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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Goodbyes & Beginnings (A Mixtape)

In my 20+ years of record digging there isn’t much I haven’t dropped a needle on, but nothing will ever be as near and dear to me as my first love - the psych/folk, English folk, and acid folk sounds of the late 60s/early 70s. The seed for this mix was planted about four years ago when my friend Elijah and I were digging together in Copenhagen. Martin at Can Records played us Suzanne Menzel’s 1981 Goodbyes & Beginnings lp and I was floored. What I heard was the spirit of . . .

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Diversions :: Iceage / Beyond ‘Beyondless’

Diversions, a recurring feature on Aquarium Drunkard, catches up with our favorite artists as they wax on subjects other than recording and performing.

Last month saw the Danish post-punk quartet Iceage embark on "Opening Nights", a series of intimate, multi-night, performances in two countries and four cities: New York, Los Angeles, Tokyo and Kyoto. The group used the events as a way to both introduce material from their new lp, Beyondless, and highlight fellow travelers in the arts; i.e. they booked the opening acts in each city (musical, visual and performance).

Four albums in, Beyondless is a triumph in both execution and intent. As such, for this installment of Diversions, we asked Iceage's Elias Bender Rønnenfelt and Jakob Tvilling Pless to highlight a bit of the mélange brewing behind the scenes during the album's gestation and production. Iceage, in their own words, below.

Samuel Beckett / Worstward Ho: The word "beyondless" was derived from this book. It was given to me by a girl who came to a show we played in some city that to me remains nameless somewhere in The Netherlands. In a sense, she named the record. When I read the book I was dumbfounded with the power of Beckett's language when he here was breaking free of the confines of language itself; simple in form, but at the same time groundbreaking in its way of mixing up the English  language in completely incorrect ways but still finding ways to make more sense of it than it usually does. Simple truths put into something wrong, and there is nothing more complicated than such a thing as a simple truth.

Leonard Cohen / Death Of A Ladies Man: I have more to say about  this man than I could possibly write in one sitting. No other lyric writer I have encountered has done more to my understanding of how fleshed out and rich a set of lyrics can have the potential to be within the span of a song. In my own songwriting, no matter how tortured it might be at times, I never underestimate a sense of humor. Sometimes it's a temptation I can't deny. A need to  add a perverse  twist to whatever might be at hand. It's mostly subtle, but however, I think this album walks a fantastic tightrope between humor and tragedy.

Henry Miller / Asleep And Awake (a.k.a bathroom monologue): For years Henry Miller has been a main obsession of mine. I've always loved his novels, but when he does most for me is in non-fictional books such as "Henry Miller On Writing" or "Time Of The Assassins". These are books where he is freed from the form of novel  writing. Just continuously rambling, as you would imagine his train of thought going, or what it might be like to sit with the man at a dinner table. This particular little short film is Henry going through his reasons and impressions of the photographs in his toilet. It's followed by a brilliant sequence where he explains his deep-founded hatred for the city of New York.

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Neil Young :: Roxy – Tonight’s The Night Live

Neil Young is proving himself to be the busiest senior citizen in the rock 'n' roll world this year. He's got a doofy sci-fi western available to stream on Netflix. He's brought Crazy Horse back out of the barn. He's pretty much blogging over on the NYA Times-Contrarian. And on the archival front, Neil has just released another winner – the debut performances of his classic Tonight's The Night lp, recorded live over the course of a couple of extremely boozy nights on the Sunset Strip in 1973. Roxy - Tonight's The Night Live is an absolutely essential addition to songwriter's ongoing Performance Series, giving listeners a front-row seat at these historic gigs. You can smell the reefer and taste the Jose Cuervo. Welcome to Miami Beach.

Neil and The Santa Monica Flyers (drummer Ralph Molina, bassist Billy Talbot, guitarist/pianist Nils Lofgren and pedal steel-ist Ben Keith) had just wrapped recording Tonight's The Night, so the songs stick close to the original arrangements – in some cases (such as "World On A String") they've managed to get quite a bit tighter. But there's still plenty of wildness – the devastating losses that inspired many of the songs (Crazy Horse guitarist Danny Whitten and roadie Bruce Berry) were just months old, so the wounds are raw.

"What we were doing was playing those guys on their way," Young told Bud Scoppa in 1975 of the Tonight's The Night era. "I mean, I'm not a junkie, and I won't even try to check out what it's like. But we'd get really high–drink a lot of tequila, get right out on the edge, where we knew we were so screwed up that we could easily just fall on our faces ... We were wide open ... just wide open."

