Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio

Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #70

Time once again for the Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio podcast, hanging tough for 70 episodes now dating back to 2012. Who’da thunk it?? Certainly not us.

This episode doesn’t break the predictable mold we’ve established over that time all that much, and hopefully that’s cool. New stuff this time from DOCTOR NOD, THE WORMS, HERON OBLIVION, WITCHING WAVES, THE GØGGS, COUNTER INTUITS and THE COOLIES, and comfortable old favorites of yours & mine like DRUNKS WITH GUNS, SKIP SPENCE, COME, VACUUM, DEAD C and the VELVET UNDERGROUND. We’re gonna have a real good time together.

Download or stream Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #70 on Soundcloud.

Stream the show on Mixcloud instead.

Subscribe to the show & download past episodes on iTunes.

Playlist:

THE WORMS – Everything in Order
DOCTOR NOD – Shaky Parts
TRASH – On and On With Lou Reed
THE COOLIES – Punks Not Bread
WITCHING WAVES – Pitiless
HERON OBLIVION – Oriar
SKIP SPENCE – Cripple Creek
WE WANT HELP – Tell Me The Reason Why People Don’t Like Me
SPACEMEN 3 – Mary-Anne
VELVET UNDERGROUND – I’m Set Free (live)
THE GØGGS – Billy is a Runaway
DRUNKS WITH GUNS – Drunks Theme
VERTIGO – Rub
COME – SVK
THE DEAD C – Bad Politics
COUNTER INTUITS – Rocket Surgery
THE PLUGZ – Move
WAVIS O’SHAVE – Mauve Shoes Are Awful
VACUUM – Accident

Uncategorized

I’ll start reblogging some of my older scans & posts that you may not have seen from the “early” days of DH in late 2012/early 2013.

dynamitehemorrhage:

Fanzine ad for ADULT CONTEMPORARY Records, scanned from Forced Exposure #11 in 1987. None of the promised “forthcoming” records – Laughing Hyenas, Drunks With Guns, Terveet Kadet (!) – never came out, at least not on Adult Contemporary, which pretty much folded up shop right around this time.

Uncategorized

Fanzine ad for ADULT CONTEMPORARY Records, scanned from Forced Exposure #11 in 1987. None of the promised “forthcoming” records – Laughing Hyenas, Drunks With Guns, Terveet Kadet (!) – never came out, at least not on Adult Contemporary, which pretty much folded up shop right around this time.