On The Turntable

  • Close
    Fugazi

    Fugazi :: Red Medicine

    In 1995 Fugazi released Red Medicine which to us here at AD was a radical shift in the band’s recorded trajectory. The arrangements grew more complex, the studio-as-instrument ethos becoming fully realized with more extreme textures. From lo-fi abstractions to widescreen feedback, to moments of tender beauty, the overall feel of the album felt more personal, even down to the packaging itself.

    Read More
  • Close
    Styrofoam Winos

    Styrofoam Winos :: Real Time

    Styrofoam Winos—the Nashville-based trio of Lou Turner, Trevor Nikrant, and Joe Kenkel—follow up their 2021 self-titled debut with Real Time, an endearing and invigorating collection of shaggy southern rock and dusty, woolen folk. With a lo-fi, ambling ease, they cruise through road-weary choogles; swampy, faded funkers; harmonica swept confessionals; and meditative, noodling jaunts through the passage of time.

    Read More
  • Close
    Werther

    Werther :: 1970 S/T

    A fine fit for the coming turn of the season, Brazilian singer and guitarist Werther’s 1970 self-titled album is a warm and inviting document of gentle, airy bossa-nova, the music lively and eclectic with folk and Tropicália inflections and adorned with sumptuous orchestral arrangements and choral gatherings.

    Read More
  • Close
    Yoshiko Sai

    Yoshiko Sai :: Mangekyou

    Before the explosion of city pop, before shibuya-key and Tokyo’s collectors mania, there was already Mangekyou itself, the 1975 debut record from Yoshiko Sai, then just a 22 year old dropout from the art school of Kyoto. Approaching the 50 year anniversary of Sai’s legendary debut, WEWANTSOUNDS has announced a reissue that will see the album available outside of Japan for the first time ever.

    Read More
  • Close
    Chu Kosaka

    Chu Kosaka :: Arigato

    Chu Kosaka’s Arigato is wide-open pastoral bliss. The natural extension of Happy End with a bit more of a singer-songwriter orientation, Kosaka pieces together what could be the finest example of American country rock through the lens of a Japanese perfectionism. Don’t let that fool you. The tunes are loose.

  • Close
    Les Rallizes Dénudés

    Les Rallizes Dénudés :: 屋根裏 YaneUra Oct. ’80

    YaneUra Oct. ‘80 is their latest release, which bridges the gap between the classic Live ‘77 and the recently unearthed CITTA’ ‘93, which was released for the first time in 2023.

    Read More
  • Close
    Keanu Nelson

    Keanu Nelson :: Wilurarrakutu

    … Mississippi Records reissue of last year’s revelatory, Keanu Nelson album Wilurarrakutu to a worldwide audience. Nelson is an aboriginal Australian from Papunya, a remote community northwest of Alice Springs, and for this album he recorded himself freely singing his own poems over template Casio beats. Expect simple reggaes, apotheotic synthpop ballads, and new age devotional hymns.

    Read More
  • Close
    Christopher Owens

    Christopher Owens :: I Wanna Run Barefoot Through Your Hair

    It’s been long enough. This is the album we’ve been waiting for Christopher Owens to make for over a decade… as bold and beautiful and great as any one of the immortal Girls records.

    Read More

Laurence Vanay :: Galaxies

Like so many lost seventies relics, there’s a level of mystery wrapped up in underground French masterpiece Galaxies. In fact, the “Laurence Vanay” name itself is a pseudonym of multi-instrumentalist Jacqueline Thibault. Released in 1974, Galaxies has largely been siloed in prog-adjacent music circles, but with so many colorful textures at play here, a broader scale reappraisal is more than warranted.

Tim Heidecker :: Slipping Away

A concept album about the end of the world and the everyday travails of existence, Tim Heidecker’s folksy and loose sixth solo LP Slipping Away finds him offering dystopian short stories alongside vivid workaday musings. It’s both his most ambitious and most personally revealing record yet.

