Disregard the above picture, the cd set I'm selling is the Special Edition double-album reissue of K.C. Accidental - Captured Anthems for an Empty Bathtub + Anthems for the Could've Bin Pills. Brand new and factory sealed. Check out my other items! for more cd's. Be sure to add me to your favorites list! I combine postage on multiple wins to reduce the shipping cost and only charge the actual cost to ship. Winner pays postage which is $3.99 Canadian within Canada and $11.50 to the US. To anywhere outside of Canada/US the shipping cost is $12 Canadian. If you prefer I can further reduce the shipping cost on multiple wins by inserting the inserts and disc from one cd inside the jewel case of another, this way the discs won't get scratched or the inserts wrinkled. 

K.C. Accidental Captured Anthems for an Empty Bathtub / Anthems for the Could've Bin Pills

K.C. Accidental Captured Anthems for an Empty Bathtub / Anthems for the Could've Bin Pills
In the thick of a massive tour, a Bruce McDonald directed film and a spot on this year's Polaris Prize short list, it's nice to pause and remember where Broken Social Scene came from: Kevin Drew's childhood bedroom, alongside fellow BSS co-founder Charles Spearin, in the form of K.C. Accidental. The reissue of two lo-fi EPs (originally recorded in the late '90s using reel-to-reel tape) sound like vintage Broken Social Scene because that's essentially what they are. The opening track on Captured Anthems, "Nancy and the Girdle Boy," is elevated and triumphant. Immediately following is "Something For Chicago," which is jazzy and contemplative, with a mischievous undertone. Next is frantic percussion-fest "Anorexic He-Man" and with it, confirmation that neither Drew nor Spearin have ever been fans of making songs that sound similar to that which came previously. The absence of Drew's charmingly capricious lyrics is mitigated by the kind of bold, communicative instrumentation that makes Do Make Say Think so stunning, yet somehow the most endearing moment comes on "Kev's Message For Charlie," when Drew leaves Spearin the voicemail that would become their first recording together. On Anthems for the Could've Bin Pills, a pre-Metric Emily Haines duets with Drew on "Them (Pop Song #3333)," while Justin Peroff plays drums on two tracks and Jimmy Shaw contributes trumpet throughout, making both EPs an integral first verse in Broken Social Scene's Canadian indie rock folklore. (Arts & Crafts)