Orrin Evans :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

The movement of musicians into or out of a jazz ensemble isn’t the kind of news that draws much attention. They are so often juggling different projects and schedules that it doesn’t raise any eyebrows when there’s a fill-in for a gig or another player sits in for a recording session. But the announcement that pianist Ethan Iverson was stepping down as a member of the Bad Plus, the trio he co-founded in 2000, to be replaced by Orrin Evans, sent a small ripple of shock through the jazz world.

The music of the Bad Plus–an angular, fractured sound, incorporating the influences of modern classical, experimental electronic fare, and rock–was entirely dependent on the chemistry of Iverson and his longtime bandmates drummer Dave King and bassist Reid Anderson. Even when they welcomed other players into the fold for a spell, as they did with tenor saxophonist Joshua Redman (for the 2015 album The Bad Plus Joshua Redman) and vocalist Wendy Lewis (on 2008’s For All I Care), the trio remained the nucleus around which these charged particles swirled.

But as Iverson transitions into a new chapter of his musical life (he announced at the PDX Jazz Festival that he had just finished and submitted his first piano concerto), Anderson and King decided to not let their artistic connection fizzle out. Instead, they reached out to a friend and fellow musical wanderer Evans to complete their circle.

It’s a fitting pick, too. While Evans’ recordings as a bandleader are much more direct, bluesy, and often swinging than the Bad Plus’s work, his playing is so versatile and deeply considered that it can adjust to meet the challenges of King’s mathematical compositions and get into the swim Anderson’s more fluid songwriting.

That’s what’s apparent when listening to Never Stop II, the first album these three men have made together. The title is a nod both to the fact that it is the second Bad Plus album to feature only original work and to this new phase of the group’s trajectory. As this collection proves, the transition was clearly a smooth one, with Evans even adapting a pair of his own compositions–“Boffadem” and “Commitment,” both originally recorded for the 2000 project Seed–to blend in with the trio’s minimalist aesthetic.

Aquarium Drunkard reached Evans on the phone in his native Philadelphia to talk about joining the Bad Plus, and finding his place within this beloved musical institution.

Aquarium Drunkard: How did this come about, you joining The Bad Plus? Was this Reid and Dave coming to you directly?

Orrin Evans: Well, yeah. That’s the only way it’s gonna happen. Reid and I go way back. He was one of the people that exposed me to a lot of music. There’s only two years between us, maybe three, but somewhat of a big brother. I was finishing up high school and he was attending Curtis Institute. I needed a bass player for my sister’s graduation party back in 1991. The bass player I had originally called couldn’t make it. There’s an organization in Philadelphia called the Clef Club of Performing Arts, which came out of the Black Musicians Union. A gentleman by the name of Lovett Hines called me and said, “There’s a bass player who just got in town. You need to give him a call. His name is Reid Anderson.” And the rest is history as they say.

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Minami Deutsch :: With Dim Light

Behold With Dim Light, the excellent new album from Japanese psych-heads, Minami Deutsch.

As Kikagaku Moyo and Guruguru Brain honcho, Go Kurosawa, mentioned last year, the band’s self-titled debut was more or less different variations on the motorik beat. This is not that. “Concrete Ocean” opens into a nice zone that’s more fusion than krautrock, though there is a definite “One More Night” vibe in the air. After repeated listens, “Tangled Yarn” very much remains a become a member or log in.

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 517: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Iceage - Catch It ++ Idles - Mother ++ Ought - Beautiful Blue Sky ++ Abe Vigoda - House ++ Disappears -   ++ Gone Completely ++ Crystal Stilts - Precarious Stair ++ Veronica Falls - Veronica Falls ++ Shopping - The Hype ++ Omni - Cold Vermouth ++ Parquet Courts - Alms For The Poor ++ The Soft Boys - I Got The Hots ++ Psychedelic Furs - Sister Europe ++ Wire - Used To . . .

