-
Magic: The Gathering
- MTG Singles
- Sealed Products (Boosters, Bundles, Commander Decks, etc.)
- (Pre-Order) Marvel's Spider-Man - Bundle
- (PREORDER) Edge of Eternities - Commander Deck (Counter Intelligence)
- Magic The Gathering Mythic Edition Storage Box
- A Game of Thrones LCG 2nd Edition: Ironborn Reavers Playmat
Pokémon TCG
- Pokemon Sealed
- Pokemon Singles
- Pokemon 5-piece Tradesies Stretchy Friendship Bracelet Set
- Build & Battle Obsidian Flames | Pokemon | New
- 2023 Pokemon Trading Card Game Classic Collection
- Pokemon TCG: Sword & Shield-Fusion Strike Trainer Box
- Scarlet & Violet - Build & Battle Stadium
Miniatures & Wargaming
TTRPG & Board Games
-
Magic: The Gathering
One Piece Card Game
Star Wars Unlimited
-
-
-
-
Evil Joy [LP] (ONLINE ORDER ONLY)
Evil Joy [LP] (ONLINE ORDER ONLY)
Regular Price $18.99Product Type : Vinyl
Hurry! Only27units left in stock!
This Item is Availible Online OnlyPrice & Availability will vary by locationItem LocationWarehouseAverage Processing Time24-72 HoursNo In store pickupOnline Order only
Fust-the Durham, North Carolina-based band-will release a newly remastered edition of it's debut album Evil Joy on vinyl for the first time on May 28, 2026 via Dear Life Records, marking the record's five-year anniversary. The re-release isn't a victory lap so much as a way of keeping the band's earliest vision of ragged, lyric-forward country-rock in active rotation-putting their point of origin back in circulation even as their new music keeps widening. It follows last year's Big Ugly and 2023's Genevieve, which introduced new listeners to Fust's blend of "small-town poetry" (Mojo) and a familiar yet probing "country-tinged folk-rock" (KEXP) that made it "one of the most fun rock records of the year" (Pitchfork). With Big Ugly, that sensibility didn't pivot so much as open up: the band plays louder and looser, while the songs feel even more close-up and lived-in, as Aaron Dowdy's writing sharpens it's eye for the detail that suddenly explains a whole life-and the band moves like a circle of friends telling the same story from several angles at once. The record's reach earned prominent year-end recognition from outlets like Time and Rolling Stone, with critic Steven Hyden calling it "the purest manifestation of the updated alt-country sensibility." The Evil Joy reissue also continues a quiet through-line in Fust's catalog: a habit of returning to earlier material not as artifact, but as groundwork-recontextualizing the beginnings as the sound keeps moving. That instinct was already visible in 2024's Songs of the Rail, a set of early home recordings that Paste called "one of the best alt-country compilations... in a long, long time"-a reminder that Fust's forward motion has always been built from an accumulating, shared history. Evil Joy was recorded sporadically between 2019 and 2021 in New York, eastern Pennsylvania, and Lake Gaston, but it was largely assembled in a shed in north Durham during the winter of 2020-21. The songs on Evil Joy probe the slow, strange weather of a relationship nearing it's end, when time speeds up and thickens at once. Days blur, then suddenly reappear as hard markers: the last days, the day you left, the day you came back, the better days, the days to come. What the record traces isn't a neat narrative arc so much as a lived-through duration: surrender and withdrawal, tenderness that keeps flickering, mistakes you can't rewind, and the uneasy relief that arrives alongside grief. As Rosy Overdrive put it, the album is "gentle, deliberate, and clear Americana/folk rock, " a breezy surface that nonetheless makes room for something darker beneath it. And that's the hinge of the title, Evil Joy: two words that don't resolve into a slogan so much as name a contradiction you can't talk your way out of-the strange experience of feeling something like lightness at the moment something shared is dying. If the phrase sounds a little overheated, that's part of it's honesty too: the way a hard period gets narrated in real time, when ordinary difficulty can feel momentous, and the name you give it is both an overreaction and a record of how heavy it actually was.
Tracklist:
- The Last Days (5 Year Anniversary Remaster)
- The Day that You Went Away (5 Year Anniversary Remaster)
- Where the Good Ones Go (5 Year Anniversary Remaster)
- Night on the Lam (5 Year Anniversary Remaster)
- Evil Joy (5 Year Anniversary Remaster)
- Long Hard
- Days In April (5 Year Anniversary Remaster)
- Pure Joy (5 Year Anniversary Remaster)
- When the Trial Ends (5 Year Anniversary Remaster)
- Wyoming County (5 Year Anniversary Remaster)
UPC: 840526502769
Label: Dear Life Records
Release Date: 5.29.26
Format: VinylAll Sales are Final.
No Refunds or Exchanges.
Anime Grading Guide
'Near Mint (NM)'
Near Mint condition cards show minimal or no wear from play or handling and will have an unmarked surface, crisp corners, and otherwise pristine edges outside of minimal handling. Near Mint condition cards appear 'fresh out of the pack,' with edges and surfaces virtually free from all flaws. '
'
'Lightly Played (LP)'
Lightly Played condition cards can have slight border or corner wear, or possibly minor scratches. No major defects are present, and there are less than 4 total flaws on the card. Lightly Played condition foils may have slight fading or indications of wear on the card face. '
'
'Moderately Played (MP)'
Moderately Played condition cards have moderate wear, or flaws apparent to the naked eye. Moderately Played condition cards can show moderate border wear, mild corner wear, water damage, scratches , creases or fading, light dirt buildup, or any combination of these defects. '
'
'Heavily Played (HP)'
Heavily Played condition cards exhibit signs of heavy wear. Heavily Played condition cards may include cards that have significant creasing, folding, severe water damage, heavy whitening, heavy border wear, and /or tearing. '
'
'Damaged (D)'
Damaged condition cards show obvious tears, bends, or creases that could make the card illegal for tournament play, even when sleeved. Damaged condition cards have massive border wear, possible writing or major inking (ex. white-bordered cards with black-markered front borders), massive corner wear, prevalent scratching, folds, creases or tears. '
'