Bola Sete :: Falling Stars

Nestled at the end of a recent installment of Deerhunter’s weekly, and highly recommended, “Sunday Night Radio Hour” Spotify mix, was Bola Sete’s “Falling Stars.” Previously unknown to us, the expectations were for a pleasant strum of acoustic guitar. We love Sete’s guitar playing here, whether it be the jazzy bossa nova sway that he mastered with a classical touch, or the immaculate, serene sounds of openness . . .

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Michael Rault :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Michael Rault's new album, New Day Tonight, lends itself to repeated listens. It's not just that the Canadian musician continues to build on his distinctively retro-but-not-old sound, but the complexity and layering accomplished on the LP reveals something new with each listen. We caught up with Rault from his home in Montreal and got the lowdown on working hand-in-hand with Daptone and Wick Records, the long-but-fruitful gap between releases, and the fortuitous walk he took with producer Wayne Gordon to a Brooklyn music shop that ended up giving the record one of its signature sounds.

It's a New Day Tonight by Michael Rault

Aquarium Drunkard: Not to start too on-the-nose, but at times the record seems preoccupied with the dichotomy of night and day, and sleep in particular. Both in the title, some of the song titles, and the lyrics — and it’s even coming out on Sleepless Records in Canada… so to be frank, how do you sleep at night?

Michael Rault: Nothing particularly unusual happens to me when I sleep, I used to sleepwalk sometimes, I guess that’s unusual, but I don’t do that much anymore. I’ve always had this subconscious approach to writing music and writing songs — not to sound pretentious or like I’ve got any special method that I use, cause I don’t really. I tend to try to play things and come up with ideas and see what sticks without thinking about it too much. And then listening to what I sing, when I’m not really thinking about it, I start to see patterns and themes. Then I start to think more consciously and make sense of it without, maybe, making too much sense of it. I don’t want to kill it by organizing it too much.

I wrote “Sleep With Me” without really thinking about it at all. And it came together in a more cohesive way than most songs do. I think I sang the first verse and chorus and maybe second verse in pretty quick order. I didn’t think I was gonna make an album themed around sleeping, but the idea kept popping up in songs I was writing. As I started getting closer to finishing the album, I was coming up with a list of songs to concentrate on - I realized that sleep was a theme. I wrote a couple of more, consciously, about sleeping and dreaming to fill out the album. “Dream Song” was consciously written about it.

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: Gospel Jubilee Vol. 2 — A Mixtape

Forcing someone to read a lengthy explication of the music found in the second installment of the Gospel Jubilee would only delay the experience of hearing — feeling — these heavenly, heavenly sounds. Over an hour of unbelievable falsettos, palpable bass lines, smoking–even Hazel-esque–guitars, fervid singing voices, chunky synthesizers, perfect drums, and much more . . .

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Ambient Explorations: Cool Maritime / Sam Gendel

Cool Maritime is the work of Sean Hellfritsch. A modular synth composer, he is the spouse of fellow modern electronic pioneer Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith, and shares her sense of ambient adventure in crafting exploratory soundscapes that reach beyond the tangible and into unseen worlds. His latest outing, Sharing Waves, due out June 1 via Leaving Records, is brought to life with shimmering ripples of aqua tones and a misty rainforest timbre. But the record expands beyond . . .

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Jennifer Castle :: Angels of Death

“The fictional concept of death rears its head in so many of my songs, always on the periphery, or as a side note, or a reminder, a punchline or the bottom line, always sniffing around like a death dog. For once I wanted to try to put it in my center vision. In order to talk about death, I armed myself with the only antidote I know: writing. Is this a record about death or a record about writing? Hard to tell in the end. I began to think of poetry as time travel. I tried to write messages to the future.” — Jennifer Castle

Jennifer Castle's path has always been a patient one. Whether covering Bob Dylan  or channeling the energy of Laurel Canyon on her album  Pink City, an elliptical air defines her work. But she's never been more potent than on her new album, Angels of Death, a work that may well stand the test of time as a masterpiece.

Following a series of familial losses, Castle stares down mortality. It’s no small feat addressing the end, but what other choice does one have? The notion of grief — the shapeless act of processing and learning to live with loss — is tremendously and overwhelmingly intangible. Because as final as a loss may feel, the question always remains: Is anyone, or anything, ever completely gone? And though mourning brings moments of overwhelming despair, at other times, it opens our eyes to the present in a way they were previously closed to. And then there are the times when all these opposing ideas seem to act in concert. The middleworld, we hear Castle call it. That's where  Angels of Death lives.