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Colin Newman (Wire) :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

2018 looks to be a banner year for fans of the defiantly minimal Wire. Following 2017's Silver/Lead, a record that marked the band's 40th anniversary in the most inspiring way possible -- by demonstrating its continued vitality -- Pink Flag Records has readied a wealth of archival releases for this year. First up, the Nine Sevens box set, collecting nine 7" singles recorded between 1977-1980, which hits record stores on April 21, Record Store Day.  And then, May 18th will see the release of expanded, deluxe editions of the quartet's first three albums, Pink Flag (1977), Chairs Missing (1978), and 154 (1979). Documenting the group's initial creative burst, the reissues are designed as definitive editions.

"If you're going for completeness, you've got to be complete," says Wire leader Colin Newman via Skype.

Presented with remastered audio, demos, B-sides, alternate takes, unreleased material, an 80-page book, and a wealth of photos by photographer Annette Green, who shot the legendary Pink Flag  and Chairs Missing album covers as well,  the expanded editions are the result of Newman and his small team of collaborators raiding the EMI archives, creating combination reissue/contextual art project. While the core albums  will continue to be available via streaming outlets, the significant trove of bonus material will remain exclusive to these physical box sets.

Aquarium Drunkard caught up with Newman to explore the band's enduring legacy while he and the group prep for a trip to Marfa, Texas, to play the Marfa Myths  April 12-15 festival alongside Amen Dunes, Suzanne Ciani, Terry Allen, and many more. Sustaining his foundational artistic stance for more than four decades, Newman remains a sharp, funny presence.

Aquarium Drunkard:  You've never been a backward-looking band. Wire has always charged forward. What has the process of re-evaluating your work like this felt like?

Colin Newman: It does your head in. [Laughs] Not to put too fine a point on it. It's a very strange, slightly surreal experience. I think we've always very much lived in the present. It's about what's going on right now with the band and always has been. In that respect, it isn't any different than how it was in 1977. But on the other side, it was a different combination of people [founding guitarist Bruce Gilbert departed in 2006] and that's something I'm very aware of when dealing with material from that time. You know, like any group of people, each person has their own thing to bring to the mix.

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Seu Jorge And Almaz :: Everybody Loves The Sunshine

In 2010 LA's Now Again Records dropped a 12" of   Brazilian singer-songwriter Seu Jorge backed by the group Almaz, comprised of drummer Pupillo, guitarist Lucio Maia and rounded out by bassist and composer Antonio Pinto. Like the majority of the label's output, the collaboration felt both immediate and timeless, especially their rendering of Roy Ayers' "Everybody Loves The Sunshine", originally found on Ayers' 1976 lp of the same name.

The Almaz project, which initially began . . .

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Sitka Sun :: Yes Yes Forward

Sitka Sun, the self-titled album marking the inaugural release from The Long Road Society, introduces itself as an Afrobeat record – and in some ways this is true. But it’s also not, as the six genre-bending tracks contort the record into something else, something hard to categorize. And it's all the better for it.

While the flagship number “Yes Yes Forward” evokes lead musician Patrick Murphy’s inner Fela, it soon dissolves into a swaying, psychedelic vehicle breaking freely into looser, spacey-er jams that . . .

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Katie Von Schleicher :: Sell It Back

Last year, Katie Von Schleicher released Shitty Hits, an earnest statement of blown out melancholic bedroom pop, invoking the likes of Emmitt Rhodes, Angel Olsen, and Alex Chilton. Over the course of a lean thirty-five minutes, songs like “Midsummer” and “Life’s a Lie” showcase a jagged, sharp-witted charm. More delicate numbers like “Swoon” and “Mary” are illuminated with a tender breeziness.

The album’s closer, “Sell It Back,” strikes a different tone, however. It's slower and outwardly dark, spacious and shot through an aquatic lens that fuses distantly echoing drums, humming synths and droning sax. It stands out as something on its own.

We spoke to Katie over email about this song, and how its origins, roots, and form shine a light on the songwriter’s artistic process, inner monologue, and future expressive horizons. An album dealing with anxiety, isolation, and the uncertainty of getting older, Von Schleicher shares that “it would be hard to argue these aren't all me talking to myself.”

Katie Von Schleicher :: Sell It Back

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Mark Renner :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

As a young man in Baltimore, Mark Renner created music that coupled the energy of punk and new wave with a sense of romantic longing. Recently, Brooklyn-based label RVNG Intl released Few Traces, a wide-angle selection of Renner's early work recorded between 1982-1990. The material varies in tone, evoking the thrum of Joy Division at one turn, the alien soundscapes of Talk Talk at another, and the quiet calm of Harold Budd elsewhere, but even as the compilation showcases different sounds, moving from lyrical passages and long stretches of ambient quiet, it maintains a spiritual cohesion.

