On The Turntable

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    Uhlmann Johnson Wilkes

    Uhlmann Johnson Wilkes ::

    In the latest permutation of the adventurous L.A. jazz group SML, guitarist Gregory Ulhmann and saxophonist Josh Johnson are joined by bassist Sam Wilkes, for an album that both deepens and expands the SML project. Looking back to bebop and drifting through post-rock, with pit stops at Jaco Pastorius, Lyle Mays and the Beatles, Uhlmann/Johnson/Wilkes is unafraid to embrace the beautiful, even as it remains committed to experimentation and smooth radicalism.

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    Liam Grant

    Liam Grant :: Prodigal Son

    With Prodigal Son, fingerstyle rambler Liam Grant continues his investigation into lineage and place with quite possibly the rawest, loudest acoustic guitar recording you’ll hear all year. Casting aside delicate precision, Grant offers up unwieldy and elemental excursions that reach from the well-trod terra firma and wreath themselves into a knotty concentric circle inside the heart of contemporary guitar soli.

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    Pavement

    Pavement :: Wowee Zowee

    Pavement albums often invite their own retrospection. Stephen Malkmus sprinkled the first two LPs with clues to his anxieties around his musical reception, but on their third album, Wowee Zowee, which is celebrating its 30th anniversary, Pavement is light on the lyrical breadcrumbs. Contemporary critics so badly wanted to read the album as a self-conscious turn away from success. But in reality, it was Malkmus and co. doing exactly what put them on the precipice of success in the first place: leaning into their own artistic self-assurance.

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    Ras Michael & The Sons Of Negus

    Ras Michael & The Sons Of Negus :: Rastafari

    If there exists a more perfect reggae album than Rastafari to symbolize the rejuvenating, re-energizing power of spring we have yet to hear it. Turning 50 this year, this is far more than sound-system music, this is reggae as art form.

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    Seefeel

    Seefeel :: Quique (2025 Reissue)

    A scary 32 years ago Londoners Seefeel unleashed their (predominantly) instrumental masterwork Quique on the Too Pure imprint. Effortlessly straddling post-rock and electronic realms might not seem a huge deal today, but back in 1993 it felt almost miraculous.

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    Okonski

    Okonski :: Entrance Music

    Okonski return with Entrance Music, revealing the flipside of the perpetual afterhours reverie of Magnolia. For their sophomore outing, the trio gently open the curtains to find themselves in the light of a new day, unimpeded by anything that isn’t melody or mood. Entrance Music drifts along like a perfect daydream, homey and lived-in, but maintaining a sense of spontaneity that leaves no doubt pianist Steve Okonski, bassist Michael Isvara “Ish” Montgomery, and drummer Aaron Frazer are attuned to the same ephemeral frequency.

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    Phi-Psonics

    Phi-Psonics :: New Pyramid

    Phi-Psonics is a spiritual jazz collective headed by Los Angeles-based composer and acoustic bassist Seth Ford-Young, whose prolific session work can be heard on releases such as the recent stunner by Takuro Okada. The uninhibited, meditative soundscapes of previous studio offerings The Cradle and Octava quickly made waves after catching the attention of Manchester jazz label Gondwana, flashing nods to A Love Supreme and a lush framework playing off of Ford-Young’s Mingus-inspired upright bass, lifting woodwinds and the Wurlitzer piano of Mitchell Yoshida.

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    Destroyer

    Destroyer :: Dan’s Boogie

    Over the past decade, Destroyer has shifted seamlessly into middle age. Where restless, lesser artists might have manufactured reinvention narratives or settled into the indie oldies circuit (imagine the money to be made from a Kaputt 15th anniversary tour), Bejar and his muse have kept on truckin’: ken, Have We Met, LABRYNTHITIS, and now Dan’s Boogie. Not career-defining statements, but statements out of which a career is defined.

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In The Spiritual Kingdom Of Love :: Robyn Hitchcock Dissects The Soft Boys’ Underwater Moonlight

Forty-five years after it was first released, the Soft Boys’ Underwater Moonlight sounds better than ever. The glorious chime of Robyn Hitchcock and Kimberley Rew’s guitars, the buoyant rhythm section of drummer Morris Windsor and bassist Matthew Seligman, the interlocking vocal harmonies, Hitchcock’s surreal and bewitching lyrics … it all adds up to a bona fide masterpiece.