Jennifer Castle :: Crying Shame

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Garcia Peoples :: Show Your Troubles Out

On their debut LP Cosmic Cash, New Jersey's Garcia Peoples  funnel  the energy of their live shows into a cohesive full-length statement. Originally a quartet featuring Tom Malach and Danny Arakaki on guitars, Cesar Arakaki on drums, and Derek Spaldo on bass, they recently added Pat Gubler (PG Six, Wet Tuna) on keys to fully flesh out the group as a deep groove machine, capable of turning on a dime. Built on dueling twin leads, barrelhouse keys, and bubbly rhythms, their songs recall the melodic glory of  NRBQ and Little Feat,  approximating AM golden radio at it finest. These songs beg to be blasted with the windows rolled down while you  cruise backroads trying to avoid the fuzz and have a good time. On your own terms, man.

We asked the band to tell us a bit about their first single “Show Your Troubles Out” out now in advance of the band's full album release this summer on Beyond Beyond is Beyond Records.

“The original thought about this song was for it to be super heavy while maintaining a solid groove, î  la Steppenwolf – née ‘American Rock n’ Roll’. Since we don’t have the amazing rasp and gusto in our voice like John Kay …[this is] more or so what came out, that dictated the mood of the melody and vocals. Kind of like, how the Band says in an interview that they 'sang what they could.' So you can say this song is Canadian-American at its core.

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These Are Better Days :: Bruce Springsteen, The Album Collection Vol. 2: 1987-1996

“Whatever you now find weird, ugly, uncomfortable and nasty about a new medium will surely become its signature,” Brian Eno wrote in  A Year With Swollen Appendices. “CD distortion, the jitteriness of digital video, the crap sound of 8-bit – all of these will be cherished and emulated as soon as they can be avoided.”

I’m thinking about that quote sitting at my kitchen table, staring at Bruce Springsteen’s bolo tie on the cover of 1987’s Tunnel of Love. I know Eno wasn’t talking about neckwear, but formats are also a kind of fashion. They go in and out of style, and this month sees the release of Springsteen’s The Album Collection Vol. 2: 1987-1996. Remastered for high grade vinyl, a format once considered dead, and housed in a replica tweed Fender guitar case box, the set commemorates a string of albums that found Springsteen in the wilderness years dividing his most commercially successful eras, including  Tunnel of Love  and the  Chimes of Freedom EP from 1987, 1992’s  Lucky Town,  Human Touch,   and the live In Concert/MTV “Plugged” special, 1995’s The Ghost of Tom Joad, and 1996’s Blood Brothers EP.

The lavish presentation of this under-recognized era might strike an odd note at first. These are not Springsteen’s undisputed masterpieces, nor efforts released by an established classic rock standard bearer. But that makes them even more interesting. They are the work of a songwriter facing himself and the world around him, creating art about how growing up means seeing yourself and others in non-idealized terms.

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Cut Worms

Lagniappe (la ·gniappe) noun ‘lan-ˌyap,’ — 1. An extra or unexpected gift or benefit. 2. Something given or obtained as a gratuity or bonus.

In early 2017, in the twilight hours outside a Michael Hurley show, John Andrews of Quilt, Woods, and Yawns first told us about Max Clarke, who records under the name Cut Worms. It wasn't long before we experienced his spectral sound for ourselves. Clarke sounds like he stepped out of a late night Time-Life rock 'n' roll memories commercial to take the stage at the Bang Bang Bar in Twin Peaks.  Hollow Ground, the debut lp from Cut Worms, is out  on Jagjaguwar, and Clarke is on tour with King Tuff. In his own words, he describes adapting songs by the Nerves and Tucker Zimmerman for this installment of the Lagniappe Sessions.

"Cut Worms has never really been only one group or thing. That’s part of what I like about it ... In this instance, it’s me (Max) and my girlfriend, Caroline Gohlke. We collaborated on these tunes that we both really like and tried to do some honest interpretations of them. Both are fantastic songs and we had fun putting them together in our way."

Cut Worms :: Many Roads to Follow (The Nerves)

The Nerves are a favorite group of mine and Caroline's. I’ve loved this song from the first time I heard it. The original song only exists as a demo, so there was room for interpretation. The vocal harmonies are really interesting and I’m not sure we really got it exactly “correct” but we did our own thing with it and I like how it turned out.

Cut Worms :: Old Fashion Shotgun Wedding (Tucker Zimmerman)

Caroline and I each recently found this song independently of one another and so it was kind of a serendipitous thing when she suggested it as a song choice for this project because I had been thinking about it too. The original version of this song by Tucker Zimmerman is singular and basically perfect the way it is. So without any intention of “improving” on the original, we did our own interpretation of it which I think does fair justice to the spirit of the thing. I’m really pleased with how it came out.