Mark Renner :: Saints and Sages

These days, Renner spends his time in Fort Worth, Texas, creating new soundscapes and working on paintings and woodcuts. Aquarium Drunkard caught up with him to discuss this recent reappraisal, his early days, and his creative nature.

Aquarium Drunkard: There's a theme of churches being referenced in your lyrics and song titles. In Brandon Soderburg's notes for Few Traces, you talk about sneaking out of Sunday school in your youth to play guitar in a church's reverberating halls. What is it about those spaces that moves you?

Mark Renner: One of my favorite things to do in Scottland -- I go there every year -- is visiting the  St Giles' Cathedral in Edinburgh. There's usually an organist practicing there, and I reserve some time at the end of the day to listen. I have a fondness for church music, both traditional hymns and classical.

AD: It feels like location plays a role in the music you make.  You're in Texas now, Fort Worth, correct?

Mark Renner: Yeah. I came expecting to be here a very short time, and I'm now beginning my ninth year. [Laughs] If you want to make God laugh tell him your plans.

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Holger Czukay :: Cinema (A Retrospective)

Holger Czukay was a genius of rhythm of the highest possible order, on par with Fela Kuti, James Brown, Steve Reich, and pretty much anyone else to ever braid together a few pulses. The founding member of Can has long been celebrated for his bass playing, which can be as melodic as Paul McCartney's and as slow-mo sticky as Robbie Shakespeare’s, and for the experimentalist glee of his production on the German band's first ten album, lacing together Michael Karoli . . .

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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 516: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ The Superimposers   (w/ Andrew Gold) — The Beach (AD edit) ++ Cornelius — Fantasma ++ Panda Bear — You Can Count On Me ++ The Morning Benders — Sleeping In   ++ Baby Lemonade — Ocean Blue ++ Besnard Lakes — Specter ++ The Apples In Stereo — Morning Breaks (And Roosters Complain) ++ Dukes of The Stratosphear — Pale And Precious ++ Roy Wood . . .

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Transmissions Podcast :: Astral Weeks: A Secret History of 1968/Abstract Truths/Environments

Welcome to the March installment of Aquarium Drunkard’s recurring Transmissions podcast, a series of interviews and audio esoterica. This month, we're centering in on a sense of place. First, we sit down with author and musician Ryan H. Walsh to discuss his new book, Astral Weeks: A Secret History of 1968. In '68, Boston was roiling with counter-culture activity. Occult circles were thriving; the underground press was emerging; the Velvet Underground, on loan from New York, was playing transcendent sets at the Boston Tea Party. And through it all, Irish R&B singer Van Morrison was quietly -- and often not so quietly -- tapping into the vibes that would help birth his soul-folk masterpiece, Astral Weeks. Walsh, best known for his work with the indie rock outfit Hallelujah the Hills, details it all in his personal and poetic new book.

Next, guitarist and writer William Tyler sits down with Douglas Mcgowan of Yoga Records and Numero Group to discuss the process of turning the pioneering vinyl soundscapes series Environments into a functional, immersive app for iOS devices. Designed with relaxation and contemplation in mind -- to aurally transport listeners to settings of tranquility -- the app recontextualizes sound recordist Irv Teibel's original aim of providing calm and peace in a noisy world, redefining the notions of a "reissue" in the process.

And finally, we close out the show with a look at our Abstract Truths: An Evolving Jazz Compendium mixtape series, which offers jazz collectors and thinkers a platform for exploring what jazz means in 2018, examining its past, untold stories, modern resonance. Where is jazz going? And what unique role does Los Angeles play in its future?

