollywood Town Hall and 1995’s Tomorrow The Green Grass (American/Legacy). With their sugary (if unrefined) harmonies, rugged intelligence and casual accessibility, the albums are to the alt-country movement what One Of These Nights and Hotel California were to ’70s SoCal country rock—even if the comparably modest sales figures may not indicate as much. Louris and Olson will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our brand new Q&A with Louris.

Olson: In Santa Monica, Calif., lived my grandmother. She worked as a secretary for 40 years at the Veterans Administration in West Los Angeles. When she was young, she put to memory poems and a substantial amount of book-read material that she could pull out and present to her family for argument’s sake. All this reading and exercising of her mind took place somewhere near Yankton, S.D., on a farm under the shade of a elm tree. She handed me books. Try to find Earth Abides, the story of a man who comes back from a hiking trip to find out that everyone has died of some illness and how things proceed into the future. Another favorite is “Guests Of The Nation,” a short story of friendship, dignity and orders from above. Video after the jump.

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VIDEOS

Film At 11: Echo & The Bunnymen

MAGNET faves Echo & The Bunnymen are bringing their Crocodiles & Heaven Up Here Tour to North America. Ian McCulloch and Co. will be playing those two albums (the band’s 1980 debut and 1981 sophomore LP) in their entirety. The tour kicks off in Boston on May 9. Watch the video of the band playing Crocodiles track “Stars And Stars” last year in its hometown of Liverpool, and read our Bunnymen Over/Under.