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Ben Lamar Gay :: Downtown Castles Can Never Block the Sun

Despite what its title may seem to imply, Ben Lamar Gay’s Downtown Castles Can Never Block the Sun is not some kind of pastoral manifesto. In fact, you’re not likely to hear an album in 2018 so steamed by big-city humidity. Like King Krule, Gay is some kind of post-industrial master of structural manipulation, the kind of guy who can fit a song into the most unlikely of unoccupied spaces the same way an . . .

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Yung Wu :: Shore Leave

When you've made one perfect record, why make another? Shore Leave, originally released in 1987, is Yung Wu's sole long-player (though a covers album has circulated privately). It's a total jangle rock gem, filled with sparkling songwriting, infectious rhythms and gorgeous melodies. But even though the band's discography is brief . . .

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SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show (7pm PST, Channel 35)

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XMU, channel 35, can now be heard every Wednesday at 7pm PST with an encore broadcasts on-demand via the SIRIUS/XM app.

SIRIUS 521: Jean-Michel Bernard — Genérique Stéphane ++ Basa Basa - African Soul Power ++ Missus Beastly — Geisha ++ Sinkane - Jeeper Creeper ++ William Onyeabor - Better Change Your Mind ++ Seu Jorge and Almaz - Everybody Loves The Sunshine ++ Paint - Heaven In Farsi ++ Khruangbin - Maria Tambien ++ Night Beats - H-Bomb ++ Spacemen 3 - Come Down Easy (Demo) ++ The Velvet Underground - I’m Sticking With You . . .

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Ornette Coleman :: The Atlantic Years

Listening to the the Atlantic recordings of Ornette Coleman is like listening to the history of jazz in fast forward. From the May 22, 1959 recording of The Shape of Jazz to Come — Coleman’s first release for Atlantic and third overall — to the March 27, 1961 session that produced Ornette on Tenor, Coleman revolutionized his artform at least twice. He emerged with one of the most idiosyncratic voices in all of music, then rapidly evolved it. He fundamentally reimagined the way jazz is notated (by eschewing conventional notation entirely) and produced the first fully collective improvisation on an album whose name — Free Jazz — doesn’t just represent a fresh movement in the genre; it conjures up an entirely new approach to making and consuming music that’s still reverberating nearly sixty years later.

All of which can make approaching The Atlantic Years, which collects the six albums the label released during Coleman’s run and four compilations pulled from the same sessions that were released years later, one of them appearing here for the first time on vinyl, a prospect as daunting as the structure of this sentence.

What’s more, the narrative of Coleman as a difficult artist persists — in part because of the Pollock-esque mess of connotations that pour out of the phrase “free jazz,” and in part because of the way Coleman’s art was immediately received, not only by critics (DownBeat famously gave Free Jazz both a five-star review and a zero-star review) but also by fellow jazz musicians; Ted Gioia reports that drummer Max Roach “allegedly punched Ornette in the mouth,” and Miles Davis once suggested that Coleman was “screwed up inside” (though he later repented and became a Coleman supporter).

Which is unfortunate, because what made Coleman a challenge to his contemporaries in the late 1950s and early 1960s is precisely what makes him accessible today. Together with trumpeter Don Cherry (who would go on to a brilliant career of his own), Coleman maintains what we could generously call a casual attitude toward the chord changes of his own compositions. The resulting atonality, which must have been grating to ears weaned on Kind of Blue, feels of a piece with even the most sweetened noise-rock that would follow in Coleman’s wake. He and Cherry peel notes out of their horns, squeaking in and out of the grooves of tonality as their playing carries them. Transpose Cherry’s phrasing in, say, Ornette!’s “W.R.U.” to guitar, and it’s easy to picture Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd (or Nels Cline at his least jazzy, ironically enough).

Perhaps more than any of the other mid-century jazz titans, Coleman was interested in making people move.

Perhaps more than any of the other mid-century jazz titans, Coleman was interested in making people move. He was born in Fort Worth, and his earliest gigs were with R&B bands touring across Texas and Louisiana. Those formative nights sweating it out in roadhouses clearly left their mark on his playing; not for nothing does Ben Ratliff declare Free Jazz to be “booty music” in the box set’s liner notes. In fact, the staggered way his quartet approaches phrasing would show up decades later; think of the way Radiohead Kid A treat their soundstage like a blank canvas instead of a moving scroll. Coleman’s use of repetition and his ensemble’s snipped entrances and exits predict classical minimalism and maybe even house music. Even when it isn’t swinging (which is much of the time), it’s visceral, music whose angularity is meant to goose you; it might be worth remembering that The Rite of Spring was composed as dance music, too.

