Eban Schletters - Witching Hour With Halloween approaching, it's not too early to get your "creep" on with a pair of spooky CDs. Lurking over his pipe organ, Theremin, and other noisemakers, Eban Schletter summons the fog with Witching Hour on the Oglio Records imprint - easy work for a composer whose work includes SpongeBob SquarePants and Mr. Show with Bob & David. Plenty of friends show up to sip from his cauldron, including Grant Lee Phillips, Jill Sobule, and comedians Paul F. Thompkins and Dave Foley. One highlight features the voice of SpongeBob, Tom Kenny, welcoming victims to his "Haunted Carnival."

DaytrotterThis week begins a whirlwind October that, when all is said and done, will result in close to 45 recorded sessions and two potential road trips to festivals in New York City (CMJ) and New Orleans (Voodoo Fest) for other sessions.

Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison One of the most important and heartfelt albums of 1968 gets a deluxe reissue next week. On Tuesday, Columbia Records releases the "Legacy Edition" of Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison, expanded to two CDs and a documentary DVD. With expletives restored and the revelation of an entire second show that was "lost" (except for a few selections culled for the original 16-song release), the box set contains a total of 51 tracks and a massive essay by Cash biographer Michael Streissguth.

Murnau Alex Riggen and Nick Pompou will perform their first public show as Murnau on Saturday at East Moline's Mixtapes, but the duo's ambitions are already clear.

Based in Morrison, Illinois, the band is named for the expressionist silent-film director F.W. Murnau (who made Nosferatu and Sunrise), and in addition to a trio of demos it has already recorded a score for the 1929 surrealistic classic short Un Chien Andalou as part of an EP with the single "We March on." The songs for a full-length have been written, the drums are recorded, and the album should be released next year, Riggen said last week.

"We've just always focused on recording and releasing ... to a wide audience [on the Web] rather than finding shows," he said. "We just like to write."

The Daredevil Christopher Wright This should not be taken as anything other than an inquiry from a discouraged person. We here at Daytrotter.com would like to know if the general Quad Cities public cares if we present shows here in town. We have the opportunity to host more and more shows here, with some of the best bands in the country, but have been turning them down because we can't afford to do them with the small draws that we've been getting. We want to help build this music scene up to what it could potentially be.

Duffy The UK's Parlophone Records imprint has announced an upcoming benefit album to raise funds for War Child's efforts in Afghanistan, Iraq, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Heroes is due November 24, and follows in the tradition of Help! in 1995, Hope in 2002, and the fastest-selling digital album in history, Help: A Day In the Life, in 2005.

X + XIf all else fails, with the help of his trusty loop pedal Marty Jones could have a promising future as a one-man band. As the founder, primary songwriter, and conductor - who also handles vocals, bass, guitars, keyboards, additional percussion, sampling, and programming duties - of Silvis' X+X (spoken as "X Add X"), Jones (a.k.a. Heat) seems more than happy to take anyone willing to jam with him along for the musical ride. But he's ready to do it alone, if necessary.

Oasis - Dig Out Your Soul Big thumbs up for Oasis, taking a unique approach to publicize their upcoming album by slapping moronic Guitar Hero enthusiasts with a dose of reality. Joining forces with their home country's Arts Council of England and the weekly music magazine NME, the cheeky lads are encouraging fans to lay off the colorful little buttons and pick up an actual guitar.

Damien Jurado For somebody who's been compared favorably to Bruce Springsteen and Neil Young and Nick Drake, Damien Jurado has had a touch-and-go career, and a bit of an inferiority complex.

Rob Barber and Mary Pearson When Rob Barber and Mary Pearson met in December 2005, they quickly struck up a friendship.

"We both thought of ourselves as pretty punk with what we were doing with our solo projects," Pearson said last week.

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