Transmissions Podcast: Astral Weeks/Environments/Abstract Truths

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Bonny Doon :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

Detroit's Bonny Doon won't kill you with kindness, nor will they burn much rubber on their musical journey. The foursome's second full-length, Longwave, continues in the vein of forebears such as Berman/Malkmus coupled with the breathing atmospheric aesthetic of their fellow Woodsist labelmates. Part confessional, part confrontational, Longwave stretches out like days long on thought - the kinds that are peppered equally with illumination, frustration and inebriation.
We spoke with principle songwriters Bobby Colombo and Bill Lennox about the growth of their partnership, the categorization of their music, and the role their hometown plays in both their music and beyond.

Longwave by bonny doon

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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 515: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Yo La Tengo - Esportes Casual ++ Rikki Ililonga Fire High ++ Blur - Moroccan Peoples Revolutionary Bowls Club ++ Dutch Rhythm And Steel Show Band: Down By The River ++ Bongos Ikwue - All Night Long ++ Arthur Verocai - Dedicada A Ela ++ Luis Melodia - Baby Rose ++ Tim Maia - Nobody Can Live Forever ++ Billy The Kid - Anything And . . .

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Sun Ra :: Springtime Again

The spring equinox is upon us – track one to the stratosphere in a silent way. Via Sleeping Beauty, 1979.

Sun Ra :: Springtime Again

Only the good shitAquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging . . .

Only the good shit. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its patrons. Keep the servers humming and help us continue doing it by pledging your support.

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Thousand Incarnations of the Rose :: American Primitive Guitar

On April 13th, over twenty guitarists will descend upon John Fahey’s boyhood home of Takoma Park, Maryland, for an event called The Thousand Incarnations of the Rose — A Festival of American Primitive Guitar.

The three-day festival–the first of its kind–is the brainchild of guitarists/scholars Glenn Jones and Jesse Sheppard, and features, in addition to the performances, a panel discussion, rare film screenings, and a social room with community vendors. The festival coincides with the compilation The Thousand Incarnations of the Rose —American Primitive Guitar & Banjo (1963-1974), to be released on CD and triple vinyl via the Craft label on March 23rd.

James Jackson Toth of Wooden Wand recently spoke with co-organizer Jesse Sheppard about the event and the enduring legacy of American Primitive.

Aquarium Drunkard: Tell me how this idea originated. Who came up with the concept of staging the first ever American Primitive festival? How long has such an idea been gestating?

Jesse Sheppard: It seems like the idea of getting all the American Primitive players together has floated around in the backs of a lot of people’s minds over the years. I know some players got together in New York after Fahey died, but since then I don’t think it’s been discussed much. For me, this music is a family and the thought of bringing everyone together was enticing but never seemed practical. It wasn’t until a series of overlapping conversations took place around the middle of last year that the concept of The Thousand Incarnations of the Rose Festival came into existence. The start of it all was really the evening my band [Elkhorn] played RhizomeDC in Takoma Park last June. I was sitting out back with Steve Korn (co-founder and president of the space) and he asked if I’d be interested in doing some kind of solo guitar festival with him. I think he knew that I was close to a lot of the players from the video work I’ve done and setting up and playing shows over the years. The funny thing was that only a few days earlier I had heard from Glenn Jones (guitarist, writer, friend of John Fahey and Robbie Basho and Jack Rose) that he had just completed the liner notes for a 2 LP compilation album of early American Primitive players that was coming out on Craft Recordings. His essay (over 6,000 words) was a deep dive into the history and meaning of the music that had been such an animating presence in his life and in the lives of so many others. So I connected Steve with Glenn and at that point the festival was definitely becoming more real.

What really pushed it into existence were conversations that Steve had with Laura Barclay at Main Street Takoma (the local business association) as well as others. They were aware that Takoma Park was Fahey’s childhood home (in fact Takoma was referenced in a lot of his early song titles and obviously gave its name to his record label), and were excited to help support an event that would bring attention to the creative history of the town. The last piece of the puzzle was the conversation that Kathy Harr was having with her husband, Josh Pfeffer (who is also the festival’s webmaster and graphic designer), about selling their house in  Berkeley and moving east. Kathy had run her own booking agency (where she had booked tours for Glenn’s band Cul de Sac) and had been one of the organizers of the Terrastock festivals, but her life had taken a turn into local politics. The move was sort of her return to the music world and she was looking for a cool project to sink her teeth into. So Glenn put Kathy in touch with me. Suddenly there was a team and a concept and some support... we were on our way.

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