Jennifer Castle :: Letting The Songs Out

“I don’t want to teach anybody anything with a song. I’m not trying to steer anybody towards anything with a song. I’m not trying to be manipulative. I’m trying to let it out,” she says. “I must want it to come into being, so I just try to let it out as honestly as I can and then work from there.”

Jim White :: A Banner Year

Let’s hear it for Jim White! The drummer has been having a hell of a year. He got back together with the Dirty Three, he released his first solo album, the playful/absorbing All Hits: Memories; he put out a new duo record with the fantastic guitarist Marisa Anderson; he showed up on Ned Collette, Bill Callahan and Myriam Gendron’s latest masterpieces. And just this month, the Hard Quartet released their excellent s/t debut.

To celebrate Jim’s sound, dig into a small sampling of tracks that the drummer has appeared on over the past several months.

Jamaica to Toronto: Soul, Funk & Reggae 1967-1974

Light in the Attic is set to reissue their stellar 2008 compilation of Caribbean-influenced music from the late 60s and early 70s Toronto music scene as selected and annotated by Kevin “Sipreano” Howes. This new, deluxe pressing comes with a 20-page booklet featuring detailed bios, essays, and archival photos that further reveal the backstage of this extremely fecund scene of soul, funk, disco, R&B, and reggae.

Radio Free Aquarium Drunkard :: October 2024

Freeform transmissions from Radio Free Aquarium Drunkard on dublab. Airing every third Sunday of the month, RFAD on dublab features the pairing of Tyler Wilcox’’s Doom and Gloom from the Tomb and Chad DePasquale’s New Happy Gathering. This month, Chad kicks things off with a moody, drifting mix of avant-garde, ambient music, downtempo pop & soul. Wilcox follows it up with a selection of 2024 tracks that all feature Dirty Three drummer extraordinaire Jim White. Sunday, 4-6pm PT.

Chu Kosaka :: Arigato

Chu Kosaka’s Arigato is wide-open pastoral bliss. The natural extension of Happy End with a bit more of a singer-songwriter orientation, Kosaka pieces together what could be the finest example of American country rock through the lens of a Japanese perfectionism. Don’t let that fool you. The tunes are loose.

Adele Sebastian :: Desert Fairy Princess

The lone album from Adele Sebastian, a member of Horace Tapscott’s Pan Afrikan People’s Arkestra who died way to young, Desert Fairy Princess looks back at the fundamentals of spiritual jazz even as it blazes its own path. Sebastian, a flutist and occasional singer, cedes the spotlight to other composers and her band on her debut as a leader, showcasing her belief in community, conversation and group interplay. The result is a small masterpiece of open-hearted introspection and playful challenge, a declaration of faith and a question left unanswered. Like Tapscott’s Ark, it carries a message that has outlasted its creator.

Office Culture :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Inspired by a dream in which he produced a CD called Enough, the latest from Office Culture signals a shift in songwriter/producer Winston Cook-Wilson’s whip smart songcraft: employing a wide cast of collaborators, including guest appearances by Alena Spanger, Sam Sodomsky’s The Bird Calls, and Jackie West, he turns his attention to rhythms, textures, and mood, creating mini-movies with each of the album’s 16 songs. From clanking, layered polyrhythms, to melodious fretless bass, to pensive piano ballads, it’s a dynamic listen that feels as personal as it does ambitious.

Joni Mitchell Archives, Vol. 4: The Asylum Years (1976-1980)

The late 1970s were a good time for Joni Mitchell’s music. The latest volume of the Joni Mitchell Archives series focuses on this period through demos, outtakes, and live recordings. It’s not a complete picture, but it’s one that helps explain how a folk singer from the Canadian prairies came to work with jazz heavyweights and write lyrics for a Charles Mingus standard.

Styrofoam Winos :: Real Time

Styrofoam Winos—the Nashville-based trio of Lou Turner, Trevor Nikrant, and Joe Kenkel—follow up their 2021 self-titled debut with Real Time, an endearing and invigorating collection of shaggy southern rock and dusty, woolen folk. With a lo-fi, ambling ease, they cruise through road-weary choogles; swampy, faded funkers; harmonica swept confessionals; and meditative, noodling jaunts through the passage of time.