The Roxy performances are very much in keeping with that vibe, whether on the wobbly party anthems ("Roll Another Number," "Walk On") or the lonely laments ("Albuquerque," "Tired Eyes"). Tied together with Neil's sleazoid banter, the whole package paints a portrait of a songwriter climbing out of the wreckage to create some truly powerful art. Everything may be cheaper than it looks, but this one's priceless. words/t wilcox

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Sarah Louise :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

On Deeper Woods, Sarah Louise wanders deep into the woods seeking a sense of awe. Over the course of the album's seven songs, which blend Appalachian folk melodies with droning ragas, she finds it over and over again. "There, I sat in wonder," she sings on opener "Bowman's Root," over her fluttering 12-string guitar and pulsing percussion. "There, I sat listening."

Best known for her stellar solo guitar work, the new lp unites various strands which have long fascinated the North Carolinian songwriter, from a cappela singing to looped minimalism. Louise's guitar playing rests at the center of her ambitious arrangements, but it's adorned with touches of flute, echoing distortion, synthesizer, electric piano, flute, and steadily thumping drums. At times, it feels something like Robbie Basho in a session with Pentangle, but chiefly, it establishes Louise's own personal voice. She produced the record herself, and while it features tasteful contributions by drummer Thom Ngyuen and bassist Jason Meagher, it always feels like an intimate, revelatory statement. Singing of metamorphosis, the solace of nature, and inner and outer wildernesses, Louise ventures into spaces where anything can happen. Spooky and arcane, it's a magical sounding record, a transformative piece of art. Go looking for wonder in these songs, and you'll find it in abundance.

Deeper Woods by Sarah Louise

Deeper Woods is out May 11 via Thrill Jockey Records.

Aquarium Drunkard: Deeper Woods is centered around the language of the woods, evoking both creatures (“Pipevine Swallowtails”) and plant life (“Bowman’s Root” and “Fire Pink And Milkweed”). Have you always been an avid outdoors person?

Sarah Louise: I have always felt a connection to nature and am grateful that my parents nurtured that impulse in me. It’s one of the threads that runs through my entire life and has led me towards a lot of interesting things.

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Unknown Mortal Orchestra :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Unknown Mortal Orchestra's fourth full-length,  Sex & Food is both reflection and rumination on our times. Simultaneously  grandiose and deeply contemplative, the record swirls with disparate  sounds and themes - unified by a pessimism and fear of where we're headed and how we got there. We reached the band's leader, Ruban Nielson, by phone while he made coffee at home. Nielson opened up about his own self-doubt in the creative process, how pop music is one of the greatest currents in his life, and the unlikely role Salvador  Dali played in one of the records key moments.

Aquarium Drunkard: Sex & Food has been out now for nearly a month - has there been a pleasant or surprising element of the reaction to it that you've seen? Is there something that really sticks out to you in the way people are perceiving it?

Ruban Nielson: The first thing that comes to mind is when we recorded the base tracks for a song called "Hunnybee," it was Jake Portrait, the bass player in the band, my brother Kody, who plays drums, and I. We were at my brother's place and I showed them the song and we were just playing through it. We kind of had this idea that it would maybe be the song of the album -   the biggest or best song. We'd only been recording for half an hour and we thought, "let's move on to something else cause I think we just made something good." And every time we worked on that song we always thought, "don't screw it up, don't screw up what we got on that first day." It's not a single on the record or anything, yet, but it already seems to be the one that people are reacting to the most. It's kind of interesting when people respond the way that your own instincts tell you.

AD: What was it about the songs you've selected as singles so far, starting with "American Guilt,” that made you want those to be the first that people would hear?

Ruban Nielson: Well, the way the singles are chosen, I'm not sure how everyone else on my label is, but we have a lot of fun with that stuff. We had a lot of debates and conversations about how to introduce people to the record. I think the main tension is that the record is not built to endear itself to the listener on the first listen - which makes for a scary round of reviews. We know that it doesn't really open up until the third listen or so. And it's kind of something that I'm always dealing with; that when I'm making the record I'm actually purposefully moving away from things that will make the music immediately appealing. So when we're choosing   the singles, I think "American Guilt" was chosen first [because] they thought the song was strong, but I think the reason to put it out first was almost to confuse people and start a conversation, because it seemed to be the only real... it was kind of for fun, really. But it is a strategy - I just didn't want to put out the song that would be the most appealing. And actually, on the last record, Multi-Love, the single [of the same name], when we put that song out we chose it because we thought it would be a shock and we didn't really know what was going to be the biggest song on the record. We kind of thought it was going to be too weird, ultimately. So after that, having gone with the song that we thought would be the most exciting on that album, we thought, maybe we should exaggerate, put the two most confusing songs out as singles first [for this one]. I don't think there ever really was going to be one song that could represent the record, so maybe we could just confuse everyone until the record came out.