To dive deep into the stories behind the songs, we went straight to the source. Below, Robyn Hitchcock walks us through the album’s 10 tracks.

Transmissions :: Yuka Honda

This week on the show, the great Yuka Honda. She’s a New York musician. In the 1990s, she emerged from the fertile New York music underground with Cibo Matto alongside groups like the Beastie Boys, Sonic Youth, and Luscious Jackson. She’s collaborated with an extensive roster of musicians, including John Zorn,David Byrne, Yoko Ono, Sean Ono Lennon, and her husband, guitarist Nels Cline. Earlier this year, we taped the conversation you’re about to hear. Some of it ran as text in the Across the Horizon zine that was available at Big Ears Music Fest. In this conversation, we get into food, art, language, and much more.

THiQ :: The New Cats

With his solo Paint project, Pedrum Siadatian has been steadily inching out of the Allah Lahs’ gritty, fuzzy, sweetly disruptive garage aesthetic and into cleaner, synthier, electro-fired dance music. Now with the Montreal producer and Sheer Agony frontman Jackson Macintosh in tow, THiQ pushes further into electronic grooviness. Day-glo fantasies of synth and keyboard open up like a psychedelic curio cabinet, with tableaux after tableaux of anime flavored hyper-realities.

Max Knouse :: Mint and Tobacco

Chipmunk’d Away is Max Knouse’s third album. Known for his sessions and live shows with artists like Califone, Jolie Holland, Adan Jodorowsky, Psychic Temple, Simon Joyner, Alex Dupree, and others, Knouse has established himself as an essential factor in the West Coast indie pop underground, brandishing guitar chops that mirror the rawness of his voice; he treats his instrument like a divining rod of spiritual tension and joyful racket, pushing and pulling on it with affection and sometimes something darker. 

The Pennys :: S/T

The Pennys distills romantic garage pop to wistful essence, the chiming guitar lick, the rattle of tambourine and the plaintive whispery melody. The Oakland duo is comprised of two low-key but excellent mainstays of the Bay Area scene. RE Seraphin came up in Apache and the Impediments but lately has been spinning out a string of bittersweet solo discs. Mike Ramos is known for his lo-fi but gemlike work with Tony Jay, Cindy and Flowertooth. Together they put together six songs, all relatively concise but in no particular hurry, all with the unfussed grace and shifting moodiness of bands like the Reds, Pinks and Purples and the Jeanines.

Bandcamping :: Spring 2025

We’re somehow barreling our way through 2025, time speeding up as spring’s renewal comes around again. The future is unknown, but music keeps us sane, humanity at its best. With another Bandcamp Friday hitting on May 2, check out a few recent recommendations below. Fill up your cart and keep on dreaming.

PJ Harvey :: To Bring You My Love at 30

Harvey made To Bring You My Love at the age of 25. The album was her third full-length, and the first to explore a career-spanning collaborative partnership with Jon Parish. Other musicians contributed, notably Bad Seeds veteran Mick Harvey, drummer Jean-Marc Butty and Joe Gore, but the album takes it shape from the fluid interactions of Harvey and Parish, often both of them playing guitars at once.

Teo’s Bag: Constructing Bitches Brew

55 years on, Miles Davis’ 1970 opus, Bitches Brew remains as mind-bending as ever, but its most enduring influence may lie in its innovative construction. A deeper look at Teo Macero’s methods and madness, paired with a 2-hour collection of unused session reels expands its universe.

Cooper Crain :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Cooper Crain is a bandleader, band member, producer, engineer, mixer, songwriter, improviser, and a player of organs, synths, guitars, and much more. First coming up as a member of the psychedelic, grooved-based Cave and then gaining more prominence with the hypnotic, meditative, and powerful Bitchin Bajas. The Bajas return this month with their new LP , marking their second collaboration with Natural Information Society. We caught up with Crain to discuss this latest collaboration, the art of mixing and editing music, and a selection of the musical projects that he’s worked on over the past several years.

Transmissions :: William Tyler (2025)

William Tyler joins Transmissions for a time-bending talk about his new record, Time Indefinite, out this week via Psychic Hotline. On this episode of the show, we toss out the script in favor of following Tyler’s thoughts; like the indefinite time his new album references, linearity isn’t always the focus in this talk. And while we touch on more than a few heavy topics, including addiction, climate change, and the sad state of satirical art, this one is an entry in our “hangout episodes” series.