Those juke-joint days make their presence known in more immediate ways, though. Once it leaves its theme in the dust, Change of the Century’s “Ramblin’” rides on a bent-string bassline that Charlie Haden leans into like he’s pushing a shovel into earth. Coleman bops along throughout his solo, trilling in and out of playground melodies and squawking along genially before handing it off to Cherry. It’s like listening to Little Richard, if all that vocal energy were coming through an alto sax. The quartet frequently staggers through bebop changes like they’ve spilled into its streets after last call, their joyous shouts reverberating off of the windows.

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Spiritual Messenger :: Idris Ackamoor and the Pyramid’s An Angel Fell

Since forming the Pyramids in the early 1970s, Idris Ackamoor has crafted a body of work fusing spiritual jazz with Afrobeat and lyrical mysticism with social justice. After studying with the late Cecil Taylor at Antioch College, Ackamoor traveled to Africa, learning new skills and picking up new instruments -- and settled in San Francisco, building a sound blending the cosmic jazz of Sun Ra with R&B, funk, and homespun folk-art. Like his noted inspiration Pharoah Sanders, he has a mighty, impassioned tone, and that sound propels Ackamoor's new album, An Angel Fell.

Working with a parred down Pyramids ensemble, he and his six-piece band create a beautiful and vivid song-cycle, employing spacey language to address the present moment, reflecting on the lingering traumas of Hurricane Katrina and the destructive storms that followed, the shooting of the 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and putting song to the Water Protectors' battle at Standing Rock. Inspirational is a word that gets tossed around a bit too loosely most the time, but it's hard to come up with a better term to describe the resilience in these sounds. Confronting grim realities, the Pyramids brew up a heady response. These aren't escapist jams. Rather, they position celebration at the center of the human struggle to be recognized. There's joy found in true justice.

In advance of the album's release this week, Ackamoor joins us to explore deeper song by song. His notes provide not only insight into An Angel Fell, but also Ackamoor's creative process itself. Let's dive in.

An Angel Fell by Idris Ackamoor and the Pyramids

Idris, Messenger Of The Moon, arrives in ancient Fra Fra Land to attend the second burial of a Fra Fra King in Bolgatanga, Ghana. Meeting up with his spiritual guide Atibila he begins a series of rituals whereby he can walk the earth protected!

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Shopping :: The Hype

London post-punk dance dynamic, Shopping, deftly combine jolt laden rhythms with cognitively fluid messages for a smooth finish. Highly recommended for anyone who enjoys Pylon, ESG, or Kleenex, the footloose trio continue to impress on their third lp, The Official Body, and specifically on its first single "The Hype". Opening with the barbed wire bass of Billy Easter, the track's underlying mantra and message are . . .

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The Lagniappe Sessions :: Nap Eyes

Lagniappe (la ·gniappe) noun ‘lan-ˌyap,’ — 1. An extra or unexpected gift or benefit. 2. Something given or obtained as a gratuity or bonus.

Earlier this year, Nova Scotia quartet Nap Eyes returned with their third and most fully realized lp, I'm Bad Now.  Packed with existential jangle pop, the album concerns the connections tying us to others. Songwriter Nigel Chapman doesn't entirely escape his inward gaze, but more often than not, this set of songs finds him looking at those around him. For their Lagniappe Session, Nap Eyes takes on a legendary trio, Lucinda Williams, Neil Young, and the Feelies, bringing their characteristic warmth and wit to the recordings. Enjoy. I'm Bad Now is available now via Paradise of Bachelors.

Nap Eyes :: 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten (Lucinda Williams)

This is a great song and Lucinda Williams’ original, from the Car Wheels On A Gravel Road album, is really great performance and recording. The persona of the song gets most concrete in the third verse; in just a few words she wrote with great simplicity and depth about possession and disillusionment in love, and the importance of retaining your own self-identity and protecting yourself, even though you feel drawn to another person, often to the dark as much as to the light side of their personality.

Nap Eyes :: Don't Cry No Tears (Neil Young)

What a great track. One of number of simple great ones on the Zuma album. I read in the Shakey biography, in an interview with Neil, that he really means it about being majorly stressed out when someone cries around him, haha it is kind of relatable -- what can you do to help when someone’s feeling sad?

Nap Eyes :: It's Only Life (The Feelies)

We started playing this song now and then maybe five years ago–although I’d never heard of this band, Seamus proposed we cover it. I listened and thought "whoa what a great track" -- not only did the sound and approach fit into Nap Eyes wheelhouse, but the lyrics, too, really resonated with me at that time (they still do today). Such a nice self-admonishment, very sarcastic, trying to teach you to live the way you know you should.

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