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Willie Nelson :: Happy 85th Birthday, Hoss

Willie Nelson doesn’t seem to age. Like Robert Duvall, he seems to have emerged into our cultural consciousness already in middle age, and to simply move through stylistic permutations the way the moon moves through cycles until, like Prince, those circular movements simply cease.

Nevertheless, for those of us keeping score in the mortal world, this weekend was the eighty-fifth anniversary of the birth of the Red-Headed Stranger. As he moves on into yet another permutation – one we might call “the Zen cowboy ponders death” – with the release of Last Man Standing, it’s a good time to look back on all those phases and stages with a few second-level cuts from the man himself. Consider it your Willie Nelson 201.

In 1956, Willie worked as a radio announcer in Vancouver, Washington, and sold a simple gospel song called “Family Bible” for a mere $50. Though it was his first sale, and the song became somewhat canonical in the world of country gospel, Willie’s take on it wouldn’t find a home on an album until 1971’€²s morality tale Yesterday’s Wine. (Oddly enough, the track would warrant an album of its own in 1980). The song itself is more of a nod to the culture of Christianity than it is an actual spiritual song. Over tasteful fiddles and pedal steel, Willie remembers the family gathering around the table to hear Bible stories and his mother’s faithful strains of “Rock of Ages.” When he finally gets to the moral – “This old world would better be / If we’d find more Bibles on the tables” — we have to wonder whether Willie’s more in favor of the Word of God or the spiritual bonds of family and memory, or whether we can even have one without the other.

Willie Nelson :: Family Bible

Kicking off with a jagged Spanish guitar run, “I Never Cared for You” is Willie’s first great kiss-off. It slides quickly into Willie’s voice, solo with reverb. “The sun was full of ice and gave no warmth at all,” Willie sings. “I never cared for you.” And just like that, a loping Mexican rhythm fills in behind him and he’s in the saddle, riding out of town with his back to Main Street. Soon enough, he’d retire from country music and leave Nashville, retreating to the hills of Austin, Texas, where he’d emerge several years later, reenergized and playing a rock and folk infused version of country music that would scare Nashville out of its platinum pants.

Willie Nelson :: I Never Cared for You

By 1973, Willie Nelson needed a hit of his own. He’d left Nashville something of a failure; Ray Price and Patsy Cline had made household names of “Night Life” and “Crazy,” respectively, but Willie had yet to score one on his own. Back in Texas, Willie penned “Sad Songs and Waltzes,” a lament for, well, lamentation. Willie, always the gentleman, tells his ex-lover that he’s writing a song about her but, not to worry, as no one would ever hear it. “Sad songs and waltzes aren’t selling this year,” he explains, a pedal steel dragging behind him. Though Shotgun Willie was a critical smash, it would be a few more years before the sad songs and waltzes on Red Headed Stranger would sell in the millions.

Willie Nelson :: Sad Songs and Waltzes

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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 520: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Sly Stone - Coming Back Home (Casio Garage Demos) ++ Luther Fujifilm -   Supra ++ Dump - Raspberry Beret ++ Shopping - The Hype ++ Drinks - Corner Shops ++   Omni - Sunset Preacher ++ Amen Dunes - Calling Paul The Suffering ++ Damien Jurado - Allocate ++ Minami Deutsch - Concrete Ocean ++ Kikagaku Moyo -   Semicircle ++ Fumio Nunoya - Mizu Tamari ++ Die Wilde Jagd - Flederboy . . .

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Tom & Lee :: Folk-Jazz Explorations

Tom & Lee finds the pairing of NYC-based composers / multi-instrumentalists Tom Csatari and Levon Henry. A spirited folk jazz duo, featuring Csatari on guitar, slide, and effects, and Henry on tenor saxophone and clarinet, the longtime collaborators make music that is earnest and untethered. With the release of their debut, self-titled EP, the pair journey through the American songbook and original compositions with a rustic playfulness.

On the Csatari-composed “Perch Blues”, Henry leads with a melody evoking a tree-lined autumnal sunrise; the winds blowing with . . .

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